SINGAPORE - Canada capped off the swim meet at the Youth Olympics with a silver medal on Friday.

Tera Van Beilen of Oakville, Ont., finished second in the women's 200-metre breaststroke.

The eight-member Canadian swim team ends the meet with seven medals: two gold, a silver and four bronze.

Emily Selig of Australia won the 200 breaststroke gold in two minutes 27.78 seconds. Van Beilen took the silver in a personal best 2:29.39 to edge Maya Hamano of Japan in third in 2:29.75.

Rachel Nicole of Lethbridge, Alta., was in the mix the whole way and placed fourth in 2:29.87.

"I had nothing left at the end of the race," said Van Beilen, who ends the meet with one gold, one silver and one bronze. "Breaking the 2:30 barrier was a big achievement for me and a great way to end the summer season. I knew Emily would be strong in this race so I started smoothly but I knew I really had to pick it up if I wanted to be on the podium."

Lindsay Delmar of Calgary was fifth in the women's 100 butterfly and Kyle McIntee was sixth in the men's 200 fly.

Canada was fifth in the mixed 4x100 medley.

Chinese athletes collected three swimming golds to help extend their lead to 18 golds and 28 medals overall. Russia is second with 12 golds and 26 overall while South Korea has six golds. Canada has two golds and 12 total medals.

Meanwhile, British diver Tom Daley gave his team a boost when he announced he will participate despite injuring a triceps at the European Championships.

Daley, who became the youngest diver at 15 to win a world title in men's platform this year, withdrew from the Europeans last weekend and said he might not participate in the inaugural Youth Games. But Daley said on Friday he would compete in the three-meter springboard on Sunday.

"It's gotten a lot better. I've got quite a good range of movement so I'd say I'm like 75 per cent," the 16-year-old Daley said. "I have to compromise some of my diving technique to make sure my arm doesn't go into overstretch."

Daley, however, did withdraw from the 10-metre platform as a precaution. He is probably the best known athlete at the Games.

"When I first injured it, I was at about 20 per cent fitness," Daley said. "I couldn't even get in the water and dive or straighten my arm."

Meanwhile, Haiti made it to the boys' soccer semifinals, coming from a goal down to beat Vanuatu 2-1.

Haiti, which was severely damaged by an earthquake in January that left an estimated 300,000 people dead, looked like it might make an early exit from the tournament after losing its opening game 9-0 to Bolivia. Its semifinal opponent will be Singapore, which beat Macedonia 3-2.

"It's more than a victory," said Fritz Gerald Wong, head of Haiti's delegation. "Any single thing that a Haitian accomplishes is amazing. It finally brings happiness."

In tennis, Russia's Daria Gavrilova won the gold in the girls' singles final, defeating Saisai Zheng of China two sets to one.

-- With files from The Associated Press