The Paris 2024 Olympic Games are barely a month and a half away — and that means athletes across the world are honing their preparations for the upcoming spectacle.
No squad in Australia has more eyeballs on it at this stage of the Olympic cycle than the swimming team.
The Dolphins are by far Australia’s most successful cohort at the Olympics.
This week in Brisbane, the nation’s top swimmers will have a chance to shoot for Paris over six days of intense competition.
Australia’s stunning Olympic record
Australia’s record in swimming is sensational — it’s the sport in which Australia has won the most medals by far
All time, the Aussies are second in terms of medals won, behind only the United States.
At the last Games, it was again the USA at the top of the pile with a total of 30 medals, including 11 golds.
Australia was not far behind though, winning nine golds and a total of 21 medals.
No other country reached double figures, with Great Britain the next most successful country with eight medals in total.
That success was almost entirely down to the all-conquering women’s squad, who claimed a whopping eight gold medals out of a possible 17 in the pool.
In total, Australia’s women won 17 of the 51 medals on offer in the pool — and given each country is limited to two athletes per event, that was over half the maximum they could conceivably have won.
All up, 10 of Australia’s 11 most successful Summer Olympians are swimmers.
Indeed, at the last Games, Emma McKeon was the most successful athlete in terms of medals won across the board, winning seven medals in total (four golds and three bronzes).
That was the first time a female swimmer had ever been the top medallist at a single Games, and the first time a female athlete had done so since Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina won six medals at the 1964 Games in Tokyo.
How do the Olympic swimming trials work?
It’s all pretty straightforward.
Swimmers race in their heats in the morning, with the eight fastest swimming again in that evening’s final.
Australia has a maximum quota of athletes to choose from, which is 26 men and 26 women.
The top two swimmers in the final will make the Olympic team — as long as they swim under the qualifying standard set by Swimming Australia.
If no athletes swim under the qualification time, they will not be selected even if they finish in the top two positions.
That time is actually faster than the official Olympic qualification time in all but a handful of instances — the 100m breaststroke and 400m individual medley (IM) for men, and the 100m freestyle, 100m breaststroke, and the 400m IM for women.
Selection for the relay teams will be subject to an athlete making the final of the event.
Who are Australia’s top names to look out for?
All four of Australia’s individual Olympic champions from Tokyo will be in action in Brisbane.
Australia’s only male individual gold medallist from Tokyo, Zac Stubblety-Cook in the 200m breaststroke, has entered both the 100m and 200m breaststroke in his home pool — events he won at April’s Australian Swimming Championships on the Gold Coast.
Ariarne Titmus will compete in the 100m, 200m, 400m and 800m.
Australia’s golden girl is favourite in the two longer events, but comes up against world record holder Mollie O’Callaghan in the 200m and, well, just about every one of Australia’s greatest modern 100m sprinters in the two-length effort — but more on that later.
Backstroke queen Kaylee McKeown is also keeping busy this week, swimming the 200m IM, the 100m and 200m back and the 100m and 200m free.
Emma McKeon is sticking to three events, racing the 100m fly, 100m and 50m free — all events she won individual medals in at the Tokyo Games.
Outside those stars, look out for Cameron McEvoy, whose less is more approach to sprinting has seen the veteran record the two fastest times in the world this year over 50m.
Kyle Chalmers‘s 47.63 over 100m free to win the Australian Championships in April was the sixth-fastest time in the world this year and a very positive sign, although Flynn Southam leads a strong contingent of swimmers hoping to upset the established order.
In the 400m, both Elijah Winnington and Sam Short have gone way under the Swimming Australia qualifying time already this year, with both men looking good to hit the 800m qualifying time as well.
Winnington should also be there or thereabouts in a very competitive-looking 200m free, with Max Giuliani, Zac Incerti and Kai Taylor all posting impressive times.
The women’s 100m freestyle
The strength in depth of Australian women’s swimming has arguably never been more impressive.
And nowhere is that more clear than in the 100m, which consists of one of the best domestic fields ever assembled.
Eight of the women down to swim in the 100m free have an Olympic gold medal to their name.
Six women — O’Callaghan, Shayna Jack, Emma McKeon, Meg Harris, Cate Campbell and Bronte Campbell — have entered a time that is below Swimming Australia’s qualification mark of 53:61.
A further three entered a time of sub-54 seconds to set up an explosive battle for a spot in the relay team, let alone one of the two individual spots, including reigning world junior champion, Olivia Wunsch, Brianna Throssell and Titmus.
The 50m freestyle is just as crammed with talent, meaning there is a very realistic chance that this could be the last time we see the Campbell sisters in action.
Seven women have entered times below the Swimming Australia qualifying standard for the Games in the one-length sprint — including both Campbell sisters.
When are the USA trials?
Australia will learn the identity of its American challengers the week after the trials in Brisbane conclude.
The Olympic trials are kind of a big deal Stateside.
So important that the competition will take place inside the home of the NFL’s Indianapolis Colts.
The 70,000-seat venue has been reconfigured to host 30,000 supporters at a cost of more than a million dollars.
“The last five Olympic Trials were in temporary pools,” chief commercial officer of USA Swimming, Shana Ferguson told the Indy Star.
“The reason for that is there’s simply no natatorium in the United States that is big enough to host a meet of this magnitude.”
Eyes will mostly be on Katie Ledecky, who will be aiming, primarily, to win a fourth-straight title in the 800m freestyle, having also won the crown in London, Rio and Tokyo.
How are the other medal favourites faring?
Canada held its Olympic trials last month, and predictably Summer McIntosh stole the show.
The 17-year-old qualified for five individual events, including the events in which she currently reigns in as two-time world champion — the 400m IM and 200m butterfly — and the 400m freestyle.
Maggie Mac Neil, who beat McKeon in the 100m butterfly in Tokyo, qualified for her chance to repeat the triumph.
Great Britain’s Olympic trials took place in April with Matt Richards winning the 200m freestyle ahead of gold and silver medallists from Tokyo, Duncan Scott and Tom Dean.
Dean, the defending champion, will now likely only compete in the 4x200m relay, which Britain will hope to defend its title in using the same four swimmers that won gold in Tokyo, Richards, Scott, Dean and James Guy, who finished fourth in the best race of the trials.
Two-time defending champion and 100m breaststroke world record holder Adam Peaty also locked in his spot after a rough couple of years that saw him stunningly surrender his 100m breast Commonwealth Games title and revealed that he was struggling with his mental health.
China also threatens to be a strong challenger, with Pan Zhanle winning a 100m, 200m and 400m hat-trick at their trials in Shenzhen in April.
Breaststroker Qin Haiyang also starred, as did women’s defending Olympic 200m butterfly champion Zhang Yufei, while the emergence of 20-year-old breaststroker Tang Qianting also brings the promise of success in the 100m.
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