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Australia Names 44 Strong Olympic Swim Team For Paris – Boxall Places 10 on the Team

SwuS2024 AUSTRALIAN OLYMPIC TRIALS

The final session of the Australian Olympic Trials has concluded, and with that, we know all of the athletes who have qualified for an individual event.

Swim Australia has announced a team of 44 swimmers, 23 of whom will be making their Olympic debut. Leading the charge for the women will be Ariarne Titmus and Kaylee McKeown, both of whom will be looking to defend their gold medals: Titmus in the 200 and 400 free and McKeown in the 100 and 200 back. Joining them will be Mollie O’Callaghan, Emma McKeon, and Lani Pallister.

For the men, Zac Stubblety-Cook will look to defend his 200-meter breaststroke gold medal. Strong medal threats Brendon Smith (bronze in 2021) and Kyle Chalmers (silver in 2021) have also made the team.

Ten of the 44 swimmers hail from one club, St. Peters Western. Head Coach Dean Boxall gained more global recognition with Titmus’s performance at the Olympics and his meme-worthy celebrations. To put that number into context, almost one in four swimmers on the Australian Olympic team call one club home.

Full Released Roster

Name (Alphabetical) Club  # of Olympic Games
Iona Anderson Breakers WA Debut
Ben Armbruster Bond Debut
Jaclyn Barclay St. Peters Western Debut
Bronte Campbell Cruiz 4th (2012, 2016, 2020)
Jack Cartwright St. Peters Western Debut
Kyle Chalmers St. Andrew’s 3rd (2016, 2020)
Abbey Connor USC Spartans Debut
Isaac Cooper St. Andrew’s 2nd (2020)
Elizabeth Dekkers Chandler Debut
Jenna Forrester St. Peters Western Debut
Maximillian Giuliani Miami Debut
Chelsea Gubecka Yeronga Park 2nd (2016)
Meg Harris Rackley 2nd (2020)
Zac Incerti USC Spartans 2nd (2020)
Shayna Jack St. Peters Western Debut
Moesha Johnson Griffith University Debut
Kyle Lee North Coast Debut
Se-Bom Lee SOPAC 2nd (2020)
Cameron McEvoy Somerville House 4th (2012, 2016, 2020)
Emma McKeon Griffith University 3rd (2016, 2020)
Kaylee McKeown Griffith University 2nd (2020)
Thomas Neill Rackley 2nd (2020)
Mollie O’Callaghan St. Peters Western 2nd (2020)
Lani Pallister Griffith University Debut
Alexandria Perkins USC Spartans Debut
Jamie Perkins St. Peters Western Debut
William Petric Nunawading Debut
Ella Ramsay Chandler Debut
Samuel Short Rackley Debut
Nicholas Sloman Noosa Debut
Brendon Smith Griffith University 2nd (2020)
Flynn Southam Bond Debut
Jenna Strauch Miami 2nd (2020)
Zac Stubblety-Cook Chandler 2nd (2020)
Kai Taylor St. Peters Western Debut
Matthew Temple Marion 2nd (2020)
Brianna Throssell St. Peters Western 3rd (2016, 2020)
Ariarne Titmus St. Peters Western 2nd (2020)
Samuel Williamson Melbourne Vicentre Debut
Elijah Winnington St. Peters Western 2nd (2020)
Bradley Woodward Mingara Debut
Olivia Wunsch Carlile Debut
William Yang SOPAC Debut
Joshua Yong UWA West Coast Debut

Day 6 Roster Additions Recap

Meg Harris punched her first individual ticket to Paris, having come so close in the 100. She will be joined by Shayna Jack, who broke 24.00 for the first time to win the event, stopping the clock at 23.99.

The men’s 400 IM saw two new swimmers add their names to the travels list. Brendon Smith will look to defend his 2020 Tokyo bronze medal. Three years ago, Smith captured his first Olympic medal in 4:10.38, and tonight he was 4:10.18, showing that he should be in good standing to make another run at a medal. Joining Smith in the 400 IM will be Will Petric. Petric narrowly missed out on making the team in the 200 IM earlier in the week but put in an inspired performance to take second tonight.

The women’s 400 IM saw Ella Ramsay cap off a successful week, adding a third event to her itinerary. Jenna Forrester, the 2023 Worlds bronze medalist, also made the team. She hit the wall in 4:38.16, squeaking under the 4:38.53 qualifying time. Smith had had a rough week, adding time in the 200 IM and 200 free, but did what was necessary.

The men’s 100 fly only saw one swimmer add their name to the roster as Matt Temple narrowly snuck under the qualifying time of 51.17, as he took the event win in 51.15. Temple, likely would have swam the fly legs on the medley relay, but now has ensured that he has an individual event.

The last event of the day saw Lani Pallister add to her already long schedule, as her win in the 1500 marked her 3rd individual event. Open water swimming, Moesha Johnson will dramatically drop in meterage as she will add the 1500 to her marathon swimming event.

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STRAIGHTBLACKLINE
5 months ago

I feel a little bit for Alex Graham because usually sixth place in the 100/200FS makes the team but I guess the selectors thought a 1.47.1 didn’t cut it. He’s been a good contributor for Australia over the years and I recall he was excellent during the ISL.

Nono
Reply to  STRAIGHTBLACKLINE
5 months ago

Unfortunately for Graham, Southam (7th place in 200free, 0.18 slower than Graham) is automatically qualified by placing 3rd in 100 free. In addition, Southam was 1:46.11 at Aussie Champs 6 weeks ago.

Flynn can basically fulfill the job in the relay.

Last edited 5 months ago by Nono
Southerly Buster
5 months ago

Watching a replay of the 50 Free Final I noticed how fast Olivia Wunsch was off the blocks. Her reaction time was 0.61 compared to everyone else between 0.68-0.75. I checked all seven of her reaction times at Trials
and she was remarkably consistent:

0.62, 0.63, 0.61, 0.62, 0.61, 0.63, 0.61

She is not as tall as some girls and that may help but still she has performed 7 very fast and very consistent RTs under the extreme pressure of a first Olympic Trials. Very impressive.

Nono
Reply to  Southerly Buster
5 months ago

I remember her RT’s at last year’s WJC relay events were so fast almost bordering DQ territories lol 😅

4×100 Free Women – 0.05
4×100 Free Mixed – 0.07

They will fine tune this at staging camp for sure

stubs
5 months ago

Probably the most disappointing trial performance was that of McKeon. Her butterfly was average and not even qualifying to defend her 50m and 100m titles, even if she wasn’t necessarily defend her title, plus losing her 51. split for the 4×100 hurts too. Maybe she busts out a freakish split in the heats, and they put her on the final team.

Troyy
Reply to  stubs
5 months ago

There’s a better chance of Bronte busting out a big split than Emma given Emma has shoulder soreness at the moment so probably can’t do the necessary work.

Sub13
5 months ago

Ok after having a little time to process I’m pretty happy with how trials went. A few highlights, quite a few times slower than I would have liked but overall a very good team.

We have 2 qualifiers in almost every event which is pretty rare. We finished ranked 1st in the world in 6 individual events which is very solid.

I’m stoked with how many new and young Olympians we have. In particular, Wunsch, Anderson, Ramsay, Forrester and Barclay I am super happy with. And both Perkins. Ok just all of them.

While I am still confused about essentially all of the sprint men bar about 5 being much slower than in season, I guess this gives us room… Read more »

M d e
Reply to  Sub13
5 months ago

We o let ever were a chance of topping the medal table if we turned every gold medal chance into a gold medal, and even then we’d need IS to drop a few events they were favourites in.

Greg P2
5 months ago

Also, how did Iona Anderson made the team?

Andy
Reply to  Greg P2
5 months ago

MOC won’t swim 100back, freeing a spot for Iona

Alison England
Reply to  Andy
5 months ago

As I expected.

Miss M
Reply to  Greg P2
5 months ago

Even if Mollie didn’t drop it, Iona would have been needed for the medley relay heat. No way Kaylee or Mollie are swimming the heat with their program.

Alison England
Reply to  Miss M
5 months ago

Exactly. They will both be extremely busy.

Greg P2
5 months ago

Man é feel for Cody Simpson…kind of feels that he should have put his efforts in the 100 free from the start. He did better than Incerti in the 100 free but was in the B final after placing 9th in the morning. So close…if he had qualified for the A final most probably he could have achieved his dream… inspiring story nevertheless

Steve Nolan
5 months ago

Two of these!?

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, …

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