You are working on Staging2

Ilya Borodin Lowers Own Russian, World Junior Records In 400 IM – 4:11.17

2021 RUSSIAN NATIONAL SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIPS

Ilya Borodin qualified for his first Olympic team in style on Saturday night in Kazan, winning the men’s 400 IM at Russian Trials in a new National and World Junior Record of 4:11.17.

Borodin, who turned 18 in February and therefore will be eligible to break world junior records until the end of the year, set the previous mark of 4:11.50 back in October.

Prior to that swim, Borodin held the old Russian Record at 4:12.95, set at the 2019 World Junior Championships in Budapest where he was the silver medalist. Greece’s Apostolos Papastamos won gold there in 4:11.93, a time that stood as the previous WJR before Borodin broke it five months ago.

Borodin Split Comparison

Out more conservatively than he was in October, Borodin was noticeably stronger over the final 150.

2020 Nationals 2021 Olympic Trials
26.42 27.02
56.77 (30.35) 57.68 (30.66)
1:29.36 (32.59) 1:30.05 (32.37)
2:01.30 (31.94) 2:02.06 (32.01)
2:36.93 (35.63) 2:37.94 (35.88)
3:12.64 (35.71) 3:13.06 (35.12)
3:42.70 (30.06) 3:42.81 (29.75)
4:11.50 (28.80) 4:11.17 (28.36)

The fastest time ever done by an 18U swimmer is Kosuke Hagino‘s 4:08.94 from the 2012 Olympic Games, before world junior records were officially recognized. Borodin’s swim would also rank second in the U.S. 17-18 age group ranks, trailing Michael Phelps‘ 4:09.09 from 2003.

This season, Borodin led the world rankings coming into today, but drops down to second after Daiya Seto won the Japanese Olympic Trials in 4:09.02.

In This Story

2
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

2 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
SwimmerFan99
3 years ago

Although both Phelps and Hagino have been faster at the same age, seeing things like this always gives me hope that one of the hardest WRs on the book will one day be beaten. He probably jas a 7-year window of development to take off 7 seconds in the 400IM. In theory, it sounds so manageable! In practice, however…

Last edited 3 years ago by SwimmerFan99
Yaboi
3 years ago

This man’s gonna be a force to be reckoned with over the next few years if he keeps up this trend

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 …

Read More »