2024 HUNGARIAN NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS
- Tuesday, April 9th – Friday, April 12th
- Duna Arena, Budapest, Hungary
- Prelims at 9am local (3am ET), Finals at 5pm local (11am ET)
- SwimSwam Preview #1/Preview #2
- Day 1 Recap/Day 2 Recap/Day 3 Prelims Recap/Day 3 Finals Recap
- Start Lists/Results
- Livestream (Prelims)
While many eyes were on 34-year-old new mom Katinka Hosszu in tonight’s final of the women’s 400m IM at the Hungarian National Championships, a teenager made history en route to gold.
15-year-old Vivien Jackl ripped the best time of her young career, beating a veteran-heavy field to finish in 4:34.96 to top the podium.
The teen split 1:02.98/1:07.22/1:22.51/1:02.36 to claim the gold ahead of veteran Boglarka Kapas, with Kapas registering 4:38.92.
Viktoria Mihalyvari-Farkas rounded out the podium in 4:39.43, Italy’s Francesca Fresia was 4th in 4:41.57 and former world record holder Katinka Hosszu finished 5th in 4:47.62.
Jackl’s time crushed her previous personal best of 4:40.66 to establish a new 16&U Hungarian Age Record and qualify for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.
Additionally, Jackl’s time tonight erased the European Junior Record in the event, a time of 4:38.53 put on the books by Spaniard Alba Vazquez Ruiz in 2019.
Jackl’s effort rendered the teen Hungary’s #3 performer of all time in this women’s 400m IM.
Top 5 Hungarian Women LCM 400 IM Performers All-Time
- Katinka Hosszu – 4:26.36, 2016
- Zsuzsanna Jakabos – 4:34.50, 2013
- Vivien Jackl – 4:34.96, 2024
- Viktoria Mihalyvari-Farkas – 4:35.99, 2021
- Eva Risztov – 4:36.17, 2002
Jackl now ranks #3 in the world on the season and punches her ticket to the Paris 2024 Olympic Games. For additional perspective, Jackl’s result would rank her 4th among all-time performing American 15-16-year-old girls.
Canada’s Summer McIntosh still owns the World Junior Record, however, courtesy of the other-worldly mark of 4:25.87 the teen unleashed at last year’s Canadian World Championships Trials.
2023-2024 LCM Women 400 IM
McINTOSH
4:24.34 WR
2 | Kaylee MCKEOWN | AUS | 4:28.22 | 04/18 |
3 | Katie GRIMES | USA | 4:32.45 | 04/13 |
4 | Freya Colbert | GBR | 4:34.01 | 04/04 |
5 | Anastasia GORBENKO | ISR | 4:34.87 | 06/01 |
Milak 50.99 in the 100fly finals. I think he’ll be 50 low if not 49 high by Paris
hope someday she could break the WR
My prediction for Paris w400IM:
Summer McIntosh 🥇
Vivien Jackl 🥈
Jenna Forrester 🥉
Times?
McIntosh: 4:25.12 WR
Jackl: 4:30.29
Forrester: 4:30.75
But I do think Grimes is still the favourite for silver, I would just like to see this order instead lol.
Yet another highly talented Hungarian IM er. Why am I not surprised?
The swimming Gods love sending us young Hungarian IM’ers with absurdly good backstrokes, don’t they? Incredible swim, Congrats!
Apparently, she was 4:46 as a 12 year old in the 400IM, and she *only* dropped 6 seconds in 2 years (her 14 year old PB is 4:40), so her trajectory is actually steepening.
she has trained with the same no-name coach since forever, alone, no team in a pool that’s nice barely modern, so I think she can find a lot of ways to improve (no-name doesn’t mean she is not an awesome coach, just that she isn’t from the Szechy klan)
plus, I am not following your math. At all.
My math is pretty simple.
4:46 at 12.
4:40 at 14.
4:34 at 15.
She dropped the same amount of time in the last year (between 14-15 years of age) than the 2 years before that (between 12-14 years of age). That means she is improving more rapidly right now than she did younger, which is a good sign. Also, none of that was meant as an insult, only as an observation.
oh, got. I misread.
wonderfull fly and excellent fast backstroke, but the breaststroke is quite poor, (technically) a lot of moment she can bee better in breaststroke.
Eva Riszto = Eva Risztov