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U.S. Breaks Boys 4×100 Free Relay World Junior Record (3:15.79), Diehl Splits 48.6

2022 JUNIOR PAN PACIFIC CHAMPIONSHIPS

BOYS 4×100 METER FREESTYLE RELAY – TIMED FINALS

  • Jr World: 3:15.80 – USA (J Magahey, L Urlando, A Chaney, C Foster) (2019)
  • Jr Pan Pac: 3:17.67 – USA, USA (R Hoffer, D Krueger, C Craig, D Kibler) (2016)

Podium:

  1. United States (Thomas Heilman, Henry McFadden, Daniel Diehl, Kaii Winkler) – 3:15.79
  2. Australia (Flynn Southam, Marcus Da Silva, Anders McAlpine, Jamie Mooney) – 3:18.06
  3. Japan (Tatsumi Edward Scott, Yoshitoku Narushima, Yamato Okadome, Ryosuke Hasunuma) – 3:19.94

The U.S. boys 4×100 free relay team of Thomas Heilman, Henry McFadden, Daniel Diehl, and Kaii Winkler tore to victory tonight at the 2022 Junior Pan Pacs, breaking the World Junior Record in the process. We’ve seen a ton of Championship Records go down through the first 3 days of this meet, but this performance marks the first WJR to be broken this week.

Australia’s Flynn Southam, who won the boys 100 free in a Championship Record last night, led Australia off in 48.43, but it was all Team USA from there on. Heilman got out to a 49.14 on the American lead-off, handing off to Henry McFadden, who split 49.04. 100 backstroke champion Daniel Diehl came up huge for the team, splitting 48.66 on the 3rd leg, then Kaii Winkler anchored in 48.95. At the finish, the U.S. team was 3:15.79, blowing away the previous Junior Pan Pacs Record of 3:17.67, and taking 0.01 seconds off the World Junior Record, which stood at 3:15.80 from the 2019 World Junior Championships.

Here is a splits comparison between the old World Junior Record from 2019 and the U.S. team’s performance tonight.

Splits USA (Heilmann, McFadden, Diehl, Winkler) – 2022 Jr Pan Pacs  USA (Magahey, Urlando, Chaney, Foster) – 2019 World Jr Champs
1st Leg Thomas Heilman (49.14) Jake Magahey (49.51)
2nd Leg Henry McFadden (49.04) Luca Urlando (48.73)
3rd Leg Daniel Diehl (48.66) Adam Chaney (48.64)
4th Leg Kaii Winkler (48.95) Carson Foster (48.92)
FINAL TIME 3:15.79 3:15.80

Comparing the U.S. team tonight to the previous WJR squad, Heilman’s lead-off made a huge difference, coming in 0.37 seconds faster than Jake Magahey was on the 2019 team’s lead-off. Notably, Heilman’s swim came after he broke the Championship Record in the boys 100 fly final earlier in the session, setting a new U.S. 15-16 National Age Group Record (51.98) in the process.

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AquaTiger
2 years ago

Does this count for Heilman being the fastest 15-16 LCM 100 Free now? It’s a lead off. Beats Dressel’s 49.28.

Last edited 2 years ago by AquaTiger
Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
2 years ago

Beat those Aussies!

Oi! Oi! Oi!

MarkB
2 years ago

Old record swimmers turned out to be pretty successful! Hope these four can meet or surpass them.

NB1
2 years ago

Heilman’s lead-off made a huge difference”
to be accurate, everyone was slower than in the previous relay, except for Heilman. He didn’t just make a huge difference, he was the only one who made the difference But there is nothing to be ashamed about being a bit slower than Luca and Carlson

H20MOM
2 years ago

Awesome Relay! Congrats to those boys and the coaching staff who put it together..

LIVESWIM
2 years ago
Brad
2 years ago

Very impressive, but I can’t get over the fact that a competition of this caliber is hosted in a venue that is utter shit

PhillyMark
Reply to  Brad
2 years ago

What’s wrong with the pool? The water’s wet ain’t it?

Campbell
Reply to  PhillyMark
2 years ago

water isn’t wet but i get what u mean

Faulty Touch Pad
Reply to  Brad
2 years ago

Agreed, I’ve seen summer league meets hosted at nicer facilities/ actually have starting wedges.

Dave
Reply to  Brad
2 years ago

I think the kids are likely willing to trade starting wedges for a week in Hawaii, lol. It’s also likely there aren’t too many 50 meter pools in Hawaii. I will admit they could have spent a couple hours powerwashing the blocks and deck before the meet.

Last edited 2 years ago by Dave
NB1
Reply to  Brad
2 years ago

please do not comment on the pool in Lima

Calvin
Reply to  NB1
2 years ago

Lima’s pool is pretty tho

7swim
2 years ago

The us machine of generating talent year in and year out is enviable.

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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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