Marchand stuns world with ‘crazy' world record in semi-final as O'Callaghan wins more gold
But eclipsing Ryan Lochte's 2011 world record in the 200m medley — and not just by a fraction — stamped his brilliance once more.
Most swimmers chase the world record line with their fingertips. The time, the world record line was trying to catch Marchand's feet, which are certainly not size 17s like Ian Thorpe, but do the trick.
Marchand touched the wall in 1:52.69 and even he was blown away by a time faster than Mark Spitz' 200m freestyle effort during his seven gold medal blitz at the 1972 Munich Olympics.
'I actually can't really believe it right now,' Marchand said. 'It's unbelievable for me. What's crazy is that it's a whole second. A 1:52 on the 200m — that's insane. I'm so happy, it's just incredible.'
Marchand, who studied computer science at college in the US, dropped both the 200m butterfly and 200m breaststroke this year to target world records in the 200m and 400m individual medleys.
He spent the early part of this year in Brisbane training with Boxall and his St Peter's Western squad, which features the likes of O'Callaghan and Will Petric.
Petric, swimming in lane one of the semi, finished 5.52 seconds behind Marchand.
In between surfing trips to the Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast, Marchand spent time with Boxall honing his freestyle.
'That group was really welcoming from the first week. They are amazing,' Marchand said in an interview with SwimSwam earlier this year. 'It was a great experience. I have learned a lot about getting better at freestyle. That group is really good for that.'
A few lanes over during those sessions, O'Callaghan was rediscovering her love for swimming after her 200m freestyle gold medal in Paris.
On Wednesday night, she delivered again. O'Callaghan (1:53.48) swam a clinical race, using American Claire Weinstein to set the early pace before charging home in the final lap to win by 1.04 seconds.
'A positive environment definitely makes a world of difference,' O'Callaghan said. 'It is nice to come to a pool and feel at home.
'Coming here was one of the last things I thought I would do. At the start of the year if you told me I'd be world champion again, I would be shocked.'
Australia had two genuine gold medal chances on night four. They left with one – and a case of what might have been.
The team was rocked by a food poisoning drama after Short announced he would not line up in the 800m freestyle final.
Short won a silver medal in the event at the 2023 world championships and was the second-fastest qualifier for the final. He was aiming to become the first Australian to win world championships gold in the 800m freestyle since Grant Hackett in 2005.
Tunisia's Ahmed Jaouadi took the gold in a time of 7:36.88, just under Short's personal best of 7:37.76.
Swimming Australia says no other athletes have been affected.
'For him to not be able to swim tonight, you know he's not feeling well because he's an ultra competitor,' said Dolphins head coach Rohan Taylor.
The unexpected story of the night was Turner, who not only won bronze but broke Nick D'Arcy's Australian record in the 200m butterfly.
Turner wasn't expected to make the team — let alone the podium — but has dropped massive personal bests in recent months.
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'I never thought I'd be actually talking to you guys … this is something I dream about,' Turner said.
At the halfway mark of these world championships, the Dolphins still lead the medal tally on four golds, one ahead of the USA.
There's a world where Short already has two golds in Singapore. Instead, he has a silver in the 400m freestyle — by 0.02 seconds — and a sore stomach that will be monitored in coming days. He hopes to be right for the 4x200m freestyle relay.
Kaylee McKeown's absence from the 50m backstroke may have cost Australia another gold medal on the tally. Throw in the fact Ariarne Titmus is taking a year off.
But if Marchand and Canada's Summer McIntosh keep pinching golds off the Americans, Australia may just be about to party like it's Fukuoka 2023 — or even 2001 — all over again.
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ABC News
24 minutes ago
- ABC News
Simon Goodwin's sacking will have Demons fans hoping that the club is back on the path to redemption
This should have been a generational team. A Melbourne outfit with the 2020s firmly at its feet, charging into the new decade with an aura and a swagger not seen at the Demons since the divine Ron Barassi thundered around the MCG six decades ago. Instead, the resounding hymn of "every heart beats true" has been consigned to a whimpering prayer of resignation. And it has cost Simon Goodwin his job. To place the blame of a football club's poor performance on one person or one situation is to ignore the complexities of an organisation that employs hundreds of people, and forget that the scores on the field are the multiplication of the sum of all sins. Sins that in isolation would have been a blip on most clubs' radars, but became exponentially problematic when packaged into a full-blown Melbourne Football Club confessional session. Sins that occurred under the eyes of the former Adelaide Crows champion. To understand the degradation of the church of Melbourne is to understand that master coach Paul Roos led the club from the desert of irrelevance in 2014 and passed the flock to Goodwin in 2017. Within the congregation was a score of rising disciples that included Max Gawn, a big man on the brink of becoming the modern era's greatest ruck, and two second-year midfielders, Clayton Oliver and Christian Petracca, raring to stand upon the pulpit and lead a new generation of slick, skilled, and motivated rookies forward to rapture. And to rapture they were led, ending a 57-year drought with premiership victory in 2021, through a season that rocked and rolled from one COVID drama to another, as the Demons rode the punches better than any other club on the backs of their rising superstars. Had that victory come a year or two after the Roos handover, it would have been fair to suggest it was a success forged solely by the ex-Swans champion. 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Perth Now
24 minutes ago
- Perth Now
Indigenous group in legal bid to stop Olympic park plan
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Perth Now
24 minutes ago
- Perth Now
First Nations bid to block Olympic venue
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