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World C’ships Silver Medalist Matsumoto Time-Trialed 1:45.44 200 Free In March

Japan’s Katsuhiro Matsumoto made history at the 2019 FINA World Aquatic Championships, becoming his nation’s first-ever 200m freestyle medalist at a Worlds or Olympic Games.

The 23-year-old, whom his friends call Katsuo, punched a powerful time of 1:45.22 to snag the silver medal in Gwangju, just .29 away from gold medalist Sun Yang’s podium-topping 1:44.93. With his effort there, Matsumoto overtook the Japanese national record, lowering the previous mark of 1:45.23 that Kosuke Hagino put on the books back in 2014.

Matsumoto’s rise among the elite freestyle ranks was gearing the Central Sports-trained athlete up for possible podium placement at the 2020 Olympic Games in front of his home crowd in Tokyo. Paired with countryman Daiya Seto, double world champion from Gwangju, the duo could have really given the host nation something to cheer about at the Olympic Aquatic Center.

As such, with the postponement of the Olympic Games to July of 2021, the culmination of their momentum would not come to fruition as planned. That’s a fact which left Seto admittedly devastated, while Matsumoto also now reveals how he had trouble dealing with the reality of the coronavirus pandemic’s impact.

“After all I had done this just couldn’t happen,” Matsumoto said of the delay, according to The Japan Times.

Matsumoto can’t help but think how his aforementioned Gwangju performance coupled with his subsequent 1:45.82 clocking at January’s Kosuke Kitajima Cup put him on the path for greatness.

He had been fueling his fortitude with high-altitude training in Mexico from February to March. Per The Japan Times, the national teamer put up a 200m free time trial of 1:45.44, a mark that still would have beaten co-bronze medalists at last year’s World Championships, Duncan Scott of Great Britain and Martin Malyutin of Russia (tied at 1:45.63).

“It showed I have the ability to swim 1:44,” said Matsumoto of his one-man training race. “I was going to push toward the 43-second level at an altitude training camp in June.”

Highlighting the competitiveness worldwide of the men’s 200m freestyle, Matsumoto’s coach Yoji Suzuki says it’s going to take something super special to take gold in Tokyo. “Someone is definitely going to swim 1:43 at the Olympics,” he said.

Until that time, Matsumoto is doing what the rest of the world is at the moment, which is doing the best with what he has to work with. He took some time off and resumed training mid-April, charged with another year of pushing himself to new heights with potential Olympic glory on the line.

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50free
4 years ago

I’m not sure how going 1:45 means u have the ability to go 1:44 then push for 1:43 in June.

Scott Morgan
4 years ago

Pfffft. Just last week, Schooling did this time butterfly from a push at the end of 10000m with a drag suit.

Togger
Reply to  Scott Morgan
4 years ago

Pretty major difference between “I just knock out these times mid-set. Wow I’m basically the Goat.” and “A major global pandemic put an abrupt halt to training for my once in a lifetime home Olympics, so in my final session I did a flat out, suited time trial to see what I could put up.”

Khachaturian
Reply to  Scott Morgan
4 years ago

I wonder if Schooling ever reads these and regrets what he said.

Ol' Longhorn
Reply to  Khachaturian
4 years ago

They don’t teach reading at UT.

Anonymoose
Reply to  Ol' Longhorn
4 years ago

And you would know?

Riccardo
4 years ago

If Hagino gets back to his best Japan could contend for a medal in the 800 free relay. That is 2 potential 1:44s

nuotofan
Reply to  Riccardo
4 years ago

There are, at least, three teams (Great Britain, Australia and Usa) very, very competitive and the 12 months delay looks perfect for shaping up a “British dream team”: Scott, Guy, Dean and Richards.

torchbearer
Reply to  nuotofan
4 years ago

The 4×200 was a great race at he last world champs…but I cant find the race online???

Samesame
Reply to  torchbearer
4 years ago

FINA TV has it but you have to pay I think

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  Samesame
4 years ago

correct

Dee
Reply to  nuotofan
4 years ago

Reading my mind. The potential of that 4×2 in 2021 and 2024 has me excited; So many fast young freestylers in GBR atm.

Joe
Reply to  Riccardo
4 years ago

The 4×200 relay is as competitive as it has ever been.

Australia, USA, Russia, GB, Italy, Japan all with a legitimate chance of a medal. No clear favourite for gold either.

Jeff
Reply to  Joe
4 years ago

I think realistically the first 4 nations are probably going to be the ones with the medals. One interesting find that I had I see that the United States are actually only the 4th best team on paper after Australia, Russia and Great Britain respectively based on aggregate times since the start of 2019.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  Jeff
4 years ago

we still havent seen what the Us team members were capable of this year ….

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  Joe
4 years ago

Brazil as well

Khachaturian
Reply to  Riccardo
4 years ago

Seto could probably go a 1:45

Dudeman
Reply to  Khachaturian
4 years ago

I think he has gone 1:45 earlier this year

torchbearer
4 years ago

Hope he doesnt suffer the time trial curse….not sure having this out in public helps him!

Ladyvoldisser
Reply to  torchbearer
4 years ago

He will tank when the chips are on the line.

Colt Simonelli
Reply to  Ladyvoldisser
4 years ago

He didn’t last world champs

Colt Simonelli
4 years ago

It would be cool to see him get a medal at the Olympics, seeing how Tokyo is hosting.

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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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