You are working on Staging1

2024 Paris Olympics: Day 7 Finals Live Recap

2024 PARIS SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES

DAY 7 FINALS HEAT SHEET

Welcome to day 7 finals of the 2024 Paris Olympics. Tonight’s finals session will feature finals of the men’s 50 free, women’s 200 back, and men’s 200 IM, as well as semifinals of the men’s 100 fly and women’s 200 IM. Of note, prelims of the mixed 4×100 medley relay took place this morning, however, the finals of that relay won’t take place until tomorrow’s (Saturday) finals session. With that being said, today’s finals session is a short one, scheduled to last just over an hour.

DAY 7 FINALS SCHEDULE

  • Men’s 50 Freestyle – Final
  • Women’s 200 Backstroke – Final
  • Men’s 200 IM – Final
  • Men’s 100 Butterfly – Semifinals
  • Women’s 200 IM – Semifinals

The session will kick off with the final of the men’s 50 freestyle, where American Caeleb Dressel will be facing the first race of his double tonight. Dressel was 5th in the semifinals of the 50 free last night, swimming a 21.58. He’s the reigning Olympic champion in the event, having set the Olympic Record back in Tokyo with his winning time of 21.07. Dressel has his hands very full in this field, however, as Great Britain’s Ben Proud and Australia’s Cam McEvoy both went 21.38 in the semifinals last night. Additionally, the last seed in this heat was still 21.69 in the semis last night, just 0.31 seconds slower than the top seeds. This ought to be a phenomenal race.

Dressel will then have the men’s 100 fly semifinals later in the session. He’ll have a big of downtime between the events, but not much. The turnaround is scheduled to be about 35 minutes. This morning, Dressel clocked a 50.83 in the 100 fly, then later swam a 50.10 on the mixed medley relay. His goal for tonight will be to simply secure a lane, any lane, for tomorrow night’s final.

Hungarian Kristof Milak looked excellent in prelims of the 100 fly this morning, speeding to a 50.19. Milak earned the silver medal in the 200 fly earlier in the meet. This is a loaded field, and, if the times from this morning hold, it will likely take under 51 seconds to advance to the final.

The women’s 200 backstroke will feature one of the showdowns we’ve been looking forward to most. This race marks round 2 as Australian Kaylee McKeown will go up against American Regan Smith. McKeown, the World Record holder in the 200 back, won gold in the 100 back a few nights ago, while Smith took silver. They won’t be next to each other tonight, as Smith is out in lane 7, since she was racing in last night’s semifinals after taking silver in the final of the 200 fly. American Phoebe Bacon will be in the middle of the pool tonight and is very capable of making a lot of noise as well.

The men’s 200 IM will feature France’s Leon Marchand as he tries to win his 4th individual gold medal of the meet. Having already won the 400 IM, 200 fly, and 200 breast, Marchand comes in as the top seed in the 200 IM tonight after clocking a 1:56.31 in semifinals. This race will mark Marchand’s last individual race of the meet, so we’re surely in for a show as the crowd gets behind him.

American Carson Foster and Great Britain’s Duncan Scott both looked great in the semifinals last night as well, and could push Marchand tonight.

The women’s 200 IM semifinals tonight have an interesting dynamic going on. It just so happens that Summer McIntosh, Kate Douglass, Alex Walsh, and Kaylee McKeown, who are the 4 strongest gold medal contenders, are all right next to each other in the 2nd heat of semis. It should act as a little preview of the final tomorrow night, though with less on the line. The only wrinkle in this race is that McKeown will be coming off the 200 back final, so she won’t be as fresh as the others. Still, she’s scheduled to have about an hour between races, so it’s not the worst double we’ve seen.

MEN’S 50 FREESTYLE – FINAL

  1. Cam McEvoy (Australia) – 21.25
  2. Ben Proud (Great Britain) – 21.30
  3. Florent Manaudou (France) – 21.56
  4. Josh Liendo (Canada) – 21.58
  5. Kristian Gkolomeev (Greece) – 21.59
  6. Caeleb Dressel (United States) – 21.61
  7. Leonardo Deplano (Italy) – 21.62
  8. Jordan Crooks (Cayman Islands) – 21.64

First things first: this was a very fast final of the men’s 50 free here in Paris tonight. Cayman Islands’ Jordan Crooks came in 8th with a 21.64, which would have been good for 5th back in Tokyo 3 years ago.

In a bunched up field, Australia’s Cam McEvoy finished the mission, winning gold with a time of 21.25. With the performance, McEvoy became Australia’s first ever gold medalist in the 50 free. He managed to get his hand on the wall just before Great Britain’s Ben Proud, who earned silver with a 21.30.

Swimming in front of a raucous home crowd, France’s Florent Manaudou got on the podium as well, touching in 21.56 for bronze. Manaudou was just the latest performance for the French crowd to get behind.

Canada’s Josh Liendo found himself just off the podium, taking 4th in 21.58. Liendo and American Caeleb Dressel are both swimming the 100 fly semifinals later in the session. Dressel took 6th in the 50 with a 21.61.

WOMEN’S 200 BACKSTROKE – FINAL

  1. Kaylee McKeown (Australia) – 2:03.73 (Olympic Record)
  2. Regan Smith (United States) – 2:04.26
  3. Kylie Masse (Canada) – 2:05.57
  4. Phoebe Bacon (United States) – 2:05.61
  5. Katie Shanahan (Great Britain) – 2:07.53
  6. Peng Xuwei (China) – 2:07.96
  7. Honey Osrin (Great Britain) – 2:08.16
  8. Anastasiya Shkurdai (Individual Neutral Athletes) – 2:10.23

Kaylee McKeown made history tonight, sweeping the women’s backstroke events in back-to-back Olympics. She did it in record fashion, taking down Missy Franklin’s longstanding Olympic Record of 2:04.06. McKeown put together a fantastic race, coming home fast to pass Regan Smith and get her hands on the wall first. Her performance of 2:03.73 stands as the 6th-fastest 200 back of all-time.

McKeown swam the race expertly, splitting 29.17 and 31.35 on the first pair of 50s for a 1:00.52 on the opening 100. She then clocked a 31.36 on the 3rd 50 and came home in 31.85, for a 1:03.21 on the back half of the race. McKeown now has to get ready for the women’s 200 IM semifinal, which is the last event of this session.

American Regan Smith found herself earning the silver medal once again, swimming a 2:04.26 for 2nd tonight. She was leading through the 150m turn, but just wasn’t quite able to hold on. Smith was out in 59.90 on the opening 100, then clocked a 31.80 on the 3rd 50. It caught up to her, however, and she came home in 32.56, which was just enough off her pace for McKeown to pass her up.

Canadian Kylie Masse had a fantastic swim, earning the bronze medal in 2:05.57. Masse was sitting in 2nd between Smith and McKeown at the 100m turn, flipping in 1:00.37. She then came home a little slower than both of them, falling into 3rd but still landing on the medal stand. Masse earned the silver medal in this event back in Tokyo.

American Phoebe Bacon found herself just off the podium, finishing 4th in 2:05.61. Bacon improved on her 5th place finish from Tokyo 3 years ago, however, she still was just off the medal stand. She had moved into 3rd place on the 3rd 50 of the race tonight, however, she faded pretty hard on the final 50, and fell out of that position.

MEN’S 200 INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY – FINAL

  • World Record: 1:54.00 – Ryan Lochte, USA (2011)
  • World Junior Record: 1:56.99 – Hubert Kos, HUN (2021)
  • Olympic Record: 1:54.23 – Michael Phelps, USA (2008)
  • 2021 Winning Time: 1:55.00 – Wang Shun, CHN
  • 2021 Time to Win Bronze: 1:56.17
  1. Leon Marchand (France) – 1:54.06 (Olympic Record)
  2. Duncan Scott (Great Britain) – 1:55.31
  3. Wang Shun (China) – 1:56.00
  4. Carson Foster (United States) – 1:56.10
  5. Tom Dean (United States) – 1:56.46
  6. Alberto Razzetti (Italy) – 1:56.82
  7. Daiya Seto (Japan) – 1:57.21
  8. Finlay Knox (Canada) – 1:57.26

22-year-old Leon Marchand can’t be stopped. The general consensus was that there was a pretty good chance he wouldn’t be in the lead at the halfway point of the race, but that his back half is so good, it wouldn’t matter. Well, it turned out none of it mattered. Marchand was 24.72 on fly and 28.83 on back, which put him into the 100m turn 1st with a stunning split of 53.55. It was over at that point. He then tacked on a shocking 32.36 on the breast leg of the race, then sped home in 28.15, putting up a 1:00.51 on the 2nd 100.

Marchand hit the 150m turn 0.60 seconds under Ryan Lochte’s legendary World Record pace, but didn’t come home quite as fast as Lochte did, and ended up touching just 0.06 seconds off the record. Still, Marchand’s performance of 1:54.06 marks a new Olympic Record, as well as a new European Record. He also is now the #2 performer all-time in the event behind Lochte, and his swam was the 2nd-fastest performance of all-time.

That swim represented Marchand’s last individual race of the meet. He went 4-for-4 on gold medals here in Paris in front of the home crowd.

Great Britain’s Duncan Scott had a terrific performance himself, not to be overshadowed by Marchand’s swim. He clocked a 1:55.31, which comes in just 0.03 seconds off his own British Record of 1:55.28. Scott swam that record back in the final of this event in Tokyo, where he earned the silver medal there as well. As usual, Scott was nothing short of incredible on the final 50 of the race, speeding to a phenomenal 27.67 on the freestyle lap.

China’s Wang Shun, the defending Olympic champion in the event, took 3rd tonight in 1:56.00. The performance was exactly 1 second slower than he swam to win gold back in Tokyo. Wang was out fast, splitting 24.65 on the fly 50, which was the fastest fly split in the field. He put up an excellent 29.10 on back as well, hitting the 100m turn in 2nd, however, a 34.03 on breaststroker did him in, and he faded to 3rd.

American Carson Foster finished just off the podium with a 1:56.10. Foster was 7th at the first turn, splitting 25.01 on the fly lap. He struggled on breaststroke a bit as well, splitting 34.07.

MEN’S 100 BUTTERFLY – SEMIFINALS

  1. Kristof Milak (Hungary) – 50.38
  2. Maxime Grousset (France) – 50.41
  3. Josh Liendo (Canada) – 50.42
  4. Nyls Kortsanje (Netherlands) – 50.59
  5. Noe Ponti (Switzerland) – 50.60
  6. Ilya Kharun (Canada) – 50.68
  7. Matthew Temple (Australia) – 50.95
  8. Naoki Mizunuma (Japan) – 51.08

The men’s 100 fly semifinals saw Kristof Milak lead the field once again, this time clocking a 50.38. While that time was just a bit off the 50.19 he swam in the heats this morning, Milak still grabbed lane 4 for tonight’s final. Milak is on a mission for gold after taking silver in the 200 fly, his best event. He did appear to be checking out something with his fingers after his race tonight, which could be something to keep an eye on, though he didn’t appear to be in significant discomfort or pain.

After swimming the 50 free at the beginning of the session, Canada’s Josh Liendo got it done in the 100 fly, taking 3rd overall with a 50.42. Managing that swim with a tight turnaround after the 50 bodes well for Liendo in the final tomorrow night when he’s fresher.

Canada was the only country to see both their swimmers make it through to the final, Ilya Kharun came in 6th tonight with a 50.68, so he will be joining Liendo tomorrow night.

Perhaps the biggest news from the race is that defending Olympic Champion Caeleb Dressel did not make it through to the final. Dressel, who is also the World Record holder in the event, was clearly not fully recovered from the his 3 other races he’s done today, and clocked a 51.57 for 13th overall. Dressel was 50.83 in the heats of the 100 fly this morning, which would have been good for 8th tonight. He also clocked a 50.10 on the mixed medley relay this morning.

Giving the French crowd yet another race to ecstatically cheer for, Maxime Grousset clocked a 50.41 for the 2nd-fastest time in the field tonight. He was out fast, splitting 23.15 on the opening 50m.

WOMEN’S 200 INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY – SEMIFINALS

  • World Record: 2:06.12 – Katinka Hosszu, HUN (2015)
  • World Junior Record: 2:06.89 – Summer McIntosh, CAN (2023)
  • Olympic Record: 2:06.58 – Katinka Hosszu, HUN (2016)
  • 2021 Winning Time: 2:08.52 – Yui Ohashi, JPN
  • 2021 Time to Advance to Finals: 2:10.59
  1. Alex Walsh (United States) – 2:07.45
  2. Summer McIntosh (Canada) – 2:08.30
  3. Kate Douglass (United States) -2:08.59
  4. Abbie Wood (Great Britain) – 2:09.64
  5. Sydney Pickrem (Canada) – 2:09.65
  6. Yu Yiting (China) – 2:09.74
  7. Kaylee McKeown (Australia) – 2:09.97
  8. Ella Ramsey (Australia) – 2:10.16

The women’s 200 IM final tomorrow night is going to look very similar to the field that race in Tokyo, with one notable exception. Japan’s Yui Ohashi, the gold medalist in this event from 3 years ago, came in 12th tonight with a 2:10.94. Ohashi won the event in 2:08.52 back in Tokyo.

Australia’s Kaylee McKeown, fresh off winning gold in the 200 back earlier in the session, nearly didn’t make it back as well, but the bottom line is she got in. McKeown swam a 2:09.97, which was good for 7th. She’ll be in an outside lane tomorrow night for the final, but she’ll undoubtedly be more fresh for the race.

On the other end of the spectrum, American Alex Walsh, for whom this is her only individual race, looked fantastic tonight as she sped to the top time of 2:07.45. She swam an excellent race, splitting 27.19 on fly, 32.73 on back, 36.70 on breast, and 30.83 on free. Interestingly, none of her 50s were the fastest in the field, however, they were all fast enough with respect to the other swimmers that she posted the fastest overall time by nearly a second.

Summer McIntosh put up a solid swim tonight as well, swimming a 2:08.30 for 2nd overall. McIntosh was out fast, splitting 26.94 on fly and 32.10 on back for a 59.04 on the opening 100m. She wasn’t great on the breaststroke leg tonight, splitting 38.66, however, a 30.60 coming home made up for it a bit.

Kate Douglass came in 3rd tonight with a 2:08.59. She was strong on the back half this evening, splitting 37.06 on breast and 30.63 on free, for a 1:07.69 on the 2nd 100m.

In This Story

1589
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

1.6K Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Samurai Swimmer
3 months ago

What commentators did NOT mention in the Ledecky vs Titmus 800m free final was that Katie had just raced 1500m TWICE in the previous 72h , Titmus not. Huge difference.

Swimmer.thingz
3 months ago

It says: Tom Dean (United States)

Awsi Dooger
3 months ago

I didn’t realize Cynthia Potter is retiring. She is one of the greatest specialized sports analysts of all time

Patrick
3 months ago

Gutted for Caeleb Dressel. Someone remind that guy he’s got a beautiful life, wife, and child. He’s loved by true American swimming fans. He’s been an inspiration for so many kids.

Who knows what the future holds, but hopefully time and perspective leads him to living happily ever after.

ggg
3 months ago

Looking at how their best have been swimming this week, there is a real chance that the US men don’t medal in the medley relay. Something noone could have predicted going in.

I miss the ISL (go dawgs)
Reply to  ggg
3 months ago

Nah. They always perform for that relay, regardless of how they’ve swam over the course of the week. In Tokyo, Murphy underperformed in the 100 back then had the fastest split of the field, and MAndrew did MAndrew things that we know about during the week then held his own against Peaty, and ZApple came back from embarrassing himself in the 8 free to having I think the fastest or second fastest split of the field in free. Only case where they didn’t perform was in 2022 when Dressel dipped out and shook everything up.

‘Murica
Reply to  ggg
3 months ago

I’ll take that bet…

BDD
3 months ago

I mean the Chinese team underperformed cos the drugs wore off right?

And Pan, well, he’s just masking the drugs he’s taking right?

But what excuse does the US team have for underperforming? …Maybe they’re just not very good. I’m enjoying those sweet silver tears. No more cowbells.

Downvote me to hell trolls. You can dish it but you can’t take it.

ggg
Reply to  BDD
3 months ago

aw swimswamers didnt like this one haha

Atticus
Reply to  BDD
3 months ago

Everyone admits that the US team underperformed and no one has made any excuses. There is a difference between having a down year versus the shroud of a large, covered up, state-backed doping scandal. The people downvoting you are not the trolls….

NotHimAgain
Reply to  BDD
3 months ago

And Pan, well, he’s just masking the drugs he’s taking right?

Not in the 100m freestyle final he wasn’t.

Stingy
Reply to  BDD
3 months ago

If Pan can mask the drugs then why can’t everyone else.

Cmon at least be consistent in your narrative, that’s the bare minimum. Have a bit of logic will you?

B+ Masters Swimmer
3 months ago

Here’s how their splits compare against the field. Who will reign supreme? Jack of all trades master of none or a swimmer with a glaring weakness?

Alex
Fly – 4th
Bk – 4th
Br – 2nd
Fr – 5th

Summer
Fly – 1st
Bk – 1st
Br – 15th
Fr – 1st

Kate
Fly – 2nd
Bk – 14th
Br – 3rd
Fr – 2nd

Kaylee
Fly – 14th
Bk – 3rd
Br – 8th
Fr – 6th

mS424
Reply to  B+ Masters Swimmer
3 months ago

Mckeown had the double – will be much fresher for the final. Her and douglass are dangerous. Mcintosh has such a shit breaststroke

MTK
Reply to  mS424
3 months ago

McIntosh’s br in the 400IM is pretty good – like 1:17, but she’s only been splitting 38s in the 200, which isn’t good. I think it will ultimately cost her the win, though I do expect her to medal.

Last edited 3 months ago by MTK
Justin
Reply to  mS424
3 months ago

Saying a 400Im Olympic gold medalist has a shit breaststroke is priceless. I assume you are saying this while stuffing your face with McDonald’s on your couch? Girl doesn’t have to swim lights out in all four strokes to even make the final. You take off 2 seconds and she’s under best time and just short of the world record. So find a new way to critique a generational talent bud.

B+ Masters Swimmer
Reply to  B+ Masters Swimmer
3 months ago

Here are the numbers when only looking at top 8. Pretty much the same story.

Alex
Fly – 4th
Bk – 3rd
Br – 2nd
Fr – 3rd

Summer
Fly – 1st
Bk – 1st
Br – 7th
Fr – 1st

Kate
Fly – 2nd
Bk – 8th
Br – 3rd
Fr – 2nd

Kaylee
Fly – 8th
Bk – 2nd
Br – 7th
Fr – 4th

wahoowa
Reply to  B+ Masters Swimmer
3 months ago

Excellent Analysis! Walsh so solid in all 4 strokes.

kazoo
Reply to  wahoowa
3 months ago

Just looking at her numbers suggests that she should win it.

JimSwim22
Reply to  kazoo
3 months ago

Are those the semi splits? How could those possibly matter? Everyone is going to drop at least 1.5 to 6 seconds

B+ Masters Swimmer
Reply to  JimSwim22
3 months ago

The splits are still relative though right? I don’t think anyone decided they would hold back on just one stroke and go for it on the rest.

Michael mooney
3 months ago

Dressel just over does it with events at gus age. I think he should just focus on 100 fly or just freestyle events… Seemed so tired in the Fly.

‘Murica
Reply to  Michael mooney
3 months ago

I don’t think that’s the issue. He should be able to handle 2 swims.

Mean Dean
Reply to  Michael mooney
3 months ago

Surely he’s gonna end up being a fly machine that can also throw down on freestyle relays if needed?

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 »