2024 Paris Olympics Data Dive: Day 8 Prelims (original) (raw)

2024 Paris Olympics Data Dive: Day 8 Prelims

Sarah Sjöström has the chance to win her first Olympic gold medal in the 50 freestyle. What else stands out from the last day of prelims? Current photo via Jack Spitser/Spitser Photography

by Bradley Bush 0

August 03rd, 2024 Africa, Asia, Australia, Brazil, Latin America & Caribbean, Britain, Canada, Europe, International, New Zealand and Oceania, News, Paris 2024, SwimmingStats

Wrapping up the last prelims session, four highly anticipated events were contested for the first time this meet, with the women’s 50 freestyle, men’s 1500 freestyle, and both medley relays. Big names like Sarah Sjostrom, Gretchen Walsh, Bobby Finke, Daniel Wiffen, and many more are all looking to add to their medal collections with the finals of these events on Sunday night. This was one of the fastest sessions we’ve seen as well, with every qualification time being faster than both the Tokyo and Rio qualification times.

PRELIMS SWIMS

WOMEN’S 50 FREESTYLE

  1. Sarah Sjostrom, Sweden: 23.85
  2. Katarzyna Wasick, Poland: 24.27
  3. Gretchen Walsh, United States: 24.37
  4. Shayna Jack, Australia: 24.38
  5. Meg Harris, Australia: 24.50
  6. Zhang Yufei, China: 24.54
  7. Michelle Coleman, Sweden: 24.55
  8. Wu Qingfeng, China/Taylor Ruck, Canada: 24.57
  9. ^tie for eighth
  10. Beryl Gastaldello, France: 24.60
  11. Julie Jensen, Denmark/Neza Klancar, Slovenia: 24.64
  12. ^tie for 11th
  13. Sara Curtis, Italy: 24.67
  14. Florine Gaspard, Belgium: 24.69
  15. Anna Hopkin, Great Britain/Valerie van Roon, Netherlands: 24.72
  16. ^tie for 15th

Returning Olympic Medalists:

Returning Tokyo Finalists:

Current International Record Holders:

Sweden’s Sarah Sjostrom had a dominant swim in the prelims of the women’s 50 freestyle this morning, earning the top time of 23.85– nearly half a second faster than the next qualifier. The veteran of the sport already has a Paris gold medal under her belt in the 100 freestyle, and she’s well-positioned to complete the sprint freestyle double and take home her second win of the meet. Many of these names that have qualified for the semifinals have found already found great success in this meet, including Gretchen Walsh, a silver medalist in the 100 fly and 400 freestyle relay, Meg Harris and Shayna Jack, two Australian women part of their gold-medal winning relays (Jack on both the 800 and 400 freestyle relays, Harris on just the 400), and Zhang Yufei, the three-time bronze medalist at these games, swimming the 100 butterfly, 200 butterfly, and 400 freestyle relay for China. Of these 16 swimmers, 13 countries are represented across four continents.

MEN’S 1500 FREESTYLE

  1. Daniel Wiffen, Ireland: 14:40.34
  2. Gregorio Paltrinieri, Italy: 14:42.56
  3. Ahmed Jaouadi, Tunisia: 14:44.20
  4. David Aubry, France: 14:44.90
  5. Kuzey Tuncelli, Turkey: 14:45.27
  6. Bobby Finke, United States: 14:45.31
  7. Damien Joly, France: 14:45.52
  8. David Betlehem, Hungary: 14:45.59

Returning Olympic Medalists:

Returning Tokyo Finalists:

Current International Record Holders:

Capping off individual swimming at the Paris Olympics, the men’s 1500 freestyle will be the last individual event contested at this year’s games. It will be the last chance for the United States men to win an individual gold medal, with Bobby Finke looking to repeat his win from the Tokyo Olympics. However, Finke won’t be the only Olympic gold medalist looking to earn another, with Ireland’s Daniel Wiffen trying to win the distance double after clinching the 800 win, and Gregorio Paltrinieri looking to reclaim his gold medal from the Rio Olympics. This is by far the fastest time we’ve seen for a finals spot, with David Betlehem’s 14:45.59 at a full seven seconds faster than the eighth place qualifier in Tokyo.

MEN’S 4×100 MEDLEY RELAY

  1. France: 3:31.36
  2. China: 3:31.58
  3. United States: 3:31.62
  4. Netherlands: 3:31.80
  5. Great Britain: 3:32.13
  6. Australia: 3:32.24
  7. Canada: 3:32.33
  8. Germany: 3:32.51

Returning Olympic Medalists (Tokyo/Rio):

Returning Tokyo Finalists:

Current International Record Holders:

*Italy and Great Britain are tied for the 4×100 Men’s Medley Relay European Record.

Always a very exciting race to watch, both of the medley relay prelims did not disappoint this morning. The top eight nations in the men’s race are only separated by 1.15 seconds, with the top seven all being within a second of each other. France continued their streak of consistently strong swims, earning the top spot going into tomorrow night’s final by around 0.2 seconds. The United States will likely change most of their relay going into the finals, and they’ll need everything they have to offer if they want to take home a definitive win in this event. China is in a comfortable second slot right now, even despite world-record holder Pan Zhanle only splitting a 47.74 anchoring for the relay. We’ve seen some impressively strong swims out of Pan this meet, and I’m anticipating another strong split out of Pan tomorrow night. Defending bronze medalists Italy did not advance to the finals, placing ninth.

WOMEN’S 4×100 MEDLEY RELAY

  1. Australia: 3:54.81
  2. Canada: 3:56.10
  3. China: 3:56.34
  4. United States: 3:56.40
  5. Japan: 3:56.52
  6. Sweden: 3:57.33
  7. France: 3:57.40
  8. Netherlands: 3:57.48

Returning Olympic Medalists (Tokyo/Rio):

Returning Tokyo Finalists:

Current International Record Holders:

Ending off this session with a bang, this is the fourth event out of four where we saw a faster qualification time than in any previous Olympics. The Netherlands’ eighth-place time of 3:57.48 was 0.22 seconds faster than the time it took to qualify for the finals in Tokyo, and was nearly two seconds faster than the eighth-place time in Rio. The United States and Australia each have a gold and a silver from the previous two Olympic games, with the United States looking to reclaim the title and Australia looking to defend their Tokyo gold. Both teams will likely swap out the majority of their relays for finals tomorrow night, so expect some much faster times.

FASTEST SPLITS

Women’s Backstroke

Men’s Backstroke

Women’s Breaststroke

Men’s Breaststroke

Women’s Butterfly

Men’s Butterfly

Women’s Freestyle

Men’s Freestyle

NATIONAL RECORDS

David Betlehem, Hungary, 1500 Freestyle: 14:45.59

Ireland, Men’s 4×100 Medley Relay: 3:33.81

Ireland, Women’s 4×100 Medley Relay: 4:00.12

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

In This Story

Anna Hopkin
Beryl Gastaldello
Bobby Finke
Caspar Corbeau
Damien Joly
Daniel Wiffen
David Aubry
Gregorio Paltrinieri
Gretchen Walsh
Hunter Armstrong
Ilya Kharun
Jack Alexy
Kate Douglass
Katharine Berkoff
Marrit Steenbergen
Michelle Coleman
Nyls Korstanje
Pan Zhanle
Qin Haiyang
Sara Curtis
Sarah Sjöström
Satomi Suzuki
Shane Ryan
Shayna Jack
Taylor Ruck
Zhang Yufei