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Tokyo 2020 Olympic Swimming Previews: Carnage Coming In Men’s 200 Breast

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2020 TOKYO SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES

MEN’S 200 BREASTSTROKE

  • World Record: Anton Chupkov (RUS) – 2:06.12 (2019)
  • Olympic Record: Ippei Watanabe (JPN) – 2:07.22 (2016)
  • World Junior Record: Qin Haiyan (CHN) – 2:07.35 (2017)
  • 2016 Olympic Champion: Dmitriy Balandin (KAZ) – 2:07.46

Although reigning Olympic champion Dmitriy Balandin of Kazakhstan will indeed be in this men’s 200m breaststroke field in Tokyo, the now-26-year-old Almaty native hasn’t been among the upper echelon of talent in the event for some time.

While Balandin still landed on podiums at the 2017 World University Games (Summer Universiade) and 2018 Asian Games, he missed the men’s 200m breast final at the 2017 FINA World Championships. More recently the Kazakhstani settled for 7th place in the event at the 2019 edition of the World Championships.

Timewise, Balandin’s fastest performance since his Olympic gold in Rio rests at the 2:08.19 he produced in the semi-finals in Gwangju. That type of mark may not even make the final based on the types of swims we’ve been seeing in this event over the past 2 years.

As such, Balandin will have quite the fight on his hands when we examine the rest of the contenders in this men’s 200m breaststroke including the current World Record holder Anton Chupkov of Russia, Dutch breaststroking ace Arno Kamminga and young gun Shoma Sato of Japan.

First, for Chupkov, the man owns the fastest time ever produced in this dynamic event, owning a PB and WR of 2:06.12 from the 2019 FINA World Championships. He was also on the podium there in Rio, grabbing bronze behind Balandin and silver medalist Josh Prenot of the United States, who is not on the U.S. Olympic team this year.

Chupkov enters Tokyo ranked 4th in the world in 2:06.99 and with a hunger to pair Olympic gold with his world title.

Hoping to stand in his way is 25-year-old Kamminga, our pick for silver medalist already in the 100m breaststroke. Coming off of double breaststroke gold from the European Championships, Kamminga has been red-hot in this discipline, owning the #3 fastest performance in the world right now with his 2:06.85 notched in Rotterdam last December

That outing marked Kammninga’s first-ever venture under the 2:07 threshold, overtaking his previous personal best entering that meet of 2:07.18 from March of 2020.

At the 2019 FINA World Championships, Kamminga was essentially a non-factor in this event, placing 9th with a time in Gwangju of 2:08.48, then a national record. As such, in just 2 years’ time, Kamminga has thrust himself into medal contention, with his 2:06.85 PB ranking him as the 4th fastest performer in history heading into Tokyo.

The rapid progression is similar for 19-year-old Sato of Japan. The Keito University student’s best time of 2019 was marked by a 2:09.21, yet here we are in 2021 and Sato has already been in the 2:06 zone on 3 different occasions. He hit 2:06.78 in January at the Kosuke Kitajima Cup and followed that up the next month with a super quick 2:06.74 at the Japan National Championships.

When it truly counted at the nation’s Olympic Trials, Sato delivered in spades, crushing a time of 2:06.40 to register a new Asian continental and Japanese national record en route to qualifying for a home-based Games. With that effort, Sato enters Tokyo as the #2 swimmer in the world. However, his 2:06 consistency is what tilts our medal pick in his favor.

As a testament to the depth of this event, we haven’t even mentioned a pair of Australian prospects in the form of Zac Stubblety-Cook and Matt Wilson, the former of whom owns the top time in the world this season with the 2:06.28 scored at the nation’s Olympic Trials.

Stubblety-Cook’s performance brought him within .16 of Chupkov’s world record, breaking the Aussie, All Comer, Oceanic and Commonwealth records in his becoming the 2nd fastest man of all time. But his result wasn’t a fluke, with 22-year-old already having snagged a PB of 2:07.00 just weeks earlier at the Sydney Open.

Teammate Wilson was actually a once-world record holder in this event, albeit for a matter of hours. Wilson blasted a time of 2:06.67 to match the mark en route to taking the top seed out of the semi-finals at the FINA World Championships. Although he ultimately settled for silver in 2:06.68, relinquishing his WR to the aforementioned Chupkov, Wilson cemented himself into the annals of 200m breaststroke history, staking his claim on Olympic gold in Toyo.

That’s why it was such a shock to onlookers when Wilson wound up outside of Australian Swimming’s Olympic qualification time when he raced this event at their Trials last month. There in South Australia, Wilson finished 2nd to Stubblety-Cook, clocking a pedestrian-by-his-standards time of 2:08.52. That fell short of the 2:08.28 needed to automatically be considered for the Olympic team, a time Wilson had exceeded on multiple occasions.

However, Wilson was granted a reprieve by Swimming Australia after having dealt with a death in the family leading up to the Trials, As such, the man is on his way to Tokyo and will be right there in the mix of medal contenders.

Also on the list of those capable of finishing near the top is American Nic Fink, the Athens Bulldog swimmer who topped the U.S. Trials with a time there in Omaha of 2:07.55. That performance rendered Fink the 4th fastest American swimmer in history. Whether he can muster another gear and join the sub-2:07 crowd remains to be seen, however.

Brit James Wilby looks good for a potential minor medal threat with a PB of 2:07.49, although that time was posted 2 years ago. More recently at the British Olympic Trials, the Loughborough man hit a mark of 2:08.06. Yes, Wilby already had the luxury of having been named to the British Olympic roster by way of his 100m breast silver in Gwangju but a stronger argument could be made for him as being more formidable had he dropped into the 2:07-low arena at that meet.

SwimSwam Picks:

Place Swimmer Country Best Time Since the 2016 Olympics
1 Anton Chupkov RUS 2:06.12 – 2019
2 Shoma Sato JPN 2:06.40 – 2021
3 Zac Stubblety-Cook AUS 2:06.28 – 2021
4 Matt Wilson AUS 2:06.67 – 2019
5 Arno Kamminga NED 2:06.85 – 2021
6 Nic Fink USA 2:07.55 – 2021
7 James Wilby GBR 2:07.49 – 2019
8 Ryuya Mura JPN 2:07.58 – 2021

Dark Horse:

American Andrew Wilson is another Olympic debutant but is unique in the fact he came from a Division III school. The former Emory University standout nabbed the 2nd Olympic roster spot behind Fink, posting a time of 2:08.32 at Olympic Trials. However, the 27-year-old has been as fast as 2:07.77 on the 2019 FINA World Cup circuit, which is at least where he’ll need to be to land among the top 8 of this stacked spectacle of swimming.

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Miles
3 years ago

I’m going with sato, definitely the most consistent 2:06 swimmer in the field as of recent.

torchbearer
3 years ago

Got a feeling this is going to be a crapshoot like the final lap in Rio….!!

Yabo
Reply to  torchbearer
3 years ago

Ehhh, chupkov feels pretty unbeatable in this event to me. He basically swims this split wise like a really good 200 freestyler

Bub
3 years ago

I feel like if someone’s going to rip something big, its Kamminga. Guy’s got way to much speed to be 5th.

Drama King
3 years ago

Gold – Anton Chupkov – 2.05.78
Silver – Zac Stubblety Cook – 2.06.04
Bronze – Shoma Sato – 2.06.22

4. Arno Kamminga – 2.06.95
5. Nick Fink – 2.07.18
6. Ryuya Mura – 2.07.36
7. James Wilby – 2.07.46
8. Matt Wilson – 2.07.90

Dark Horse – Qin Haiyang ??? and Erik Persson

oxyswim
3 years ago

At Euros Kamminga took the Chupkov approach of waiting until the last 50 to really get going and he wasn’t able to do it as well as Chupkov. He’s got more speed than anyone else in this field, I’d like to see him get out in 59+ or 1:00 low. I believe that is his best shot to win. Could backfire and leave him out of the medals as well, but you’ve got to take some risks in order to be Olympic Champion.

Yabo
3 years ago

Chupkov-2:05.3-5
Kamminga-2:05.9-6.1
Sato-2:06.3-5
Wilson-2:06.4-6

Gambler
3 years ago

Unibet Odds To Win Gold

ZSC +175
Chupkov +200
Sato +225
A. Wilson +800
Kamminga +900
M. Wilson +900
Fink +1100

Definitely scared of the top 3, especially Sato, but I have to think that you’re getting a pretty good price on Kamminga at 9-1. Other longshots for a medal- Corbeau (+5000 to win, maybe +1500 to medal). I like his interviews on swimswam. Anyone else have any dark horses?

Kamminga, Sato, Corbeau

Nick
Reply to  Gambler
3 years ago

Persson has a PB of 2:07.66 from euros

Dee
Reply to  Gambler
3 years ago

Kamminga is a very generous price – I’d definitely be playing him at those prices.

DrSwimPhil
3 years ago

The carnage might come from the cameras….

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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