logo
Katie Ledecky posts third-fastest time in history to open swimming nationals

Katie Ledecky posts third-fastest time in history to open swimming nationals

NBC Sports04-06-2025
Katie Ledecky opened the Toyota U.S. Swimming Championships by winning the 800m freestyle in the third-best time in history, extending a 15-year win streak in her trademark event.
Ledecky clocked 8 minutes, 5.76 seconds in Indianapolis to qualify for the World Championships in Singapore in July and August. The only faster times are Ledecky's 8:04.12 from earlier this spring and 8:04.79 from the 2016 Olympics.
She is in line to become the first U.S. swimmer to compete at a seventh World Championships, according to Olympic historian Bill Mallon.
Nationals continue Wednesday with finals at 7 p.m. ET, live on Peacock.
SWIMMING: Broadcast Schedule | Results
In other events Tuesday, Torri Huske took the women's 100m free in 52.43, the fastest time ever in an American pool and the world's best time this year. Huske earned silver at the Olympics in 52.29, her personal best.
In the men's 100m free, Jack Alexy swam the second-fastest time in American history and world's best time for 2025 in the prelims (46.99), then won the final in 47.17.
Luca Urlando captured the men's 200m butterfly in 1:53.42, a time bettered by only one man globally in 2025: Urlando.
Back in April, Urlando swam 1:52.37 to become the second-fastest American all-time in the event behind Michael Phelps. He's the world's fastest man this year by 1.33 seconds.
Rising Stanford junior Caroline Bricker upset Olympic silver medalist Regan Smith in the women's 200m fly, overtaking her 2:05.80 to 2:05.85.
Bricker lowered her personal best by 3.32 seconds over the prelims and final to supplant 2000 Olympic gold medalist Misty Hyman as the fifth-fastest American in history.
Nick Zaccardi,
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

American Gretchen Walsh wins 50-meter butterfly, second world championship gold
American Gretchen Walsh wins 50-meter butterfly, second world championship gold

New York Times

time30 minutes ago

  • New York Times

American Gretchen Walsh wins 50-meter butterfly, second world championship gold

Gretchen Walsh won the 50-meter butterfly Saturday at the swimming world championships, kicking off a day of American medal potential with her second gold of the event. Walsh finished in 24.83 seconds in the one-pool-length sprint, beating Australia's Alexandria Perkins (25.31) and Belgium's Roos Vanotterdijk (25.43) to start one of the most anticipated days of the swimming program at these World Aquatics Championships. Advertisement Walsh — a short-course pool (25-yard) star who is proving quite adept at long-course pools too — also won the 100-meter butterfly event earlier this week. The 50-meter butterfly is among the events that will make their Olympic debut in Los Angeles, and that's good news for Walsh. She has the eight fastest times in the event this year. Five-time Olympic gold medalist Kaylee McKeown of Australia continued her reign as the sport's dominant backstroker, once again beating American Regan Smith in a head-to-head showdown. McKeown took gold in the 200-meter event, pulling away from Smith in the final 50 meters, just as she did in the 100-meter event earlier in the week. McKeown won in 2:03.33, a world-championship record time. Smith finished in 2:04.29 for silver. American teammate Claire Curzan took bronze in 2:06.04. 'I was really jazzed with the time,' Smith, who also took silver in the 100-meter backstroke, said in an interview on Peacock after the race. 'I was almost exactly a second off my best time, so … it was a really great swim for me.' In the men's 50-meter freestyle, Olympic champion Australian Cameron McEvoy outsprinted everyone to gold in 21.14 seconds. Great Britain's Ben Proud won silver in 21.26, and American Jack Alexy earned bronze in 21.46. Three finals are still to come Saturday, starting with the men's 100-meter butterfly. Switzerland's Noe Ponti was the top qualifier out of the semis. Olympic silver medalist Josh Liendo and bronze medalist Ilya Kharun, both from Canada, are medal contenders here as well. Later, we'll see the women's 800-meter freestyle final, the much-hyped showdown between Katie Ledecky and Summer McIntosh. Ledecky qualified first out of the heats, McIntosh third, with Australia's Lani Pallister in second. Ledecky, the American who is the most decorated women's swimmer in history, will try to continue her dominance in the event against the rising Canadian star. Ledecky has won the 800 all 10 times she has contested it on the Olympic or world championship stage and reset her own world record in June. McIntosh beat Ledecky in the 400-meter earlier this week, is 3-for-3 in her races in Singapore, and in May posted the third-best time ever in the event. Advertisement The final medal event Saturday is the mixed 4×100-meter freestyle relay, where the Americans were the top qualifiers out of the preliminary heats. Three semifinals are also scheduled — the 50-meter events in the women's breaststroke, women's freestyle and men's backstroke. Saturday night Eastern time (Sunday morning in Singapore) is the final session of preliminary heats, including the men's and women's 400-meter individual medleys. Those will feature French star Léon Marchand and McIntosh, who will be in line for history if she beats Ledecky. Only American legend Michael Phelps has won five individual gold medals at a single world championships, a mark McIntosh would equal with wins in the 800 freestyle and the 400 IM. The world championship program concludes Sunday with eight finals. (Photo of Gretchen Walsh: Oli Scarff / AFP via Getty Images)

Kaylee McKeown tops rival Regan Smith for another major title at swimming worlds
Kaylee McKeown tops rival Regan Smith for another major title at swimming worlds

Yahoo

time31 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Kaylee McKeown tops rival Regan Smith for another major title at swimming worlds

Australia's Kaylee McKeown edged American Regan Smith to win gold in the women's 100-meter backstroke final Tuesday at the swimming world championships in Singapore, a blistering-fast edition of the rivalry between two of the best in the sport. McKeown won in 57.16 seconds, just missing the world record, with Smith just behind in 57.35 for silver. Both were among the top five times in the event's history. American Katharine Berkoff took bronze in 58.15. Smith was a fraction ahead at the 50-meter mark, but McKeown passed her in those final meters for her second world title in the event. It's the fourth time in four tries that McKeown has outpaced Smith in the event at either the Olympics or world championships. Smith also took silver behind McKeown at the Paris Olympics and the 2023 worlds and earned bronze in the Tokyo Olympics behind McKeown and Canada's Kylie Masse. Smith won gold at the 2022 worlds, which McKeown did not compete in. Smith's time was her third-best ever and is now the fifth best in the event's history. However, one of those four superior times was McKeown's in the lane next to her on Tuesday. 'What more can you do? I have no control over how fast Kaylee swims,' Smith said in an interview on Peacock. 'I'm going to choose not to be frustrated — 57.35 is pretty fantastic.' Though McKeown has owned the biggest meets, the rivalry is still one of the best in swimming. Smith is the current world-record holder, setting the mark of 57.12 at last year's U.S. Olympic trials. She also set the Olympic record of 57.28 in Paris — the event's second-best time ever before Tuesday — but it came in the women's medley relay, in which the U.S. beat McKeown's Australian squad for gold. In the individual 100-meter final, McKeown beat Smith 57.33 to 57.66. McKeown now has five world championship golds and 13 overall medals. This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Olympics, Global Sports, Women's Olympics 2025 The Athletic Media Company

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store