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Paris 2024, NA Day 7: With A Third Silver, Regan Smith Shows Shades Of Laszlo Cseh

2024 PARIS SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES

Hungary’s Laszlo Cseh is often regarded as one of the greatest swimmers to never win an Olympic gold medal. As a butterfly and IM specialist, he clocked some of the fastest times in the history of his events (including three European records), but never won Olympic gold. Unfortunately, he raced the same events as Michael Phelps and Ryan Lochte, who were two of the best swimmers in history and constantly prevented Cseh from reaching the top.

A generation later, we are seeing a similar career play out for American swimmer Regan Smith. She just picked up her third individual silver medal of the 2024 Paris Olympics, and her fifth overall Olympic medal. With six medals (five silvers, one bronze) at just 22 years, she ties to become third-most decorated swimmer in Olympic history to never win a gold medal, alongside Cseh (four silvers, two bronzes) and Australia’s Frank Beaurepaire (three silvers, three bronzes).

This stat isn’t meant to be a slight against Smith. It simply goes to show how consistently good she’s been without ever reaching the top. At these Olympics, she finished second to Australia’s Kaylee McKeown in the 100 and 200 back, while losing to Canada’s Summer McIntosh in the 200 fly. McKeown just happens to be the first female swimmer to ever sweep the backstroke events in back-to-back Olympics, while McIntosh is a 17-year-old phenom who got closer to Liu Zige‘s supersuited 200 fly world record than anyone ever has. These are the two best female swimmers in the world, and Smith was just unable to get past them.

It’s easy to say that all that glitters isn’t gold for Smith, just like it wasn’t for Cseh. But somehow, directly comparing them feels like a slight against Smith.

Because unlike Cseh, there was a point in time where Smith was at the top — in 2019, she became the first female swimmer to go 57 and 2:03 in the 100 and 200 back respectively. It just so happens that McKeown caught up and got the best of her in every single individual head-to-head matchup they’ve had since 2019. Similarly, Smith was the fastest 200 fly swimmer of the Paris Olympic quad until McIntosh beat her at the actual games.

In addition, McKeown and McIntosh aren’t exactly out of reach for Smith. She just set the world record in the 100 back a month ago, and McKeown wasn’t able to break it. Smith’s best 200 back time of this Olympic cycle (2:03.80) is just 0.08 off of McKeown’s winning time and 0.45 seconds off the Aussie’s world record. In the 200 fly, Smith sits just 0.81 seconds behind McIntosh’s best.

But it seems as if in every meet and every race, Smith’s competitions beat her out. And that just goes to show what separates a fast swimmer with a great racer.

That being said, Smith still has a lot to be proud of at this meet and this Olympic cycle. She broke her own American record in the 200 fly after adding considerable time from trials to Worlds in this race last year. She got over her mental block in the 200 back and got to race it at an Olympic Games. She broke her first world record since 2019. And more likely than not, she’ll still come home with a gold medal — the United States is the heavy favorite to win both the mixed and women’s medley relay.

Swimming is a cruel sport sometimes where not everyone gets to reach the top, even if it’s a swimmer as exceptional as Smith. But winning is in her — she just needs to put together a race to pull it all off.

Other Highlights:

  • Caeleb Dressel, the 2021 Olympic champion in the 50 free and 100 fly, finished sixth in the former event and missed the final in the latter. Meanwhile, Canada’s Josh Liendo just missed the podium in the 50 free (after scratching into the event) and is safely in the 100 fly final.
  • The Cayman Islands’ Jordan Crooks finished eighth in the 50 free final.
  • Americans Kate Douglass and Alex Walsh, as well as Canadians Summer McIntosh and Sydney Pickrem, all made the final of the women’s 200 IM.
  • The United States’ Carson Foster finished fourth in the 200 IM final. Canada’s Finlay Knox was eighth.
  • Canada’s Kylie Masse won her fifth Olympic medal, picking up bronze in the 200 back. Meanwhile, America’s Phoebe Bacon finished fourth by just 0.04 seconds.

North American Medal Table:

OUNTRY GOLD SILVER BRONZE
United States 4 10 6
Canada 2 1 2

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SwimFL
3 months ago

One big difference is that I don’t believe Lazlo ever held a LCM world record, whereas Regan does.

OnTop
3 months ago

I wouldn’t call silver medals at the Olympics “not reaching the top.” She’s is on top.

Kudzai Makova
3 months ago

Kirsty Coventry won 3 silver medals in Beijing before finally winning a gold medal in the 200m backstroke. She lost twice to Steph Rice 200/400IM setting best times and being under the previous world record and also lost to Coughlin in the 100m backstroke, having set the world record in the semis… That story-line never received as much attention as Regan’s but it surely did happen..

Yikes
3 months ago

If the Olympics happened in 2020, she would have had one summer of glory on the Olympic stage before Kaylee caught up.

Thomas The Tank Engine
Reply to  Yikes
3 months ago

If my grandmother had wheels, she’d be a motorbike

Yikes
Reply to  Thomas The Tank Engine
3 months ago

Not making excuses for Regan, this is literally what she is saying in the article. Regan had a brief time at the top, she beat Kaylee by 3+ seconds at 2019 worlds, but the timing didn’t work out for her to ever translate it to the big stage. All the pieces were there, though, and that’s something she probably thinks about and wonders what could have been.

Im not disputing Kaylee is the best and has been for 3 years, that she deserved this victory, and there is nothing Regan could have done or honestly can probably do in the foreseeable future to beat her. She’s firmly at the top.

Last edited 3 months ago by Yikes
Thomas The Tank Engine
Reply to  Yikes
3 months ago

“Im not disputing Kaylee is the best and has been for 3 years”

Four years.

2021
2022
2023
2024

Kelsey
3 months ago

Also shades of Leisel before she got it together

Thomas The Tank Engine
Reply to  Kelsey
3 months ago

And Leisel lost it again.

Tremendously talented and could have been so much better.

Regan is mentally much better than Leisel was and worked so much harder than Leisel ever did.

Regan is just unfortunate she swims against two of the best female swimmers ever.

Mark69
Reply to  Thomas The Tank Engine
3 months ago

Leisel dominated for 3 years. 2005 until the 200 m breast final in 2008.

Swimswammy
3 months ago

This headline/article seems outright insensitive.

Regan is in the middle of competing and representing our country to the best of her ability….and this is what you write about her 3rd individual medal?

Sure, some of it may be valid but when you consider Regan and the vulnerability she has discussed regarding her previous mental health struggles with the sport this just feel harsh.

It would’ve been nice to read an article congratulating her first and mentioning this “correlation” as a paragraph at the bottom, if even. Or heck, wait until the Olympics are over at the very least.

Do better SwimSwam. You’re perpetuating a culture we people pick apart athletes instead of celebrating them.

Big purple dinosaur
Reply to  Swimswammy
3 months ago

It occurs to me that swim fans don’t actually enjoy sports. It’s too bad, because elite swimming in the United States is being driven further and further into dark quiet corners where these poor athletes are going to be surrounded by their families and nobody else.

The expectation that sports fans should only want to read glowing and effusive things about athletes is going to kill the sport.

MDE
Reply to  Swimswammy
3 months ago

Being compared to Cseh shouldn’t be viewed as a negative. Hes an all time great.

Yanyan Li
Reply to  Swimswammy
3 months ago

1. The point of journalism isn’t to write congratulatory things in articles, that would just be impartial
2. Regan Smith is a professional athlete. If she can handle competing at the Olympics, I’m sure she can handle a nuanced article pointing out an undeniable narrative about her. She’s being compared to an all-time great, which she’s on track to being right now. It’s just a matter of fact that both of them have the misfortune of doing super well but still losing to better swimmers, and I even point out areas where Smith is better than Cseh.

To say that Smith can’t take an article like this honestly feels more like a slight against her and Cseh than the… Read more »

TKF
3 months ago

Swim Swam, please do an article on Smith’s post-race interview! Too often swimmers beat themselves up for an amazing race because they got out-touched by another swimmer having a better day. She said she was proud of herself, she beat herself, had a best time and was very happy with her performance. She also talked about mental health, keeping things in perspective and had such a great attitude about everything. It’s a message I made my swimmers watch and more age group swimmers should hear!

Jay
3 months ago

Can’t understand why coaching staff would put Regan in mixed medley prelims. Cost her a gold and Dressel a finals spot. Ridiculous

Yikes
Reply to  Jay
3 months ago

With Dressel I agree. Smith was never winning that gold, though. This way she’ll finally get one.

Thomas The Tank Engine
Reply to  Jay
3 months ago

100 back in the morning cost her 200 back gold at night?

Lmfao.

Why are people ignoring that she swam one of her fastest 200 back and faster than Trial.

Why are people ignoring she swam 200 back prelims the day before and still PB in 200 fly in the evening.

Why are people ignoring that Kaylee McKeown also swam 200IM prelims, which is more taxing than 100 back.

Regan was beaten by a better swimmer.

To keep claiming Regan lost the gold is disrespect to both Regan and Kaylee.

Last edited 3 months ago by Thomas The Tank Engine
Idontevenswim:)
Reply to  Thomas The Tank Engine
3 months ago

Yeah, I agree. I’m a huge Regan Smith fan but at this point, Kaylee will beat her in any head to head matchup.

I’m not gonna necessarily say that Kaylee is the “faster” swimmer out of the 2, although it is very tight. As the articule eluded to, Regan Smith is the fastest backstroker in the world (evidence in her 100 WR) yet Kaylee just knows how to win races. Those 2 things are distinct in the case of McKeown and Smith. Smith has struggled tremendously with confidence issues in the past but is heading back to a better place which I’m excited to see.

But no, Regan did not “lose the gold” by swimming the 100 in… Read more »

Last edited 3 months ago by Idontevenswim:)
Canaswim
Reply to  Jay
3 months ago

Pretty sure she wanted it that way!

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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