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2016 Rio Olympic Games: Day Four Finals Live Recap

2016 RIO OLYMPIC GAMES

The fourth night of competition at the 2016 Rio Olympic Games has arrived and with it brings one of the most anticipated head-to-head matchups that’s partially responsible for the comeback of the greatest Olympian of all time: Michael Phelps.

In a rematch of the most personal loss of his career, Phelps will get the opportunity to avenge the gold that he lost in 2012 when South African Chad le Clos beat him to the wall. Before that happens however, there will be two events.

The men’s 100m freestyle is the first of the two. Kyle Chalmers of Australia and Caeleb Dressel of the United States were the fastest this morning. Defending Olympic champion Nathan Adrian was 16th overall, and will be looking to enhance his speed in order to safely advance to the final. There’s plenty of talent jam packed into these two semifinals.

Katie Ledecky will face off Sarah Sjostrom in the 200m freestyle also prior to Phelps’ swim. Ledecky has never lost an international final in an individual event, and if she wants to keep that streak alive she’s going to have to beat Sjostrom who has been on fire as of late. In their 200m freestyle semifinal, Sjostrom beat Ledecky in a head-to-head race. Tensions high for Ledecky’s streak to continue, but it will take a lot for her to get it done.

Finally, Phelps will race Chad le Clos in the final 200m butterfly of his storied career. It’s the fifth Olympic 200m butterfly final he will race in his career, and this one is personal. He was taunted by le Clos in the ready room yesterday before the semifinal, and the look on his face said it all: he does NOT want to lose this race. Look for Phelps to do whatever necessary to get his hands on the wall first this time.

Mireia Belmonte Garcia will lead the women’s 200m butterfly semifinals. The two Americans were also quick this morning and should be in the mix to get into the championship final. Following that race the men will race in the 200m breaststroke. Anton Chupkov of Russia emerged this morning with a huge best time and Russian national record and is now in the top spot heading into tonight’s semifinals.

Katinka Hosszu will look to earn a third gold medal at these games in the 200m IM. In order to do so she’s up against Siobhan-Marie O’Connor who was electric in yesterday’s semifinals.

The Americans and the British will face-off in the final event of the night: the men’s 4x200m freestyle relay. The Americans have never lost this event at the Olympics while the British are the reigning world champions.

MEN’S 100m FREESTYLE SEMIFINALS

Start List: click here
Top Seed: 47.90 – Kyle Chalmers – Australia
World Record: 46.91 (2009) – Cesar Cielo – Brazil
JR World Record: 48.03 – Kyle Chalmers – Australia
Olympic Record: 47.05 (2008) – Eamon Sullivan – Australia
2012 Olympic Champion: 47.52 – Nathan Adrian – USA

If anybody was scared that Nathan Adrian of the United States wasn’t going to be able to make the final and defend his Olympic gold medal, he eliminated those fears with a fantastic semifinal performance to take the top seed heading into finals.

Adrian was a 47.83 to dominate the first of the two semifinals from an outside He was out quick and held on as his American counterpart Caeleb Dressel and Australia’s Cameron McEvoy chased him down. McEvoy ended up second in 47.93, Dressel third in 47.97. McEvoy took the third seed overall, Dressel the fifth.

The second semifinal is what really sets up tomorrow’s Olympic final which looks to be a duel between the Aussies and the Yanks mixed with a Canadian.

Santo Condorelli of Canada took things out hard and held on towards the end, although he was passed by Kyle Chalmers at the end. Chalmers stretched in for a time of 47.88, smashing his own world junior record and taking the second overall seed.

Condorelli managed to touch not far behind in 47.93. He’ll be heading into finals as the third overall seed tied with McEvoy. That time for Condorelli is a personal best and brings him closer to the best textile Canadian former of all time.

TOP 8

  1. Nathan Adrian – USA – 47.83
  2. Kyle Chalmers – Australia – 47.88
  3. Cameron McEvoy – Australia – 47.93 TIE
  4. Santo Condorelli – Canada – 47.93 TIE
  5. Caeleb Dressel – USA – 47.97
  6. Pieter Timmers – Belgium – 48.14
  7. Duncan Scott – Great Britain – 48.20
  8. Marcelo Chierghini – Brazil – 48.23

WOMEN’S 200m FREESTYLE FINAL

Start List: click here
Top Seed: 1:54.65 – Sarah Sjostrom – Sweden
World Record: 1:52.98 (2009) – Frederica Pellegrini – Italy
JR World Record: 1:56.12 – Shen Duo – China
Olympic Record: 1:53.61 (2012) – Allison Schmitt – USA
2012 Olympic Champion: 1:53.61 – Allison Schmitt – USA

This final appeared to be the one hitch in Katie Ledecky‘s schedule, the one event where she wasn’t the favorite to win, the one final that potentially could disturb the her streak of never losing an international final in an individual event.

It appeared to be wrong.

Emma McKeon of Australia took things out as fast as could be, turning under world record pace at the 100-meter mark and leading both Sarah Sjostrom of Sweden and Ledecky of the United States.

On that third 50, Ledecky began to pull ahead with Sjostrom also moving up. The three of them charged ahead of the rest of the field, approaching the last wall all with hopes of taking home the gold.

Ledecky inched out in front and looked like she was going to take the win, but Sjostrom also began to move. With 25-meters to go it appeared as though Sjostrom was going to pass Ledecky, but at the end Ledecky found another gear and began to surge. She rocketed into the wall to win her third gold of these games with a 1:53.73 performance.

Sjostrom was second in 1:54.08, and McKeon held on for the bronze in 1:54.92.

  1. Katie Ledecky – USA – 1:53.73
  2. Sarah Sjostrom – Sweden – 1:54.08
  3. Emma McKeon – Australia – 1:54.92
  4. Frederica Pellegrini – Italy – 1:55.18
  5. Shen Duo – China – 1:55.25
  6. Bronte Barratt – Australia – 1:56.25
  7. Michelle Coleman – Sweden – 1:56.27
  8. Charlotte Bonnet – France – 1:56.29

MEN’S 200m BUTTERFLY FINALS

Start List: click here
Top Seed: 1:53.96 – Tamas Kenderesi – Hungary
World Record: 1:51.51 (2009)- Michael Phelps – USA
JR World Record: 1:55.92 – Andrew Seliskar – USA
Olympic Record: 1:52.03 (2008) – Michael Phelps – USA
2012 Olympic Champion: 1:52.96 – Chad le Clos – South Africa

The greatest Olympia of all time was challenged in the 200m butterfly, his signature event. There’s one thing about the greatest Olympian of all time that separates him from the remainder of his competitors, his absolute resilience to losing, his domineering hatred of losing.

Chad le Clos of South Africa and Laszlo Cseh of Hungary appeared to be the two swimmers who could beat Phelps in this race. Everyone speculated that Phelps would lose after watching Cseh dominate at the European championships earlier this year.

At the 100-meter wall tonight, Phelps turned in first. Cseh was second, le Clos was third. Le Clos appeared to be saving for the last 100 where he usually makes his move, but Phelps never even let him get past his shoulder.

At the 150-wall Phelps turned first, Le Clos second, and Daiya Seto of Japan was third. That last 50 was rough for Phelps, he was well ahead as le Clos started to fade but the field began to creep up on him.

The touch was close, but Phelps got his hands on the wall first, earning his 24th Olympic medal and 14th individual Olympic medal, tying the record for most individual Olympic medals. His time of 1:53.36 got the job done, taking down Masato Sakai of Japan by just four one-hundredths of a second.

Tamas Kendersi was third in 1:53.62.

Le Clos was fourth overall, Cseh was seventh.

Phelps also become the oldest swimmer to ever win an individual Olympic gold medal in the process.

Following his win Phelps threw up the number one sign. Jumped on the lane rope, and signaled to the crowd to applause him. His dominance in the event was solidified, redeeming himself from the 2012 loss.

  1. Michael Phelps – USA – 1:53.36
  2. Masato Sakai – Japan – 1:53.40
  3. Tamas Kenderesi – Hungary – 1:53.63
  4. Chad le Clos – South Africa – 1:54.06
  5. Daiya Seto – Japan – 1:54.82
  6. Viktor Bromer – Denkmark – 1:55.64
  7. Laszlo Cseh – Hungary – 1:56.24
  8. Louis Croenen – Belgium – 1:57.04

WOMEN’S 200m BUTTERFLY SEMIFINALS

Start List: click here
Top Seed: 2:05.41 – Mireia Belmonte Garcia – Spain
World Record: 2:01.81 (2009) – Liu Zige – China
JR World Record: 2:06.51 – Zhang Yufei – China
Olympic Record: 2:04.06 (2012) – Jiao Liuyang  – Chinga
2012 Olympic Champion: 2:04.06 – Jiao Liuyang  – China

Madeline Groves of Australia made up for her morning swim with a very strong performance which once again puts her in contention for tomorrow’s gold medal in this event. The Aussie managed to drop a time of 2:05.66 which was almost a full second faster than anyone else in the field.

Mireia Belmonte Garcia of Spain, another swimmer who’s in the mix to win gold tomorrow, was a 2:06.52, swimming in the same semifinal as Groves and finishing second overall. Defending world champion Natsumi Hoshi of Japan touched in third with a 2:06.74 – that gives her the fourth overall seed.

Sitting in third overall is Zhou Yiun of China who won the first of the two semifinals. Yiun rocked a 2:06.52, putting up the exact same time as Belmonte.

Both Americans managed to squeek into the final. Hali Flickinger was a 2:07.02 for sixth overall, Cammile Adams was eighth in 2:07.22.

TOP 8

  1. Madeline Groves – Australia – 2:05.66
  2. Mireia Belmont Garcia – Spain – 2:06.52
  3. Zhou Yiun – China – 2:06.52
  4. Natsumi Hoshi – Japan – 2:06.74
  5. Zhang Yufei – China – 2:06.95
  6. Hali Flickinger – USA – 2:07.02
  7. Brianna Throssell – Australia – 2:07.19
  8. Cammile Adams – USA – 2:07.22

MEN’S 200m BREASTSTROKE SEMIFINALS

Start List: click here
Top Seed: 2:07.93 – Anton Chupkov – Russia
World Record: 2:07.01 (2012) – Yamaguchi Akihiro – Japan
JR World Record: 2:09.64 – Anton Chupkov – Russia
Olympic Record: 2:07.28 (2012) – Daniel Gyurta – Hungary
2012 Olympic Champion: 2:07.28 – Daniel Gyurta – Hungary

The men’s 200m breaststroke is heating up to be one of the tightest races of these games with plenty of swimmers edging into the 2:07-low territory and putting a scare on the world record.

This time around it was Ippei Watanabe of Japan rocking an Olympic record time of 2:07.22, bettering the 2:07.28 time that Daniel Gyurta of Hungary swam in 2012 to take home the gold.

Watanabe was fast, but amazingly there were four other swimmers who managed to go under 2:08 in order to get into the finals. The closest to him was Andrew Willis of Great Britain in a 2:07.73.

He was just five one-hundredths faster than Josh Prenot‘s 2:07.78. Behind Prenot was Yasuhiro Koseki of Japan in 2:L07.91 and Kevin Cordes, also of the United States, with a 2:07.99.

With five swimmers under 2:08, it’s likely going to take a world record or close to it in order to win the gold tomorrow night. All eight swimmers are capable of dropping an incredible time. All eight swimmers are within 1.19 seconds of the current world record.

TOP 8

  1. Ippei Watanabe – Japan – 2:07.22 OR
  2. Andrew Willis – Great Britain – 2:07.73
  3. Josh Prenot – USA – 2:07.78
  4. Yasuhiro Koseki – Japan – 2:07.91
  5. Kevin Cordes – USA – 2:07.99
  6. Anton Chupkov – Russia – 2:08.08
  7. Marco Koch – Germany – 2:08.12
  8. Dmitriy Balandin – Kazakhstan – 2:08.20

WOMEN’S 200m IM  FINAL

Start List: click here
Top Seed: 2:07.57 – Siobhan-Marie O’Connor – Great Britain
World Record: 2:06.12 (2015) – Katinka Hosszu – Hungary
JR World Record: 2:10.76 – Imai Runa – Japan
Olympic Record: 2:07.45 (2016) – Katinka Hosszu – Hungary
2012 Olympic Champion: 2:07.57 – Ye Shiwen – China

Katinka Hosszu managed to win her third gold of these Olympic Games, touching first in the women’s 200m IM in order to beat Great Britain’s Soibhan-Marie O’Connor.

Hosszu put a scare on her world record, but ultimately fell short, posting a time of  2:06.58 to break the Olympic record she set in prelims.

O’Connor managed to hold on for the silver medal, touching in at 2:06.88 to record her personal best time in the event.

American Maya DiRado ended up finishing in the bronze medal position, adding to the silver she won in the 400m IM earlier in the meet. DiRado was a 2:08.79. Her American teammate Melanie Margalis was fourth in 2:09.21.

  1. Katinka Hosszu – Hungary – 2:06.58 OR
  2. Siobhan-Marie O’Connor – 2:06.88
  3. Maya Dirado – USA – 2:08.79
  4. Melanie Margalis – USA – 2:09.21
  5. Alicia Coutts – Australia – 2:10.88
  6. Sydney Pickrem – Canada – 2:11.22
  7. Viktoria Andreeva – Russia – 2:12.28
  8. Ye Shiwen – China – 2:13.56

 

MEN’S 4x200m FREESTYLE RELAY FINAL

Start List: click here
Top Seed: 7:06.31 – Great Britain
World Record: 6:58.56 (2008) – USA
JR World Record: 7:13.76 – USA
Olympic Record: 6:58.56 (2008) – USA
2012 Olympic Champion: 6:59.70 – USA

The American men claimed gold on the 4x200m freestyle relay giving Michael Phelps his second gold medal of the night, his 21st gold overall, and his third of these games.

Their winning time of 7:00.66 closed in on the world record performance from 2008 and managed to take back the relay from the British who won it at last year’s world championships.

The British finished second.

  1. United States – 7:00.66
  2. Great Britain – 7:03.13
  3. Japan – 7:03.50
  4. Australia – 7:04.18
  5. Russian Federation – 7:05.70
  6. Germany – 7:07.28
  7. Netherlands – 7:09.10
  8. Belgium – 7:11.64

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john26
8 years ago

After O’Connor’s swim, it seems like 4:26 is a lot stronger than 2:06.1

conchita
8 years ago

As much as it feels wrong… I can understand the logic. It’s the Olympic Games, you HAVE to go with your best relay options. There can’t be too much room for feelings just because the USA has a 99% chance of winning…

rans
8 years ago

It’s going to be another incredible night!

Daniela Kapser
8 years ago

Germany’s Paul Biedermann swam the last rrace of his career tonight in the 4 x 200 m freestyle relay, Germany finished 6th. He currently holds the WR in the 200 and 400 m freestyle. But he wasn’t able to medal at Olympic Games. He had an awesome career and was an important role model for German swimming. After his last race he thanked his family, friends, sponsors and all the German fans who got up at 3 am in Germany to watch the Olympic swimming on TV. Thank you Paul and all the best!

Gary P
Reply to  Daniela Kapser
8 years ago

Classy.

Boomer
8 years ago

Does anyone know why phelps was laughing so hard during the medal ceremony (after the national anthem)?? Let us in on the joke please

Stay Human
Reply to  Boomer
8 years ago

Yeah his Baltimore yelled the “O” in the last line of the anthem instead of “Oh say does that…” because it’s something Orioles fans due in Baltimore, apparently.

North
8 years ago

O’Connor, Kenderesi, and Haas are going to be stars in Tokyo.

Robbos
Reply to  North
8 years ago

Somehow think Chalmers will be the big one too!!!!

Caeleb Dressel\'s Occupied Stall
Reply to  North
8 years ago

Lets not forget duncan scott and caeleb dressel

bigNowhere
Reply to  North
8 years ago

Ryan Murphy

SwimmerFoxJet
8 years ago

I was worried in the 4×200 relay. He is beat, tired. Ouchie
1:53.3 most impressive race since comeback.
2015
He had prelims, then finals, he was also just 30

2016 31 years old, concentration shattered by dudes in the crowd
Two bad last turns plus that semi final yesterday and the relay.
Phelps 1:53.3 is more impressive than 1:52.9 from last year.
BROWNISH, CSEH WENT 1:56.2
Chad??? You are an …

8 years ago

Mary T Meagher would be the #2 seed going into tomorrow’s 200Fly final.

Springbrook
Reply to  coacherik
8 years ago

It was worth reading through 700 comments just to get to this one, which is priceless. Bravo!

Ice age swimmer
Reply to  coacherik
8 years ago

Right, and just imagine if she had a tech suit and under waters!

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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