7th FINA World Junior Swimming Championships 2019
- 50-Meter Course
- Duna Arena, Budapest (Hungary)
- Pool swimming: Tuesday, August 20 – Sunday, August 25, 2019
- Meet site
- Live results
The FINA World Junior Championships have launched numerous future Olympic medalists onto the world stage since their inception. At the first version of the meet, then called FINA Youth World Championships, held in Rio de Janeiro in 2006, ten swimmers went on to medal for their countries at future Olympic Games. That 2006 meet included, among others, future gold medalists Camille Muffat of France, USA’s Tyler Clary (who competed as Scott Flowers until he changed his name at the age of 18), and Mireia Belmonte of Spain. Subsequent youth/junior meets featured future Olympic stars Caeleb Dressel (USA), Bronte Campbell (AUS), Gregorio Paltrinieri (ITA), Kosuke Hagino (JPN), Ryan Murphy (USA), Simone Manuel (USA), Mack Horton (AUS), Kyle Chalmers (AUS), and Penny Oleksiak (CAN). (A couple of athletes, like Lithuania’s Rūta Meilutytė and Canada’s Taylor Ruck, competed at FINA Juniors *after* winning Olympic medals, but those cases are rare.)
Swimmer | Nation | FINA Youth Meet | Results | Olympic Games | Results |
Anastasia Zuyeva (aka Anastasia Fesikova) | RUS | 2006 Youth Worlds (Rio de Janeiro) | Gold 200 back, gold 4×100 medley, silver 100 back | 2016 Rio Olympics | Silver 200 Back |
Caitlin Leverenz | USA | 2006 Youth Worlds (Rio de Janeiro) | Gold 200 IM, bronze 100 breast, bronze 200 breast | 2012 London Olympics | Bronze 200 IM |
Camille Muffat | FRA | 2006 Youth Worlds (Rio de Janeiro) | Gold, 4×100 free, silver 200 IM, bronze 50 free, bronze 100 free | 2012 London Olympics | Gold 400 free, silver 200 free, bronze 4×200 free |
Denys Dubrov | UKR | 2006 Youth Worlds (Rio de Janeiro) | 2016 Rio Paralympics | 3 gold, 3 silver and 2 bronze | |
Mikhail Polischuk | RUS | 2006 Youth Worlds (Rio de Janeiro) | Silver 4×100 free | 2008 Beijing Olympics | Silver 4×200 free |
Mireia Belmonte | ESP | 2006 Youth Worlds (Rio de Janeiro) | Gold 400 free, gold 400 IM | 2012 London Olympics 2016 Rio Olympics |
Silver 800 free, silver 200 fly Gold 200 fly, bronze 400 IM |
Ophélie-Cyrielle Etienne | FRA | 2006 Youth Worlds (Rio de Janeiro) | Gold 200 free, gold 4×100 free, gold 4×200 free, silver 200 back | 2012 London Olympics | Bronze 4×200 free |
Sergei Fesikov | RUS | 2006 Youth Worlds (Rio de Janeiro) | Silver 50 free, silver 100 free, silver 4×100 free, silver 4×100 medley | 2012 London Olympics | Bronze, 4×100 free |
Tang Yi | CHN | 2006 Youth Worlds (Rio de Janeiro) | Silver 200 free | 2012 London Olympics | Bronze 100 free |
Tyler Clary (aka Scott Flowers) | USA | 2006 Youth Worlds (Rio de Janeiro) | Gold 200 IM, gold 400 IM, bronze 200 free, bronze 200 back | 2012 London Olympics | Gold 200 back |
Chris Walker-Hebborn | GBR | 2008 Youth Worlds (Monterrey) | Gold 4×200 free, gold 4×100 medley, bronze 100 back | 2016 Rio Olympics | Silver 4×100 medley |
Danila Izotov | RUS | 2008 Youth Worlds (Monterrey) | Gold 200 free, gold 400 free, silver 4×100 free | 2008 Beijing Olympics 2012 London Olympics |
Silver 4×200 free Bronze 4×100 free |
Yuki Kobori | JPN | 2008 Youth Worlds (Monterrey) | Bronze 4×200 free | 2016 Rio Olympics | Bronze 4×200 free |
Brittany MacLean | CAN | 2011 Junior Worlds (Lima) | Gold 200 free, gold 400 free, silver 4×100 free, silver 4×200 free | 2016 Rio Olympics | Bronze 4×200 |
Bronte Campbell | AUS | 2011 Junior Worlds (Lima) | Gold 50 free, bronze 100 free | 2016 Rio Olympics | Gold 4×100 free |
Cameron McEvoy | AUS | 2011 Junior Worlds (Lima) | Gold 50 free, gold 100 free, bronze 200 free | 2016 Rio Olympics | Bronze 4×100 free, bronze 4×100 medley |
Chantal van Landeghem | CAN | 2011 Junior Worlds (Lima) | Silver 100 free, silver 4×100 free, bronze 50 free, bronze 50 back, bronze 50 fly | 2016 Rio Olympics | Bronze 4×100 |
Fu Yuanhui | CHN | 2011 Junior Worlds (Lima) | Silver 100 back, bronze 200 free | 2016 Rio Olympics | Bronze 100 back |
Gabriele Detti | ITA | 2011 Junior Worlds (Lima) | Silver 800 free, bronze 1500 free | 2016 Rio Olympics | Bronze 400 free, bronze 1500 free |
Gregorio Paltrinieri | ITA | 2011 Junior Worlds (Lima) | Silver 1500 free, bronze 800 free | 2016 Rio Olympics | Gold 1500 free |
Kosuke Hagino | JPN | 2011 Junior Worlds (Lima) | Gold 200 IM, silver 200 back, silver 4×100 medley, bronze 100 back, bronze 400 IM | 2012 London Olympics 2016 Rio Olympics |
Bronze 400 IM Gold 400 IM, silver 200 IM, bronze 4×200 free |
Lia Neal | USA | 2011 Junior Worlds (Lima) | Gold 100 free, gold 4×100, gold 4×200, silver 50 free, silver 4×100 medley | 2012 London Olympics 2016 Rio Olympics |
Bronze 4×100 free Silver 4×100 free |
Ryan Murphy | USA | 2011 Junior Worlds (Lima) | Bronze 200 back | 2016 Rio Olympics | Gold 100 back, gold 200 back, gold 4×100 medley |
Simone Manuel | USA | 2011 Junior Worlds (Lima) | Gold 4×100 free | 2016 Rio Olympics | Gold medal 100 free, told 4×100 medley, silver 50 free, silver 4×100 free |
Taylor McKeown | AUS | 2011 Junior Worlds (Lima) | 2016 Rio Olympics | Silver 4×100 medley | |
Blake Pieroni | USA | 2013 Junior Worlds (Dubai) | Bronze 4×200 free | 2016 Rio Olympics | Gold 4×100 free |
Caeleb Dressel | USA | 2013 Junior Worlds (Dubai) | Gold 100 free, silver 4×100 free, silver 4×100 free mixed, bronze 50 free, bronze 4×200 free, bronze 4×100 medley mixed | 2016 Rio Olympics | Gold 4×100 free, gold 4×100 medley |
Cierra Runge | USA | 2013 Junior Worlds (Dubai) | Gold 4×200 free, silver 4×100 free mixed, bronze 4×100 free, bronze 4×100 medley | 2016 Rio Olympics | Gold 4×200 free |
Emily Overholt | CAN | 2013 Junior Worlds (Dubai) | Bronze 400 IM | 2016 Rio Olympics | Bronze 4×200 free |
Gunnar Bentz | USA | 2013 Junior Worlds (Dubai) | Gold 200 IM, gold 400 IM, bronze 4×200 free, bronze 4×100 medley mixed | 2016 Rio Olympics | Gold 4×200 free |
James Guy | GBR | 2013 Junior Worlds (Dubai) | Gold 4×200 free, silver 200 free, silver 400 free | 2016 Rio Olympics | Silver 4×200 free, silver 4×100 medley |
Kathleen Baker | USA | 2013 Junior Worlds (Dubai) | Silver 100 back, silver 200 back, bronze 4×100 medley, bronze 4×100 medley mixed | 2016 Rio Olympics | Gold 4×100 medley, silver 100 back |
Mack Horton | AUS | 2013 Junior Worlds (Dubai) | Gold 200 free, gold 400 free, gold 800 free, gold 1500 free, gold 4×100 free, silver 4×200 free | 2016 Rio Olympics | Gold 400 free |
Masato Sakai | JPN | 2013 Junior Worlds (Dubai) | Silver 200 fly | 2016 Rio Olympics | Silver 200 fly |
Rūta Meilutytė | LTU | 2013 Junior Worlds (Dubai) | Gold 50 free, gold 50 breast, gold 100 breast, gold 200 IM, silver 100 free, silver 4×100 medley | 2012 London Olympics | Gold 100 breast |
Anton Chupkov | RUS | 2015 Junior Worlds (Singapore) | Gold 100 breast, gold 200 breast, gold 4×100 medley, gold 4×100 medley mixed | 2016 Rio Olympics | Bronze 200 breast |
Kyle Chalmers | AUS | 2015 Junior Worlds (Singapore) | Gold 50 free, gold 100 free, gold 4×100 free, silver 4×200 free, silver 4×100 free mixed, silver 4×100 medley mixed, bronze 4×100 medley | 2016 Rio Olympics | Gold 100 free, bronze 4×100 free, bronze 4×100 medley |
Penny Oleksiak | CAN | 2015 Junior Worlds (Singapore) | Gold 4×100 free mixed, silver 100 free, silver 50 fly, silver 100 fly, silver 4×200 free, bronze 4×100 free | 2016 Rio Olympics | Gold medal 100 free, silver 100 fly, bronze 4×100 free, bronze 4×200 free |
Tamsin Cook | AUS | 2015 Junior Worlds (Singapore) | Gold 400 free, gold 4×200 free, silver 200 fly | 2016 Rio Olympics | Silver 4×200 free |
Taylor Ruck | CAN | 2015 Junior Worlds (Singapore) | Gold 100 free, gold 200 free, gold 4×100 free mixed, silver 4×200 free, bronze 200 back, bronze 4×100 free | 2016 Rio Olympics | Bronze 4×100 free, bronze 4×200 free |
So who’s next?
Taking into consideration all the medalists from 2017 (who haven’t yet had the opportunity to swim at the Olympic Games) and 2019, the most obvious World-Juniors-medalist-to-Olympics-medalist picks are USA’s Regan Smith and Hungary’s Kristóf Milák. While neither competed at 2019 World Juniors, both of them swam times at 2017 World Juniors that would have scored in Rio in 2016. Moreover, both Smith and Milak swam at 2019 World Championships this summer and set World Records in their respective events, putting them in good stead for medals at 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo. Smith set World Records in both the 100 back (57.57) and 200 back (2:03.35) at Gwangju while Milak took down Michael Phelps’s mark in the 200 fly (1:50.73). His recent PB of 50.62 in the 100 fly would have earned him a silver medal in Rio.
2019 Swimmers of the Meet Andrei Minakov of Russia and Lani Pallister of Australia, and Croatia’s Franko Grgic emerged as the most promising talents from Budapest. Minakov won the 100 free and 100 fly and was runner-up in the 50 fly. His 100 fly time was only .11 off the silver medal-tying performance of Michael Phelps, László Cseh, and Chad le Clos (51.14) in 2016. Furthermore, he won silver in the 100 fly at 2019 World Championships in Gwangju. His 100 free time in Budapest was 9/10 out of bronze-medal territory but only .05 off the leadoff split of Russia’s 4×100 free relay.
Grgic dominated the 800/1500 free races and set a World Junior Record in the latter by more than 10 seconds. His 1500 free time (14:46.09) is just over 5 seconds off the bronze-medal time from Rio (14:40.86). Pallister broke meet records in the 800/1500 free and wound up 7th/13th for the year in the respective events. As her compatriot Ariarne Titmus proved with a win over Katie Ledecky in the 400 free in Gwangju, on any given day, it is entirely possible to do the impossible and given Pallister’s progression over the last year, she may be on her way to a podium in Tokyo.
The entire cadre of 200 breaststrokers put on an impressive show in Budapest. Josh Matheny’s winning 2:09.40 set a Championships Record and was just 1.7 seconds off the third-place time from Rio. Japan’s Shoma Sato finished only .16 behind Matheny (2:09.56). On the women’s side, Russians Evgeniia Chikunova (2:24.03) and Anastasia Makarova (2:24.39) and Mei Ishihara of Japan (2:24.99) could all be medal contenders in Tokyo. Third place in Rio was 2:22.28.
Gretchen Walsh is inching her way into medal contention territory in the 50 free and 100 free. She won both events in Budapest going 24.71 and 53.74. Belarus’s Aliaksandra Herasimenia won bronze with 24.11 in the former and Sarah Sjöström placed third with 52.99 in the latter. Butterflyers Torri Huske of USA (57.71) and Anastasiya Shkurdai of Belarus (57.98) were 1-2 in the 100 fly, still 1.3 seconds away from Dana Vollmer’s bronze-medal time in Rio of 56.63, but they are both improving rapidly.
2017’s 50 free winner, Michael Andrew, has dropped his time to 21.46, which is .03 faster than Nathan Adrian’s bronze medal-winning performance in 2016. Luca Urlando, who won the 200 free and 200 fly at World Juniors, although not with best times, is a contender for medals in both events in 2020. His 1:46.51 in the 200 free is .1.28 seconds off the 1:45.23 it took to win bronze in Rio; his 1:53.84 is only .22 away from the 1:53.62 that Hungary’s Tamás Kenderesi swam to score the bronze in 2016. Apostolos Papastamos of Greece won the 400 IM with a World Junior Record of 4:11.93. Japan’s Daiya Seito went 4:09.71 for bronze in 2016.
EVENT | 2019 | TIME | SWIMMER | 2017 | TIME | SWIMMER | Δ% ‘19/’17 | |||
M50fr | 1st | UKR | 0:22.13 | Vladyslav Bukhov | USA | 0:21.75 | Michael Andrew | =WJR, =CR | 1.75% | |
2nd | USA | 0:22.14 | David Curtiss | FRA | 0:22.25 | Maxime Grousset | -0.49% | |||
3rd | USA | 0:22.40 | Adam Chaney | ITA | 0:22.31 | Leonardo Deplano | 0.40% | |||
M100fr | 1st | RUS | 0:48.73 | Andrei Minakov | RUS | 0:48.33 | Ivan Girev | CR | 0.83% | |
2nd | CAN | 0:49.17 | Joshua Liendo Edwards | HUN | 0:48.95 | Nándor Németh | 0.45% | |||
3rd | SWE | 0:49.25 | Robin Hanson | USA | 0:49.35 | Daniel Krueger | -0.20% | |||
M200fr | 1st | USA | 1:46.97 | Luca Urlando | RUS | 1:46.40 | Ivan Girev | WJR, CR | 0.54% | |
2nd | SWE | 1:47.03 | Robin Hanson | HUN | 1:46.79 | Nándor Németh | 0.22% | |||
3rd | BRA | 1:47.39 | Murilo Sartori | AUS | 1:46.81 | Elijah Winnington | 0.54% | |||
M400fr | 1st | HUN | 3:46.06 | Gabor Zombori | CR | USA | 3:49.19 | Andrew Abruzzo | -1.37% | |
2nd | AUS | 3:46.27 | Thomas Neill | HUN | 3:49.97 | Balázs Holló | -1.61% | |||
3rd | RUS | 3:47.36 | Aleksandr Egorov | USA | 3:50.14 | Trey Freeman III | -1.21% | |||
M800fr | 1st | CRO | 7:45.92 | Franko Grgic | USA | 7:54.58 | Andrew Abruzzo | -1.82% | ||
2nd | RUS | 7:48.05 | Ilia Sibirtsev | HUN | 7:56.81 | Dávid Lakatos | -1.84% | |||
3rd | AUS | 7:48.65 | Thomas Neill | USA | 7:57.22 | Michael Brinegar | -1.80% | |||
M1500fr | 1st | CRO | 14:46.09 | Franko Grgic | CR, WJR | USA | 15:06.48 | Andrew Abruzzo | -2.25% | |
2nd | AUS | 14:59.19 | Thomas Neill | USA | 15:09.00 | Michael Brinegar | -1.08% | |||
3rd | RUS | 15:05.17 | Ilia Sibirtsev | RUS | 15:09.18 | Iaroslav Potapov | -0.44% | |||
M50bk | 1st | CZE | 0:25.08 | Jan Cejka | USA | 0:24.63 | Michael Andrew | WJR, CR | 1.83% | |
2nd | USA | 0:25.23 | Wyatt Davis | ESP | 0:25.30 | Hugo Gonzalez | -0.28% | |||
3rd | ITA | 0:25.35 | Thomas Ceccon | POL | 0:25.38 | Kacper Stokowski | -0.12% | |||
M100bk | 1st | ITA | 0:53.46 | Thomas Ceccon | CR | ESP | 0:54.27 | Hugo Gonzalez | CR | -1.49% |
2nd | RUS | 0:53.50 | Nikolay Zuev | IRL | 0:54.51 | Conor Ferguson | -1.85% | |||
3rd | USA | 0:54.14 | Wyatt Davis | ROM | 0:54.55 | Daniel Martin | -0.75% | |||
M200bk | 1st | USA | 1:58.18 | Wyatt Davis | ESP | 1:56.69 | Hugo Gonzalez | CR | 1.28% | |
2nd | USA | 1:58.47 | Carson Foster | USA | 1:57.87 | Carson Foster | 0.51% | |||
3rd | FRA | 1:58.71 | Mewen Tomac | RUS | 1:58.72 | Nikita Tretyakov | -0.01% | |||
M50br | 1st | RUS | 0:27.58 | Vladislav Gerasimenko | ITA | 0:27.10 | Nicolò Martinenghi | 1.77% | ||
2nd | CAN | 0:27.73 | Gabe Mastromatteo | ITA | 0:27.19 | Alessandro Pinzuti | 1.99% | |||
3rd | GBR | 0:27.83 | Archie Goodburn | USA | 0:27.39 | Michael Andrew | 1.61% | |||
M100br | 1st | RUS | 0:59.97 | Vladislav Gerasimenko | ITA | 0:59.58 | Nicolò Martinenghi | 0.65% | ||
2nd | USA | 1:00.17 | Josh Matheny | USA | 1:00.08 | Reece Whitley | 0.15% | |||
3rd | USA | 1:00.55 | Kevin Houseman | USA | 1:00.37 | Michael Andrew | 0.30% | |||
M200br | 1st | USA | 2:09.40 | Josh Matheny | CR | USA | 2:10.77 | Daniel Roy | -1.05% | |
2nd | JPN | 2:09.56 | Shoma Sato | USA | 2:10.82 | Reece Whitley | -0.96% | |||
3rd | JPN | 2:10.84 | Yuta Arai | AUS | 2:10.90 | Zac Stubblety-Cook | -0.05% | |||
M50fl | 1st | ITA | 0:23.37 | Thomas Ceccon | USA | 0:23.22 | Michael Andrew | WJR, CR | 0.65% | |
2nd | RUS | 0:23.39 | Andrei Minakov | RUS | 0:23.53 | Andrei Minakov | -0.59% | |||
3rd | BUL | 0:23.48 | Josif Miladinov | HUN | 0:23.72 | Kristóf Milák | -1.01% | |||
M100fl | 1st | RUS | 0:51.25 | Andrei Minakov | HUN | 0:51.08 | Kristóf Milák | WJR, CR | 0.33% | |
2nd | ITA | 0:51.83 | Federico Burisso | RUS | 0:51.16 | Egor Kuimov | 1.31% | |||
3rd | RUS | 0:51.90 | Egor Pavlov | RUS | 0:51.84 | Andrei Minakov | 0.12% | |||
M200fl | 1st | USA | 1:55.02 | Luca Urlando | HUN | 1:53.87 | Kristóf Milák | WJR, CR | 1.01% | |
2nd | JPN | 1:55.31 | Tomoru Honda | JPN | 1:57.05 | Yuya Sakamoto | -1.49% | |||
3rd | ITA | 1:55.39 | Federico Burisso | BUL | 1:57.54 | Antani Ivanov | -1.83% | |||
M200im | 1st | USA | 1:58.46 | Carson Foster | GER | 1:59.03 | Johannes Hintze | WJR, CR | -0.48% | |
2nd | CAN | 1:59.44 | Finlay Knox | USA | 1:59.56 | Kieran Smith | -0.10% | |||
3rd | GRE | 1:59.62 | Apostolos Papastamos | HUN | 2:00.14 | Márton Barta | -0.43% | |||
M400im | 1st | GRE | 4:11.93 | Apostolos Papastamos | CR, WJR | ESP | 4:14.65 | Hugo Gonzalez | CR | -1.07% |
2nd | RUS | 4:12.95 | Ilia Borodin | HUN | 4:15.65 | Márton Barta | -1.06% | |||
3rd | FRA | 4:16.37 | Leon Marchand | HUN | 4:16.78 | Balázs Holló | -0.16% | |||
M4x100FR | 1st | USA | 3:15.80 | United States | CR, WJR | HUN | 3:17.99 | Hungary | -1.11% | |
2nd | RUS | 3:16.26 | Russia | POL | 3:18.53 | Poland | -1.14% | |||
3rd | ITA | 3:16.29 | Italy | AUS | 3:18.55 | Australia | -1.14% | |||
M4x200FR | 1st | USA | 7:08.37 | United States | CR, WJR | HUN | 7:10.95 | Hungary | WJR, CR | -0.60% |
2nd | RUS | 7:11.90 | Russia | USA | 7:10.96 | United States | 0.22% | |||
3rd | AUS | 7:15.06 | Australia | RUS | 7:11.39 | Russia | 0.85% | |||
M4x100MR | 1st | RUS | 3:33.19 | Russia | CR, WJR | RUS | 3:36.30 | Russia | WJR, CR | -1.44% |
2nd | USA | 3:33.66 | United States | ITA | 3:36.44 | Italy | -1.28% | |||
3rd | CAN | 3:36.35 | Canada | AUS | 3:38.39 | Australia | -0.93% | |||
W50fr | 1st | USA | 0:24.71 | Gretchen Walsh | JPN | 0:24.59 | Rikako Ikee | CR | 0.49% | |
2nd | USA | 0:24.75 | Maxine Parker | USA | 0:24.82 | Grace Ariola | -0.28% | |||
3rd | AUS | 0:24.89 | Meg Harris | JPN | 0:25.07 | Sayuki Ouchi | -0.72% | |||
W100fr | 1st | USA | 0:53.74 | Gretchen Walsh | GBR | 0:53.88 | Freya Anderson | CR | -0.26% | |
2nd | USA | 0:54.54 | Torri Huske | JPN | 0:54.16 | Rikako Ikee | 0.70% | |||
3rd | AUS | 0:54.58 | Meg Harris | CAN | 0:54.44 | Kayla Sanchez | 0.26% | |||
W200fr | 1st | NZL | 1:57.96 | Erika Fairweather | CAN | 1:57.08 | Taylor Ruck | CR | 0.75% | |
2nd | AUS | 1:58.09 | Lani Pallister | HUN | 1:57.10 | Ajna Késely | 0.85% | |||
3rd | CAN | 1:58.64 | Emma O’Croinin | RUS | 1:58.51 | Irina Krivonogova | 0.11% | |||
W400fr | 1st | AUS | 4:05.42 | Lani Pallister | CR | HUN | 4:06.72 | Ajna Késely | -0.53% | |
2nd | CAN | 4:08.11 | Emma O’Croinin | ARG | 4:08.33 | Delfina Pignatiello | NR | -0.09% | ||
3rd | USA | 4:08.30 | Rachel Stege | RUS | 4:08.73 | Anastasiia Kirpichnikova | -0.17% | |||
W800fr | 1st | AUS | 8:22.49 | Lani Pallister | ARG | 8:25.22 | Delfina Pignatiello | CR, AR | -0.54% | |
2nd | JPN | 8:27.24 | Miyu Namba | HUN | 8:30.62 | Ajna Késely | -0.66% | |||
3rd | ITA | 8:28.99 | Giulia Salin | ESP | 8:30.85 | Agueda Cons Gestido | -0.36% | |||
W1500fr | 1st | AUS | 15:58.86 | Lani Pallister | CR | ARG | 15:59.51 | Delfina Pignatiello | CR, NR | -0.07% |
2nd | ITA | 16:14.00 | Giulia Salin | HUN | 16:15.68 | Ajna Késely | -0.17% | |||
3rd | USA | 16:18.04 | Chase Travis | ESP | 16:17.84 | Agueda Cons Gestido | 0.02% | |||
W50bk | 1st | AUS | 0:27.87 | Bronte Job | JPN | 0:27.93 | Natsumi Sakai | -0.21% | ||
2nd | CAN | 0:27.91 | Jade Hannah | CAN | 0:27.93 | Jade Hannah | -0.07% | |||
3rd | RUS | 0:27.91 | Daria Vaskina | USA | 0:28.11 | Grace Ariola | -0.71% | |||
W100bk | 1st | CAN | 0:59.63 | Jade Hannah | USA | 0:59.11 | Regan Smith | WJR, CR | 0.88% | |
2nd | USA | 1:00.00 | Claire Curzan | CAN | 0:59.23 | Taylor Ruck | 1.30% | |||
3rd | RUS | 1:00.02 | Daria Vaskina | CAN | 0:59.62 | Jade Hannah | 0.67% | |||
W200bk | 1st | CAN | 2:09.28 | Jade Hannah | USA | 2:07.45 | Regan Smith | WJR, CR | 1.44% | |
2nd | AUT | 2:10.27 | Lena Grabowski | USA | 2:09.04 | Alexandra Sumner | 0.95% | |||
3rd | ITA | 2:10.52 | Erika Gaetani | JPN | 2:09.34 | Natsumi Sakai | 0.91% | |||
W50br | 1st | ITA | 0:30.60 | Benedetta Pilato | USA | 0:30.78 | Emily Weiss | -0.58% | ||
2nd | GBR | 0:30.91 | Kayla van der Merwe | CAN | 0:30.91 | Faith Knelson | 0.00% | |||
3rd | USA | 0:30.92 | Kaitlyn Dobler | IRL | 0:30.97 | Mona McSharry | -0.16% | |||
W100br | 1st | RUS | 1:06.93 | Evgeniia Chikunova | IRL | 1:07.10 | Mona McSharry | NR | -0.25% | |
2nd | USA | 1:06.97 | Kaitlyn Dobler | CAN | 1:07.47 | Faith Knelson | -0.74% | |||
3rd | GBR | 1:07.06 | Kayla van der Merwe | USA | 1:07.63 | Zoe Bartel | -0.84% | |||
W200br | 1st | RUS | 2:24.03 | Evgeniia Chikunova | USA | 2:25.68 | Zoe Bartel | -1.13% | ||
2nd | RUS | 2:24.39 | Anastasia Makarova | USA | 2:27.04 | Ella Nelson | -1.80% | |||
3rd | JPN | 2:24.99 | Mei Ishihara | GBR | 2:27.42 | Annabel Guye-Johnson | -1.65% | |||
W50fl | 1st | USA | 0:25.70 | Torri Huske | JPN | 0:25.46 | Rikako Ikee | WJR, CR, NR | 0.94% | |
2nd | BLR | 0:25.77 | Anastasiya Shkurdai | SWE | 0:26.18 | Sara Junevik | -1.57% | |||
3rd | USA | 0:25.81 | Claire Curzan | CAN | 0:26.22 | Rebecca Smith | -1.56% | |||
W100fl | 1st | USA | 0:57.71 | Torri Huske | JPN | 0:57.25 | Rikako Ikee | CR | 0.80% | |
2nd | BLR | 0:57.98 | Anastasiya Shkurdai | CAN | 0:58.07 | Rebecca Smith | -0.15% | |||
3rd | USA | 0:58.37 | Claire Curzan | JPN | 0:58.60 | Suzuka Hasegawa | -0.39% | |||
W200fl | 1st | USA | 2:08.24 | Lillie Nordmann | GBR | 2:07.74 | Emily Large | CR | 0.39% | |
2nd | HUN | 2:08.93 | Blanka Berecz | JPN | 2:08.29 | Suzuka Hasegawa | 0.50% | |||
3rd | USA | 2:09.00 | Charlotte Hook | GBR | 2:09.64 | Keanna MacInnes | -0.49% | |||
W200im | 1st | USA | 2:11.50 | Justina Kozan | JPN | 2:12.42 | Miku Kojima | -0.69% | ||
2nd | ESP | 2:13.43 | Alba Vasquez Ruiz | CAN | 2:12.64 | Kayla Sanchez | 0.60% | |||
3rd | JPN | 2:13.52 | Mei Ishihara | FRA | 2:13.31 | Cyrielle Duhamel | 0.16% | |||
W400im | 1st | ESP | 4:38.53 | Alba Vasquez Ruiz | JPN | 4:39.14 | Miku Kojima | -0.22% | ||
2nd | USA | 4:39.15 | Isabel Gormley | JPN | 4:40.99 | Anna Sasaki | -0.65% | |||
3rd | GBR | 4:39.35 | Michaella Glenister | SRB | 4:42.24 | Anja Crevar | -1.02% | |||
W4x100FR | 1st | USA | 3:37.61 | United States | CAN | 3:36.19 | Canada | WJR, CR | 0.66% | |
2nd | AUS | 3:40.85 | Australia | USA | 3:39.69 | United States | 0.53% | |||
3rd | ITA | 3:42.04 | Italy | JPN | 3:40.59 | Japan | 0.66% | |||
W4x200FR | 1st | USA | 7:55.49 | United States | CAN | 7:51.47 | Canada | WJR, CR | 0.85% | |
2nd | AUS | 7:57.87 | Australia | RUS | 7:57.33 | Russia | 0.11% | |||
3rd | CAN | 8:01.14 | Canada | JPN | 8:02.09 | Japan | -0.20% | |||
W4x100MR | 1st | USA | 3:59.13 | United States | CAN | 3:58.38 | Canada | WJR, CR | 0.31% | |
2nd | RUS | 4:00.30 | Russia | USA | 3:59.19 | United States | 0.46% | |||
3rd | CAN | 4:03.17 | Canada | JPN | 3:59.97 | Japan | 1.33% | |||
Mxt4x100FR | 1st | USA | 3:25.92 | United States | CR, WJR | CAN | 3:26.65 | Canada | WJR, CR | -0.35% |
2nd | RUS | 3:27.72 | Russia | AUS | 3:28.57 | Australia | -0.41% | |||
3rd | ITA | 3:29.12 | Italy | RUS | 3:28.83 | Russia | 0.14% | |||
Mxt4x100MR | 1st | USA | 3:44.84 | United States | CAN | 3:46.36 | Canada | -0.67% | ||
2nd | RUS | 3:48.06 | Russia | USA | 3:46.80 | United States | 0.56% | |||
3rd | CAN | 3:48.20 | Canada | RUS | 3:48.30 | Russia | -0.04% |
Matheny is my dark horse. So far, he’s been training 6-7 times a week, no morning practices, occasional dryland, no recovery tub, no massages, crowded old pool(s), almost no extra equipment… This year, there will be a new state-of-art pool in his school/club (did I mention that his HS coach is also his club coach? – former Stanford guy), and if he ramps up practices to a college-like or pre-Olympic-Trials level, with the support of the US Swimming resources, he might be in for something really great.
Dark horse is appropriate, US breaststroke is in the best place it’s probably ever been internationally in depth. Wilson and Lincon have been 2:07s, we’ve had 2 (3?) Sub 59 relay splits, and a few guys who are hungry for redemption (Miller, Prenot, Fink, Cordes). Can’t forget about guys like Finnerty, Nowecki or even Seli either if he takes a shot at the 200
At this point, no one’s a lock and trials will be a dog fight! I’m excited to see which guys sneak through to finals and push the rest of the field
Urlando might get on the podium in the 200 fly and Minakov likely will in the 100 fly.
The rest will do well to make the finals, and then make their move to the top in the next 4 years.
It is a bit too early to say that Minakov will likely make the podium in the 100 fly …
Dressel and Rooney have been faster this season and then we also have guys like Milak or Metella. He should definitely be a medal contender, but far from a lock, especially when you look at the progression of some of the russian youngsters (Kolesnikov, Girev, Kuimov, Pakhomov).
Kenderesi, Le Clos, Milak, Seto… it will be a good 200 fly.
I would say on the men’s side:
Good chance:
Minakov (100 fly/400 free relay/medley relay)
Urlando (800 free relay, maybe 200 fly)
Decant chance:
Neill (400 free, 800 free relay)
Grgic (800 free, 1500 free)
Burdisso (200 fly)
Papastamos (400 IM)
Borodin (400 IM)
Foster (800 free relay)
Shchegolev (800 free relay)
Small chance:
Zombori (400 free)
Chaney (400 free relay)
——————————–
Among the women:
Good chance:
Walsh (400 free relay)
Decent chance:
Pallister (800 free relay)
Small chance:
O’Croinin (800 free relay)
Chikunova (200 breast)
I would be really surprised if more than 2 or 3 of those would win individual medals… Read more »
Chikunova ‘s 2.21 has got to be better than a small chance . Only 2 ppl were faster in the world this year.
Maybe, but she has a smaller chance than Pallister and Walsh in my opinion. First she has to make the team (which will be hard enough) and then she has to beat at least one out of Efimova and the two americans (not to mention the rest of the field including 2 japanese girls and Schoenmaker). Pallister and Walsh just have to make the team to win a medal (considering that the american 400 free relay and the australian 800 free relay are a lock to win a medal).
Any former World Junior Champs phenoms who never panned out at the Olympics?
Definitely. Keep in mind that when this meet started, participation was light and countries were skeptical about putting any importance on it. If you look at the 2006 results, you’ll see a few names that have gone on to good careers, but a whole lot of names you don’t recognize: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_FINA_Youth_World_Swimming_Championships
Evgeny Sedov, Luke Percy, and Caeleb Dressel were meant to be a sprint king trio
Anyone know what happened to Sedov?
I think he got back problems. He had surgery and he seemed to be coming back to form and even raced SC world’s in 2014. But after that I don’t know
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evgeny_Sedov
The list says Caitlin Leverenz medalled in the 100 and 200 back at the 2006 Youth Worlds, but I’m pretty sure that was the 100 and 200 breaststroke.
Tyler Clary (aka Scott Flowers) ????
He was born as Scott Tyler Flowers, named after his father Scott Flowers. After the 2006 World Junior Championships, on or around his 18th birthday, he took the last name of his step father – Clary.
Saved me a few clicks!
Anastasia Zuyeva, Silver 200 back in 2012 London Olympics not 2016 Rio Olympics.
Nice article. Please amend the paragraph about silver-medal-tying to include Laszlo Cseh as well – it was a 3-way tie. Thank you.