You are working on Staging1

Natalie Coughlin Sheds Light on Her Sprint Freestyle Goals

Natalie Coughlin, 12-time Olympic medalist, sits down wtih SwimSwam anchor Garrett McCaffrey.

At the Mesa Grand Prix Natalie swam a personal best time in the 50 free, 24.90, signaling a “sprint” shift in her career for the future.

2013 Mesa Grand Prix Women’s 50 freestyle as reported by Morgan Priestley:

To close out the evening session, we saw another great effort from Natalie Coughlin.  After swimming a season-best 100 free yesterday morning that was good for top ten in the world, she was destined for a great swim in the 50.  When all was said and done, Coughlin broke 25 seconds for the first final time since 2008.  Her final time was 24.90, tops among Americans, and tied for 5th-best in the world this year.  After taking a break this summer, Coughlin appears to have put the other strokes on the back burner, focusing almost exclusively on the sprint freestyles, which includes training extensively with Nathan Adrian and Anthony Ervin.  Jessica Hardy, who finaled for the U.S. in this event last summer in London, was 2nd in 25.38.  Christine Magnuson touched just behind in 3rd (25.47). 

2013 Mesa Grand Prix Women’s 100 freestyle as reported by Braden Keith:

The biggest “wow” of the meet’s first session came from Natalie Coughlin, who is swimming her first meet on American soil as a 30-year old this weekend. She swam a 54.44 to easily take the top seed in the 100 free in 54.44. She’s now been better than 55 seconds in this race in every meet she’s raced since the Olympics (this is her third), showing that she still has great value at least on American relays this summer (though with how well she’s swimming, it’s far too early to write her off for individual bids either).

Follow Natalie Coughlin on Twitter here.

Like Natalie Coughlin on Facebook here. 

Find Natalie Coughlin’s HQ here. 

This video was produced by SwimSwam co-founder, Garrett McCaffrey.

In This Story

16
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

16 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
LANE8
11 years ago

She doesn’t seem to have the 200 “endurance” to compete at the top with today’s competition. It was very clear last summer that 65 meters was her max capacity. I’m talking about what she appears to be capable of today with today’s competition.

lane8
11 years ago

I agree. Smart move. She doesn’t have a chance in the other events with Franklin and the others in the mix. Still I think 50 is her best bet and of course 100 is the easier ticket to the games.

Roque Santos
Reply to  lane8
11 years ago

I would never say that Nat could not do anything. If she wanted to just focus on back, the others should watch out she has proven to be the best female swimmer of all time. I would bet a lot of money on her this summer!

She has always been first class.

Loves the interview!

LANE8
Reply to  Roque Santos
11 years ago

She certainly didn’t prove she could this last summer. I’d say Franklin is well on the way of proving she is the best of all time. Also it helps if you can swim more than 100 meters to be considered best of all time.

miws
Reply to  LANE8
11 years ago

Natalie has been an American Record breaker in 200 lcm free, 200 scy free, 200 lcm back, 200 scm back, 200 scy back, and 200 lcm IM. Not just a 50, and 100 swimmer.

Jim Briggs
Reply to  LANE8
11 years ago

Let’s not get ahead of things too quickly. Franklin has had a great start to what should be a terrific career. “Will be” the best of all time? Maybe — it’s still to be proven. “Is the best of all time”? Too soon.

Anon
Reply to  Jim Briggs
11 years ago

Who is the best of all time? Janet Evans! She didn’t have the opportunity to rack up all the medals in her events since there aren’t relays like that. But she dominated like no other U.S. female has. And she beat the East German steroid program. End of story! Perhaps Franklin will be as good.

iLikePsych
11 years ago

“She swam a 54.44 to easily take the top seed in the 100 free in 54.44”
You don’t say??

anonymous
11 years ago

Great interview Garrett, as always! Random question…why are these posted on vimeo instead of youtube? seems like you’d get a bigger audience that way…and generate more traffic to the site? Just wondering! Keep up these interviews! Some of the best!

SprintDude9000
Reply to  anonymous
11 years ago

I was thinking the same thing. Also, Vimeo has much slower buffering speeds than youtube.

duckduckgoose
11 years ago

Legendary swimmer, great person, smart, and self-aware-Natalie has the whole package. Training with Adrian and Ervin, coached by Durden and Folker, and mentored by Teri will definitely extend her career. Solid potential path for Missy as well-she’ll probably be able to swim a full program (back and free) through 2020, but she may need to narrow her focus if she wants to continue through 2024.

Nadador
11 years ago

I am a Huge fan of Natalie’s! As Weirdo said: always a class act!

bobo gigi
11 years ago

Natalie is a legend. Great decision to focus on sprint freestyle.

bobo gigi
Reply to  bobo gigi
11 years ago

And if someone could post one day on youtube her 100 back race of Fort Lauderdale in 2002 when she shocked the swimming world with a fantastic 59.58, it would be cool. And while I’m here to talk about the races I’m desperately looking for, I can mention the first world record of MP in 2001 and his first world title the same year too. Thank you.

Lane Four
Reply to  bobo gigi
11 years ago

Me too! I would kill to see MP’s first world record as well as his 2001 World Championship gold medal. I have seen all of his other races but never the 2001.

weirdo
11 years ago

Great Interview. Natalie is always a class act.

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 »