2017 FINA WORLD SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIPS
- Sunday, July 23rd – Sunday, July 30th
- Budapest, Hungary
- LCM (50m)
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Emily Seebohm of Australia broke a national and Oceanian record in her gold-medal performance in the women’s 200m backstroke final on Saturday. Seebohm, who finished a disappointing 12th in this event in Rio, was fourth at the 100 and third at the 150. But she had another gear reserved for the final 50 meters, and blew by everyone to get the touch, just ahead of host nation’s Katinka Hosszu, for a record-breaking 2:05.68. Team USA’s Kathleen Baker secured the bronze medal with her third-place 2:06.48.
Watch the entire race, courtesy of NBC Sports.
Write-up from James Sutherland:
WOMEN’S 200 BACK – FINAL
- World Record: Missy Franklin, 2:04.06, 2012
- Championship Record: Missy Franklin, 2:04.76, 2013
Junior World Record: Regan Smith, 2:07.19, 2017
- Emily Seebohm, AUS, 2:05.68
- Katinka Hosszu, HUN, 2:05.85
- Kathleen Baker, USA, 2:06.48
Emily Seebohm roared home in 31.38, successfully defending her 200 back world title in 2:05.68, a new Australian and Championship record. She wins Australia’s first gold medal of the meet.
Katinka Hosszu led with 50 to go, and held on for silver with a new national record of her own in 2:05.85. Kathleen Baker takes the bronze in 2:06.48, her second individual medal of the meet.
Coming in for 4th was another Australian, Kaylee McKeown, as she breaks Regan Smith‘s Junior world record from yesterday in 2:06.76. Canadians Kylie Masse (2:07.04) and Hilary Caldwell (2:07.15) ended up 5th and 6th.
McKeown’s turns are terrible.
She’ll be one to watch in the next few years if she’s able to improve her turns.
Poor turns run in the McKeown family it seems
Baker seemed to get stuck alongside the right lane marker during the final 10 meters or so of the third leg. In fact, she had to adjust her final stroke before the wall sharply to her left to enable a semblance of a normal turn. That was obvious from the overhead replay.
I doubt it impacted her placement but she lost momentum and probably a few tenths.
Hosszu out there reminded me of Le Clos in the 200 freestyle last year. Taking off and you know it’s not a fluke. With the top talents they are normally good for at least one performance that sharply defeats expectation. Hosszu didn’t have one here until now.
Katinka indeed looked very satisfied,… Read more »
Brits – did the BBC show this event? Working through iplayer but I can’t find it?
McKeown break world junior record, great race for Australia.
Great job Katinka! This field was much stronger than Rio.
Completely unexpected for Hosszu to be under 2:06. Nothing during previous 6 days of competition predicted such fast time. I think Seebohm and Hosszu haven’t seen each other. Otherwise the race would be even more dramatic and possibly faster. I also think that Hosszu hasn’t focused in her preparation for WC on World records at IM but 200back was of major concern. Well, Seebohn same as DiRado said “NO”, But in contrast to Olympic race it looked like Hosszu wasn’t disappointed with the result. Therefore I don’t know how think about this result at 200back and what time to expect tomorrow at 400IM.
Great race for Emily Seebohm, but her splits are really weird if to put it calmly.… Read more »
Emily says it works best for her to do a fast 50 then drop off for middle laps then a fast last 50 .
McKeowns swim is the bonus because they are training her up to be a 400 imer & now she a killer back leg like Katinka .
Yes very interested to see how she goes in the 400IM, still very young, but should have a decent Breaststroke leg considering her sister.
I don’t think the splits are weird- they are inspired. She did much the same thing to win Kazan. It is how Pelligrini won the 200m as well- have the speed to the wall, you don’t win the race in the first 300m….
But 1.2 sec ? I saw Efimova swimming in similar manner 200 in semi. She showed best time. But in the final it was completely different strategy, with much faster first 150.
She won the World Championship. She can split the race however she likes 😉
She can split the race however she likes in any case. And you know why? Because she’s adult and there is none of anybody’s else business. But It is not the point of discussion. The way Seebohm approaches the 200 distance is very unusual. Therefore people like me who doesn’t know much about her are asking questions if this is an optimal strategy. Does she always splits this way? Or because of her previous health problems is afraid to hit the wall. So it is sort of negative split when one is uncertain about the speed in the middle of the distance. Answering this question will be more appreciated than the empty statement you made.
She split very similarly in Kazan, too.
Budapest: 29.46 32.26 32.58 31.38
Kazan: 29.50 32.19 32.98 31.14
It seems she consciously slow down in the third 50, especially when you watch her race in Kazan. I just think that she has found the optimal formula for herself in swimming 200 back. Coming from 10 years experience competing internationally as one of world’s top female backstrokers, I guess. Like Pellegrini, what works for them may not work for anyone else.
So what was the real championship record? Y’all have had it listed at 2:04 in multiple posts, but have also said repeatedly that Seebohm broke it today.
Why is the championship record crossed off in the article above?
If you read the article it stated that the 4th placegetter Kaylee McKeown broke it (Regans record) in the final . Kudos to both girls .
Apologies – it may have been edited .