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'The washington Post': Yulia Efimova says her Rio Olympics were a ‘nightmare,’ thanks to Lilly King

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Lilly King and Yulia Efimova’s Olympic rivalry was never destined to stay confined to the pool at the Olympic Aquatics Stadium, not with King’s sudden prominence as a doping vigilante.

Now, with the swimming events in Rio all finished, Efimova is opening up about the emotional toll of King’s outspokenness.

“It was war, Efimova told USA Today on Saturday. “It was like a nightmare. This completion is a relief because I love racing, but this was more like a war.”

> > 'The washington Post': Yulia Efimova says her Rio Olympics were a ‘nightmare,’ thanks to Lilly King

The inciting moment happening during last Sunday’s 100-meter breaststroke semifinals, whenEfimova won her heat and held up an index finger signaling “No. 1.” 

[In vilifying Russian swimmer Yulia Efimova, Americans are splashing murky waters]

The only problem, at least for King, was that Efimova was originally among the seven swimmers banned from the Rio Games for testing positive for a banned substance, a sentence that was overturned shortly before the breaststroke event. Efimova had previously been given a 16-month suspension for performance-enhancing drug use in 2014 and had a suspension for using meldonium overturned earlier this year. Suffice to say, King didn’t like Efimova’s “No. 1? sign.

She responded with a wag of a finger that blossomed into a full-fledged campaign for clean swimming that has earned the 19-year-old adoration among fans. King also said Efimova should not be allowed to compete.

“You wave your finger No. 1, and you’ve been caught drug cheating?” King said on NBC after her semifinal. “I’m not a fan.”

Efimova, on the other hand, earned the wrath of a fan base happy to get behind an outspoken, spunky teenager who, oh yeah, beat Efimova in the 100-meter breaststroke final for a gold medal. Efimova said King turned the Olympics into an intercontinental war in which she was the common enemy.

[American Lilly King outduels new nemesis Yulia Efimova to win 100 breaststroke]

That meant boos almost every time Efimova walked out onto the pool deck. It meant tears in awkward press conferences in which she, the silver medalist, had to sit next to King, avoiding eye contact. It means the Russian 24-year-old is re-considering returning to Southern California, where she has trained since she was a teenager.