You are working on Staging1

Americans Add More Hardware, Maintain Overall Medal Table Lead

2017 FINA WORLD SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIPS

The Americans came on strong day 3 of the 2017 FINA World Swimming Championships, with several athletes landing up on the podium to give the stars n’ stripes a boost in hardware. Townley Haas kicked off the podium-placing streak, taking silver in the men’s 200m freestyle behind China’s Sun Yang.

Katie Ledecky then got the job done for gold in the 1500m freestyle, with Kathleen Baker taking silver in the 100m back in the next final of the night. Matt Grevers and Ryan Murphy finished 2-3 in the men’s 100m backstroke behind China’s Xu Jiayu. In the final event of the night, Americans Lilly King and Katie Meili made it a 1-2 U.S. finish to add another 2 medals to the Americans’ big night.

Canada saw its first medal up on the board by way of Kylie Masse‘s new 100m backstroke world record, while Spain also entered the medal table with a silver by Olympian Mireia Belmonte in the 1500.

The table below shows medals within pool swimming only, through day 3:

 Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  United States 5 6 3 14
2  China 3 0 1 4
3  Great Britain 2 0 0 2
4  Hungary* 1 0 1 2
5  Canada 1 0 0 1
 Sweden 1 0 0 1
7  Australia 0 3 1 4
8  Brazil 0 2 0 2
9  Japan 0 1 0 1
 Spain 0 1 0 1
11  Russia 0 0 3 3
12  Italy 0 0 2 2
13  Netherlands 0 0 1 1
 Ukraine 0 0 1 1
Total 13 13 13 39

* – hosts

Below are the top 10 nations in the overall standings, across all disciplines:

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  China 12 9 3 24
2  Russia 8 3 6 17
3  United States 6 8 6 20
4  France 5 1 1 7
5  Great Britain 3 2 1 6
6  Italy 1 3 7 11
7  Australia 1 3 1 5
8  Brazil 1 2 2 5
9  Canada 1 1 2 4
10  Netherlands 1 1 1 3

In This Story

11
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

11 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Neil
7 years ago

The idea of “all disciplines” seems silly to me; especially since a it’s not the olympics. What do these disciplines have to do with each other (except open water)? You wouldn’t have a track and field world champs and then randomly add in gymnastics and soccer. Polo and diving should hold there own events. If they want to piggy back in order to make the logistics easier, fine but the idea of “all disciplines” seems very random.

Luke
Reply to  Neil
7 years ago

They are all run by FINA. That is also why they are all done roughly at the same time and the same place.

SwimShark
7 years ago

Surprising and sad to see the Aussies this far down in the swim medals count. They have a long heritage in this sport and helped raised the bar. Hope they have the opportunity to rebuild and bounce back.

swimfan
7 years ago

Why is there an * by Hungary?

Jim C
7 years ago

I find the overall aquatics table more interesting. The USA has narrowed China’s gold medal lead from 9 to 1 before pool swimming to 12 to 6 at present. The USA looks like they should be in good position to regain the overall (GOLD) medal title–but obviously there is a lot of work to be done.

Rafael
Reply to  Jim C
7 years ago

6 golds needed..
US have as “sure” golds (Unless dq): 2 more from Ledecky, 5 relays (Won´t count 6 due to 4×200 Men side) that would give 7.
50 back/200 back US could win, but also China could win. or Neither
Women 50 breast is tough to predict, but King has the momentum, 200 breast would not go to US or China.
Sun may win the 800 free but not a favorite.
Kalizs and Cordes might help on the IM and 200 breast but not so sure. 200 Back is very open to say anything.
Outside these events can´t see US winning, unless I missed some times.
US have a strong shot to… Read more »

Jim C
Reply to  Rafael
7 years ago

I know US women are very strong in water polo, and US women won gold and silver last time in high diving, as well as water polo.

bill
7 years ago

Omega Timing results never work, what a pos

taa
7 years ago

I would say “dominating the medal count”

ERVINFORTHEWIN
7 years ago

Usa just cruising the medal count ….just in 3 days

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 »