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Regan Smith Leads Off Mixed Medley Heat in 57.64, Unofficially #5 Swim All-Time

2020 TOKYO SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES

Regan Smith put up the fifth-fastest 100 backstroke swim of all-time with a 57.64, though it won’t official count for records or rankings.

Smith led off the United States 4×100 mixed medley relay tonight in Tokyo, swimming that 57.64. Mixed relay leadoff splits are not eligible for world records due to the potential drafting advantages of a female backstroker swimming next to men. But the time would check in as the #5 swim of all-time in the women’s 100 back, and is faster than Smith’s swims in the individual 100 back earlier this week.

Top Performances All-Time, Women’s 100 Back

  1. Kaylee McKeown – 57.45 (2021)
  2. Kaylee McKeown – 57.47 (2021)
  3. Regan Smith – 57.57 (2019)
  4. Kaylee McKeown – 57.63 (2021)
    1. Unofficial: Regan Smith – 57.64 (2021)
  5. Kylie Masse – 57.70 (2021)

The 19-year-old Smith took bronze in the 100 back final, going 58.05. She was 57.96 to briefly set an Olympic record in heats, then 57.86 to re-set the Olympic record in the semifinals.

A first-time Olympian, Smith has been adjusting to the pressure of the Olympic stage. Her 100 back bronze was a key milestone as her first-ever Olympic medal, but also came two years after she set the world record in 2019. Smith actually bounced back for a better medal (silver) in an off-event later in the week – she finished second in the 200 fly.

It appears Smith might be getting better as the meet goes on, adjusting to the Olympic stage and perhaps not feeling as much pressure now that she’s away from the individual event where she was considered an Olympic gold favorite after her international breakout at age 17. Smith has also proven to be a very good relay swimmer, breaking that 2019 world record on a relay leadoff.

Smith’s big swim this morning is notable for two key reasons. First, it sets up a tough choice for Team USA as to who will swim the final in the mixed medley relay. Both Smith and Ryan Murphy won Olympic bronze in their individual 100 backs. Both have broken world records leading off relays, and both have a shot to be the fastest leadoff swimmer in their gender in the mixed relay final.

Using Smith, though, would allow Team USA to potentially swim Caeleb Dressel and Michael Andrew on that relay in the final.

The other big impact is on the women’s medley relay, where the United States set a world record in 2019 in the same race where Smith led off in her own individual world record. Australia is expected to be a strong challenger to Team USA, boasting the 100 back gold medalist and 100 fly bronze medalist, not to mention a medal contender in the 100 free. If Smith can match or better the leadoff leg of Australia’s Kaylee McKeownthough, the balance tips much more in favor of the United States, which would then get a lead and clean water for their significant breaststroke advantage.

Canada should also be in the gold medal hunt, and Smith’s battle with 100 back silver medalist Kylie Masse is equally important, with the United States also holding a significant breaststroke advantage over Canada.

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Samesame
3 years ago

“Australia has a medal contender in the 100 free”. We have the favourite and the third favourite.

BairnOwl
Reply to  Samesame
3 years ago

I like the way they worded it, because favorites are also medal contenders by definition. The 100 free also seems to be a race where there are often upsets and surprises.

BKP
3 years ago

I think we need the litmus test for Andrew since it is critical to know where he stands for the final men’s medley relay. A thought:

  • If MA is 1.56 high or slower on the 200 tonight, you consider a different breast leg for the MMR
  • If MA looks good tonight, then consider him for the spot in the MMR.
  • If MA makes the MMR lineup, use his result to determine his sport for the final men’s MR
MTK
Reply to  BKP
3 years ago

That’s cool and all, but they have to pick the team before the session starts, so there’s no looking at session results.

Ratio
Reply to  MTK
3 years ago

200 IM final is today, MMR final is tomorrow.

WhoGoesHere
3 years ago

If by some strange coincidence ALL of the backstrokers were women, would the leadoff count for records?

Willswim
3 years ago

Murphy-Fink-Huske-Weitzel (Unless Meehan wants to roll the dice with Manuel again). I know we all want Dressel, but we really should go Male-Male-Female-Female.

pSL1988
3 years ago

Regan , Andrew , Dressel , Weitzel –> 219.35 sec
Murphy , Andrew , Huske , Weitzel –> 220.80 sec
Regan , Andrew , Huske , Weitzel –> 220.60 sec

They should go with ( Regan , Andrew/Fink , Dressel , Witzel ) lineup.

pSL1988
Reply to  pSL1988
3 years ago

Typo fixed.

Regan , Andrew , Huske , Dressel –> 220.60 sec

96Swim
Reply to  pSL1988
3 years ago

I came up with the same optimal relay when playing with the numbers, but had it faster. What are you using for splits? 57.6+58.5+49.5+52.5 gives 218.1 seconds. Regan was 57.6 this morning, MA was 58.8 flat start so 58.5 seems reasonable, 49.5 for Dressel with a flying start seems reasonable, and Weitzel was 52.6 on the free relay but was 52.9 individually so 52.5 seems reasonable. Curious where you added 1.2 seconds

MichaelTran
Reply to  96Swim
3 years ago

MA is so bad at this meet.

WhoGoesHere
Reply to  MichaelTran
3 years ago

You post the same negative comment about MA over and over, every article. Sure, he’s not having an ideal meet compared to trials, but 4th in 100 breast isn’t dreadful, just off the podium. He’s got a chance at something in the 200 IM. The 50 free is zero margin for error, so a top 8 spot would be decent. I think he’ll leave with one individual medal (IM), and a second if he get the mixed MR slot. He’s 22, and can use this as big learning experience, and come back in 3 years at 25.

MTK
Reply to  WhoGoesHere
3 years ago

He’ll swim in the 4×100 medley too, why wouldn’t he?

Pags
Reply to  pSL1988
3 years ago

But what’s the adjustment for Andrew and Dressel for the other swims they have earlier in the session? I think a rested Wilson is no slower than a just-off-the-50-free-semifinal Mandrew, and probably even a touch faster. What does a 100 fly final and 50 semi do to Dressel? Do either of those guys even want to swim it with the 50 final the next day?

Last edited 3 years ago by Pags
Tracy C
3 years ago

USA has to go first FM, there is no other option, then you can gamble with Huske+Dressel or Dressel+Abby, really? There is a 6 sec gap in both options, but Huske looked very good in the final, that is the pick, both safe and high ceiling, you can bet I would love to have male As anchor. So we have RS 57,5, TH 55,5, CD 46,5, 2.39.5. You need at least 58 flat to have a chance. So the ultimate tease MA is the only viable way, even if everybody knows that is a bad option.

Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
3 years ago

It seems Regan Smith has regained her confidence.

Here Comes Lezak
3 years ago

You go girl!

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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