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2017 FINA World Championships: Day 4 Finals Live Recap

2017 FINA WORLD SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIPS

Last night we were treated to an incredible THREE world records, while an additional WR fell by the wayside already this morning. With 5 finals and 4 semifinals, the stage will be set in Budapest for more lightning-speed swimming.

WOMEN’S 200 FREE – FINAL

It looked like a battle between Australian Emma McKeon and American Katie Ledecky, but Italy’s reigning world record holder in this event kicked in another gear the final 25m to overtake them both at the end for gold. Pellegrini registered the only sub-1:55 time of the night, earning a time of 1:54.73 for the sole gold. This marks her 7th consecutive world championships medaling in this event.

In a thrilling battle down the stretch, McKeon and Ledecky wound up tying for silver, marking the American’s first silver in a major international championships. Both of these women were faster last night in 1:54.99 for McKeon and 1:54.69 for Ledecky, but each wound up slamming the touchpad in 1:55.18 for the tie.

Comparative splits for top 3 finishers:

Pellegrini – 56.41/58.32 = 1:54.73
Ledecky – 56.09/59.09 = 1:55.18
McKeon – 55.83/59.35 = 1:55.18

Ledecky has won the women’s 1500m and 400m freestyle, as well as earned gold on the women’s 4x100m freestyle relay. McKeon also has two additional silvers, one from the 100m fly and one as a member of her nation’s 4x100m free relay.

Of note, in 5th place Michigan Wolverine Siobhan Haughey became the first Hong Kong swimmer ever under the 1:56 mark with a final time of 1:55.96, beating her time from Rio.

MEN’S 100 FREE – SEMIFINAL

  • World Record: Cesar Cielo, 46.91, 2009
  • Championship Record: Cesar Cielo, 46.91, 2009
  • Junior World Record: Kyle Chalmers, 47.58, 2016
  • Top 8:
    1. Mehdy Metella, France, 47.65
    2. Caeleb Dressel, USA, 47.66
    3. Nathan Adrian, USA, 47.85
    4. Cameron McEvoy, Australia, 47.95
    5. Jack Cartwright, Australia, 47.97
    6. Duncan Scott, GBR, 48.10
    7. Sergii Shevstov, 48.30
    8. Marcelo Chierighini, 48.31

As expected the two semifinals of the men’s 100m freestyle were very quick, with Brazil’s Marcelo Chierghini’s 48.31 as the minimum time to qualify for tomorrow night’s final. With the help of his bigt-ime start, France’s Mehdy Metella touched in 47.65, which besides Caeleb Dressel‘s lead-off split of 47.26, is the fastest time in the world this year. For Metella, tonight’s effort marks the first time he’s delved into sub-48 second territory.

Both Americans, Nathan Adrian and Dressel, comfortably made it into the final with solid swims of 47.66 and 47.85. Each looked smooth and controlled and will be huge threats for the podium tomorrow night.

Two Australians were able to make it into the final. Cameron McEvoy, the fastest man ever in a textile in this event (47.04), wasn’t a surprise, but the fact young Jack Cartwright made it in is a nice boost for Australia. In the absence of 100m freestyle Olympic champion Kyle Chalmers (although he is in the stands), the fact that this 18-year-old crushed a personal best under huge pressure is a great sign that the Dolphins’ medal haul may indeed include a gold in the near future. Cartwright had never been sub-48 before tonight.

Great Britain’s Duncan Scott is lurking as the 6th seed in 48.10. Heading into this championships, Scott held the world’s fastest time in 47.90 from GBR’s national championships where he became the first Brit ever under 48.

WOMEN’S 50 BACK – SEMIFINAL

  • World Record: Zhao Jing, 27.06, 2009
  • Championship Record: Zhao Jing, 27.06, 2009
  • Junior World Record: Minna Atherton, 27.49, 2016
  • Top 8:
    1. Etiene Medeiros, Brazil, 27.18
    2. Fu Yuanhui, China, 27.19
    3. Kathleen Baker, USA, 27.48
    4. Georgia Davies, GBR 27.49
    5. Emily Seebohm, Australia, 27.51
    6. Holly Barratt, Australia, 27.51
    7. Aliaksandra, Herasimenia, Belarus, 27.54
    8. Wang Xueer, China, 27.60

The women’s backstroke splash n’ dash was exactly that, a mad fury of speed over the water across two semifinals. Brazil’s Etiene Medeiros led the field tonight in 27.18, tying Fu Yuanhui for the 3rd fastest performance in history.

Yuanhui also put up an impressive time, just .01 off of Medeiros, while Kathleen Baker of the USA nailed a new American Record in 27.48. British swimmer Georgia Davies also registered a new national record in 27.49, while the oldest Aussie rookie ever to make a green and gold international squad, Holly Barratt, made the final in 6th with 27.51 tying teammate Emily Seebohm.

Of note, newly-minted 100m back world record holder, Kylie Masse of Canada, finished outside the top 8.

MEN’S 200 FLY – FINAL

  • World Record: Michael Phelps, 1:51.51, 2009
  • Championship Record: Michael Phelps, 1:51.51, 2009
  • Junior World Record: Kristof Milak, 1:53.79, 2017
  • GOLD – Chad Le Clos, South Africa, 1:53.33
  • SILVER – Laszlo Cseh, Hungary, 1:53.72
  • BRONZE – Daiya Seto, Japan, 1:54.21

South Africa’s Chad Le Clos swam a gutsy race of speeding out to the lead and splitting 53.21 and simply held on for the final 50m to hold off a chargning Hungarian in Laszlo Cseh. Le Clos got the job done, however, and clocked 1:53.33 for the win.

Cseh raced to a roaring crowd for silver in 1:53.72, well-off his own personal best of 1:52.70 from last year’s European Championships, while Daiya Seto nailed a bronze with 1:54.21 after claiming the top seed last night in a PB of 1:54.03.

American Jack Conger clocked a solid 1:54.88 for 5th in the race.

MEN’S 50 BREAST – FINAL

  • World Record: Adam Peaty, 25.95, 2017
  • Championship Record: Adam Peaty, 25.95, 2017
  • Junior World Record: Nicolo Martinenghi, 26.97, 2017
  1. Adam Peaty, GBR 25.99
  2. Joao Gomes, BRA 26.52
  3. Cameron van der Burgh, 26.60

Adam Peaty was the class of the field once again, posting the 2nd sub-26 second 50 breast in history with a 25.99 for gold. That’s just .04 off of his world record time of 25.95 from semifinals. Joao Gomes broke the Brazilian national record with a 26.52 for silver, touching out South Africa’s Cameron van der Burgh (26.60). Van der Burgh settled for bronze after he scratched out of the 100 breaststroke to, assumedly, focus on this.

Gomes’ teammate Felipe Lima was 26.78 for 4th, with American Kevin Cordes in there for fifth at 26.80. Fabio Scozzoli of Italy was 26.91 to touch 6th, while Kirill Prigoda (27.01) and Ilya Shymanovich (27.27) were on the other side of 27.0 for 7th and 8th.

WOMEN’S 200 FLY – SEMIFINAL

  • World Record: Liu Sige, 2:01.81, 2009
  • Championship Record: Jessicah Schipper, 2:03.41, 2009
  • Junior World Record: Suzuka Hasegawa, 2:06.29, 2017
  1. Franziska Hentke, GER 2:06.29
  2. Zhou Yilin, CHN 2:06.63
  3. Mireia Belmonte, ESP 206.71
  4. Suzuka Hasegawa, JPN 2:07.01
  5. Zhang Yufei, CHN 2:07.11
  6. Katinka Hosszu, HUN 2:07.37
  7. Liliana Szilagyi, HUN 2:07.67
  8. An Sehyeon 2:07.82

Semifinal 1 saw an Asian top 4, with Zhou Yilin leading the way at 2:06.63, the only sub-2:07 of the heat. She was followed by world junior record holder Suzuka Hasegawa (2:07.01) of Japan, with China’s Zhang Yufei right behind at 2:07.11. South Korea’s An Sehyeon touched at 2:07.82 for fourth, just ahead of Hali Flickinger, who was 2:07.89 for fifth.

That 2:07.89 wasn’t good enough for Flickinger, though, as the 2nd semifinal saw four women go faster than her. Fransizka Hentke of Germany swam a strong race for first at 2:06.29, followed by a hard-charging Mireia Belmonte (2:06.71). Hungarians Katinka Hosszu and Liliana Szilagyi made it through to the final, too, going 2:07.37 and 2:07.67, respectively.

MEN’S 200 IM – SEMIFINAL

  • World Record: Ryan Lochte, 1:54.00, 2011
  • Championship Record: Ryan Lochte, 1:54.00, 2011
  • Junior World Record: Qin Haiyang, 1:57.54, 2017
  1. Chase Kalisz, USA 1:55.88
  2. Kosuke Hagino, JPN 1:56.04
  3. Max Litchfield, GBR 1:56.70
  4. Jeremy Desplanches, SUI 1:56.86
  5. Daiya Seto, JPN 1:56.92
  6. Phillip Heintz, GER 1:57.27
  7. Wang Shun, CHN 1:57.39
  8. Qin Haiyang, CHN 1:57.81

Chase Kalisz of the USA erupted for a new personal best to dominate semifinal 1, going 1:55.88. That was over a second ahead of 2nd place Daiya Seto of Japan, who touched back at 1:56.92. Kalisz looked great and gave himself a lead after the breaststroke, and he’s looking like he has a great shot at a gold tomorrow night.

Taking semifinal 2 was Kosuke Hagino, the other Japanese swimmer, at 1:56.04. Max Litchfield of GBR and Jeremy Desplanches of Switzerland were neck and neck behind Hagino, ending up 1:56.70 and 1:56.86, respectively. Phillip Heintz gives Germany their second finals qualifier after Hentke, his 1:57.27 good for 6th after semis here.

Two Chinese men closed out for 7th and 8th– Wang Shun and Qin Haiyang, at 1:57.39 and 1:57.81. American Abrahm Devine was 1:58.0, but sits at 10th after semifinals and won’t swim the final.

MEN’S 800 FREE – FINAL

  • World Record: Zhang Lin, 7:32.12, 2009
  • Championship Record: Zhang Lin, 7:32.12, 2009
  • Junior World Record: Mack Horton, 7:45.67, 2013
  1. Gabriele Detti, ITA 7:40.77
  2. Wojciech Wojdak, POL 7:41.73
  3. Gregorio Paltrinieri, ITA 7:42.44

Gabriele Detti got out to an early lead, cruising ahead of the field. Gregorio Paltrinieri, though, edged ahead for the lead, and the race moved to the center lanes, as Paltrinieri and Poland’s Wojciech Wojdak did battle on the back half of the race. Detti had another gear at the end, though, and he surged past the leaders on the last 50 to win it all in 7:40.77, setting new Italian and European records in the process. Those records used to belong to Paltrinieri at 7:40.81.

Wojdak (7:41.73) and Paltrinieri (7:42.44) earned silver and bronze.

Henrik Christiansen was fourth in 7:44.21, while Sun Yang faded to fifth in 7:48.87. American Zane Grothe was 8th in 7:52.43.

MIXED 4×100 MEDLEY RELAY – FINAL

  • World Record: USA, 3:40.29, 2017
  • Championship Record: USA, 3:40.29, 2017
  • Junior World Record: Russia, 3:45.85, 2015
  1. USA 3:38.56
  2. Australia 3:41.21
  3. Canada/China 3:41.25

Team USA dominated the field, putting together a 3:38.56 to take almost two seconds off of their world record from prelims, which had four completely separate swimmers. All four legs swam very well for the Americans, but it was Caeleb Dressel who unleashed a 49.92 split on the butterfly leg, the real difference maker for them. That’s an incredibly fast swim, and it’s nearly a full second better than his lifetime best.

Matt Grevers led off in 52.32, faster than his silver medal time, with Lilly King following in 1:04.15. Remarkably, she held her ground despite being the only female breaststroke leg in the field. Dressel gave way to Simone Manuel, who put together a 52.17, nearly an identical split to what she did on the end of the women’s gold medal 4×100 free relay.

The race for silver was a scramble, with Australia just getting ahead at 3:41.21. They had a nice 52.30 anchor leg from Bronte Campbell. Canada and China ended up tying for the bronze, and both teams had some impressive legs. Canada was led off by Kylie Masse at 58.22, another great time from her, and Penny Oleksiak put together a very strong 56.18 fly split, with Yuri Kisil anchoring in 47.71. Xu Jiayu led off in 52.37 for China, with Yan Zibei dropping a 58.98 on the breast.

GBR was out of medal range at 5th, though they were just tenths back at 3:41.56. They had a fantastic middle grouping with Adam Peaty (57.12) and James Guy (50.51), but the rest of their relay wasn’t strong enough to push them to a medal.

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KSchwim
7 years ago

Race videos?

bobo gigi
7 years ago

Quick comments about day 4

Women’s 200 free. The 3 swimmers expected on the podium, but not in the expected order. Yes, it is a surprise. But it’s good for KL in my opinion. It proves she’s human after all. Many people started to doubt about that. She was tired. The schedule at worlds is tough for her. 3 of her 4 individual events are on the first 4 days. And the 200 free final comes after 2 rounds of 1500 free. She needs to be close to her top to win that event. In 2015 she was younger. This year she’s not as well prepared as last year. And it’s logical. Post-olympic year. New training environment. New coach. Busy… Read more »

GARYP
Reply to  bobo gigi
7 years ago

How you feeling about that Metella prediction, now? Dressel flat smoked him when it counted.

AWSI DOOGER
7 years ago

I was disgusted that Simone received the glamour anchor spot at night while Mallory was relegated to the semifinal. If you win Trials and then break the American record in your first major international long course final, there shouldn’t be any thinking or favoritism involved.

That coach should be strung up from the rafters by his extremities and forced to dangle there for the remainder of the meet.

Jake
Reply to  AWSI DOOGER
7 years ago

I’m not happy with Simone over Mallory either, but come on let’s not resort to violent hyperboles.

GARYP
Reply to  AWSI DOOGER
7 years ago

Simone outswam Mallory in the 4×100 Free relay (R/T adjusted splits) and ended up splitting much faster in the Mixed Medley final than Mallory did in the prelim. Coach had reasonable justification, and was then vindicated for his choice.

Anonymous
7 years ago

I’ve thought about it a lot and I just really don’t like how Conger swims his 2Fly. He has a lot of speed for a 2Flyer but he goes out slow, no legs and no arms. He gets to the second 100 and picks up his tempo and kicks a little more but doesn’t use his hips very much.
In my opinion, he should go out a little harder and use his legs the second 50 and focus more on his hips the last 50 to get that extra snap to power through the finish. Going a little faster out front should make it easier to maintain a faster pace since he won’t have to pick it up as… Read more »

Torchbearer
7 years ago

My take on the womens 200m….

I think Ledecky got tactically outgunned in her first real dog fight for a long time…and McKeon and Pelligrini unwittingly tore her race plan apart.
1. Ledecky tried to keep up to McKeon and went out too fast. McKeon is a sprinter and well over a second faster than Ledecky over 100m. There was just a feeling that Ledecky was out of her pace comfort zone.
2. When Ledecky raced to catch McKeon on the third and fourth lap she couldn’t pull away as usual….which left Ledecky in unchartered waters. What to do now?
3. As chance had it, Pelligrini was racing a better pace, and lurked just close enough to… Read more »

GARYP
Reply to  Torchbearer
7 years ago

You’re just wrong. Look at her split comparisons from prelims to finals. She swam almost exactly the same race for the first 150. She just didn’t have the usual pop on the last 50.

GARYP
Reply to  GARYP
7 years ago

should have said “semi’s to finals”

Bob
7 years ago

World champs are fast

Bob
7 years ago

I can see both ways of the argument. One side doesn’t appreciate the new addition of the 400 mixed relays while one side enjoys them. I personally like them because it’s a small andrenaline rush with how fast everything can change. Some people say that it Just adds additional yardage to stacked schedules, but on the other side of things, we wouldn’t be able to see break out performances such as Caeleb Dressel and his 49.9. I understand both sides though. On a completely different note, writing a comment on a phone sucks. Auto correct is terrible ???

Baker-King-Vollmer-Manuel
7 years ago

USA Swimming
2016 Rio Olympics
Women’s 200 m freestyle – gold
Women’s 400 m freestyle – gold, bronze
Women’s 1500 m freestyle – Tokyo 2020
Women’s 100 m backstroke – silver
Women’s 100 m breaststroke – gold, bronze
Women’s 100 m butterfly – bronze
Women’s 200 m individual medley – bronze
Women’s 4 x 100 m freestyle relay – silver

USA Swimming
2017 FINA World Aquatics Championships
Women’s 200 m freestyle – silver
Women’s 400 m freestyle – gold, silver
Women’s 1500 m freestyle – gold
Women’s 100 m backstroke – silver
Women’s 100 m breaststroke – gold, silver
Women’s 100 m butterfly –… Read more »

Baker-King-Vollmer-Manuel
Reply to  Baker-King-Vollmer-Manuel
7 years ago

USA Swimming
2017 FINA World Aquatics Championships
Personal Bests (Summer Olympic events)
Comerford – women’s 100 m freestyle (women’s 4 x 100 m freestyle relay final)
Smith – women’s 200 m freestyle (final)
Smoliga – women’s 100 m backstroke (final)
King – women’s 100 m breaststroke (final)
Meili – women’s 100 m breaststroke (final)
Worrell – women’s 100 m butterfly (final)
Margalis – women’s 200 m individual medley (semifinals)

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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