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Tritonwear Showdown: Men’s 200 Free Gold, 2004 Athens Olympics

Courtesy of Tritonwear 

By the time the Olympics came to Athens in 2004, Ian Thorpe and Pieter van den Hoogenband were already legends in the global swimming community. Their 200 freestyle rivalry had been established four years previously in Sydney, when the Dutchman defeated Thorpe in his own backyard in world-record fashion. In those same 2000 Games, Michael Phelps was a relatively unknown 15-year-old butterflyer, but he quickly rose to fame as one of the fastest swimmers in the world in multiple disciplines.

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Tritonwear Showdown, Men's 200 Athens 2004 (courtesy of Tritonwear, a SwimSwam partner)

When news broke that all three of these stars – the Australian world-record holder and world champion, the Dutch former world-record holder and defending Olympic champion, and the up-and-coming American phenomenon – would face off in Athens, the hype for the men’s 200 freestyle grew exponentially. With speculation about Phelps’ potential fueling the excitement, the race became more than just a rematch between Thorpe and van den Hoogenband. It was a showdown spanning three continents and two eras. Indeed, the media labelled it the “Race of the Century.”

On August 17, after advancing comfortably through the prelims and semifinals the day prior, the three challengers dove in for the final in the middle lanes of the pool. The first 100 meters belonged to van den Hoogenband, who out-split his competitors on each length. He turned in a blistering 50.42, which was more than a second under world-record pace. However, his distance per stroke (DPS) was lower than Thorpe’s – on the second length, Thorpe travelled 0.06 m further with every pull. Their stroke index metrics indicate that van den Hoogenband was consistently less efficient than his Australian competitor, and this extra energy expenditure over the duration of the race would cost the Dutchman in the end.

Thorpe closed the gap considerably on the third length, splitting 0.42 seconds faster than van den Hoogenband. While van den Hoogenband averaged a longer amount of time on his first three underwaters, Thorpe crushed him off the final wall, with an additional 0.59 seconds of propulsive dolphin kicks. This marked the turning point in the race. Thorpe surged ahead and out-split van den Hoogenband by 0.72 seconds on the last 50, touching the wall in an Olympic-record time of 1:44.71. Conserving his energy on the first half of the race paid off.

Although Phelps was stuck in third position for the entirety of the race, he spent far longer underwater than his competitors and had the fastest split on the last 50 with a stroke index similar to Thorpe’s. This momentous finish is perhaps symbolic of the fact that his career was on the rise.

There was never another showdown between Thorpe, van den Hoogenband, and Phelps after the 2004 Olympics. Considering the star-studded field and level of hype leading up to the race, the men’s 200 freestyle final in Athens stands as one of the most epic races in swimming history.

Tritonwear is a SwimSwam partner.

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aussie crawl
8 years ago

At the end of the day the race of the century was won by “thorpie”.
End of story.

TNM
8 years ago

I’ll never forget MP crushing Peter vd H at 2007 Melbourne in the 200 free. The was the moment I realized it was doable for him to get 8 gold medals at Beijing.

Lp Man
Reply to  TNM
8 years ago

I agree. He hit the 150 even with pvh and then mutilated everyone with his final turn

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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