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1:56-Point Splits From Steenbergen And Gose Highlight W. 4×200 FR (RELAY ANALYSIS)

2022 EUROPEAN AQUATICS CHAMPIONSHIPS

In the women’s 4×200 free relay at the 2022 European Championships, the Dutch women upset two-time defending champions Great Britain to win the women’s 4×200 free relay for the first time in the country’s history. In this article, we take a look at the splits recorded by every swimmer in that relay.

LEADOFFS:

Teenage phenom Nikoletta Padar, who scratched the 100 free semi-finals to presumably focus on this relay, had the fastest leadoff time of 1:58.52. Her best time in the event still sits at 1:57.91, a time that she swam in April 2022 at the Hungarian National championships. Freya Colbert and Imani De Jong join Padar as the other two swimmers under two minutes, with De Jong being less than a tenth of her best time of 1:57.88 set this April.

Country Swimmer Time
Hungary Nikoletta Padar 1:58.52
Great Britain Freya Colbert 1:58.72
Netherlands Imani De Jong 1:58.97
France Lucile Tessariol 2:00.03
Italy Alice Mizzau 2:00.58
Poland Aleksandra Knop 2:01.28
Germany Juia Mrozinski 2:01.68
Sweden Sofia Astedt 2:04.05

ROLLING SPLITS:

Marrit Steenbergen continues her streak of being phenomenal on relays this year, and she’s done a great job filling the holes within the Dutch women after the retirement of freestyle stars Femke Hemskeerk and Ranomi Kromowidjojo. She had the fastest rolling split in the field with her anchor leg time of 1:56.26, entering the water 0.1 seconds behind Great Britain but touching the wall 0.66 seconds ahead.

Steenbergen went her fastest 200 free time ever on a relay, as her best relay split time prior to today was a 1:58.04.

Not to be ignored is Isabel Gose‘s 1:56.93 anchor, which is the second-fastest rolling split and brought Germany from sixth to fifth place position. This split time is just 0.13 seconds off of her flat start best time of 1:56.80.

Katinka Hosszu split 2:00.62 to help Hungary win bronze, earning her 97th international medal. She now just needs three more to get to the 100 mark.

Just like the men, the British women were all relatively slower than their best times, which highlights the fatigue of swimming a World Championships, Commonwealth Games, and European Championships all in one summer.

Country Swimmer Time
Netherlands Marrit Steenbergen 1:56.26
Germany Isabel Gose 1:56.93
Great Britain Freya Anderson 1:57.02
Hungary Lila Abraham 1:57.16
Poland Aleksandra Polanska 1:57.90
Italy Noemi Cesarano 1:58.81
Netherlands Silke Hokenborg 1:58.92
Great Britain Lucy Hope 1:58.98
Italy Antonietta Cesarano 1:59.38
Hungary Ajna Kesley 1:59.43
Netherlands Janna Van Kooten 1:59.92
Italy Linda Caponi 2:00.06
Germany Chiara Klein 2:00.16
France Giulia Rossi-Bene 2:00.28
Hungary Katinka Hoszu 2:00.62
France Oceane Carnez 2:00.68
France Marina Jehl 2:00.83
Great Britain Medi Harris 2:01.01
Germany Zoe Vogelmann 2:01.12
Sweden Hanna Bergman 2:01.16
Poland Wiktoria Gusc 2:01.54
Sweden Alicia Lundblad 2:01.57
Poland Marta Klimec 2:02.32
Sweden Elvira Moerstrand 2:02.70

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MastersSwimmer
2 years ago

The Dutch team were shown on the data to have a -0.04 takeover in the heats- which would have meant a disqualification.
There was a long long delay until heat results were published, and a -0.04 takeover somehow became a +0.05, and the Dutch were through to the final.

NathenDrake
2 years ago

No swimmers like Ajna Kesley or Katinka Hoszu.

The 2. mistake in UNACCEPTABLE LEVEL.

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
2 years ago

When it comes to the women’s 4 x 200 meter freestyle relay on the international stage, it’s AUS, CAN, CHN, USA (not necessarily in that order) then a major drop-off.

NathenDrake
Reply to  Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
2 years ago

Hopefully Hungary can cut the margin with 3 girls born in 2006. ÁbrahÁm and Pádár has already swum around 1:57.

Molnár is capable of that with more freestyle training and racing.

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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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