2022 FINA World Aquatics Championships
- June 18-25, 2022 (pool swimming)
- Budapest, Hungary
- Duna Arena
- LCM (50-meter format)
- Meet Central
By The Numbers:
- World Record: Ryan Lochte (USA) โ 1:54.00 (2011)
- World Junior Record: Hubert Kรณs (HUN) โ 1:56.99
- 2020 Olympic Champion: Wang Shun (CHN) โ 1:55.00
- 2019 World Champion: Daiya Seto (JPN) โ 1:56.14
Last year, most of the excitement surrounding the menโs 200 IM had to do with Michael Andrewโs race strategy. It was hard to resist the drama of him bursting out of the gates on the first three legs only to be reeled in by multiple people on the final 50.
Andrew isnโt racing the 200 IM this year, choosing to focus on other events, but that doesnโt mean thereโs no reason to get excited. All the Tokyo Olympic medalists will be in the race, as will a cast full of storylines. Veterans looking for redemption, Newcomers looking to establish themselves, and you need two hands to count the number of national record holders in the field. It should be a good one.
THE OLYMPIC PODIUM
Wang Shun unleashed a 1:55.00 in Tokyo to win the gold medal. In doing so, he set an Asian Record and became the third-fastest performer of all time, trailing only Ryan Lochte and Michael Phelps. Heโs been a consistent medal threat since 2015, winning bronze at three straight major meets in Kazan (’15), Rio (’16) and Budapest (’17). This season, he has the third-fastest time in the world at 1:56.33, and is in prime position to follow up his Olympic gold with his first LC World Championship title.
Itโs Duncan Scott who holds this yearโs top time, having clocked 1:56.08 at British Trialsโa meet where he also dropped a monster PB in the 400 IM. Scott is incredibly versatile and has also been constantly improving. This event is a good example of thatโin Tokyo, he upgraded from fifth place at the 2019 Worlds to an Olympic silver medal. That swim was a lifetime best of 1:55.28, taking even more time off the National Record he set of 1:55.90 at the British Olympic Trials. This year, heโll be looking for gold.
However, Scott recently revealed on Instagram that he’s come down with COVID-19 just three weeks out from the meet, which is something to keep in mind.
Switzerlandโs Jeremy Desplanches took bronze at the Olympics last summer, and like Wang, has been consistently in the medal hunt for years. The 27-year-old Swiss athlete won gold at the 2018 European Championships and silver at the 2019 Worlds, having also made the final the last time the Worlds were held in Budapest in 2017. Desplanches has only been 1:59.23 this season, and given that there are six in this field who have already been 1:56, heโll need to quickly find his form and be much closer to his 1:56.17 best to retain a step on the podium.
BEEN HERE BEFORE
After a disappointing home Olympic Games where he only made one final, Japanese star Daiya Seto bounced back at Short Course Worlds in December, winning gold in the 200 and 400 IM. Seto also spent this year sampling different training environments in the U.S.
The 28-year-old has proven himself time and time again in the medley events on the global stage, and comes in as the defending world champion after winning gold three years ago in Gwangju. At Japanese Trials, he opted for this event over the 200 fly, showing that his focus is here, and put up a time of 1:57.09. Look for him to make a serious run at becoming a back-to-back World Champion in this eventโsomething he’s already done in the 400 IM in 2013 and 2015.
While itโs the 400 IM where he won his Olympic gold last year, itโs hard to count Chase Kalisz out when it comes to the IMs. He finished 12th in Tokyo and didnโt make the final, so heโll be looking to bounce back from that here. His lifetime best is 1:55.40, which makes him the ninth-fastest performer of all time. In Greensboro, he won in a time of 1:56.21, setting himself up nicely not only to make the final, but to be in the hunt for a medal.
Like Kalisz, the 400 IM is New Zealandโs Lewis Clareburtโs better race. Nevertheless, he made last yearโs Olympic final in both events. His best in the 200 is 1:57.27. Clareburt recently tested positive for COVID-19 and had to quarantine, which meant going a week without getting in the water. While he said heโs still confident in his ability to swim fast in Budapest, itโs an unwelcome hurdle on his path back to the final, especially in a field this deep.
RISING STARS
Carson Foster finally got over the hump and qualified for his first senior international team this year. At U.S Trials, the 20-year-old won the 400 IM and then finished second to Kalisz in the 200 with a new best time of 1:56.65. One of the keys to his success at the meet was that he didnโt do his big swim in the morning, he executed the build from heats to finals arguably better than he ever has and it paid off.
Now that heโs on the roster and the semi-finals return (there werenโt any in Greensboro), the big question for Foster is whether he can maintain his cool on the big stage or whether heโll fall back into old habits. The answer to that question determines if heโs in the hunt for a medal, but there’s no denying his ability.
While there weren’t any semis in either race, the rising University of Texas junior did win a pair of individual medals at the 2021 Short Course Worlds, claiming silver in the 200 IM and bronze in the 400 IM, showing he can perform under the lights.
After an incredible NCAA Championships, French native and rising Arizona State sophomore Leon Marchand traveled to the San Antonio Pro Series the following weekend and clocked 1:56.95 to break the French Record by almost a second. That immediately puts him into the medal conversation, in an event he didnโt even advance out of the heats in at last year’s Olympics (placing 18th in 1:58.30).
South African Matt Sates also just dropped a new lifetime best, going 1:57.43 at the Monaco stop of Mare Nostrum. That puts him about three-tenths off South Africaโs national record. So far, Sates has fared well in the transition to the professional lifestyle, continuing to be on fire through the next two stops of Mare Nostrum. However, heโs already said that his focus meet will be Commonwealth Games, not Worlds, which makes it hard to predict his form. Itโs easy to see him dropping another best time, but harder to put him down for a medal.
After having surgery in the fall, Finlay Knox kicked off his Canadian Trials with a 1:57.50, breaking his own Canadian record by more than half a second. With his improved backstroke, the 21-year-old has set himself up to be a factor in the final.
In the Olympic prelims, Norwegian Tomoe Hvas swam a lifetime best of 1:57.64 before fading to 16th and missing the final. Had he repeated that time in the semis, he would have found himself in a swim-off with the now-retired legend Laszlo Cseh for a spot in the final. Despite illness, Hvas had a successful season in short course meters, and heโs now looking for a breakthrough in the big pool.
IN THE MIX
Hugo Gonzalez had a strong senior season at Cal, highlighted by an NCAA and U.S. Open Record of 3:32.88 in the 400-yard IM. At his second Olympics, he placed sixth in the 100 back, and was also 11th in this event. Last May, Gonzalez won the 200 IM at the European Championships and is now looking to assert himself as a medal contender in Budapest. His best time is a 1:56.31, which certainly makes him a threat.
Continuing the springโs hottest trend of setting a national record, Jaouad Syoud broke the Algerian record in 1:58.12 at French Championships. Heโll likely need another drop to make the final, but donโt be surprised to see him in the fight for a lane.
Australiaโs Brendon Smith will also be looking for a lane in the final. He was two one-hundredths off the best he set in Tokyo during the recently-concluded Australian Trials, going 1:58.59. That time is faster than where he was during the Olympic Trials last year, which bodes well for him. Heโll be more of a factor in the 400, but with a drop, he could find himself in this final, too.
As mentioned in other previews, China has not released an official roster for Worlds yet. The leaked version does list Qin Haiyang, but Chinese media has also reported that swimmers who train in Shanghai, like Qin, will be subject to the cityโs COVID-19 travel restrictions, which may mean that they wonโt be able to compete. Qin holds a lifetime best of 1:57.06 and has been 1:58.63 this season. If he is in Budapest, heโs capable of sneaking into the final, especially if his breaststroke is on point.
SWIMSWAM’S PICKS
Place | Name | Season Best | Lifetime Best |
1 | Wang Shun | 1:56.33 | 1:55.00 |
2 | Daiya Seto | 1:57.09 | 1:55.55 |
3 | Duncan Scott | 1:56.08 | 1:55.28 |
4 | Leon Marchand | 1:56.95 | 1:56.95 |
5 | Jeremy Desplanches | 1:59.23 | 1:56.17 |
6 | Chase Kalisz | 1:56.21 | 1:55.40 |
7 | Carson Foster | 1:56.65 | 1:56.65 |
8 | Matt Sates | 1:57.43 | 1:57.43 |
DARK HORSE: Tom Dean (GBR) โ Is Tom Dean really going to swim this? He already has a busy schedule with individuals and relays, and all three rounds of this event coincide with the 100 free. But if heโs in, he could be a major upset to some of the usual IMers. Dean finished second to Scott at British Trials in a lifetime best 1:57.18, good for eighth-fastest in the world so far this season.
My prediction:
Kalisz
Wang
Foster
Desplanches
Kos
Marchand
Seto
Dean
โ
Sates
Clareburt
Gonzalez
Knox
Razzetti
Kalisz is definitely focusing on the 200 im now that he knows Carson is taking the mantle in the 400. I am keeping my eye out for Kalisz who might sneak onto the podium.
I was all in on Dunks but now I’m concerned. I’m still going to stick with my initial thought. I have faith!
Would be nice to see Brendon Smith make the final too but he obviously doesn’t have medal potential.
Where is Andrew?!?!
Even if Andrew isn’t there I’ll still envision a hologram of him being run down
Rowdy can make that happen
You can always just ask Siri to play Billy Joel ,,Piano Man,๐น๐น๐น
And what about the official junior world record holder?
Not even a word about Hubert Kรณs.
y’all doing my boy Carson dirty
Lochte’s record will survive for a thousand years