2024 Paris Olympics Data Dive: Day 7 Prelims (original) (raw)

2024 Paris Olympics Data Dive: Day 7 Prelims

Katie Ledecky is the top seed going into tomorrow's 800 freestyle final, after swimming an 8:16.62. What other swims stood out from Day 7's prelims? Current photo via Jack Spitser/Spitser Photography

by Bradley Bush 2

August 02nd, 2024 Africa, Asia, Australia, Brazil, Latin America & Caribbean, Britain, Canada, Europe, International, New Zealand and Oceania, News, Paris 2024, SwimmingStats

This morning we saw some of the most highly anticipated events for the first time in Paris, with the men’s 100 fly, women’s 200 IM, women’s 800 free, and the 4×100 mixed medley relay. Swimmers like Kaylee McKeown, Kate Douglass, Summer McIntosh, and Hubert Kos will all be back tonight to further their chances at another individual gold medal in these games. Unique to this preliminary session, we saw an opportunity for all twelve medalists from these events at the Tokyo Games to return to continue their journey of becoming repeat medalists in the same event in 2021. Each person or nation that stood on the podium for these events (men’s 100 butterfly, women’s 200 IM, women’s 800 freestyle, and the 4×100 mixed medley relay) in Tokyo will be back to defend their titles. Day seven’s finals will start at 2:30 EST.

PRELIMS SWIMS

MEN’S 100 FLY

  1. Kristof Milak, Hungary: 50.19
  2. Josh Liendo, Canada: 50.55
  3. Noe Ponti, Switzerland/Maxime Grousset, France: 50.65
  4. ^tie for fourth
  5. Ilya Kharun, Canada: 50.71
  6. Caeleb Dressel, United States: 50.83
  7. Matt Temple, Australia: 50.89
  8. Nyls Korstanje, Netherlands: 51.17
  9. Jakub Majerski, Poland: 51.18
  10. Gal Cohen Groumi, Israel: 51.30
  11. Ben Armbruster, Australia: 51.33
  12. Katsuhiro Matsumoto, Japan: 51.43
  13. Simon Bucher, Austria: 51.33
  14. Hubert Kos, Hungary: 51.58
  15. Naoki Mizunuma, Japan/Clement Secchi, France: 51.62
  16. ^tie for 15th

Returning Olympic Medalists:

Returning Tokyo Finalists:

Current International Record Holders:

This morning we saw seven of the top fastest performers in the history of this event (Dressel (1), Milak (2), Liendo (5), Grousset (6), Ponti (7), Temple (8), Korstanje (19)) earn a spot in the semifinals, with this year’s semifinal qualifying time being faster than any time we’ve seen in a past Olympics. Many big names in the sport are looking to add another international medal to their collection, including Dressel and Hubert Kos, who have all already won a gold medal in Paris. France’s Maxime Grousset scratched himself out of the 50 freestyle final tonight (which will occur around 35 minutes before the first semifinal of the 100 butterfly), presumably to focus on this event. Swimmers like Josh Liendo and Dressel will be completing the 50 free/100 fly double tonight.

WOMEN’S 200 IM

  1. Summer McIntosh, Canada: 2:09.90
  2. Yu Yiting, China: 2:10.28
  3. Alex Walsh, United States: 2:10.48
  4. Sydney Pickrem, Canada: 2:10.63
  5. Kate Douglass, United States: 2:10.70
  6. Ella Ramsay, Australia: 2:10.75
  7. Abbie Wood, Great Britain: 2:10.95
  8. Ye Shiwen, China: 2:10.96
  9. Kaylee McKeown, Australia: 2:11.26
  10. Charlotte Bonnet, France: 2:11.47
  11. Anastasia Gorbenko, Israel: 2:11.53
  12. Emma Carrasco, Spain: 2:11.54
  13. Shiho Matsumoto, Japan: 2:11.67
  14. Yui Ohashi, Japan: 2:11.70
  15. Ellen Walshe, Ireland: 2:11.81
  16. Rebecca Meder, South Africa: 2:11.96

Returning Olympic Medalists:

Returning Tokyo Finalists:

Current International Record Holders:

Kaylee McKeown (100 backstroke), Summer McIntosh (200 butterfly/400 IM) and Kate Douglass (200 breaststroke), all already individual gold medalists in this year’s competition, will look to pick up another gold in the finals of the women’s 200 IM tomorrow night. These three swimmers, joined by Alex Walsh, were the top four swimmers coming into the prelims session this morning. They will all be competing in semifinal #2 tonight, swimming in lanes 2-5. McKeown will be completing the 200 back/200 IM double tonight, but she has a slightly more gracious turnaround time than the men do in the 50 free/100 fly, at around an hour instead of 30 minutes. This is a jam-packed event, and it’s one you surely don’t want to miss.

WOMEN’S 800 FREESTYLE

  1. Katie Ledecky, United States: 8:16.62
  2. Paige Madden, United States: 8:18.48
  3. Ariarne Titmus, Australia: 8:19.87
  4. Lani Pallister, Australia: 8:20.21
  5. Isabel Gose, Germany: 8:20.63
  6. Simona Quadarella, Italy: 8:20.89
  7. Erika Fairweather, New Zealand: 8:22.22
  8. Anastasiia Kirpichnikova, France: 8:22.99

Returning Olympic Medalists:

Returning Tokyo Finalists:

Current International Record Holders:

Katie Ledecky looks well-positioned to continue adding gems to her distance crown, as she holds the top seed going into tomorrow night’s final. She’s already taken home a gold medal in the 1500 freestyle, with a new Olympic record to boot. We’ll see a rematch of the Titmus/Ledecky rivalry, after Titmus took home the gold medal in the 400 freestyle earlier in the meet. Titmus is seeded third behind Ledecky and Paige Madden. Both of the other medalists in the women’s 1500, Anastasiia Kirpichnikova from France and Germany’s Isabel Gose will have a chance to earn another medal, qualifying eight and fifth respectively.

MIXED 4×100 MEDLEY RELAY

  1. United States: 3:40.98 (FMMF)
  2. Australia: 3:41.42 (FMFM)
  3. China: 3:42.26 (MFFM)
  4. Netherlands: 3:43.60 (MMFF)
  5. Great Britain: 3:43.73 (FMMF)
  6. Canada: 3:43.87 (MMFF)
  7. France: 3:43.99 (MMFF)
  8. Japan: 3:44.25 (MMFF)

Returning Olympic Medalists:

Returning Tokyo Finalists:

Current International Record Holders:

One of the three events to get added to the Olympic program in Tokyo alongside the men’s 800 freestyle and the women’s 1500 freestyle, the mixed medley relay is back in action, and many countries are looking to take down defending gold medalists Great Britain. This event is one of the most unpredictable, due to the age-old question of “who is going to swim where?” Many countries, like the United States and Australia, are lucky to have an abundance of options for their final relay lineup, an intrinsic advantage that heavily favors the larger swimming countries. There are many nations in this final that can stand a chance to medal, and I’m extremely curious as to who will be on each team’s final relay. The United States and Great Britain employed a Female/Male/Male/Female strategy, China went with the opposite, going Male/Female/Female/Male. Australia chose to swim Female/Male/Female/Male, and the other four nations in the final chose to go Male/Male/Female/Female. The finals of this event will be swum tomorrow night, August 3.

FASTEST SPLITS

Men’s Backstroke:

Women’s Backstroke:

Men’s Breaststroke:

Women’s Breaststroke:

Men’s Butterfly:

Women’s Butterfly:

Men’s Freestyle:

Women’s Freestyle:

NATIONAL RECORDS

France, 4×100 mixed medley relay: 3:43.99

Ching Hwee Gan, Singapore, 800 freestyle: 8:32.37

Jesse Ssengonzi, Uganda, 100 butterfly: 53.76

Note: for the following swimmers, there are seemingly little to no officially-recognized national records on World Aquatics’ website or elsewhere. These swimmers swam faster than their seed times, and there are no accessible records of any faster swims for their countries.

In This Story

Alex Walsh
Anna Hopkin
Apostolos Christou
Ariarne Titmus
Caeleb Dressel
Caspar Corbeau
Charlotte Bonnet
Emma McKeon
Hubert Kos
Ilya Kharun
Josh Liendo
Kate Douglass
Katie Ledecky
Katsuhiro Matsumoto
Kaylee McKeown
Kristof Milak
Kyle Chalmers
Lani Pallister
Maggie MacNeil
Marie Wattel
Marrit Steenbergen
Maxime Grousset
Noe Ponti
Nyls Korstanje
Paige Madden
Pan Zhanle
Regan Smith
Simona Quadarella
Summer McIntosh
Sydney Pickrem
Xu Jiayu
Yui Ohashi