You are working on Staging1

Alex Shackell Shatters 17-18 200 Fly NAG Record (1:50.15) To Close Out Winter Juniors

2023 SPEEDO WINTER JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIPS – EAST

During the final session of the 2023 Winter Junior Nationals – East, Alex Shackell of Carmel Swim Club destroyed the 17-18 national age group (NAG) record in the 200 butterfly, touching in 1:50.15. The previous mark was held by Olympic silver medalist Claire Curzan (1:50.85), which was set in March of 2022. With her performance, Shackell became the fifth-fastest performer of all time.

Top 5 Performers in History, 200 SCY Butterfly:

  1. Regan Smith – 1:48.33
  2. Ella Eastin – 1:49.51
  3. Elaine Breeden – 1:49.92
  4. Emma Sticklen – 1:49.95
  5. Alex Shackell – 1:50.15

Shackell took the race out much faster than Curzan through the first 100, but Curzan had a slightly faster third 50. They split about even on the final 50, so Shackell’s opening speed is what garnered her the record in the end. See a full split comparison below:

Splits Comparison

Shackell New Record: Curzan Old Record:
24.14 24.48
51.61 (27.47) 52.32 (27.89)
1:20.05 (28.44) 1:20.68 (28.31)
1:50.15 (30.10) 1:50.85 (30.17)

Shackell scared the mark during today’s prelim session, where she recorded a time of 1:51.33. Coming into the meet, her best time rested at the 1:53.52 marker she threw down exactly a year ago.

With her 1:50.15 swim tonight, she took off 3.37 seconds off her best time in the span of eight hours. This is a great sign for Shackell, as this event in the long course pool seems to be fairly wide open for a spot on the U.S. Olympic team. Regan Smith, who destroyed the American record with a 2:03.87 last June, seems like the clear frontrunner — but behind Smith, the field is bunched up in the 2:06 – 2:07 range.

Here’s how the U.S. rankings in the 200 LCM Fly shaped up this past year:

  1. Regan Smith – 2:03.87
  2. Dakota Luther – 2:06.79
  3. Hali Flickinger – 2:06.80
  4. Tess Howley – 2:06.85
  5. Lindsay Looney – 2:07.35

Shackell placed 5th in this event at the World Championships trials last June, where she touched the wall in 2:08.18. She clocked a personal best of 2:07.95 during the prelims of that meet. Her breakout event of the meet was the 200 freestyle, where she dropped a multi-second best time of 1:56.70 to place 5th, earning a spot on the World Championship team as part of the 4×200 free relay.

At the World Championships, Shackell clocked 1:56.05 on the third leg in prelims, earning a spot on the U.S. relay in the final. She anchored the team to silver, splitting 1:56.38.

In This Story

2
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

2 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
502SwimFan
11 months ago

I’ve seen Alex swim a few times in person… BEAST! Can’t wait to see how she develops over the next few years… hoping she makes the Olympic team in ’24, but should have a great chance in ’28.

614
Reply to  502SwimFan
11 months ago

My daughter was in the lane next to her. lordy, beast is right! All eyes were certainly on Alex for that race-history made. fun to have witnessed it in person.

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 »