Leaders throughout the competition, Mexican duo Paola Milagros Espinosa and Tatiana Ortiz were last to dive, however, and earned the highest score of the afternoon, an 80.58, to finish atop the field (326.04). Silver went to Koreas Kum Hui Choe and In Sun Hong (314.76), while Japanese duo Misako Yamashita and Mai Nakagawa took bronze (308.70).
The mens 3m synchro team of Sean Moore (Englewood, Colo. / Ohio State) and Drew Brown (Denver, Colo. / Minnesota) finished sixth in todays final with a score of 342.87. The Chinese duo of Xinhua Zhang and Bo Peng took the gold medal, earning 431.10 points. Silver went to Russias Alexander Gorshkov and Artem Lvov (396.75) while Anton Zakharov and Dmytro Lysenko of the Ukraine took bronze with a score of 366.00.
In the womens 10m platform final, Americans Cardinell and Jessica Livingston (The Woodlands, Tx. / Texas) finished ninth and 10th, respectively. Cardinell found herself in 10th position after four rounds, but executed a near-perfect back 2 ½ somersault, 1 ½ twists (5253B), scoring 73.10 points to move up a spot with 291.25 total points. Livingston was in 12th position entering her final dive, but also scored highly on a 5253B, adding 68.00 points to ascend to 10th place (271.90). The gold medal went to Chinese Olympian Lao Lishi (388.00) while silver was awarded to Mexicos Espinosa (363.70). Japans Nakagawa took bronze with 329.40 points.
Zach Schultz (Chicago, Ill / Purdue) finished 12th in the mens 3m springboard final. Schultz entered as the 11th seed today and scored 353.50 points in the championship session. The gold medal went to defending Olympic champion in this event Bo Peng of China (486.25). Fellow Chinese Olympian Yutong Luo won silver (474.10). Roumel Pacheco of Mexico won bronze (434.05).
The final day of competition tomorrow will include four more finals, with the womens 3m springboard kicking things off at 10 a.m. local time. Also contested will be the mens 10m platform, the womens 3m synchro and the mens 10m synchro.
About USA Diving: Featuring Americas best divers, USA Diving is the national governing body for the sport of diving. Headquartered in Indianapolis, USA Diving offers diversified programs geared toward the broadest number of diving enthusiasts, from the novice to the world champion. USA Diving conducts approximately 40 regional and national events annually and is responsible for training and selecting teams that represent the United States at international events such as the Olympic Games, World Championships and World Cup. For additional information please visit www.usadiving.org.

