2019 AUSTRALIAN WORLD SWIMMING TRIALS
- Sunday, June 9th – Friday, June 14th
- Brisbane Aquatic Centre
- LCM
- Meet Site
- Swimming Australia 2019 World Championships – Selection Policy
- Start List
- Prelims Heat Sheets
- Day 1 Prelims Recap/Day 1 Finals Recap
- Day 2 Prelims Recap/Day 2 Finals Recap
- Live Results
- Live Stream
King Kyle Chalmers earned his pet namesake in Brisbane, clinching his first of potentially 4 World Trials qualifying times. In the men’s 200m free, Chalmers edged out Clyde Lewis to top the podium in a mark of 1:45.76, his fastest of the season. Lewis touched just .12 later in 1:45.88 to move the pair into the top 10 performers of the season.
Of his win, Chalmers stated post-race,“I probably haven’t done too many great two hundreds this year so I was kind of doubting myself a little bit, but this morning was a really good confidence booster knowing I can swim that fast in the mornings and feel comfortable, and then I knew I could go a bit faster tonight which was great.”
Joining Chalmers and Lewis on the men’s 4x200m freestyle relay will be Bond’s Alex Graham, whose bronze medal-earning time of 1:46.25 is just off his own PB, but still under the Worlds QT. Chandler’s Jack McLoughlin was next in line with 1:46.82.
Of the relay composition and potential, Chalmers said,“The relay is something I really want to be a part of, I know that it is potentially our best shot of getting a medal in a relay.
“It is not only the four guys that are going to swim on that night, but I think the eight who were in the final tonight are really competitive in that event and put us all together, hopefully we can do something really special,” Chalmers added.
“It is great to be able to swim well individually but swimming well for your country and as a relay team is for me the best part about swimming and something that I enjoy doing the most.”
Also making waves tonight was 25-year-old Olympic silver medalist Mitch Larkin, the St. Peters Western star who manhandled tonight’s 100m back field en route to putting up his fastest time in almost 4 years in 52.38.
“Yeah, I’m happy with that – this morning was a really good swim and I set it up really well with nice stroke rates,” Larkin said post-race.
“I knew I was swimming well, my body is in great shape and I have done lots of work and tonight was just about trusting myself and not rushing.”
As much as I like Kyle I don’t see him as a realistic contender for medalling in the 200 free come worlds.
Lol
It’s 1.45, but not actually as fast as Dressel’s 1.47 from Richmond when you think about it.
Caeleb warmed up 20k and did a one rep max deadlift in the ready room. He was also 6 days into Troy’s experiment with a KGB sleep deprivation technique and so tired he literally believed he was a mango. Equivalent to 1.40 if he didn’t think he was a tropical fruit.
I normally don’t like these posts but execution was top notch here
agreed , this was a very refined one ….