Disclaimer: BlueSeventy Swim of the Week is not meant to be a conclusive selection of the best overall swim of the week, but rather one Featured Swim to be explored in deeper detail. The BlueSeventy Swim is an opportunity to take a closer look at the context of one of the many fast swims this week, perhaps a swim that slipped through the cracks as others grabbed the headlines, or a race we didn’t get to examine as closely in the flood of weekly meets.
It began to feel like a broken record – only one about a record that stubbornly refused to be broken.
“Its days are numbered.” “Someone will get it soon.” “There are too many swimmers in the 2:07s for that record to last long.”
Yet despite years of constant threats, Akihiro Yamaguchi‘s 2:07.01 world record in the 200 breast held fast from 2012 to early 2017. The onslaughts were regular. Every single year, one or more swimmers would come within tenths of breaking it. In 2013, Daniel Gyurta went 2:07.23. In the summer of 2014, Ross Murdoch was 2:07.30 and Marco Koch 2:07.47. That fall, Dimitriy Balandin went 2:07.67, and then in the summer of ’15, Koch once again dipped into the 2:07s to win Worlds. At U.S. Olympic Trials in 2012, Josh Prenot went 2:07.17, and at the Olympics Balandin was 2:07.46 to win gold and Ippei Watanabe went 2:07.22 in semifinals.
After what seems like forever, Yamaguchi’s record has finally fallen in January of 2017. It was Watanabe, the last name in that long list of challengers, who finally cracked the barrier, going 2:06.67 in Tokyo this week.
Watanabe’s splitting was incredibly even, with his final three splits all dipping under 33 seconds: 28.9/32.3/32.6/32.6. That huge leap forward chopped almost half a second off the world record. It also sets up Watanabe as the heavy favorite in the 200 breast at this summer’s World Championships in Budapest. A win would give the 19-year-old his first-ever Olympic or World Championships medal.
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Like see what happened to ippei Watanabe in Rio. He broke the olympic record in the semi finals with a 2:07:22 but died in the final. It,s too tough but you have to swim fast enough to qualify but not to fast so you don’t die in the final. Difficult choice to make.
The 200 meters breaststroke is one of the most difficult races to break a world record in a major meet. It,s such a painful race. Swimming it in 3 rounds in a major meet is enough torture.
The 200 breast is the kind of race where the world records are more easily broken in a one off swim rather than in a three round racing event.
So I don’t think the world record will be broken again in Budapest but whoever breaks it will break it in the semi finals and then lose in the finals bcos after breaking it in the semi finals, the individual swimmer will be to exhausted to win in the final.
Throwback to Rikke Moller Pederson.
Where are the rest of the results from this meet? Between his WR and Ikee’s 1:56 low, this sounds like it was a pretty fast meet.
On the Japanese website I can find results only in Japanese….
Budapest should be awesome
The 50-400 freestyles are wide open
Horton vs Paltrinieri Vs park in the 800 and 1500
Murphys chances to chase down the WRs in the backstroke races
Peaty lowering his marks in the 50 and 100 breast.
A loaded 200 breast field.
Govorov chance to get the WR in the 50 fly
How much faster can schooling get in the 100
How will the new names like Kenderesi due in the 200 fly vs Le Clos
Hagino vs Seto in the IMs
And thats just the men, can’t wait for june
Will Haas get a new run at the 200 or maybe Conger ? how will be the 400 free relay for Usa with the new blood on the deck ..? The field overall will be awesome to watch for sure .
Murphy is a beast but no way he breaks Aaron Peirsol’s 200 back world record next summer.
is it just me or are there issues with the bios under the “in this story” section? every time I click a name it comes up with an error page 🙁
I am able to get to the profile and watch the video there for the WR swim. Amazingly even split but interesting that he did a lot more strokes in the last lap than the previous 2 laps (2nd and 3rd lap) – excluding pull out, looks like he did 13,16, 16 and 21(or 22? didn’t see to clearly as the camera moved away and then back as he reaching the wall) for each laps.