You are working on Staging1

2023 Swammy Awards: European Male Swimmer of the Year – Leon Marchand

See all of our 2023 Swammy Awards here.

2023 EUROPEAN MALE SWIMMER OF THE YEAR: LEON MARCHAND, FRANCE

It had already been an electric first finals session in Fukuoka before Leon Marchand stepped up to the block for the 400 IM final. But, this was the individual performance that had all eyes fixed on the TV screen. The hype for Marchand to break Michael Phelps‘s last individual world record (then the oldest world record on the books) had been building since last year.

At 2022 Worlds, Marchand scared the record, swimming 4:04.28 for a new European record and making him second-fastest performer ever behind Phelps. The hype continued to build throughout Marchand’s second collegiate season as he reset the NCAA record first at a dual meet. Then, he destroyed his own record at 2023 NCAAs by becoming the first man under 3:31, 3:30, and 3:29 with a jaw-dropping 3:28.82.

Given all that Marchand accomplished in the year leading up to 2023 Worlds, it wasn’t surprising that he broke Phelps’ record. But that didn’t make it any less special.

With Phelps himself in the booth, Marchand obliterated the 4:03.84 mark from the 2008 Olympics by over a second, rocketing to a new world standard of 4:02.50. Phelps, who said after Marchand’s 1:07.64 breaststroke split, “It [the record] is gone,” was also on hand to present Marchand with his gold medal, completing a full circle moment for both Bob Bowmantrained athletes.

Courtesy: NBC Sports

With seven days left in the meet, Marchand still had a lot of racing to do. In 2022, he was named the Male Swimmer of the Meet courtesy of his two golds (400 IM, 200 IM) and one silver (200 fly). This year, he upgraded to three gold medals.

He skipped the 200 breast in favor of the 200 fly. On his first swim of the 200 fly final/200 IM semifinal, Marchand set a new French record en route to his second world title of the meet. His 1:52.43 gave gold more than a second ahead of silver medalist Krzysztof Chmielewski.

The next night in the 200 IM final, Marchand tore away from a stacked field, leaving them to battle it out for the second and third steps on the podium. He wrapped up his third gold of the meet with a European record of 1:54.82, which made him just the third swimmer to break 1:55.

With his three golds, a world record, and a continental record, Marchand edged out Qin Haiyang for Male Swimmer of the Meet, earning the honor for the second time in two years.

The 21-year-old hasn’t raced in meters since Fukuoka, as an illness he picked up at the NC State Invite also kept him away from the U.S. Open. But those recent setbacks shouldn’t at all dim the dominance that Marchand displayed this year at the collegiate and international levels. He went over a year — from September 2022 to October 2023 — without being beaten in a race. He was the first NCAA swimmer since Natalie Coughlin to complete an undefeated season.

At 2023 NCAAs, the only time he wasn’t the fastest swimmer in the pool was the last event, where Jack Alexy split faster than him on the 400-yard freestyle relay. Tallying all of those accomplishments with his exceptional 2023 Worlds makes him more than deserving to claim the European male swimmer of the year honor this year.

Honorable Mentions

  • Maxime Grousset, France — Even though Caeleb Dressel and Kristof Milak‘s absences at 2023 Worlds afforded new swimmers the chance to step up in the men’s 100 butterfly, you would have gotten a few strange looks if you’d thrown Maxime Grousset‘s name out as a title threat. It’s not a knock against Grousset, it’s just that until this spring, his 100 fly PB was 56.11 and he was more known for his sprint freestyle skills; where he’d already found himself on the Worlds podium in 2022. Once he added sprint fly as a focus though, Grousset made quick improvements and broke the French record ahead of Worlds (50.61). Then in Fukuoka, he won a tight race in a blazing 50.14 and earned his first LCM world title. The swim vaulted him to 5th on the all-time performers list. He also added a gold medal to medal haul of two brzone medals from the 100 free and 50 fly. He wasn’t done yet though. In the 4×100 medley relay, he split a massive 49.27 100 fly–the 2nd fastest performance in history. He kept the pressure on at 2023 SCM Euros as well, winning gold in the 100 free and silver in the 100 fly. Grousset’s standout summer gives the French another card to play at their home Olympics next summer and also makes them a dark horse podium pick for the 4×100 medley relay.
  • Hubert Kos, Hungary — Since making the move to train at Arizona State with Bowman and his ever growing group of stars, Hungary’s Hubert Kos has seen massive improvements. Before arriving in Tempe, Kos was mostly known for his IM prowess as he holds the world junior record in the 200m IM (1:56.00). But Kos honed in on his backstroke this year and made the choice to DNS the 200 IM at 2023 Worlds. The choice paid off for him. The 20-year-old beat out defending champion Ryan Murphy in the 200 backstroke, claiming his first world title in a new Hungarian record (1:54.14). Kos also set a new Hungarian record in the 100 backstroke (53.12) where he eventually finished 7th. At the 2023 U.S. Open–his first LCM meet since Worlds–Kos won the race in 53.19, a sign that even though he’s in the midst of the NCAA season, his meters the drops that he’s made in the yards pool have not come at the expense of his LCM times. In the absence of Milak, Kos was the face of the Hungarian Worlds team and looks up to the task of filling that role again in Paris, if needed.
  • Daniel Wiffen, Ireland — Daniel Wiffen‘s had his eye on a world record all season long. His quest started back in March at the Stockholm Open, when he rocketed to a 14:34.89 in the LCM 1500 freestyle, which was then the 4th fastest time in history. At Worlds, he missed out on medals in highly competitive 800 and 1500 freestyle fields, but swam a new European record in the 800 free, dropping five seconds for a 7:39.19 (9th all-time). After another sub-14:36 1500 freestyle at the u23 LEN Championships, everything came together for Wiffen on the final day of December’s SCM European Championships. He broke the oldest world record on the books, taking down Grant Hackett‘s 800 free world record from 2008. Wiffen used a blistering back half to speed to 7:20.46, becoming the only swimmer to break an SCM world record this year and adding to his 400/1500 European titles from earlier in the meet.

PREVIOUS WINNERS:

In This Story

22
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

22 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Nick
10 months ago

Honorable mention for two Irish swimmers Kós and Wiffen 😄

jeff
10 months ago

damn milak is a 49.6/1:50.2 flyer and has never won european swimmer of the year, thats crazy

snailSpace
Reply to  jeff
10 months ago

He should have been last year. But the Popovici hype was (understandably) too great.

Mi-Lack
Reply to  snailSpace
10 months ago

Milak was 49.6 in 2021, not 2022. And his 1:50.73 at 19 is significantly more impressive than a 1:50.34 at 22. He hasn’t exactly taken the 200 fly to a whole different level since breaking the WR over 4 years ago.

snailSpace
Reply to  Mi-Lack
10 months ago

That 1:50.34 is incredibly impressive no matter how you look at it. Nobody is even close to that time. He already has taken the 200 fly to a different level. But that doesn’t even matter, because they don’t give this award for WRs (the next fastest swimmer in history is 0.05 s slower than Popovici in the 100 free; the next fastest in the 200 fly is 1.17 s slower than Milak). Milak simply had more medals at major competitions than Popovici in 2022 and that’s that.

jeff
Reply to  snailSpace
10 months ago

50.14 also seemed mid at the time – I remember watching live and being disappointed, but in hindsight, that would still put him at #2 textile all time if it were a PB. And of course the 200 fly was otherworldly, over a second faster than Phelps and 2 seconds faster than anyone else puts that at the same level as Ledecky’s 800 free and Peaty’s 100 breast for me

BeardedSwammer
Reply to  Mi-Lack
10 months ago

MFW 1.2 seconds ahead of Phelps who himself is about a full second ahead of #3 all time Marchand isn’t a “whole different level”

Last edited 10 months ago by BeardedSwammer
Sub13
10 months ago

Of course Marchand was always going to win. Well deserved, fantastic season.

Only issue is Richards should be an HM. Individual and relay gold at worlds (plus 5th in the 100 free), individual gold again at Euros. Arguably better than Kos and Wiffen.

Emily Se-Bom Lee
10 months ago

pretty easy to pick when the 4 best mens swimmers of 2023 all come from different continents

Marc P
Reply to  Emily Se-Bom Lee
10 months ago

My ranking:

1. Qin Haiyang

2. Leon Marchand

3. Ahmad Hafnaoui

4. Sam Short

Ps.

1. I only consider LCM swims since it’s universal all over the world. I give most points to World Championship, and then continental championship, and then World Cup.

2. Gold medal – World Record – 2023 world ranking – all time ranking in each event are considered

3. I only use relays points when there’s a tie.

I think it’s pretty clear and no confusion.

Last edited 10 months ago by Marc P
Andrew
Reply to  Marc P
10 months ago

Fair point, and I’d throw Grousset, Ceccon and Chalmers right behind using this logic.

Grousset split 49 low fly and sliver in 1 free. Gives French relays some much needed hope. Has to be a gold medal favorite if Dressel/Milak not in form. Either way a medal threat in 2 of the most competitive men’s events

Ceccon is deadly in 3 strokes and the WR holder in 1 back. Huge boost for Italy relays and his 1 free is criminally underrated

Any time Chalmers is about to anchor and regardless of where AUS is, there is hope that he can single-handedly carry them to the podium. His 1 free is just legendary

Marc P
Reply to  Andrew
10 months ago

Grousset and Ceccon is joint #5 in my opinion.

Chalmers behind them.

Swammer
Reply to  Andrew
10 months ago

Ceccon wasn’t great at worlds tho. Only good swim he had was the the 50 fly win. He’s a great swimmer but didn’t show it this year

Marc P
10 months ago

Easiest pick lol.

Troyy
Reply to  Marc P
10 months ago

A lot of the picks are very easy this year.

Thomas Selig
10 months ago

No doubt about the winner. I would probably have Richards above Kos for HMs though. The field is much deeper in the 200 free than in the 200 back, Richards did better at Worlds in his second event, plus relays and SC Euros I feel gives him the edge.

Marc P
Reply to  Thomas Selig
10 months ago

I agree.

It seems NCAA swimmers who swim in yards get extra points. Bowman’s swimmers seems also get extra points (have a look at Regan Smith getting HM of “comeback” swimmer of the year)

Have a look at Douglas over Ledecky for American female swimmer of the year.

It’s so weird when “European” swimmer get extra points for swimming in NCAA.

Even Ceccon I think is more deserving than Kos.

Last edited 10 months ago by Marc P
Andrew
Reply to  Marc P
10 months ago

I agree but at the end of the day I have huge respect for Kos putting that phony fraud Murphy in his place

Marc P
Reply to  Andrew
10 months ago

One of the biggest upsets at Worlds

snailSpace
Reply to  Marc P
10 months ago

Ceccon underperformed at Worlds while Kos overperformed. I also wouldn’t rate SC Euros above the US Open this year, which wasn’t any weaker fieldwise. Kos took the highest point scorer award (or whatever its name is) at that meet.
I don’t get why Richards hasn’t featured as a HM thought, he was Grousset level at Worlds and had a great SC Euros as well.

Last edited 10 months ago by snailSpace
Frank A Wilson
Reply to  Marc P
10 months ago

Both Marchand and Kos swam at least 2 each LCM meets before Worlds last year. And had wins against strong fields.

Andrew
Reply to  Frank A Wilson
10 months ago

I wouldn’t exactly call the men’s 200 back a strong field haha. Look at mens distance free, those are strong and deep fields

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, …

Read More »