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2023 Swammy Awards: Oceanian Female Swimmer of the Year – Kaylee McKeown

See all of our 2023 Swammy Awards here.

OCEANIAN FEMALE SWIMMER OF THE YEAR: KAYLEE MCKEOWN, AUSTRALIA

It was a standout year for Australian women in the pool, as they won nearly a third of the gold medals up for grabs at the 2023 World Championships.

That included six individual titles, and winning three of them, and following up with an equally impressive back-half of the year, was Kaylee McKeown, earning Oceanian Female Swimmer of the Year honors for the second straight year.

McKeown has been one of the world’s best swimmers for years, but established herself as arguably the best in 2023.

She kicked things into high gear early on, setting a new world record in the women’s 200 backstroke at the New South Wales State Open Championships in March, clocking 2:03.14 to take out Regan Smith‘s mark of 2:03.35 set in 2019.

In setting the 200 back world record, McKeown became the first female swimmer in history to hold the Olympic, Commonwealth, long course world and short world titles, and the LC and SC world records, in the same event concurrently. The only other swimmer to accomplish this feat was fellow Aussie Grant Hackett in the men’s 1500 freestyle.

One month later, McKeown made some noise at the Australian Championships in April, reeling off numerous impressive swims including a 2:24.18 showing in the 200 breaststroke, ranking her #8 all-time among Australians.

In May, competing at the Australian World Trials, McKeown clocked a blistering personal best of 2:07.19 in the 200 IM, ranking her #7 all-time, logged another sub-2:04 swim in the 200 back (2:03.70), and came within five one-hundredths of her world record in the 100 back (57.50).

Then came the 2023 World Championships, where McKeown went 3-0 in her head-to-head trilogy with Smith, setting a new Commonwealth Record in the 50 back (27.08), a new Championship Record in the 100 back (57.53) and finishing things off with a dominant victory in the 200 back (2:03.85), becoming the first female swimmer to sweep the 50/100/200 of the same stroke at the World Championships—China’s Qin Haiyang became the first swimmer to do so in men’s breaststroke one day earlier.

McKeown won two more medals on the Aussie medley relays, leading off the mixed team in 58.03 as they claimed silver behind China, and then finishing the meet with a 57.91 backstroke leg on the women’s medley relay that were the runners-up to the United States.

All of these accolades come without mentioning the 200 IM, where McKeown was denied a chance to vie for the world title after she was controversially disqualified in the semi-finals.

For many of the world’s best, the end of the World Championships effectively closed the book on their high-level competition schedule for 2023, at least in long course meters, but not McKeown.

The 22-year-old resurfaced just a few months later at the World Cup, absolutely dominating the three-stop series.

Not only did McKeown win the women’s 50, 100 and 200 back at all three stops, earning a trio of “Triple Crown” bonuses, but she set new world records in the 50 back (26.86) and 100 back (57.33), giving her the distinction of having set the fastest time ever in all three distances in the same year.

All told, in 2023, she swam three of the five fastest times ever in the 50 back, four of the eight fastest times ever in the 100 back, and three of the eight fastest times ever in the 200 back.

McKeown’s 2023 Performances That Rank Top 10 All-Time

  • Women’s 50 Back
    • 26.86 – #1
    • 27.02 – #3
    • 27.08 – #5
  • Women’s 100 Back
    • 57.33 – #1
    • 57.50 – #4
    • 57.53 – #5
    • 57.63 – #7 (tie)
  • Women’s 200 Back
    • 2:03.14 – #1
    • 2:03.70 – #4
    • 2:04.18 – #8

Her swim in the 200 IM from May wasn’t far off the top 10 either, as McKeown’s 2:07.19 from the Sydney Open is the 16th fastest ever and puts her #8 on the all-time performers’ list (was #7 at the time).

On top of her world records in the backstroke events, McKeown also ranks inside the top 30 in the world for the calendar year in five other events.

McKeown’s Top 50 World Rankings, 2023

  • 50 back – #1 (26.86)
  • 100 back – #1 (57.33)
  • 200 back – #1 (2:03.14)
  • 200 IM – #3 (2:07.19)
  • 400 IM – #3 (4:31.68)
  • 200 free – #17 (1:56.14)
  • 200 breast – #20 (2:24.18)
  • 100 breast – #29 (1:06.86)

McKeown wasn’t just the best Oceanian female swimmer this year, her 2023 was one of the best from any swimmer in recent memory.

HONORABLE MENTIONS

  • Mollie O’Callaghan (AUS) – Imagine breaking one of the most elusive super-suited world records on the books and winning five World Championship titles and still not being the best swimmer in your own country for the year. O’Callaghan was an absolute force in Fukuoka, with her crowning achievement being the women’s 200 freestyle, where she won the world title over reigning Olympic champion and Australian teammate Ariarne Titmus in a time of 1:52.85, breaking the historic world record of 1:52.98 established by Federica Pellegrini at the 2009 World Championships. O’Callaghan, who moved up one spot on the podium in the 200 free after earning silver in 2022, also successfully defended her title in the 100 free in a time of 52.16. On top of her two individual titles, the 19-year-old also played a prominent role on three world-record-setting relays for Australia at the World Championships, leading off the women’s 400 free relay (3:27.96) in 52.08, the 800 free relay (7:37.50) in 1:53.66, and anchoring the mixed medley relay (3:18.83) in 51.71. She added a sixth medal in the women’s medley relay, anchoring them home in 51.95 to earn silver. Overall, 10 world records were broken at the meet and O’Callaghan factored in four of them. In addition to ranking #1 in the 200 free and #2 in the 100 free, O’Callaghan also finishes 2023 as the 5th-fastest swimmer in the 100 back (58.42), 24th in the 50 free (24.64) and 33rd in the 400 free (4:07.21).
  • Ariarne Titmus (AUS) – Many were critical of Titmus’ decision to sit out of the 2022 World Championships and forgo a chance to race head-to-head with Katie Ledecky and Summer McIntosh, but one year later, she delivered in a big way. In a marquee showdown with the defending world champion in Ledecky and the newly-minted world record holder in McIntosh, Titmus, the reigning Olympic champion, dominated the women’s 400 free at the 2023 World Championships, shattering McIntosh’s world record by seven-tenths in a time of 3:55.38. The most anticipated race of the meet ended up being a non-event, with Titmus winning by more than three seconds. She followed that up by coming within three one-hundredths of Federica Pellegrini‘s super-suited world record in the final of the women’s 200 free, only to be outdone by countrymate Mollie O’Callaghan. Behind O’Callaghan’s world record swim of 1:52.85, Titmus claimed silver in 1:53.01, the third-fastest swim in history. The then 22-year-old also won bronze in the 800 free in Fukuoka, matching her Commonwealth and Oceanic Record of 8:13.59, and in a swim that was arguably as impressive as her world record in the 400 free, she anchored the Australian 800 free relay home in 1:52.41, the fastest split ever, as they torched the world record in 7:37.50. Finishing the year ranked #1 in the 400 free, #2 in the 200 free and #3 in the 800 free, Titmus also ranks 23rd in the 1500 free (16:13.46) and 43rd in the 100 free (54.26) in 2023.

Previous Winners:

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Jason
11 months ago

Right choice, it’s not easy to dominate internationally over 50, 100 and 200m and she does it time and time again. Those WR’s will be tough to beat, although I have a feeling she will go 57 next year in the 100m.

23/51/1:52
11 months ago

It is funny, outside of SPW Kaylee is Mollie’s mentor, they first properly met when Kaylee was sent to Boxall’s group at Cairns during the staging camp for Tokyo.
Back then Kaylee hadn’t won a senior individual international event before and Mollie was a heat swimmer at her first senior international meet.
Now they are the number 1&2 female swimmers in the world, the main separation between them outside of primary events is age.
Mollie was slightly better at Fukouka and got the Olympic Program swimmer of the year nod. But then Kaylee found a very rare gear at the World Cup and tore expectations to shreds.
The future is bright.

Hooked on Chlorine
11 months ago

A richly deserved award. Kaylee has been nothing short of sensational this year, and I can’t see 2024 being any less impressive for her. Relentless in her training regimen, she is living proof that the harder one works, the luckier one gets.

Steph
11 months ago

So this list + Katie Ledecky and Kate Douglass are essentially the nominees for female swimmer of the year right?

Troyy
Reply to  Steph
11 months ago

Sjostrom Meilutyte McIntosh

commonwombat
Reply to  Troyy
11 months ago

Will be curious whether SwimSwam will subject themselves to that wonderful annual bitch-fest of “Top 100 Male/Female Swimmers”. If they do; the realistic top 3 would have to be McKeown, McIntosh & The Notorious MOC … with top slot being between McKeown & McIntosh.

I’d them slot in Ledecky. The next 3 spots are somewhat “fluid” as regards order; namely Sjostrom, Meilutyte & Titmus. Whilst the former 2 both have 2 World golds & 2 WRs to Titmus having only one of each; it’s level pegging if we judge it on solely Olympic events.

Douglas is certainly top 10 but I cannot honestly rank her above those already named on the score of World level performance/achievement.

Troyy
Reply to  commonwombat
11 months ago

I hope they do and I think they’ll put Ledecky ahead of MOC.

23/51/1:52
Reply to  Troyy
11 months ago

Ledecky would have to break one of her own WR’s to deserve that, and frankly I don’t think she has that in her anymore. 100/200 free are more competitive and prestigious, while that incurs a lot of risks, the upside is way higher than a safe 800/1500 double gold with times several seconds off her own PB.

Sub13
Reply to  23/51/1:52
11 months ago

They’ll say it’s because Ledecky is basically guaranteed 2 golds while MOC isn’t. Ledecky benefits so much every year from no women wanting to swim long distance

Marc P
Reply to  Troyy
11 months ago

Agreed!

MOC being underrated every year in the list always worked in her favor!

commonwombat
Reply to  Troyy
11 months ago

They certainly COULD but,if 2023 performances are the primary factor, the argument for placing Ledecky in front of MOC is certainly debateable.

Marc P
Reply to  commonwombat
11 months ago

Absolutely debatable.

MOC is critical leg in all relays that could add more golds, while Ledecky is only part of one relay that potentially win silver.

23/51/1:52
Reply to  commonwombat
11 months ago

The top 100 list is an institution, it brings a lot of activity to the site and it is part of human nature to critique and debate.
As for top 3 females, Kaylee, Mollie, Summer.
McIntosh has the highest ceiling, but if you average her expected outcome I think she is a bit behind the 2 Aussies as of right now.
MOC would fit by dropping more time and winning both of her events, plus she has the highest relay potential. But one misfire at Trials could derail everything, unlike McIntosh or McKeown who are very safe qualifiers.
McKeown’s #1 might come down to the 200IM, or perhaps either medley relay. And Smith is very credible… Read more »

Marc P
Reply to  Steph
11 months ago

Kate Douglas?

She won only one individual gold in Fukuoka. Not even a championship record.

Sjostrom won 2 gold plus WR

Meilutyte won 2 gold plus 2 WR

McIntosh won 2 gold, one in CR and one in WJR

Troyy
Reply to  Marc P
11 months ago

McIntosh also had 2 WRs (at trials).

Sub13
Reply to  Steph
11 months ago

The way I see it these are the contenders for Swimmer of the Year:

-Kaylee: 3 gold and 3 individual WR
-MOC: 2 individual gold, 3 relay gold, 1 individual WR and 3 relay WR
-Ledecky: 2 individual gold and 1 silver, no records but dominant wins
-McIntosh: 2 gold, 2 WRs
-Sjostrom: 2 gold plus WR
-Meilutyte: 2 gold plus 2 WR
-Titmus: She arguably doesn’t even make this but you could put her in with 1G 1S plus a relay gold/WR with fastest split all time by over a second.

Kate Douglass doesn’t belong with the above. 1 gold 1 silver, no records, not ranked first in any events

Joel
Reply to  Sub13
11 months ago

Titmus had individual WR and relay WR

Joel
11 months ago

Keep forgetting Titmus won the most anticipated race of the meet by more than 3 seconds! I always thought she’d win but that was incredible. No one would have believed that 6 months ago.
Mollie breaks an iconic WR and is part of 4 WRs at the meet! Apart from Phelps, who has done that? Lochte maybe?
And yet McKeown was still the winner and very well deserved too. She seems unstoppable. (Plus she matched the old 50 back WR in December).

Mark69
Reply to  Joel
11 months ago

Putting Phelps aside, Mark Spitz broke 7 WRs (4 individual) at Munich. Ian Thorpe broke 4 (3 individual) at 2001 WCs. Lochte didn’t break 4 WRs at any meet.

Robbos
11 months ago

What a legend, such a pleasure to see 2 great ones swimming against each other in Kaylee & Regan Smith.

Mollie O too = Legend.

Sub13
11 months ago

Slight correction on the 50 back: she swam a 26.98 last week at QLD Champs, tying the old world record. Looks like it hasn’t appeared in FINA rankings yet though.

So she has 4 of the top 6 fastest 50 backs in history. Before this year her PB was 8th all time.

Torchbearer
11 months ago

MOC must be the greatest ‘honorable mention’ in history!

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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