You are working on Staging1

2024 Aquatics GB Summer Championships: 16-Yr-Old Morgan Rips 1:00.10 LCM 100 Breast

2024 AQUATICS GB SUMMER CHAMPIONSHIPS

  • Saturday, July 20th – Friday, July 26th
  • Ponds Forge, Sheffield, England
  • LCM (50m)
  • Live Results

While the top-tier British swimmers are heading to Paris for the 2024 Olympic Games, a strong contingent is competing at this week’s Aquatics GB Summer Championships in Sheffield.

The competition kicked off last night with heats of the 1500m free, with the championships spanning a thrilling 7 days to the lead-up of aquatics action in Paris.

Right off the bat at Ponds Forge, 16-year-old Max Morgan fired off a lifetime best of 1:00.10 in his age category’s final of the 100m breaststroke.

Morgan of Reed’s Swim Club opened in 28.46 and closed in 31.64 to beat the field by nearly 3 seconds en route to lowering his own British Age Record in the event.

Entering this competition, Morgan’s PB and Age Record stood at the 1:00.83 put up at this year’s Aquatics GB Olympic Trials.

He then placed 6th in the event at this year’s European Junior Championships in 1:01.61. Two weeks later, he has hacked a second-and-a-half to check in with tonight’s 1:00.10.

Morgan’s outing now renders swimmer 12th among all-time junior 100m breaststroke worldwide, at just 16 years of age.

The breaststroke future looks bright for Great Britain after the legacy of Adam Peaty who will try for a triple-peat of his 100m breast title at this year’s Olympic Games.

Additional Notes

  • 19-year-old Tyler Melbourne-Smith of Loughborough topped the men’s open 200m free, registering a time of 1:47.54 for a monster new lifetime best. His previous PB rested at the 1:49.63 he logged in the heats at this year’s Olympic Trials. He’s now GBR’s 21st-best 200m freestyler in history.
  • National champion, Olympic qualifier and European Junior Championships multi-gold medalist Amelie Blocksidge has seemingly not stopped racing, competing again here with Paris on the horizon. The 15-year-old Salford ace clocked a time of 4:17.17 to win the 400m freestyle this evening.
  • A multi-medalist at this year’s European Junior Championships, 15-year-old Theodora Taylor clocked a time of 31.89 to win her age group’s 50m breast, getting under the 32-second barrier for her first time ever.
  • National record holder Imogen Clark won the open women’s 50mb breast, notching 30.32 as a performance just outside the top 10 times of her career.

In This Story

9
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

9 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Brit swim fan
3 months ago

Morgan just went 27:52 in the 50 final. To put that into perspective, Adam Peaty’s age group record for 18 year olds is 27:58. Morgan is 16 years old!

Swimmer
3 months ago

Broke the 50m record in the heats today too: 27.68

Brit swim fan
Reply to  Swimmer
3 months ago

And again quicker than the 17 year old age group record at the same time

Brit swim fan
3 months ago

It’s worth noting that Morgan’s time is also quicker than the 17 year old age group record now in this event!

Boz
3 months ago

Where do you find the all time junior lists ?

Just Keep Swimming
Reply to  Boz
3 months ago

Nuoto has a list and they’re usually pretty accurate

junior_all_time_m.pdf (nuotomondiale.altervista.org)

Scuncan Dott v2
3 months ago

1:47.5 and a 2 second PB for Melbourne Smith, if he can find another second by trials next year then he can definitely make our 4×2 for Worlds. Certainly seems like his future is in the 200/400 not the 800/1500 that he also swims.

Scuncan Dott v2
3 months ago

Peaty’s heir

Dee
3 months ago

I know the kids go crazy sometimes but 1.04.5 to almost breaking a minute in one season is difficult to fathom. A pretty insane day all round for 16 year old British breaststrokers, as Filip Nowacki swam 1.01.13 in a separate race – That would have broken the pre-Morgan age mark by almost a second. Adam Bradley then also went top 5 all time in the age group, and Daniel Ransom went top 10 all-time.

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 »