2017 FINA World Championships: Day 7 Finals Preview

2017 FINA WORLD SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIPS

The second-to-last finals session from Budapest features nine more events on the schedule, including five 50m races.

The women’s 50 fly final opens things up, as Sarah Sjostrom seeks her second gold and third individual medal of the championships. Her meet record of 24.96 is certainly in jeopardy.

In the battle for silver and bronze, all of the other seven are in the hunt. Kelsi Worrell leads the charge with her 25.57 semi, and will look to get under the 2009 American record of Dara Torres (25.50).

For the third time we’ll see Caeleb Dressel do the 50 free / 100 fly double, beginning in the splash n’ dash where he’ll have lane 4. Dressel set a new American record of 21.29 in the semis, and is favored to sweep the sprint freestyle events. If he does, he’d be the first to do it since Cesar Cielo in 2009.

Vladimir Morozov came out of the semis seeded 2nd in 21.45, and Ben Proud and Bruno Fratus are dead-locked at 3rd in 21.60.

Next will be the women’s 200 back, which was incredibly fast in the semi-finals. Two women went under the gold medal winning time in Rio, and all but the Olympic bronze medalist Hilary Caldwell, who qualified 8th, went faster than Caldwell went to win that medal last summer.

Emily Seebohm tied her Australian record in the semis and looks to defend her title, but 100 back champion Kylie Masse is right there, one tenth back, and took off over a second from her previous best in the semis as the two went 2:05.8 and 2:05.9.

American Kathleen Baker sits 3rd, while Olympic silver medalist Katinka Hosszu will be out in lane 1 and Caldwell in lane 8.

There will then be two semis in the women’s 50 breast, with Yuliya EfimovaKatie Meili and Ruta Meilutyte swimming in the first heat. Then heat 2 will feature Lilly King, who was just a tenth outside of her American record this morning, and defending champion Jennie Johansson.

Dressel will then be back in the water for the 100 fly, which is scheduled to be about 32 minutes after the 50 free (about the same as yesterday prelims, longer than semi-finals). Based on what he’s shown, there’s no reason why he can’t walk away with two individual gold medals tonight. He could perhaps also become the 3rd man ever under 50 seconds in the 100 fly, with the 49.82 world record all of a sudden on notice.

Joseph Schooling may have something to say about that, however. He was over seven tenths slower than Dressel in the semis, but maybe he hasn’t shown his cards yet? His best time of 50.39 is still a long ways from Dressel’s back-to-back 50.0 swims, so will see what he has in the tank.

James Guy (50.67) and Kristof Milak (50.77) were faster than the Olympic champ in the semis though, and threaten to leave him off the podium altogether.

Pernille Blume and Sarah Sjostrom will go from lane 4 in two semis of the women’s 50 free, with Simone Manuel and Ranomi Kromowidjojo joining them in lane 5. These are the four expected to battle for three medals tomorrow.

Two more semis will follow in the men’s 50 back. Defending gold and silver medalists Camille Lacourt and Matt Grevers will swim in semi 1, and Junya KogaXu JiayuJustin Ress and Jérémy Stravius head up a loaded 2nd semi.

Katie Ledecky will be looking for a three-peat in the women’s 800 final, and shouldn’t have a problem doing so. Leah Smith is the #2 seed and will seek to make it another 1-2 finish for the U.S., like they did in the 400.

China’s Li Bingjie and Spain’s Mireia Belmonte will both threaten Smith for the silver, and perhaps hometown Hungarian Boglarka Kapas has big swim in her.

Things will finish off with the mixed free relay, where the U.S. is expected to swap in a whole new squad, headlined by 100m free winners Dressel and Manuel. Nathan Adrian, who was runner-up in the men’s 100, and Mallory Comerford, who was 4th in the women’s, make that team absolutely loaded and well within reach of breaking the world record by three or four seconds.

The Americans will have lane 5, with threats all over the pool including Australia in lane 8, Canada in lane 3 and Hungary in lane 6. The Netherlands will have lane 4.

Lineups will be announced prior to the session.

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SHM
6 years ago

I’d never though I’d be this exicted to see what a Brit could do in the 100m butterfly I always thought this was just a fun swim for Guy clearly much more than that

Swimmmmmmmmer
6 years ago

Rowdy isn’t commentating on NBC today WOOHOO!!

PowerPlay
6 years ago

Is this first time US has not had a men’s 1500 finalist? Hopefully next generation US distance swimming will step up before Tokyo.

jay ryan
6 years ago

Hey does anyone have the link for the session? It was being broadcast all week on NBCSN but I couldn’t see it…freakin’ work gets in the way of all of my fun. Now that it is Saturday and I am home, but they do not broadcast it!

Coach B
Reply to  jay ryan
6 years ago

I am wondering the same thing. Why is the coverage so limited on the weekend when people can actually watch it? Link for US?

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  jay ryan
6 years ago
jay ryan
Reply to  ERVINFORTHEWIN
6 years ago

Thanks, EftW

Damiansport1
6 years ago

Is this mixed relay squad confirmed? that would means 3 finals today for Dressel

Iain
Reply to  James Sutherland
6 years ago

Dressel-Stolk-Comerford-Manuel
Schwietert-Stolk-Heemskerk-Kromowidjojo
Kisil-Acevedo-Van Landeghem-Oleksiak
Kozma-Bohus-Jakabos-Verraszto
Dotto-Miressi-Pellegrini-Di Pietro
Matsumoto-Nakamura-Ikee-Igarashi
Izotov-Popkov-Andreeva-Popova
Townsend-Graham-Elmslie-Wilson

commonwombat
6 years ago

W50FLY: Should be SS
M50FR: Dressel, minors a lottery
W50BRS SF: Next episode of King-Efimova show; behind them Meili, Johansson, Ruta & Castiglione look reasonably secure. Last 2 spots lottery
W200BK: Seebohm fastest QF with new PB. Has to be respected esp if she’s within 1sec at final turn but can’t help thinking that this one will also go to the next generation, most likely Masse. Other interests are whether Hosszu has sufficient petrol to be in position that home crowd can lift her to podium or whether one of the next-next generation have another big PB in them
M100FLY: Dressel (not sure of WR), Guy good chance of one minor, not sure of other
… Read more »

bobo gigi
6 years ago

Haha! Dressel can win 3 other golds today! 😆 If he wins the 50 free in 20.99, the 100 fly in 49.81 and leads off the mixed relay in another 47.1/47.2 after all the races he has already done then I promise to never again use the words “too many races”, “fatigue”, “save energy”, “fresh” or “tired” about Dressel. We have already seen that he was not in the category of the usual sprinters. A sprinter must be fresh to perform. That was the norm before Dressel. He’s revolutionizing the sprint world before our eyes. He has a crazy speed but also a huge endurance base. I presume he does a lot of yardage in training at Florida. He accumulates… Read more »

takinpics
6 years ago

Could the US 4×1 mixed team possibly throw down a 3:20?? A couple 52.5s from the girls and 47.5s from the guys could potentially have them under 3:20… wow!

takinpics
Reply to  takinpics
6 years ago

I know it will be a stretch after Dressel’s two swims earlier… but the kid is showing he knows how to put up a big time. Maybe anchor him to give him a couple extra minutes??

Iain
Reply to  takinpics
6 years ago

He’s swimming first

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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