You are working on Staging1

Men’s and Women’s 4×100 Medley Relay Prelims Lineups: Most Countries Saving Legs for Finals

2024 PARIS SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES

DAY 8 PRELIMS HEAT SHEET

This is the last prelims session of the 2024 Paris Olympics, and with it, we have the last relays of the meet. This morning’s session will conclude with the 4×100 medley relays. The men first, then the women. Notably, the mixed 4×100 medley relay finals will be tonight during the finals session, and the men’s and women’s 4×100 medley relay finals will take place tomorrow night during Sunday’s finals session.

So, let’s take a look at the start lists for the relays, and see which swimmers each country has elected to use this morning. The men are up first, so let’s start there.

MEN’S 4×100 MEDLEY RELAY – START LISTS

Starting with the top seed: the United States. The Americans are the World Record holders and defending Olympic Champions in this event.

USA:

This relay basically features the 2nd-fastest American in each of the 100s, which means we can expect the legs to be swapped out for the other swimmers in finals. The exception to that is Jack Alexy, who was the US’ fastest swimmer in the 100 free earlier in the meet, and is swimming this morning.

The name of the game will be securing a good lane for the final tomorrow night. Armstrong was viewed as a medal contender coming into these Olympics, however, he didn’t make it out of the semifinals in the 100 back, where he clocked a 53.11. He’ll get another opportunity to put up a time this morning. Similarly, Swanson and Heilman didn’t advance past prelims in the 100 breast and 100 fly respectively. Alexy made the final of the 100 free, where he finished 7th.

Next up, China is the #2 seed heading into the meet. Interestingly, it looks like China has elected to race their fastest combination of swimmers this morning, so they’ll surely be looking to put up the top time.

China:

This is an intimidating relay on paper. Of course, Pan Zhanle made waves earlier in the week when he destroyed the field in the men’s 100 free final, blowing away his own World Record in the event by 0.40 seconds. He’ll be on the end for China, which is good, because fly is probably their weakest leg, so he’ll mask that a bit.

The Chinese also have a stellar lead-off, as Xu Jiayu was the silver medalist in the 100 back towards the beginning of the week. Qin Haiyang came into this meet as the fastest breaststroker in the world after going on a rampage last summer and fall, however, he has not been at his best here in Paris. Still, he took 7th in the 100 breast final, so China has a very solid leg there to look forward to. Wang, Changhao, the butterflier, did not make it out of prelims of the men’s 100 fly yesterday morning, where he swam a 52.37. He’ll be looking to put up a faster time this morning.

Following China, Australia is the 3rd-fastest seed coming in.

Australia:

The Aussies appear to have taken a similar line to the Americans with this relay. They’re both using their fastest freestyler on the anchor this morning. For the Aussies, that’s Kyle Chalmers, who earned the silver medal in the 100 free earlier in the week.

Australia is also using Isaac Cooper, who was their fastest 100 backstroker here in Paris, however, that’s likely because the 100 back is a bit of a weakness for the Australian men. Cooper was 21st in prelims of the 100 back on the 2nd day of the meet.

In the middle of the relay this morning, Australia will have Joshua Yong and Ben Armbruster. They’ll likely be switched out for Zac Stubblety-Cook and Matthew Temple for the final tomorrow.

Italy:

Italy is maybe the scariest country heading into this relay. They have the gold medalist in the 100 back, Thomas Ceccon, and the gold medalist in the 100 breast, Nicolo Martinenghi, on their front half. Their weakness lies on the fly leg, where they have Giacomo Carini this morning. Carini is a terrific flyer, though his strength lies more in the 200 fly than the 100. His career best in the 100 fly in 52.00. Alessandro Miressi just missed the final of the 100 free earlier in the week, swimming a 47.95 in semifinals.

WOMEN’S 4×100 MEDLEY RELAY START LISTS

USA

The Americans should be just fine this morning, even though they’re not using their fastest swimmer on any of the legs. They’ll be led off by Katharine Berkoff, who earned the bronze medal in the 100 back earlier in the week. Then, Emma Weber will swim breast. Weber had a tough prelims of the 100 breast earlier in the week, so she’ll be looking to bounce back here. Ales Shackell, who didn’t compete in the 100 fly individually here in Paris, will swim fly for the Americans this morning. Shackell finished 6th in the 200 fly. Kate Douglass will anchor this relay.

Using Shackell on fly this morning tells us that the American coaching staff is most likely planning to have Gretchen Walsh swim fly on the relay tomorrow night, and have Torri Huske swim free.

Australia

Like the Americans, Australia seems content to send their 2nd-fastest swimmers in each leg for this morning. Iona Anderson came in 5th in the 100 back final earlier in the week, so they’ll have a solid start this morning. Ella Ramsay didn’t compete in the 100 breast here in Paris, however, she did race the 200 breast, where she finished 12th in the semifinals.

Alexandria Perkins came in 8th in prelims of the 100 fly in the first event of the meet, then finished 13th in semifinals. Meg Harris didn’t swim the 100 free individually for Australia, however, she is one of their 50 freestylers.

Canada

Canada has been racing extremely well here in Paris. They’ve elected to not send their ‘A’ team into the prelims of this race either. Ingrid Wilm, the 6th-place finisher in the 100 back earlier in the meet, will lead the team off. Sophie Angus didn’t make it past prelims of the 100 breast, however, she did swim a 1:06.93, which is a solid time. Mary-Sophie Harvey has been on fire here in Paris, including having finished 4th in the 200 free final with a massive swim. She’s on fly duty this morning, but she’ll surely put up a good split.

In This Story

21
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

21 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Lpman
3 months ago

Just another poor coaching decision. Why have Kate Douglass in here at all? Place Weitzall in free, rest Douglass for IM.

I also think King should have swum in prelims to prove she belongs in final. If she cannot split 105.5, Douglass seems the logical choice

Chris
3 months ago

i sincerely hope they they put KD on the breaststroke. Lilly King has not had a good meet.

Idontevenswim:)
Reply to  Chris
3 months ago

Lilly had a solid 100 breast still. She only missed the podium by 0.01, and she was bronze in Tokyo. She’s also generally been a very clutch relay swimmer for the US, having that fighter, hate-to-lose mentality.
She had a very rough 200 breast final but I think she was in her own head. I still would trust her to split a 1:05 low or 1:04 high on this relay

JCK
Reply to  Chris
3 months ago

While KD has some upside, Lilly has consistently been 1.05-mid this year which is good enough from a flat start to become 1.05-low on a relay. Shes the safe pick

ZThas
3 months ago

I wonder if this is the first time both winners of the 100 free at trials did not swim the medley relay in finals?

Iswimfan
3 months ago

Why would a coach exhaust KD for a stupid prelim when she has a shot at gold tonight? Probably a good reason why we are not winning as many golds. Incompetence.

JCK
Reply to  Iswimfan
3 months ago

She won’t be swimming the finals so I assume Desorbo got her in the heats so she still gets the relay gold, which feels warranted considering she won the 1 free at trials

Fact check
3 months ago

Charlie Swanson advanced to semis in the 100 breast this week, unlike Heilman fyi

Swiikeafish
3 months ago

Should have triedKD on breast. Sorry Weber, KD ‘s 100 split in the 200 was faster than your prelim.

Treedoc
3 months ago

KD should be in final

Swimz
Reply to  Treedoc
3 months ago

She don’t have a leg to swim..Huske is the fastest freestyler this year by a huge margin

Treedoc
Reply to  Swimz
3 months ago

In one race. KD hit taper for 2 breast

Ob man
Reply to  Treedoc
3 months ago

Huske split 52.0 flying start and went 52.2 flat. I’d argue for KD on Brest over anything else

Safenotsorry
Reply to  Ob man
3 months ago

That flying start came with a 0.0 reaction time

KD4GOLD
Reply to  Swimz
3 months ago

Huske also almost DQed the free relay

KD4GOLD
Reply to  Swimz
3 months ago

Hope she doesn’t DQ us

Dai
Reply to  Swimz
3 months ago

KD won 100 free in trial

mparisi22
Reply to  Dai
3 months ago

Yes and she led off the relay 4 tenths slower than she was at trials and Torri went 3 tenths faster than KD was at trials. Torri is the obvious choice.

VA Steve
Reply to  mparisi22
3 months ago

Kate actually has a faster split (pre-Paris), but it is still the right choice.

Swimgeek
Reply to  Treedoc
3 months ago

In what stroke?

Irish415
Reply to  Swimgeek
3 months ago

Breaststroke. She would 100% out split King. Regan / Kate / Gretchen / Torri is the best US lineup, but the coaches were never going to do that.

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 »