2022 FINA WORLD AQUATICS CHAMPIONSHIPS
- June 18-25, 2022 (pool swimming)
- Budapest, Hungary
- Duna Arena
- LCM (50-meter format)
- Full Aquatics Schedule
- How To Watch
- Psych Sheets
- Start Lists Book (pre-meet)
- Meet Central
- Live Results
- Day 1 Prelims Live Recap
- Day 1 Finals Heat Sheet
The first swimming finals session of the 2022 World Championships is here. It’s a packed session, with five finals and four semifinals.
Medal events on tap for tonight are the men’s and women’s 400 free, men’s 400 IM, and men’s and women’s 4×100 free relay. We’ve also got semifinal rounds of the women’s 100 fly, men’s 50 fly, men’s 100 breast, and women’s 200 IM.
Day 1 Finals Schedule
- Men’s 400 free–Final
- Women’s 100 fly–Semifinal
- Men’s 50 fly–Semifinal
- Women’s 400 free–Final
- Men’s 100 breast–Semifinal
- Women’s 200 IM–Semifinal
- Men’s 400 IM–Final
- Men’s 4×100 free relay–Final
- Women’s 4×100 free relay–Final
Men’s 400 Free
We got a preview of what finals could look like in Heat 4 of prelims, which featured half of the 2020 Olympic final. Elijah Winnington was under world record pace for the first 200 meters, with Kieran Smith going with him. But it was Felix Auboeck who touched first, using a strong back-half to power past them and touch in 3:43.83. That’s a new personal best and Austrian Record for Auboeck, and would have medaled last summer.
Guilherme Costa qualified third, setting a new South American record of 3:44.52. After posting 3:41.60 this spring to become the eighth-fastest performer all-time, Lukas Märtens clocked 3:45.04 in the heats to quietly advance fifth. Was he saving something for tonight, or did he peak in the spring? Either way, we’re set for a tight race for our first final in Budapest, where the winner could come from any lane.
Women’s 400 Free
Unlike the men’s 400 free, where the gold medal is up for grabs, Katie Ledecky looks to have this race locked down. She looked in control this morning, posting 3:59.79 for the only sub-4:00 time in prelims. There’s an interesting battle brewing behind her for the minor medals though, as Summer McIntosh, Lani Pallister, and Kiah Melverton are all within half a second of each other. In finals, Leah Smith will surely be in the fray with them as well.
Make sure to keep your eye on the clock here. Ledecky will be hungry to reclaim her world record after Ariarne Titmus broke it at the Australian Trials. Behind her, the race is on to get under 4:00, and all four of the women in the medal hunt are capable of getting close to the barrier. The question is, can any of them get under?
Men’s 400 IM
French sensation Leon Marchand is the top seed here, after breaking his own French record in 4:09.09. Marchand seemed to be on cruise control for the freestyle leg, so we could see him get under that time in the final. He’ll be pushed by Daiya Seto, who’s rebounded well after missing this final in Tokyo. He won’t be satisfied with just getting back to the final though, he’ll want a medal, and he’s shown that he’s capable of getting there.
The American duo of Carson Foster and Chase Kalisz qualified second and third. Here, we’re witnessing a changing of the guard play out before our eyes, as Foster looks to take over as the top American in an event that Kalisz has dominated for a long time, though appears to be less focused on now. Foster posted 4:09.60, and as always, the question with him is how much does he have left in the tank for finals?
Men’s 4×100 Free Relay
Even without Caeleb Dressel, the U.S men still finished a second clear of the field in the prelims to solidify their place as favorites. We saw some ridiculously fast splits out of the heats across the board though, and the race for the medals just got a lot tighter as Hungary put together an awesome prelims performance to assert themselves as a threat.
Australia elected to use Kyle Chalmers this morning, and he blasted 47.11 to help the Aussies qualify in second. That swim answers a lot of questions about his freestyle form, and if he can duplicate that swim, the Aussies have a strong chance at medaling in a relay many counted them out of. Aside from the U.S., not many teams have many options for swapping swimmers out, so many nations will likely field the same team for finals. One of the countries in this position is Italy, the Olympic silver medalists, who qualified in a lackluster sixth position. We’ll have to wait and see if they were keeping their cards close to their chests and have a big swim in store for finals.
Women’s 4×100 Free Relay
We’re back on world record watch here, as the Australian women look capable of rattling their record from Tokyo. They’re missing some of their biggest sprint stars, so this seemed unlikely before the morning, but they were under the pace through the first two legs. They still have Mollie O’Callaghan and Shayna Jack to swap in, too.
Penny Oleksiak will likely draw in for Canada tonight to boost their squad, and there’s a tough decision to be made for who makes the U.S’s finals team. Those two teams look like they’ll be locked in a battle for second, with Great Britain and China looking to get in on the action. In Tokyo, the Canadian women out-touched the U.S for silver, so get set for another tough race tonight as the U.S looks to even the score.
Day 1 Semifinals Quick Hits
- Torri Huske was under world record pace at the 50, splitting 25.98. Watch for her to take the race out fast again in heat 2, as she swims between Olympic silver medalist Zhang Yufei and Louise Hansson. Marie Wattel and Claire Curzan will battle it out in the first heat, with .27 separating them in the heats.
- The top four from the heats are separated by .02, with Dylan Carter leading the way in 22.87. This is a stacked field, and medal contender Nicholas Santos qualified 13th. He’ll need to make up some ground tonight if he wants to defend his 2019 bronze medal.
- Unsurprisingly, Arno Kamminga had the top time from prelims, though he battled it out with Nic Fink for most of the way. Keep an eye on third-place qualifier Michael Andrew here, this will be his second semifinal of the night.
- The American duo of Alex Walsh and Leah Hayes posted the top their times of the morning and the only ones in the field sub-2:10. Hayes also re-broke her 15-16 NAG from U.S. Trials. Kaylee McKeown is lurking in seventh, and will go head-to-head with Walsh in semi #2. Watch for Katinka Hosszu and Tokyo gold medalist Yui Ohashi, as tonight’s swim will be a better indication of what both are capable of at these Worlds.
400 IM should be a doozy.
Marchand can match Chase K. in the breaststroke, so Chase can’t hang back too much.
Carson Foster in his first big league international race.
http://gx.freestreams-live1(dot)com/
Channel 9 schedule shows finals coverage starting at 1.20am, 1.30am & 1.50am from same listing. Ummm – thanks guys…
China treating this legit, Zhang Yufei lead off and Yang also swimming, could easily sneak a medal from USA/Canada.
How long until the first final
37 minutes
nat is not in the final relay line up don’t hmu 😭😭😭
Zhang Yufei!
USA not using Kibler and Aus not using Incerti in Finals of the 400 FR relay, both probably got Covid then unfortunately.