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Epic Showdowns: Ledecky vs. Adlington – London 2012 Olympic Games

Braden Keith
by Braden Keith 3

December 20th, 2016 Training

TritonWear and SwimSwam are bringing you the best in swimming race analysis. With the power of TritonWear, you can have an in-depth analysis of your practice every day with zero effort. Today we are having a closer look at one of the fiercest duels in swimming: Katie Ledecky vs. Rebecca Adlington.

In anticipation for the women’s 800 freestyle at the 2012 Olympics in London, commentators described the race as the “biggest moment in British swimming for who knows how long.” While the results may not have met Great Britain’s expectations, this race was certainly an epic showdown featuring some of the greatest distance swimmers in recent history, and it marks the international debut of American superstar Katie Ledecky.

Rebecca Adlington, the defending Olympic Champion and world record holder in the event, was seeking victory again in front of a home crowd. She was in the center of the pool next to Ledecky in lane 3, who was already making a name for herself at only 15 years of age. On Adlington’s other side was Lotte Friis of Denmark who qualified second after prelims, and Mireia Belmonte García of Spain who had her sights set on the podium.

Expectations for each of these competitors were high as they hit the water. The swimmers in the middle of the pool fought for the lead over the first 150 meters of the race. But as they approached the 200 meter turn, Ledecky broke away from the rest of the field and flipped under the two-minute mark, faster than world record pace.

By the halfway point at 400 meters, Ledecky had a sizeable lead on Adlington, who was fighting hard to fend off Lotte Friis of Denmark in third spot. But they weren’t free of other competitors; the 400-meter mark is where Belmonte García made her move to challenge for the medals. She picked up her pace considerably – while she’d averaged slower splits than Adlington on the first half of the race, she turned the tables on her British competitor for the rest of the swim. Check out their “Split Time” lines cross over after 400 meters on the analysis graph.

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The roar of the crowd swelled as the swimmers hit the 600-meter wall. Belmonte García blasted off the turn and threw down a split of 31 seconds flat on the next length, her fastest since the first hundred of the race. It was enough to surpass Friis, who was fading quickly, and nearly equal Adlington, who had also fallen off pace. But nobody stood a chance of catching Ledecky – astonishingly, she began to increase her speed on the final 200 meters, from 1.59 meters per second to 1.6 to 1.64 on the final length.

As Adlington’s splits dropped into the 32-second range and Belmonte García moved up into second place, Ledecky extended her lead. She surged down the final length and became the youngest female to ever win the 800 freestyle, missing the world record by just half a second with an impressive 8:14.63. Belmonte García touched over 4 seconds later to claim the silver medal, followed by Adlington, who settled for bronze.

This was only the beginning of Ledecky’s freestyle dominance. Four years later in Rio, she would hold 40 strokes per length with phenomenal efficiency to smash the world record in 8:04.79.

 Check out the analysis of the Women’s 800m Free from Rio here.


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Swimming news release is courtesy of Tritonwear, a SwimSwam partner.

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Prickle
7 years ago

The real interest is Katie Ledecky-2012 against Katie Ledecky-2016. It is like two different swimmers. Tremendous job done by Katie and Bruce Gemmell. Masterpiece. Belmonte was faster then in London but no medal this time. 7 seconds (!) Improvement by Boglarka Kapas.
The technical details of 2016 against 2012 will be of much more interest.

IRO
7 years ago

Her race with Friis the next year in the 1500 was the greatest distance race of all time.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  IRO
7 years ago

Exactly – her Monster underwater dolphins got the best of Lotte

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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