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Greenbank Takes Down Longstanding British 200 Back Record

2021 BRITISH SWIMMING INVITATION MEET

Earlier today Luke Greenbank came within a fingernail of breaking the British national record in the men’s 200m backstroke and tonight he accomplished the feat in Manchester.

Competing on day 1 of the inaugural British Swimming Invitation Meet, 23-year-old Greenbank crushed a huge new lifetime best of 1:55.34. That outing shaved .35 off of his already personal best-establishing time of 1:55.69 he posted this morning to take the top seed.

Entering this competition, Greenbank’s career-quickest was represented by the 1:55.85 he put up en route to claiming the bronze medal in the event at the 2019 FINA World Championships in Gwangju.

Greenbank’s splits for his morning 1:55.69 swim included 56.87/58.98 while tonight’s effort saw the Loughborough man open 56.33 and bring it home in 59.01, showing his tactic to add a little speed to the front half of the race.

With his new 1:55.34 result, Greenbank managed to break the former British standard of 1:55.58 James Goddard put on the books over a decade ago.

En route to becoming the fastest British man ever, Greenbank now ranks as the 2nd fastest performer worldwide this season, sitting only behind Chinese ace Xu Jiayu. Additionally, while this orning’s swim rendered Greenbank just outside the top 25 performers all-time, his 1:55.34 British Recofd now makes him the 16th fastest man in history.

2020-2021 LCM Men 200 Back

EvgenyRUS
Rylov
04/08
1:53.23
2Ryan
Murphy
USA1:54.1507/30
3Mitch
Larkin
AUS1:54.3804/16
4Luke
Greenbank
GBR1:54.4305/22
5Bryce
Mefford
USA1:54.7906/18
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Sapnu puas
3 years ago

If Luke Greenbank turns into a 52.xx swimmer I will EXPLODE with joy

ALEXANDER POP-OFF
3 years ago

Scary. Hope the US men’s breaststrokers take note. Both US and UK should be under WR in Tokyo. The way the US could take it is if Murphy leads off around WR split, the breaststroker hits a 58 low, Dressel does Dressel and then Zach Apple anchors in no slower than 46 high (preferably, 46.7 or faster). It will be a dogfight.

Bub
Reply to  ALEXANDER POP-OFF
3 years ago

Honestly the us needs a 57 split which is viable with either fink or nowicki

PFA
3 years ago

Is he swimming the 100 can’t wait to see what he can do there.

swimmer1
Reply to  PFA
3 years ago

great britain medley relay looking real dangerous now

Ol' Longhorn
Reply to  swimmer1
3 years ago

You’ve obviously forgotten about Team USA and their 58-high breastrokers. Oh, wait…

sven
Reply to  Ol' Longhorn
3 years ago

how much damage could a 55-high relay split possibly do?

50free
Reply to  PFA
3 years ago

Are you assuming improvement in the 200 might lead to improvement in a 100? Well you would be correct.

Khachaturian
Reply to  50free
3 years ago

IMPOSSIBLE, you are saying that if I drop around 60 seconds in my 200 free it might lead to a time drop in my 50 free?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?

50free
Reply to  Khachaturian
3 years ago

Hmmmm idk. Just in personal experience I’ve seen the ability to swim faster makes your times faster.

Jack
3 years ago

Wow that is a very impressive swim at 1:55. Interestingly, a 1:55 has one bronze at the last two worlds and has come at least 4th in every Olympics ever. It would therefore be completely wrong to suggest Luke is not a viable medal threat in Tokyo as it would directly contradict the meaning of the phrase. This is unarguably true.

Anyone who would suggest anything else is clearly not worth a responce in the comments as they are begging for attention. They should instead  look up results and patterns at championships rather than saying open ended meaningless comments that are impossibly proved due to their subjectiveness.

This is a great swim from a great swimmer and i… Read more »

Last edited 3 years ago by Jack
Kwb
Reply to  Jack
3 years ago

why are you so upset about this no one has even said anything lol

Jack
Reply to  Kwb
3 years ago

Im going to assume you didnt read the comments this morning.

sven
Reply to  Jack
3 years ago

sir, this is a Wendy’s

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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