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Ft Lauderdale PSS: 5 Storylines to Watch (Plus a Bonus)

2023 PRO SWIM SERIES – FORT LAUDERDALE

The 2023 Pro Swim Series will head to Fort Lauderdale, Florida this week for its second stop. Most of the US National Team that is not still competing in the NCAA system will be in attendance, including the top two swimmers in SwimSwam’s Top 100 Women for 2023 ranking: Katie Ledecky and Summer McIntosh.

That means there are a ton of highlight races – frankly, every race of the meet is a highlight – to watch. But we picked out our favorites below:

1. The Women’s 100 Free

Penny Oleksiak is a late entry, and that elevated this early-meet event from a great race to a spectacular showdown.

The list of names is a hall-of-fame lineup. Oleksiak and Simone Manuel, in a rematch of their Olympic tie from 2016; the Tokyo 2020 silver medalist Siobhan Haughey; Kasia Wasick coming up from the 50; Summer McIntosh coming down from the 200; Abbey Weitzeil resurging in the new year; Erika Brown and Natalie Hinds and Olivia Smoliga and Katie Ledecky are all in that field.

This race goes deep. Gabby DeLoof is the 14th seed. Isabel Ivey is the 17th seed. Bella Sims isn’t a sprinter, but with the way things have been going for her lately, she’s bound to pop a 54-or-better.

Someone is going to be left out of this A-final and still have a chance at a World Championship final this summer.

After diminutive attendance during and coming-out-of COVID, this is the kind of race that the Pro Swim Series needs to reinject some energy.

2. The Women’s 200 Free

As if the 100 wasn’t good enough, the 200 might be even better. The top three are Katie LedeckySummer McIntosh, and Siobhan Haughey, which is enough to make this a can’t-miss race.

But then there’s 16-year-old rising star Claire Weinstein, double Olympic medalist Leah Smith, Oleksiak, all of the Sandpiper stars, Ella Jansen from Canada, and Regan Smith who is not usually a freestyler but who is training under a coach now (Bob Bowman) who values versatility.

Simone Manuel, who is often forgotten for how good she was at the 200 free at her best, is also entered as the 19th seed, which would be a nice bonus onto a stacked race.

3. Diogo Ribeiro Makes His US Debut

Portuguese swimmer Diogo Ribeiro, swimming under the clever pseudonym “Diego Ribeiro,” will be making his debut on American soil.

The 18-year-old from Benfica is the poster-child, literally, for a rise in Portuguese swimming under new national team head coach Alberto Pinto da Silva. He broke a surprise World Junior Record in the 50 fly last summer, swimming 22.96 to climb to 11th in the all-time rankings.

Fort Lauderdale will be the unofficial start of his 2nd act, and his first time swimming on American soil.

Ribeiro has swum in three meets since his World Junior Championship gold medal, all on Portuguese soil. He’s had strong results at those competitions, but now will step on to a bigger stage against stiffer competition.

He’s seeded with his 100-meter time in the 50 fly, which means he’ll have to wait until finals to race against the primary competition there. That includes Michael Andrew and Dylan Carter, who have both been 22 seconds in this race and are veterans of the circuit who know how to get up and swim fast in finals, along with names like Marius KuschZach Harting, Coleman StewartIlya Kharun, and Ryan Held.

But Ribeiro will be eager to show that he’s got the chops for the Olympic stage too. He’ll race in the 50 free (#5 seed – 21.92), 100 free (#10 seed – 48.52), and 100 fly (#5 seed – 51.61). Based on his success in the short course season (including a 46.6 in the 100 free), some of those times could fall by the wayside.

4. Summer McIntosh‘s First 200 Fly Since Winning a World Title

Summer McIntosh has done a bunch of racing since her breakthrough World Championships last summer, where she won gold medals in the 200 fly and 400 IM, plus silver in the 400 free and bronze in the 800 free relay. She’s raced in short course, she’s raced in long course, she’s raced in yards.

But she hasn’t swum a long course race in the 200 fly since winning the World Championship (she did swim the 400 free and 400 IM at the US Open in December).

She swam the 200 fly at the World Cup in Indianapolis in short course meters (2:03.40); she swam the 200 yard fly at Winter Juniors – East (1:51.40). But she hasn’t swum it in the most important course for a Canadian, long course meters, in 8 months.

But she’s lined up to swim it this week!

It’s been easy to gauge McIntosh’s overall progress since moving to Florida to train with the Sarasota Sharks: it’s been great. But this will be a good first test of her progress in that 200 fly, specifically.

5. Can Michael Andrew Get Back on Track?

It’s hard to really understand where Michael Andrew is right now with his training. He used to be reliable to go out and swim fast at every Pro Swim, every money meet, every World Cup, and everything in between.

But more lately, he’s been good sometimes (PB in the 50 free at LC Worlds, PB in the 50 free at SC Worlds), and not-as-good other times. He doesn’t race anywhere near as often as he used to.

We don’t really know what this means yet. Is it a change away from the truest form of USRPT that he has made famous? Is it just his version of the ‘break’ that we’ve seen lots of swimmers take since the Tokyo Olympics?

I don’t really know. His swims in Jalisco, Mexico, last weekend weren’t great, but that’s a different kind of meet. With Trials for the Fukuoka World Championships just a few months away, this will be a crucial measuring stick for him.

Bonus: Zach Harting in the 50 Back

Last December, Zach Harting raced World Record holder Hunter Armstrong in a 50 backstroke in short course meters. It was presented as kind of a stunt, with the loser having to sing a karaoke song on Instagram, but…what if it wasn’t? What if that was a real swimoff for a leg on a medley relay?

And what if Harting shocked himself, and others, with how close he got to Armstrong, who is the fastest-ever in the 50 back in long course?

Harting is entered in the 50 back at this week’s PSS meet. He swam it in Knoxville too (26.48), and was 16th in prelims. He had never swum the race before, but is now making it a regular part of his schedule. Will the 200 butterflier find a change-of-stroke in the back-nine of his career?

 

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Eddie
1 year ago

Super excited for Abbey Weitzeil this year. 53.6 in January?? If there’s anything Emma Mckeon has taught us, you can have a swimming career past the age of 26

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  Eddie
1 year ago

Katinka Hosszu proved that back in 2016.

Jimmyswim
Reply to  Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
1 year ago

Hosszu and McKeon have both taught us that you can have a swimming career past 26 but if you’re a woman then you’ll be accused of dop1ng by jealous losers.

BoyerM
1 year ago

Bonus storyline: Casas will likely go 1.54 IM and 49 fly

Ross
1 year ago

Caeleb dressel spotted swimming today !

CracK
Reply to  Ross
1 year ago

Where?

Ross
Reply to  CracK
1 year ago

Warm up pool

BOBFROMTHEISLAND
Reply to  Ross
1 year ago

Lol I need more than one confirmation

Beginner Swimmer at 25
Reply to  Ross
1 year ago

goat is back

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  Ross
1 year ago

Provide an official press release from Anthony Nesty.

Gummy Shark
1 year ago

Michael Andrew is back like he never left!

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  Gummy Shark
1 year ago

Oh he left for Costa Rica in an attempt to become a beachcomber.

Noah
1 year ago

How fast can we expect people to be a couple months out from trials?

CanSwimFan
Reply to  Noah
1 year ago

The Canadians are four weeks out from their trials.

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  Noah
1 year ago

I don’t expect much from the USA Swimming “veterans” coming out of the winter doldrums especially with two more Pro Swim Series slated in April and May. Katie Ledecky maybe can pop a Top 25 All-Time Performance in the W 800 FR.

Yozhik
1 year ago

Ledecky is scheduled to swim 200FLY. Why? Sure she can include this exercise in her practice for endurance training or to have a different experience in the water with different sequence of involvement of different muscles or just for fun to do something different beyond this monotonous yardage in freestyle or whatever…
But why in the competition at PSS. It should be some other reason. Maybe she is on the veteran quest to improve her personal bests wherever it is still possible. I don’t know.
I hope it is in the line for improving her performance in 400IM. But she said last year after improving her personal best in this event that she won’t include it in her… Read more »

Mediocre Swammer
Reply to  Yozhik
1 year ago

I think Katie Ledecky just likes to swim things and compete. Sitting around for too long is boring; why not enter another race?

Yozhik
Reply to  Mediocre Swammer
1 year ago

She isn’t a high school girl any more. She is a high paid professional who doesn’t need high adrenaline excitement of school girl in her job. And that is the job and I’m sure that she looks at her activities in the pool under this angle first of all. Of course all of us don’t want our job to be boring but making fun isn’t the reason of doing it.

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  Mediocre Swammer
1 year ago

Break the monotony of the typical W 1500 FR (Day 1), W 400 FR (Day 2), W 200 FR (Day 3), W 800 FR (Day 4) schedule.

Walter
Reply to  Yozhik
1 year ago

Yohzik is posting about Katie Ledecky swimming the 200 fly? Why? Sure, Yohzik can include this exercise in their practice……..

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  Walter
1 year ago

Yozhik does not understand that Katie Ledecky is actually allowed to swim “off” events.

SHRKB8
Reply to  Yozhik
1 year ago

Maybe deep down she really enjoys the Ledecky-McIntosh rivalry that is forming and they both conspired to do the 200fly together??? Unless we are elites of the sport ourselves, we won’t know what rocks their boat.

Jimmyswim
Reply to  Yozhik
1 year ago

I think the big question is: why do you care? If she dropped the 1500 at the Olympics to swim the 200 fly then I could understand people being concerned. But she’s swimming at an unimportant meet which is basically meaningless to her. Literally what difference does it make to you or anyone other than KL that she’s chosen to swim an off event at a small meet?

Yozhik
Reply to  Jimmyswim
1 year ago

Why do I care? Because it is what sports fans do. Why do they do it? It is very philosophical question. And I am not kidding or being sarcastic here. Because it is really hard to understand what makes people for no reason to begin to care if someone else is swimming faster or slower. Carrying sometimes so strongly that it may cause high blood pressure, heart attacks etc. isn’t it stupid.
Maybe if you answer the question why do you care of what I am writing about Katie Ledecky you will understand my reasoning as well.

MikeS
1 year ago

Masters swimming world records (Men’s 30-34)
100 Breast 1:01.25
50 Breast 27.74
Can Cody Miller break either one?

Supafly23
Reply to  MikeS
1 year ago

Masters world records must come from Masters meets. So…he might swim faster, but even if he does it won’t count.

Dmswim
Reply to  Supafly23
1 year ago

No, Masters swimmers can break records at non-masters meets, but they have to be USMS members and the meet might have to be pre-approved.

USA
Reply to  MikeS
1 year ago

Didn’t Hansen go 59.3 in 2012 at age 30?

Last edited 1 year ago by USA
Ghost
1 year ago

So no Flickinger vs McIntosh? Weird she isn’t entered in that all the other Sun Devil pros are swimming and the college men are at Pac 10s?!?
Glad the Ft Lauderdale is renovated and back in action! Lots of swimming history has been made there.

Gen D
Reply to  Ghost
1 year ago

Didn’t Flickinger say in the last podcast that she wouldn’t be racing for a while?

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  Ghost
1 year ago

Too busy selling houses.

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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