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Eye-Popping: 12-Year-Old Wang Yichun Of China Clocks 58.44 100 Fly

13TH ANNUAL NATIONAL GAMES OF CHINA

15-year-old Li Bingjie blasted a new Chinese and Asian record  tonight in the women’s 400m freestyle while competing at the National Games of China, but she wasn’t the only youngster to crank out an eye-popping swim in the session. Although she wasn’t able to land on the podium in the women’s 100m butterfly, Wang Yichun, just 12 years of age, crushed a time of 58.44 to finish in 4th place in the event.

Yichun’s age of just 12 is not a typo. In fact, the youth has already been sub-1:00 in the 100m fly this year, having rocked a 59.07 at the National Spring Championships this past April. Entering these National Games of China, that time ranked as 52nd in the world, but her 58.44 finish tonight now checks-in as 31st, ahead of Americans Dakota Luther and Cassidy Bayer.

For perspective, the fastest American 12-year-old female in history was in fact Bayer, who earned a time of 1:01.75 back in 2012. She is followed by Claire Curzan’s recent time of 1:02.13 from this year. Former world record holder Dana Vollmer held a time of 1:02.49 in this event when she was 12 years old back in 2000. Yichun’s time is a whopping 3+ seconds ahead of all 3.

To compare to another country, Australia’s national age group record for 13&U females in the 100m butterfly event is 59.95 set by Yolane Kukla in 2009. For the Netherlands, the fastest 12-year-old female ever in the 100m butterfly was Elise Tanis, who registered a time of 1:08.69 in 2014. Yichun’s sub-59 second mark is still in a league of its own when compared to these other nations’ standards.

The World Junior Record is held by Canada’s Penny Oleksiak with the 56.46 she established at the Rio Olympic Games en route to silver. Yichun still has a ways go to get within striking distance of that mark, but then again she has a ways to go until she nears the upper-end of the 18&U junior time bracket.

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Pam
7 years ago

Our South African 12 year old Karen Muir broke World Backstroke records back in the 60’s.

Swim1
7 years ago

a video from 2017 age group national,championship. She said she is a head taller than everyone

http://sports.cctv.com/2017/08/12/VIDETJScoMO49C5d42mJdR2n170812.shtml

gregor
7 years ago

Good old USA where nobody dopes, we are all clean they say, if this was an American we would be saying how great she was!

Cobalt
Reply to  gregor
7 years ago

That’s right Gregor! Because Americans never, ever, cheat.

S B Kong
Reply to  Cobalt
7 years ago

Are u sure of yourself? What about Marion Jones, Justin Gatlin, Kelli White, Eddy Hellebuyck, Mary Decker and the like. Not to mention Florence Griffth

Prof
7 years ago

Anyone have a race video?

Jorge
7 years ago

Correction: Wang was born in 2000.

E P
7 years ago

Another Ye Shiwen that will swim an amazing time once then disappear off the face of the earth?

Emanuele
Reply to  E P
7 years ago

Ye shiwen was asian champion in 2010, world champion in 2011 and olympic champion in 2012..
Dudes you write in a swimming site, at least make a little google search before say BS.

Dan
Reply to  Emanuele
7 years ago

it is easier being ignorant

E P
Reply to  Emanuele
7 years ago

Doped all the same, unbelievable times then completely disappeared. Not a surprise when it comes to China, a country known for stealing and cheating as much as humanly possible.

G.I.N.A
Reply to  E P
7 years ago

You’ve been told but continue your ignorance & now you’ve upped it . You can choose to hold opinions on PRC – it doesn’t matter as you are 1 vs 1.3 billion but Ye is still swimming . She was at Worlds & here .Her times would have won her a medal at WUGs if she had gone .

East Bay Cheerleader
7 years ago

The next Peavey.

Ting
7 years ago

Every athlete with excellent results should be respected and rewarded.No swimmer should receive malicious speculation.There’s no evidence to indicate that Wang is doping or lying her age.

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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, …

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