2019 FINA WORLD AQUATICS CHAMPIONSHIPS
- All sports: Friday, July 12 – Sunday, July 28, 2019
- Pool swimming: Sunday, July 21 – Sunday, July 28, 2019
- The Nambu University Municipal Aquatics Center, Gwangju, Korea
- Meet site
- Competition Schedule
- FinaTV Live Stream
- Entry Lists
- Results
The United States announced before the final day of prelims at the 2019 FINA World Championships that it would opt to use Melanie Margalis in prelims of the women’s 4×100 medley relay, leaving Micah Sumrall, who competed in the event individually, off the team.
Sumrall was 1:07.81 in prelims of the 100 breast and 1:07.94 in the second semifinal, finishing 16th overall. Her best this season was 1:07.40, from April, and her lifetime best 1:06.34 from the 2018 Phillips 66 National Championships.
Margalis’ lifetime best came in March at 1:07.20, after three years of stagnation in the event, and she split 1:06.40 on the relay. Earlier in the meet, she swam on both the prelims and finals team of the U.S. women’s silver medal 4×200 free relay, splitting 1:55.81 in finals (her flat start best is 1:56.58). Thursday, placed fourth overall in the 200 IM final, nearly hitting her lifetime best at 2:08.91.
With the world record holder Lilly King a lock for the final, the U.S.’s use of Margalis here signals a willingness to play the “hot hand,” even in a scenario when it did not really matter. The American team is the top seed by nearly three seconds, and the coaching staff could have used Sumrall and still safely gotten the relay into the final but opted to put forth the best option.
Olivia Smoliga led off the prelims swim in 58.79, Katie McLaughlin went 57.15 on the fly leg, and Mallory Comerford anchored in 53.05. In the final session Sunday night, Regan Smith – fresh off a monster 200 back world record – will sub in on leadoff, King will swim breast, Kelsi Dahlia is expected to swim fly, and Simone Manuel is the presumed anchor.
That lineup, of course, leaves 100 back world record holder Kathleen Baker on the bench. Baker was 59.03 in semis of the 100 back earlier in the meet, but 59.56 in the final. Smith took out the first 100 of her gold medal 200 back Saturday night in 59.45.
1:06.4 is a good split to just drop out of nowhere
Melanie is a Swiss Army Knife
we didn’t not know that ….😂👇🏽
I’m not sure Sumrall is 100% healthy and that might’ve had something to do with Margalis getting the prelims swim.
I hope 2020 is Margalis breakout year
I really hope she can make a huge drop next year instead of being stuck at 2:08.9, she is too talented not to!
Would be helpful if you told us the split ¿
It’s under Results. 1:06:40. Margalis rocks.
Ha, yes, minor detail 😅It’s updated!
Jordan and Yianni love this
There are more 100 back times in this article than Margalis’ split….