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SwimSwam’s Top 100 For 2024: Women’s #80-71

After the record-setting year that was 2023, we’re gearing up for another exciting year over here at SwimSwam, and part of that is releasing our fourth annual Top 100 list—check out last year’s rankings here.

Similar to 2023, we’ve taken a statistically driven approach reliant primarily upon world rankings and World Championship medals. We’ve also taken into account things such as potential, Olympic medal opportunities, injuries, and versatility. Long course is weighted more than short course, though performance potential in both formats is factored in.

We’ve also moved Russian and Belarusian swimmers way down this list because of their likely absence from the Olympics or either World Championship meet. While that doesn’t preclude them from swimming fast at domestic meets (including whatever Russia comes up with to replace the Olympics), those swims just won’t mean quite as much without the international spotlight.

We’ll be breaking down the top 100 into multiple installments, so keep an eye out as they’re released.

These lists are, by nature, subjective. If you disagree, leave your thoughts/ranks in the comments.

Braden Keith, Sophie Kaufman, Anya Pelshaw and Mark Wild contributed to this report.

Women’s Rankings:

  • #100 – #91
  • #90 – #81
  • #80 – 71
  • #70 – 61
  • #60 – 51
  • #50 – #41
  • #40 – #31
  • #30 – #21
  • #20 – #11
  • #10 – #1

In this next range, we see a group of swimmers who have found success on the international stage, but could easily find more if they make improvements in 2024. A few are on the cusp of breakthroughs, while others are battling stacked events domestically that they’ll need to battle through to make their respective Olympic teams.

#80: Olivia Wunsch, Australia –  Last summer, at 17, Wunsch was the belle of the ball at the World Junior Championships. She came away with 5 gold medals including the 50 and 100 free individually, and in the 50 tied a Meet Record. While 24.59/53.71 on their own might not rank her this high normally, given her age and the Australian success lately, there’s some projection in this placement. Projection – and those relay splits. She was 52.61 and 52.73 in Netanya, which says her individual swims can go even lower. Breaking through for an individual swim in Paris is going to be hard in the world’s best sprint nation, but no Madi Wilson means a relay swim (and gold medal) are within reach.

#79: Barbora Seemanova, Czech Republic – Seemanova swam five races at the World Championships, and she had an okay 200 free (1:56.50 for 9th in the semifinals). But if she can pare that schedule back at the Olympics and narrow in her focus, she has big upside. Seemanova swam best times in a few primary events in 2023, but the most exciting swim came in December when she launched a 57.75 in the 100 fly in Rotterdam. At 23, she’s already a two-time Olympian.

#78: Reona Aoki, Japan – Aoki salvaged her season with a 1:05.98 showing in November in the 100 breast at the Tokyo Swimming Invitational after missing the final at the World Championships. She’s another breaststroker on this list having a renaissance in her late 20s.

#77: Kotryna Teterevkova, Lithuania – Teterevkova, who turns 22 next week, is part of the great Lithuanian breaststroking tradition. Unlike many of the breaststroke names behind her on this list, she can swim all three distances, which she showed by sweeping gold at the 2023 World University Games. Her Worlds performance was a bit downturn, but a 2:22.86 in the 200 breast in Chengdu showed that she’s still in the mix.

#76: Moesha Johnson, Australia – Johnson swam 15:55 in the 1500 free at Worlds in 2022, but backslid a bit to 16:03 at Trials and 16:05 at Worlds in 2023, missing the final in Fukuoka. She swam both open water and pool events at the 2023 World Championships, finishing 10th in the 5k and 9th in the 1500. She’ll do the same at the 2024 World Championships with an Olympic bid in the open water 10k on the line. At Worlds, open water will come before racing in the pool, but at the Olympics, pool swimming comes first. Whether she winds up making the Olympic team in open water or not, she should have a lot fewer meters under her belt going into the 1500 in Paris than she did in Fukuoka, which implies we’ll see an improved performance.

#75: Nikoletta Padar, Hungary – Padar is heading to Arizona State in fall 2025, where her countrymates Zalan Sarkany and Hubert Kos are having so much success. Until then, the 17-year-old is having plenty of success training at home. She continued to improve late into the year in 2023, swimming a best time of 1:56.17 in the long course 200 free at the Budapest stop of the World Cup Series, then a best time of 1:53.51 in the 200 free in short course at the European Championships in December (among other late-in-the-year best times). She has a choice to make whether to go up to the 400 or down to the 100, though.

#74: Anastasia Gorbenko, Israel – Gorbenko swam breaststroke, backstroke, freestyle, and IM races at the World Championships. The only one where she really had success was the 200 IM, where she placed 5th. A frontrunner for the long course world title in February, if she can get focused at Worlds, she has a chance at chasing a 200 IM medal in what will be one of the best fields in the meet.

#73: Wang Xueer, China – The Asian Games champion in the 50 back, Wang won a swim-off to make a final at the 2023 Worlds in the same event. Her best 100 back time came at May’s Chinese Championships, where she swam 58.99. At 26, she’s past the age when most Chinese swimmers peak historically, but without a spot on China’s team for the World Championships, all of her eggs will be in the 100 backstroke basket (which could include a relay medal).

#72: Tess Howley, USA – The retirement of Hali Flickinger leaves a big hole in the 200 fly for the U.S. Olympic Team behind Regan Smith. Dakota Luther (2:06.79), Howley (2:06.85), the incumbent Lindsay Looney (2:07.35), and the young Alex Shackell (2:07.95) are the leaders to take that spot. Howley also swam 58.99 in the 100 fly at Junior Nationals last summer. She’s training at Virginia, where the women’s team is firing on all cylinders, again. No best times for her yet as a Cavalier. Whoever makes the team for the American women is a medal contender.

#71: Gao Weizhong, China – Gao was China’s second entry at Worlds in the 1500 free behind bronze medalist Li Bingjie, and while she only placed 11th — she was also only 15 years old at the time. Times of 4:06 in the 400, 8:25 in the 800, and 16:01 in the 1500 at the Chinese Spring National Championships in May, all before her 16th birthday, are electric, and she took silver in the 1500 at the Asian Games. China is crowded in the middle-distance races (with Li potentially taking up a spot at every distance from 200 through 1500), but Gao could be a three-event finalist in Paris if she can break through.

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Troyy
9 months ago

Glad to see Wunsch make the list. Must have been a little difficult to choose where to place her given she could do anything from miss the team to pop a 100 time worthy of an Olympic final. I probably would’ve gone for the previous section.

Admin
Reply to  Troyy
9 months ago

Yeah she moved around a lot as we took it from “the math” to “the projection”. The relay splits and age are what tipped her up to this chunk.

Someone commented a few weeks back that they’d love Australia to find the “next Mollie O” who breaks out at Trials. Wunsch seems like the best candidate for that.

Mark69
Reply to  Braden Keith
9 months ago

Wunsch is getting much more publicity 6 months out from trials than MOC got in 2021. To be fair, Olivia deserves it given her world junior results. Also, she will be 18 at trials whereas MOC was only just 17 at the 2021 trials. I think 80 is a fair ranking at this point.

Joshua Liendo-Edwards-Smith
Reply to  Mark69
9 months ago

Yeah the fact that Wunsch dominated junior worlds is definitely a factor in her getting more hype than MOC did. MOC swam well but didn’t individually medal at her junior worlds.

Mark69
Reply to  Joshua Liendo-Edwards-Smith
9 months ago

I’m not knocking MOC – she was only 15 at 2019 junior worlds. But I think Wunsch will make the 2024 relay team and if she can follow MOC’s trajectory, has a great future ahead.

Beatriz Cortez
Reply to  Mark69
9 months ago

Didn’t Shayna Jack win 50-100-200 at Junior Worlds? How old was she? It was long ago when Dressel was the boys winner.

Mark69
Reply to  Beatriz Cortez
9 months ago

Not sure what you are remembering. Dressel won the 100 free at 2013 world juniors. Jack only won a bronze medal at 2015 world juniors. Kyle Chalmers won the 50/100 free double at those champs.

Sub13
Reply to  Beatriz Cortez
9 months ago

Jack won medals across 50-100-200 at Junior Worlds and Junior Pan Pacs combined but only ever won the 100 free

Mark69
Reply to  Sub13
9 months ago

Shayna won bronze in the 100 free at 2013 world juniors and bronze in 50 free at 2015 world juniors. Gold in relays at both titles, but only individual junior gold was 100 free at Pan Pacs.

Troyy
Reply to  Joshua Liendo-Edwards-Smith
9 months ago

To be fair MOC was two years younger when she went to World Juniors and had not long made her move to St Peters.

Joel
Reply to  Joshua Liendo-Edwards-Smith
9 months ago

Mollie got a lot of 4ths in 2019 at age 15. She would have blitzed 2021 junior worlds if it wasn’t cancelled. And if Australia had let her go after the Olympics.

DK99
9 months ago

Feel like Wunsch being so high is SwimSwam bowing down to the Australian commenters who throw their toys out the pram anytime one of their swimmers isn’t worshipped.

Admin
Reply to  DK99
9 months ago

Hmmm I ranked her there and that thought didn’t cross my mind, but never know.

Joel
Reply to  DK99
9 months ago

Aren’t Wunsch’s relay splits from 2023 faster than nearly all the USa relay team apart from Douglas?

Sub13
Reply to  DK99
9 months ago

There have been 4 top 100 articles so far. I’ve seen zero complaints from Australians about any of them, but about 10 comments complaining that they think Australians complain too much. The irony lol.

Admin
Reply to  Sub13
9 months ago

I have seen complaints from Australians (one in particular is still complaining about last year), but I think by privacy law I can’t say who’s an Australian and who isn’t unless they identify their locations. I’m not sure, but I don’t want to pay our lawyer to find out lol.

But I can say this: don’t assume that the nationality implied in a person’s username correlates to their own nationality ;-).

snailSpace
Reply to  Braden Keith
9 months ago

There was little doubt as to their nationality after reading like 3 of their comments lol. No American will ever be that anti-Douglass (MOC should have been higher though for 2023 – but, well, hindsight is everything).

Beatriz Cortez
Reply to  snailSpace
9 months ago

You know that there are people who love swimming and follow swimming from countries other than Australia and USA that access this site? Pretty sure Braden can tell you that.

Last edited 9 months ago by Beatriz Cortez
snailSpace
Reply to  Beatriz Cortez
9 months ago

Yeah, I’m one of them lol.

Beatriz Cortez
Reply to  snailSpace
9 months ago

So am I.

I love following fantastic swimmers regardless of nationality.

I love swimmers from USA, Australia, China but I’m not American, Australian, or Chinese.

So you saying “there’s little doubt as to their nationality” is reaching when the forum is anonymous and people from all the world access this site.

snailSpace
Reply to  Beatriz Cortez
9 months ago

Okay that is fair. The person I am talking about has complained about MOC’s 2023 placement in multiple comments. That at least is telling.
Then again, I have been mistaken for an Australian before.

Last edited 9 months ago by snailSpace
snailSpace
Reply to  Beatriz Cortez
9 months ago

Also their name implies that they are American, hence my “no American would”.

Admin
Reply to  snailSpace
9 months ago

Not even a UNC fan? Or a Stanford swim dad?

snailSpace
Reply to  Braden Keith
9 months ago

… would they also complain about MOC’s “low” placement in every other comment? (but point taken xd).

Troyy
Reply to  Braden Keith
9 months ago

Is this the one that keeps claiming they’re not Australian?

Boxall's Railing
Reply to  Troyy
9 months ago

I’ve always imagined you as Troye Sivan from Australia, secretly being a big swim fan.

Sub13
Reply to  Boxall's Railing
9 months ago

Troyy is actually Timothee Chalamet pretending to be Troye Sivan pretending to be a swim fan

bubbles
Reply to  Braden Keith
9 months ago

is it the person that has a new name every few days but similar commenting style

Southerly Buster
Reply to  bubbles
9 months ago

Yes that’s the one. I think we all realised what was happening pretty quickly.

bubbles
Reply to  Southerly Buster
9 months ago

yeah i was like “you seem pretty familiar”

lmao

Sub13
Reply to  Braden Keith
9 months ago

I just had a brief review of comments and can’t see any complaints about the current list relating to Aussies. I have seen a complaint about MOC’s ranking in previous years (I think this is fair enough tbh) and discussions of potential top 10 but that’s it.

Obviously I don’t know what nationality everyone is. There is one person who seems the match your description now though lol.

But while we’re on the topic of previous lists, I said on the 2022 list that Erika Brown being ranked 24 places above Meg Harris was the worst decision ever. Harris had a better medal haul in Tokyo and had faster times in the 50/100/200 free (Brown had a faster time… Read more »

jeff
Reply to  DK99
9 months ago

idk, I thought she’d be a given for top 100. The only knock against her is that as an Aussie sprinter it’s hard to make the team in the first place

Noah
9 months ago

Howley??😭 She hasn’t looked great this year at Virginia.

Buttafly
Reply to  Noah
9 months ago

It’s really not that big of a shock, 2:06 200 fly this past summer was legit

Noah
Reply to  Buttafly
9 months ago

I agree but I think she’s in a similar position to Stadden where she has to make the team first.

RealSlimThomas
Reply to  Noah
9 months ago

we’ve taken a statistically driven approach reliant primarily upon world rankings and World Championship medals. We’ve also taken into account things such as potential, Olympic medal opportunities, injuries, and versatility. Long course is weighted more than short course, though performance potential in both formats is factored in.

gitech
9 months ago

I think Gorbenko should be in a better position, she has incredible styles and should exploit it in his 200 IM at some point.

I wouldn’t know how to place Anderson, Semanova or Padar, they are both very comparable 200 free, but Semanova is an Olympic finalist and has been showing good condition in recent months with several 1.55s, very close to her pb.

For me, the Hanssons should be a little better positioned, especially Louise.

Last edited 9 months ago by gitech
Troyy
Reply to  gitech
9 months ago

The problem with Gorbenko is she’s looked like being capable of a very great 200 IM for number of years already but it hasn’t happened. The lower ranking probably reflects doubt that it ever will.

Beatriz Cortez
Reply to  gitech
9 months ago

“I think Gorbenko should be in a better position, she has incredible styles”

This reminds me of Rowdy Gaines making live commentary on NBC Sports during the final of women’s 200 backstroke in Fukuoka World Championship:

“Regan Smith should win this race because she has the prettiest backstroke”

I miss the ISL
9 months ago

Has Madi Wilson officially announced her retirement or is a Flickinger situation where it’s pretty obvious she’s done?

flicker
Reply to  I miss the ISL
9 months ago

to my knowledge it’s just speculation since she hasn’t competed in a while + Meg moved clubs + she’s spoken before about how hard 2021-2022/early 2023 was for her dealing with covid multiple times along with a couple other health matters

Sub13
Reply to  I miss the ISL
9 months ago

She hasn’t announced. But she hasn’t competed since worlds and is missing from SA states this weekend which is where she lives. Seems very unlikely she’s still going.

Troyy
Reply to  I miss the ISL
9 months ago

Maybe SwimSwam can reach out to Madi? Braden?

A.B.
Reply to  Troyy
9 months ago

Madi Wilson announced she is pregnant

Southerly Buster
9 months ago

Yes. Olivia Wunsch made the top 100. Well done Swim Swam.

That 52.61 relay split announced her potential as a future sprint freestyler for Australia. The split was faster than all of the silver and bronze medal swimmers in the 4×100 Free at Fukuoka except for Kate Douglass.

It will be tough but hopefully she can force her way into the relay squad for Paris.

Spotted Zebra
Reply to  Steve Nolan
9 months ago

The hyperlink to the referenced comment is everything. 🤣

Jess
9 months ago

So many 100-200 freestylers which swam slower/ placed lower than Anderson last year yet are above her when Freya herself is still only 22?

Steve Nolan
Reply to  Jess
9 months ago

comment image

I miss the ISL
Reply to  Jess
9 months ago

well those 100-200 freestylers didnt regress like Freya. So there’s your answer

Pescatarian
Reply to  Jess
9 months ago

Marsha Marsha Marsha!

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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