You are working on Staging2

Tokyo 2020, SA Day 8: Fratus Becomes Oldest Swimmer to Win First Olympic Medal

2020 TOKYO SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES

Bruno Fratus Wins First Olympic Medal at Age 32

Brazil’s Bruno Fratus‘ wait is over, as one of the great men’s sprinters of this era earned his first Olympic medal during the final session of the Tokyo Olympics. The 32-year-old finished 3rd in the final of the men’s 50 free, swimming a 21.57 to earn a Bronze medal for Brazil. Though Fratus has a decorated career at the World Championships, Pan Pacific, and Pan American Games, he had never, until tonight, won an Olympic medal.

Additionally, Fratus has now become the oldest pool swimmer in history to win their first Olympic medal. That title was previously held by American David Plummer, who won his first medal with a 3rd-place finish in the 100 back at the 2016 Rio Olympics at the age of 30. Plummer was 30 year, 304 days old when he earned his first medal, while Fratus was 32 years, 32 days old. That mean’s Fratus was approximately 1 year and 3 months older than Plummer was. Importantly, Fratus is only the oldest pool swimmer to earn a first Olympic medal. There have been open water swimmers who are older when they earn their first medal.

This wasn’t the first piece of history Fratus made in the past several days. With his semifinals performance of 21.60, Fratus became the first swimmer ever to record 90 sub-22 LCM 50 free performances in their career. He added to that total with his finals swim of 21.57, so he now has 91 career sub-22s. Fratus has hinted that these were his last Games, but it will be interesting if he chooses swims for another year or two, and is able to reach 100 sub-22 50 frees.

MEN’S 50 FREESTYLE – FINAL

  1. Caeleb Dressel (USA), 21.07 OR
  2. Florent Manaudou (FRA), 21.55
  3. Bruno Fratus (BRA), 21.57
  4. Michael Andrew (USA), 21.60
  5. Ben Proud (GBR) / Kristian Gkolomeev (GRE), 21.72
  6. Lorenzo Zazzeri (ITA), 21.78
  7. Thom De Boer (NED), 21.79

In This Story

30
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

30 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Sarcastic
3 years ago

Bruno was at Auburn all four years I was there. This dude is an animal, lives and breathes his training, and is an all around good guy. Really excited that his hard work has paid off. A truly deserving individual.

Ol' Longhorn
3 years ago

His reaction and Sarah’s in the 50 free were great bookends to cap off the Olympics individual events.

Definitely Not Sun Yang
3 years ago

So happy for this guy! So close to a medal in 2011 and 2012. 10 years later he gets it done in a fantastic way! And from my understanding, his 21.27 from 2017 is a textile brazilian record!

T S
3 years ago

Seeing how Happy Bruno, Flo, and Caeleb were for eachother was super heartwarming

Bevo
Reply to  T S
3 years ago

Sportsmanship at its finest.

NOT the frontman of Metallica
3 years ago

I would love to know Fratus training methods and compare it to Andrews. Since the idea of usrpt seems to be you can go fast anytime all the time and here we have a guy you seemingly could drag out of bed and still get a sub 22 swim.

Ol' Longhorn
Reply to  NOT the frontman of Metallica
3 years ago

Biggest difference —- by a lot —- is dryland. Fratus does a lot of Olympic lifts and other strength/fast-twitch dryland work (as does Dressel, Manaudou and every sprinter not named MA). According to his father, Andrew abandoned weights after they couldn’t hit his pace times in the pool. And, just a reminder, Brent Hayden dragged his 37-year-old body out of a 7-year retirement and cracked 22. You’re either born with it, or you aren’t.

Rafael
Reply to  Ol' Longhorn
3 years ago

They probably trained a week and gave up

Landen
Reply to  Rafael
3 years ago

They seemed to try for a few months

MTK
Reply to  Ol' Longhorn
3 years ago

I don’t think swimmers do “a lot” of Olympic lifts. They’re doing the easier modified version of some of them, ie: a hang power clean, because Olympic weightlifting is taxing on the joints and takes a long time to learn and perfect.

Your point is well taken though – these guys prioritize their out of the pool training pretty much equally to their in-water.

Pringles man
Reply to  NOT the frontman of Metallica
3 years ago

It’s not that different as far as I know. Arison Silva seems to like specificity but is probably not as dogmatic about it as the usrpt philosophy is.

NOT the frontman of Metallica
3 years ago

Mr Consistency finally got his medal, wel deserved and long overdue. I’m happy for him

Philip Johnson
3 years ago

That was a long time coming, happy for the guy.

Yup
3 years ago

Plummer was 30 year, 304 days old when he earned his first medal, while Fratus was 32 years, 32 days old. That mean’s Fratus was approximately 1 year and 3 months older than Plummer was. “

did you really put that last sentence in there?

Big moves
Reply to  Yup
3 years ago

What’s wrong with it?

Ol' Longhorn
Reply to  Big moves
3 years ago

Math is hrd.

About Braden Keith

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, …

Read More »