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The Swimmers With The Most Followers On Instagram

Who are the most popular swimmers on social media?

In these days, the most popular form of social media is Instagram. Almost every active swimmer has an Instagram account – more than Twitter, for example.

The swimmers’ popularity on social media, however, doesn’t always reflect their achievements in the pool. Instagram’s Swimming Stats page has published the list of the active swimmers with the most followers in Instagram.

(Before you ask “what about Michael Phelps?”, we know he has more than 3 million followers. But he is now retired, and the list is about the active swimmers, mainly because it is very hard to track all retired swimmers. It is also hard to define a “retired swimmer”. There are many former swimmers who weren’t successful at international level who are very successful in other areas, and they have millions of followers. That’s why only active swimmers are considered on the list).

The most followed swimmer on Instagram is Australian Cody Simpson, who has 4 million followers. Of course we know he is also a very successful singer, and that’s why he has such a large following. But he is also a very good swimmer, having made the final in the men’s 100 butterfly at the Australian Olympic Trials, and has announced that he will try to make the Australian Olympic team in 2024.

The Italian swimming fans are among the most passionate in the world, so it’s no surprise that Federica Pellegrini has so many followers: 1.5 million.

Pellegrini is also a bit of a mainstream celebrity in Italy, so much so that she’s appeared as a judge on Italy’s Got Talent.

Ryan Lochte has 845K, and this is a curious case. Exactly one year ago, he had 881K, so he lost almost 40K followers, probably because he didn’t make the U.S. Olympic team and is not under the spotlight as he used to be few years ago.

Fourth place on the list might surprise you: Argentinian Delfina Pignatiello, with more than 800K followers. She is one of the most popular sports persons in Argentina, a three-time Pan-American champion and also a Youth Olympic gold medalist. She didn’t perform well at the Tokyo Olympics, and amazingly she continues gaining followers: almost 300K since August 2020.

But no one has gained more followers over the last year than Caeleb Dressel. This is certainly no surprise, since he was the best swimmer in the 2020 ISL season and the Tokyo Olympics, winning gold medals and world records at will. A year ago he had 259K followers, and now he has 703K.

Yusra Mardini has not won medals at the Olympics or World Championships, but she is one of the most famous swimmers in the world, which is reflected by her 416K followers. She gained popularity when she competed by the Refugee Olympic Team at the 2016 Rio Olympics.

Malaysia’s Welson Sim is not a mainstream swimmer. But, in 2016, he became the first Malaysian swimmer ever to register a FINA ‘A’ Olympic cut. And today he is one of the most followed swimmers on Instagram with more than 300K followers – more than Olympic champions Nathan Adrian, Florent Manaudou, Sarah Sjostrom, Chad le Clos, and Simone Manuel.

Winning medals is good driver for popularity on social media, but it’s clearly not everything.

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Sarcastic
3 years ago

The tiktok crowd discovered Dressel – lots of new female fans after Leslie Jones and her commentary

Dressel1234
Reply to  Sarcastic
3 years ago

He’s definitely one of those swimmers with natural media appeal like Lochte, when meanwhile there are a lot of other successful swimmers like Ledecky that don’t really have that

swammer2009
Reply to  Dressel1234
3 years ago

Yet she still has 500k plus followers.. I think she’s doing just fine & really coming into her own with interviews, the media, etc.

Dressel1234
Reply to  swammer2009
3 years ago

They love to ask her the same questions over and over again

cynthia curran
3 years ago

Cody Simpson can sing like Elvis Presley, cool.

Virtus
3 years ago

Eddie wang is confusing

Casas 100 back gold in Fukuoka
Reply to  Virtus
3 years ago

Population. And swimming is a very popular sport in many East Asian countries. I believe many Chinese swimmers have way more followers on their version of Instagram.

Troyy
Reply to  Casas 100 back gold in Fukuoka
3 years ago

Does that still apply to Taiwan tho?

Chineeese boy
3 years ago

Error! Number 1: Dean Farris – 7 billion followers

John
3 years ago

Brazilians has the most fake followers that’s for sure

Olympian
Reply to  John
3 years ago

How come?

Admin
3 years ago

My favorite related stat is that Boomer Phelps has 570K followers alone.

RAP
Reply to  Torrey Hart
3 years ago

lol he’ll grow up well adjusted

PVSFree
Reply to  RAP
3 years ago

As a similar case, Michael Schumacher’s (7-time world champion, arguably the GOAT in Formula 1) son Mick Schumacher raced under a pseudonym in the junior karting series (equivalent to age group swimming) to avoid the pressure/spotlight. Now Mick is in F1 himself as a rookie. Wonder if that’d be an option for Phelps’s kids as well.

WhenVictorDavisWasKing
Reply to  PVSFree
3 years ago

Registering him as Boomer Bowman, or Boomer Lochte, will not raise a single suspicion.

Dressel1234
Reply to  WhenVictorDavisWasKing
3 years ago

If he went by Boomer Johnson it would be kinda funny

MickeyMouse
Reply to  Torrey Hart
3 years ago

What level of swimmer does an athlete have to be to get included in this article? As soon as he gets USA Swimming registered is he good to go?

MickeyMouse
3 years ago

I wish we could somehow break the followers down between the amount of followers that are swimmers and those that are the general public, that’d be an interesting stat

Deepblue
3 years ago

Lochte had over 1m followers before Rio, wonder what happened that caused him to lose so many?

Bruh
Reply to  Deepblue
3 years ago

I have no idea /s

McKeown-Hodges-McKeon-Campbell
Reply to  Deepblue
3 years ago

hmmmm

frug
Reply to  Deepblue
3 years ago

People must not have been impressed with his 1:57 in the 200 IM.

WhenVictorDavisWasKing
Reply to  Deepblue
3 years ago

I’m pretty sure those numbers were over-exaggerated, likely inflated by performance-enhancing IV transfusions of Jeah juice and drive-by spectators who enjoy a good car-crash.

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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