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2021 U.S. Olympic Trials Previews: Margalis Looks For 400 IM Olympic Debut

See all of our U.S. Olympic Trials previews & picks here.

2021 U.S. Olympic Swimming Trials

Women’s 400 IM

  • World Record: Katinka Hosszu (HUN) – 4:26.36 (2016)
  • American Record: Katie Hoff – 4:31.12 (2008)
  • US Open Record: Katinka Hosszu (HUN) – 4:31.07 (2015)
  • World Junior Record: Yu Yiting (CHN) – 4:35.94 (2021)
  • 2016 Olympic Champion: Katinka Hosszu (HUN) – 4:26.36
  • 2016 US Olympic Trials Champion: Maya DiRado – 4:33.73
  • Wave I Cut: 4:51.79
  • Wave II Cut: 4:47.72

The women’s 400 IM is among 2 women’s events in which both 2016 Olympians for the United States have now retired from the sport, the other being the 200 backstroke. Elizabeth Beisel and Maya DiRado‘s retirements have left the field open for 2 different 400 IMers to pick up first and second-place finishes at US Trials.

The top 8 swimmers in the event throughout the Olympic Trials qualification period (November 28, 2018 – May 30, 2021) is currently lead by Melanie Margalis‘ 4:32.53 which is followed by a fairly congested pack of 4:35 – 4:38s:

US Women’s Long Course 400 IM Rankings (11/28/2019 – 05/13/2021)

  1. Melanie Margalis – 4:32.53 (2020)
  2. Emma Weyant – 4:35.47 (2019)
  3. Brooke Forde – 4:36.06 (2019)
  4. Ella Eastin – 4:37.18 (2019)
  5. Madisyn Cox – 4:37.23 (2019)
  6. Hali Flickinger – 4:37.55 (2021)
  7. Kay Sargent – 4:37.95 (2019)
  8. Ally McHugh – 4:38.09 (2019)

While most of those top-ranked swimmers haven’t improved upon their swims from 2019, many of the same names appear in the top 8 ranked women for the 2020-2021 season.

US Women’s Long Course 400 IM Rankings (09/1/2021 – 05/13/2021)

  1. Melanie Margalis – 4:35.18
  2. Hali Flickinger – 4:37.55
  3. Madisyn Cox – 4:39.10
  4. Ally McHugh – 4:39.11
  5. Emma Weyant – 4:39.18
  6. Leah Smith – 4:40.48
  7. Brooke Forde – 4:40.59
  8. Katie Grimes – 4:41.39

Melanie Margalis has established a significant gap between herself and the field with a 4:32.53 last March which was actually the second-fastest swim in the world for 2019-2020, behind Katinka Hosszu‘s leading 4:32.30. Margalis hasn’t yet had an opportunity to show her potential on the major international scene, having only qualified to swim the 200 IM at 2017 and 2019 Worlds while Elizabeth Beisel and Leah Smith raced the 400 in the former and Brooke Forde and Ally McHugh took over in 2019.

Margalis’ 4:32.53 swim in 2020, however, was quicker than all 4 of those swimmer performances at the last 2 World Championships and was a decent drop from her previous PB of 4:35.50 from 2018. Considering her recent improvement and leading margin, Melanie Margalis is our pick for gold at the upcoming US Olympic Trials.

Hali Flickinger has been USA’s resident 200 butterflier for a few years now, 9th in Budapest at 2017 Worlds, and took silver in the event at 2019 Worlds in Gwangju. In March 2021, however, Flickinger posted a 4:37.55 400 IM which made her the second-fastest to Margalis over the past 2 seasons and gives her the 8th fastest time in the world for 2020-2021.

2020-2021 LCM Women 400 IM

YuiJPN
Ohashi
07/24
4:32.08
2Kaylee
McKeown
AUS4:32.7312/13
3Emma
Weyant
USA4:32.7607/24
4Hali
Flickinger
USA4:33.9606/13
5Melanie
Margalis
USA4:34.0806/13
6Leah
Smith
USA4:34.5506/13
7Katinka
Hosszu
HUN4:34.7605/17
8Mireia
Belmonte
ESP4:35.1307/24
View Top 26»

More recently, Flickinger swam to victory in the women’s 400 IM at the Indianapolis stop of the 2021 Pro Swim Series by posting a 4:37.73 for gold which was just shy of her 4:37.55 PB.

McHugh was also present in Indianapolis and finished second to Flickinger with a 4:40.89, trailing her season-best of 4:39.11 by just under 2 seconds while staying a decent bit over her PB of 4:34.80. McHugh raced the event for the US at 2019 Worlds, winding up in 6th place with a 4:38.34.

McHugh had a solid 1500 free performance earlier on in the meet, cracking 16 minutes for the first time with a 15:59.54. That 1500 swim makes McHugh the 8th fastest in the world this season. While she was out-swum by Flickinger in Indy, McHugh’s 1500 power combined with her 400 IM history make her a strong candidate for the A final in Omaha and could be enough to get her on to the Tokyo team.

Madisyn Cox has a lifetime best of 4:37.23 but hasn’t yet been within range of what it will take to make the team this season, holding a season-best thus far of 4:39.10. She swam that time at the Mission Viejo stop of the Pro Swim Series which was a significant improvement from her 4:47.90 swim back in January of this year. Considering that she was un-rested and in a heavy training block during that 4:39.10, Cox certainly has the potential to be competitive in the event once she’s tapered next month.

Another solid competitor will be Stanford swimmer Brooke Forde who recorded a 4:35.09 back in 2018 and place 9th in the event at 2019 World Championships with a 4:39.74. With a 4:40.59 season-best, the Stanford swimmer recently showed her strength by swimming to a gold medal in the yards version of the event at 2021 NCAAs. While Forde hasn’t been under a 4:40 yet this season, she certainly still has the potential to throw her name in the ring next month in Omaha.

Emma Weyant and Katie Grimes sit at #6 and #7 on our list and currently hold the 5th and 8th place national rankings this season. Weyant swam a 4:35.47 to take gold at the 2019 Phillips 66 Summer Nationals and has gotten under 4:40 another 3 times in the form of a 4:39.64 in December 2019, a 4:39.18 in March 2021, and a 4:39.38 in April 2021. She’ll likely need a near PB to have a shot at the Olympic team but considering her 2019 victory, Weyant is certainly not yet out of the picture.

Grimes on the other hand has seen impressive improvement upon her PB this season, getting down from a 4:51.13 from 2019 to a 4:41.39 which she hit in April 2021. 15-year-old Grimes will race at her first-ever Olympic Trials this year, fighting to get down under a 4:40.

Ella Eastin is arguably the biggest question mark on the list of top-ranked swimmers during the Olympic Trials eligibility period. Eastin holds a PB of 4:37.18 from May of 2019 but hasn’t been very active recently with her most recent 400 IM on record coming from the December 2019 US Open at which she posted a 4:40.12. Eastin has a particularly impressive record in the short course yards 400 IM, having won the NCAA title for 4 straight years from 2016-2019. Without any recent results or clarity on whether or not she will be racing at Trials, we’ll leave Eastin out of our top 8 predictions.

TOP 8 PICKS:

Place Swimmer Lifetime-best Season-best
1 Melanie Margalis 4:32.53 4:37.81
2 Ally McHugh 4:34.80 4:39.11
3 Hali Flickinger 4:37.55 4:37.55
4 Madisyn Cox 4:37.23 4:39.10
5 Brooke Forde 4:35.09 4:40.59
6 Emma Weyant 4:35.47 4:39.18
7 Katie Grimes 4:41.39 4:41.39
8 Emma Barksdale 4:40.20 4:46.19

Dark Horse: Justina Kozan (Lifetime-Best/Season-Best: 4:42.05): USC commit Justina Kozan swam to gold in the 200 IM at the 2019 World Junior Swimming Championships but, in terms of national rankings this season, has seen more success in the 400 IM. She’s currently the 9th fastest Americna woman in the 400 and ranks 14th in the 200. She’s gotten down from a 4:44.45 PB from 2019 to a 4:42.05 at the TYR 18&U Spring Cup – Irvine in April. While a 4:42.05 is still a decent amount away from an Olympic-qualifying swim, Kozan has proven her ability to perform under pressure and should she swim her way into the A final, could put up a solid fight for a podium finish.

Wave I Standout: Nora Deleske (PB: 4:48.70) – Before this season, ASU swimmer Nora Delske had a PB of 4:48.70 in the 400 IM which she set back in August of 2019. Following that swim, Deleske was unable to get back under 4:50 again for more than a year, waiting until her recent swim of 4:48.41 at the 2021 AZ SUN April Meet. The swim improved upon her 400 IM ranking heading into the summer but was still a bit short of the Wave II qualifying time in the event of 4:47.72. Considering her recent time drop and high seed at the Wave I meet, Deleske looks like a solid contender to move on and potentially shave off some more time at Wave II.

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Marcy Spann
3 years ago

i think you guys are sleeping on Hali Flickinger…….not including Melanie Margalis, she is the United States’ most versatile woman swimmer! c’mon have you guys seen how freakin’ muscular she is my lord

no but seriously Flickinger is gonna take that mfer out quick since she’s spectacular in fly & back and she can bring it home just like Margalis in the freestyle. GO BULLDOGS

my dark horse to sneak up in the A-final is Kathryn Ackerman from Michigan

Virtus
Reply to  Marcy Spann
3 years ago

Definitely not biased

Wanye Kest
3 years ago

It’s funny how a national champ and up and coming youngster doesn’t get the respect she deserves! Weyant for the gold

swimfan210_
3 years ago

I think Margalis cruises to a win in the event, about a second off her best time, and Weyant and McHugh get 2nd and 3rd – Weyant went some in-season bests that set her up for a new best time (she’s young and improving), and McHugh went a pretty solid in-season time and I think she could be right around her best time or go a new best if she has a good swim.
My predictions: Margalis 4:33.5, Weyant 4:34.7, McHugh 4:34.9, Cox/Flickinger 4:35.5, Forde 4:36.1 (might be underestimating someone though)

Nonrevhoofan
3 years ago

Ella Nelson is a dark horse to at least make Top 8. NCAA runner up with virtually no long course times since she dropped from 4:10 to 4:02 in yards. LTB of 4:46.12 from 3 long years ago.

manoj
3 years ago

i think margalis will win, weyent 2nd

Comet
3 years ago

Margalis wins it and scares the American record
Cox probably second
Wild cards are flickinger does she focus on the 200 events and weyant because she is inexperienced at this level but could make a huge drop
I don’t think forde, mchugh and Leah Smith make it

Hswimmer
Reply to  Comet
3 years ago

Weyant was 4:35 2 years ago and always consistent then HUGE drops at taper meets. She can beat Cox.

Joel
3 years ago

Kozan swam to gold at the 2019 World Swimming Championships? Wasn’t it Hosszu? Don’t think Kozan swam in it.

Smith-King-Dahlia-Manuel
Reply to  Joel
3 years ago

Someone has the facts confused:

2019 FINA World Junior Swimming Championships

Women’s 200 meter individual medley

Random123
Reply to  Joel
3 years ago

yeah, it’s a mistake. Kozan won the 2019 World JUNIOR Championships in a 2:11

manoj
3 years ago

margalis ist, weyant 2nd

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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