You are working on Staging1

Japan Has Two 15-16-Year-Olds Hit 4:18 LCM 400 IM At JOC

44th NATIONAL JOC JUNIOR OLYMPIC SWIMMING CUP (JPN)

Fresh off his victories at the Japan Inter-High School Championships from last week, 17-year-old Konosuke Yanagimoto was back at it. Yanagimoto is in Kadoma City, racing at the 44th National JOC Junior Olympic Swimming Cup, already wreaking havoc in the men’s freestyle.

Taking on the 200m free event, Yanagimoto produced a winning time of 1:48.66, just .09 outside of the meet record. Splitting 53.33/55.33, Yanagimoto registered the only sub-1:50 time of the field.

Last week Yanagimoto logged a winning time of 1:48.41 so tonight’s effort here was just .25 shy of that mark, giving him a nod to consistency. He led off Japan’s men’s 4x200m free relay in the heats with a time of 1:48.50, but the squad’s collective mark of 7:09.53 rendered them well back in 12th and out of the final.

In the men’s 400m IM event for 15-16-year-olds here at the JOC, Riku Yamaguchi and Tomoyuki Matsushita went head-to-head all the way to the touch where the teens were separated by just .01 at the end.

Yamaguchi got his hand on the wall first in a super quick 4:18.87 while Matsushita was right in there at 4:18.88, with both men getting well under the previous meet record of 4:20.93.  The exact birth dates are not listed for these athletes, only that they were born in 2005.

Yamaguchi’s top time heading into this meet rested at the 4:19.88 he logged in June of this year while Matsushita had been as fast as 4:23.69 2 years ago.

For perspective, these two men would rank as the 5th and 6th top American 15-16-year-olds of all time in the 400m IM event, ranking ahead of the likes of Jake Foster and Andrew Seliskar.

 

2
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

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

“Born in 2015”
Now that’s an impressive swim for a six year old!

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 »