You are working on Staging1

Bella Sims Moves To #4 All-Time In 15-16 200 Free Ranks With 1:58.00

2021 U.S. OLYMPIC SWIMMING TRIALS

Three young swimmers in the women’s 200 free semifinals at Olympic Trials moved up the all-time age group ranks, led by Bella Sims‘ 1:58.00.

Sims is now #4 in age group history behind three absolute legends: Missy Franklin, Katie Ledecky, and Dagny Knutson.

The Sandpipers of Nevada 16-year-old went 1:58.00 in the second semifinal. That was a drop of more than a full second – Sims went a career-best 1:59.16 just to get into the semifinals this morning.

One heat before her, 16-year-old Erin Gemmell of Nation’s Capital went 1:58.67. That would have moved Gemmell up from #11 to #9 all-time in age group history, but she drops to #10 with Sims’ swim.

Also out of that first semifinal, Cavan Gormsen went a career-best 1:59.79. Gormsen hit 2:00.00 on the nose earlier this year, so this was her first swim under two minutes. That puts Gormsen into a tie for #23 all-time in the age group’s history. Gormsen actually scratched into this final after taking 18th this morning.

USA Swimming: Top 200 Freestylers All-Time, 15-16 Girls

  1. Missy Franklin (2011) – 1:55.06
  2. Katie Ledecky (2013) – 1:56.32
  3. Dagny Knutson (2009) – 1:57.73
  4. Bella Sims (2021) – 1:58.00
  5. Claire Tuggle (2019) – 1:58.21
  6. Sippy Woodhead (1979) – 1:58.23
  7. Quinn Carrozza (2010) – 1:58.31
  8. Chelsea Chenault (2010) – 1:58.52
  9. Jasmine Tosky (2010) – 1:58.54
  10. Erin Gemmell (2021) – 1:58.67
  11. Katie Drabot (2014) – 1:58.73

2
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

2 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Dan
3 years ago

If she can get past Dagny’s time tomorrow she might have a chance for a Top 6 and maybe a relay spot.
Good Luck tomorrow.

Walter
3 years ago

Cynthia Woodhead would also be a legend, give her a new suit and 40 years worth of training updates and her time would be….?

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 …

Read More »