Katie Ledecky may be the most dominant athlete in any sport on the planet right now and the 800 meter freestyle is her prime event. Her incredible rise from newcomer status on the national scene at the 2012 Olympic Trials to her surprise gold in London (taking down Janet Evans’ American Record from 1989 on the way) was just the beginning of an era of unprecedented success. Since the 2012 Games she has lowered the World Record from 8:14.10 to 8:06.68, a time nearly twelve seconds ahead of anyone else in the world this year, and there is no indication that this star is finished rising. Of course the Stanford commit is the favorite heading into Omaha, but the race that creates the Team USA roster for Rio still has to be swum and there are two spots up for grabs. Behind Ledecky is a crop of American talent who will put on a show while fighting to claim the right to represent the USA in the longest individual women’s event offered. Here is the Viking’s rundown of the rest of the top eight ranked athletes at this point heading into trials for the 800 meter freestyle.
Becca Mann‘s 8:21.77 for the 800 free from the Arena Pro Swim Series in Minneapolis last November currently ranks her 4th in the world. This gives her nearly a three second advantage over any American besides Ledecky hoping to claim a spot on the American squad heading to Rio. She was also the Open Water 10K National Champion in 2015. She has committed to USC but still currently trains at North Baltimore Aquatic Club.
Cierra Runge had a stellar freshman season in 2015 at Cal where she set an NCAA Record (4:31.90) for the 500 freestyle at the PAC-12 Championship and contributed to an American Record 800 Free Relay for the Bears. She is spending the year in Tempe training under Bob Bowman with plans to transfer to the University of Wisconsin in the fall. Her top time is the 8:24.69 she achieved at 2014 Summer Nationals.
Leah Smith turned in the second fastest 500 free in NCAA history (4:31.33) and defended her NCAA title in the 1650 after setting an NCAA Record 15:32.72 at the 2016 ACC Championships while representing the University of Virginia. So far her best 800 free for Long Course is 8:24.74 from June 2015, which puts her just .05 behind Cierra Runge in the rankings. Smith was just a tenth off that time at last weekend’s Pro Swim Series meet in Indianapolis.
Stephanie Peacock is currently training under Bill Rose at Mission Viejo. She turned in a stellar 8:25.89 to win the 800 meter freestyle at the Fran Crippen Swim Meet of Champions in April. That time ranks her 4th in the US and 13th in the world for the 2015-16 season and is only 1.5 seconds from her personal best 8:24.36 from the US Open in 2012. That is well ahead of any in-season swim she has turned in over her career. Peacock also ranks 4th in history among Americans in the 1000 yard freestyle with her personal best 9:23.50 set at the King Marlin Pro-Am Classic in December, indicating that she is on track to be on her game in Omaha.
Lindsay Vrooman continues to improve as a professional after completing her college swimming career at Indiana in 2014. She turned in a seven second improvement in the 1000 yard freestyle in December at the American Energy Pro-Am in Oklahoma, winning the event in 9:30.19. She currently represents Badger Swim Club. Her lifetime best 8:26.67 over 800 meters was set at World University Games last July.
Sierra Schmidt from North Baltimore Aquatic Club may be more well known for the way she rocks out behind the blocks than for her incredible success in distance events. Schmidt won the 800 meter freestyle at the 2015 Pan-American Games with 8:27.54, ranking her 7th among Americans heading into Trials so far. You can be certain the Dancing Queen won’t be nervous behind the blocks, and if she does make the team she will surely get a lot of attention from the media.
TYR sponsored athlete Ashley Twichell is only 14th on the list of Olympic Trials Qualifiers with the 8:30.45 she swam recently in Charlotte, which cut nearly four seconds from her previous best. Looking for a good sign that this girl has a shot?… Check out the even more impressive 16:11.19 she rocked in the 1500 at Charlotte on May 12th that ranks her #5 in the world this year. Twichell is training under Bill Rose at Mission Viejo and has landed several other performances this season that make her noteworthy. She is currently ranked 5th all time for American women in the 1000 yard freestyle with 9:24.44, and touched the wall to the feet only .38 away from that time on her way to an outstanding performance in the 1650 at the King Marlin Pro-Am Classic in Dallas this December. The 15:35.42 for that mile ranked her fifth all time and third among active athletes in the USA. She has also excelled in Open Water events over the past year with a win at the RCP Triburon Mile and a 10k Open Water National Title that unseated Defending Champion Becca Mann.
Top 8 Picks
Athlete | Best Time since 2012 | Prediction |
Katie Ledecky | 8:06.68 | 8:06.6 |
Leah Smith | 8:24.74 | 8:19.5 |
Becca Mann | 8:21.77 | 8:21.0 |
Ashley Twichell | 8:30.45 | 8:21.6 |
Stephanie Peacock | 8:25.89 | 8:24.4 |
Cierra Runge | 8:24.69 | 8:25.9 |
Lindsay Vrooman | 8:26.67 | 8:26.9 |
Sierra Schmidt | 8:27.54 | 8:27.5 |
Viking’s Dark Horse pick: Haley Anderson.
Haley Anderson’s best time in the 800 meter free since 2012 has been 8:29.32 which she hit at 2015 Winter Nationals. She has been faster than that three times in her career though, with her lifetime best performance being the 8:26.60 from the Olympic Trials in 2012. Anderson has been killing it in Open Water events over the last two years, qualifying for her second Olympic team with her ninth place finish in the 10k and a repeat as Gold Medalist in the 5k, both at 2015 FINA World Championships. The USC grad openly admits “I hate walls. I hate turns.” That doesn’t seem to be a problem though when she decides that she wants to put up a fight in the long course pool.
Don’t you think it’s time to let women swim a 1500 at the Olympics? Maybe add that and an 800 for men?
First sentence references Ledecky’s “newcomer status at the 2008 Olympic Trials” . . . I assume that’s supposed to be 2012 b/c I don’t think she swam Trials at age 11.
Haha. Thanks. Can’t believe I didn’t catch that. Will edit! Not that she couldn’t have won at age 11. Her parents just forgot to sign her up I’m sure.
Question: Who will join Ledecky in the 800 freestyle?
Answer: Leah Smith
I think it will be a shootout between Smith and Runge. If the girls could swim a 1500 I would love to pick Andersen but it would probably go to Twichell.
I predict 2nd place will go to Connor Jaeger. After realizing that she accidentally won the men’s event, Ledecky will hop back in and do another 800 in under 8:10.
Thats a real T-REX prevision
Ashley Twichell is not ranked #2 anymore I think. The top 3 in Europeans all went faster.
I love these picture captions
Second spot for Leah Smith – no doubt in my mind . She is the rocket going up right now for Usa – she is good at 200 , 400 and 800 . Maybe Becca can sneak in for second at Trials .