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Ryosuke Irie Delivers World-Leading 52.59 100 Back On 30th Birthday

Braden Keith
by Braden Keith 26

January 24th, 2020 News

2020 KOSUKE KITAJIMA CUP

The 2020 Kosuke Kitajima Cup represents a veritable ‘who’s who’ of Japanese swimming, with the likes of Daiya Seto, Kosuke Hagino and Yui Ohashi among the competitors taking on the 3-day meet.

Also among the elite is Ryosuke Irie, the ever-consistent backstroker who maintains his relevance in the highest level of international swimming with performances like the one he threw down today in Tokyo.

After establishing himself as the top-seeded swimmer in the men’s 100m backstroke, clocking a new meet record time of 53.12, the birthday boy who turned 30 years of age today busted out the fastest swim globally this season, hitting the wall in a mark of 52.59.

Beautifully splitting 25.70/26.89, Irie’s time of 52.59 got his hand on the wall more than a second ahead of runner-up Masaki Kaneko, who secured silver in 54.33.

Irie’s time tonight overtakes his own world rankings leader of 52.97, also held by China’s Xu Jiayu, from when the men tied for the gold at the FINA Champions Series in Beijing last week.  With his outing here, Irie slashed .38 off that mark to sit atop the rankings throne and stake his claim on the event 6 months out from a home nation-hosted Olympic Games.

Top 5 Men’s 100m Back Performers Since September 2019

Rank       Time     Name                                 Team       Date
1              52.59 Irie, Ryosuke                JPN         01/24/2020
2              52.97  Xu, Jiayu                              CHN        01/18/2020
3              53.14 Casas, Shaine                        USA         11/22/2019
4              53.54 Grevers, Matt                       USA         01/14/2020
5              53.76 Tarasevich, Grigory            RUS         11/03/2019

The man who turned 30 years of age today holds a personal best and Japanese national record of 52.24 logged at the 2009 Australian Championships. He more recently turned in a time of 52.53 to take the 2018 Asian Games silver behind the aforementioned Xu.

If Irie had produced this same in-season mark of 52.59 in Gwangju last year, he would have grabbed the silver, with his time sitting behind gold medalist Xu (52.43), but ahead of Russian Evgeny Rylov‘s 52.67. Instead in Korea, Irie musted juts a 53.22 for 6th place.

Irie took Olympic silver in the 200m backstroke and bronze in the 100m backstroke at the 2012 Olympic Games in London.

In Rio, the man placed 7th in the 100m back (53.42) and 8th in the 200m back (1:56.36).

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Hashtags for Cat
3 years ago

ssss

Coach Mike 1952
4 years ago

Any video?

Coach Mike 1952
Reply to  Coach Mike 1952
4 years ago
Greg Spire SWIM SAN DIEGO
4 years ago

Great job and congratulations Ryosuke Irie!! Your Japanese swimmers and admirers from Swim San Diego wish you happy birthday and success!!! From Kosei, Nisou and Kai.

Ol’ Longhorn
4 years ago

Man to go 52.5 balancing a water bottle on your head is spectacular.

hzmusicstand
4 years ago

This guy… He’s so good

swimfan_00
4 years ago

Irie, Murphy, Rylov, Kolesnikov, Jiayu, Larkin, Grevers, Casas, all gold medal pretenders for this summer

Yup
Reply to  swimfan_00
4 years ago

Larkin, at the Olympics? LOLz

sven
4 years ago

Which 100 is least certain on the men’s side? The 100 free seems to be all Chalmers and Dressel, with a few other guys under 47.5 to keep things interesting. Dressel looks dominant in the 100 fly, Peaty even moreso in the breast. The back has Rylov, Murph, and Xu at the top, but then Grevers, Larkin, Irie, and a few others all with lifetime bests and recent performances that make them contenders for gold if the current top three aren’t on their game. Also dark horses on unknown trajectories (e.g. Casas) that could surprise.

I’d say it’s back, with free somewhat close behind.

Yup
Reply to  sven
4 years ago

You had Dressel and Chalmers in the wrong order…

M Palota
4 years ago

His form is flawless!

Coach Mike 1952
Reply to  M Palota
4 years ago

Smoooooth he is (said Yoda)

Yup
Reply to  Coach Mike 1952
4 years ago

But what would Baby Yoda say?

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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