You are working on Staging1

Kaylee McKeown Continues World Cup Backstroke Reign With Series Record in 200 BK (2:06.02)

2023 WORLD AQUATICS SWIMMING WORLD CUP – ATHENS

  • Friday, October 13th – Sunday, October 15th
  • Athens, Greece
  • LCM (50m)
  • Prelims 9:00am (EEST)/ 2:oo am (EDT)
  • Finals 6:00 pm (EEST)/ 11:00 am (EDT)
  • Meet Central
  • Entries
  • Live Results

22-year-old Kaylee McKeown stamped her authority on the backstroke races at the Athens World Cup stop. On the final day of the meet, McKeown won the 200 backstroke in a new World Cup record. She earned her win in 2:06.02, undercutting the 2:06.47 mark that she set at the first stop of the series in Berlin, Germany.

McKeown is now six-for-six in backstroke World Cup records at this year’s World Cup. She’s undefeated in the backstroke events and won this race easily, touching 1.99 seconds ahead of 2nd-place Katie Grimes.

McKeown’s 200 Back WC Record Splits

Athens Berlin
50 29.29 29.57
100 1:01.26 (31.97) 1:01.73 (32.16)
150 1:33.58 (32.32) 1:34.23 (32.50)
200 2:06.02 (32.44) 2:06.47 (32.24)

Compared to her Berlin record-setting swim, McKeown was faster on her first three 50s in Athens. “I just wanted to take it out a little bit harder and see if I could hold on,” McKeown said after the session. She’ll have another chance to lower the World Cup record at the final stop of the series next weekend in Budapest, Hungary.

There, McKeown will be aiming for a Triple-Triple Crown: a complete sweep of the 50/100/200 backstroke at all three World Cup stops. She and Qin Haiyang are both vying for that honor this year; last year, Nic Fink earned that honor in the breaststrokes. Both McKeown and Qin swept the 50/100/200 of their stroke in Fukuoka, becoming the first swimmers in history to achieve the feat at a World Championships.

In addition, McKeown will also have a pair of world records in her sights. Earlier this weekend, she rattled both the 50 and 100 backstroke world records. In the 50, she became the 2nd fastest performer all time with an Oceanic record of 27.02, just .04 seconds off the world record. Then in the 100 back, she blazed 57.63, missing her own mark from 2021 by just .18 seconds.

In This Story

10
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

10 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
RMS
1 year ago

Grimes also had an incredible race. She can literally swim everything.

Andy
1 year ago

She’s on 117.7/120 possible points. Next best is Zhang on 110.5. Given she has four events, it’s basically impossible for her to lose this

Sub13
Reply to  Andy
1 year ago

It is essentially impossible for her to lose at this point unless she gets DQ’d twice. No one else has won three golds at either stop and Kaylee has done it at both, as well as getting the most FINA points at both.

Jason
1 year ago

Been my favourite Aussie swimmer for a while now. How she swims so fast in-season is incredible. Her starts are amazing and her stroke rate is nuts over 100m. I think she’s on a trajectory for a 56 next year, she’s the right age and her training looks to be going next-level.

Sub13
1 year ago

Please give us a WR (or even 2!?) in Budapest. Obviously the 200 is out of the question but she’s so close in the sprints!

Skip
Reply to  Sub13
1 year ago

I hope kaylee gets the 50 in budapest! 100 and 200 would be awesome too

GrameziPT
Reply to  Sub13
1 year ago

money wise she should save the WR’s for the World Championships in Doha. I dont if she’s going beacause of australian trials

Breezeway
1 year ago

This lady just knows how to race. I just don’t see anybody beating her in backstroke anytime soon

Hooked on Chlorine
1 year ago

Kaylee got a segment on the Australian version of 60 Minutes last night.

YouTube it.

BennetBD
Reply to  Hooked on Chlorine
1 year ago

Worth watching. She is so likable and down to earth.

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 »