2019 World Champs Previews: Threats Looming For American Men’s Medley Relay

2019 FINA WORLD AQUATICS CHAMPIONSHIPS

  • All sports: Friday, July 12 – Sunday, July 28, 2019
  • Pool swimming: Sunday, July 21 – Sunday, July 28, 2019
  • The Nambu University Municipal Aquatics Center, Gwangju, Korea
  • Meet site
  • FinaTV Live Stream
  • Live results

MEN’S 4x100m Medley Relay

  • World Record: 3:27.28, USA (Peirsol, Shanteau, Phelps, Walters), 2009
  • World Championship Record: 3:27.28, USA (Peirsol, Shanteau, Phelps, Walters), 2009
  • World Junior Record: 3:35.17, Russia (Kolesnikov, Gerasimenko, Minakov, Markov), 2018
  • Defending World Champion: USA (Grevers, Cordes, Dressel, Adrian), 3:27.91

Outside of Disqualifications in 2001, 2007 and 2013 (that’s a lot), the American men haven’t missed a World Champs gold medal in the medley relay since 1998, when a Michael Klim-led Australian team bested Gary Hall, Jr.’s squad by six tenths. In fact, that’s the only time when Team USA has not won the World Championship in this race in long course other than the 3 DQs. That run comprises some of the highest highs and lowest lows possible for Team USA, including 6 gold medals and the world record, but also disqualifications in exactly a third of World Championships meets since 1998.

More recently, it feels like every year the world is closing in – single-stroke standouts (Adam Peaty) have risen in various countries, and most of those nations are starting to fill in the glaring holes that have in the past cost them their shot at the American run of dominance (when relay starts stay legal, at least). Yet despite the ‘the-world-is-catching-up’ narrative, the Americans have continued to get to the wall first. At the risk of playing a broken record, this year’s field looks like the toughest challenge yet, but the American relay still has a couple of big-hitters and the best depth of the field.

For Team USA, it starts with the backstroke – always has. The Americans have been historically dominant in the men’s backstrokes for decades, and you can’t overstate the impact that a lead and clean water have on breaststrokers and butterflyers. (The short-axis strokes, in particular, can really be affected by waves and chop coming from other swimmers ahead of them in the pool). Ryan Murphy was the 2016 Olympic champ and still holds the world record in the 100 back. He was the fastest backstroker in the world last year, and the only one to break 52. There are some tough challengers, but it’s a good bet that the Americans will lead after that leg.

The other home run hitter on the American medley is Caeleb DresselWhen healthy, he’s the U.S.’s fastest flyer and freestyler, but the depth is better in free, so Dressel typically takes the fly leg. A 50.3 individually a few weeks ago showed Dressel’s in-season form, and he’s one of only a few men with a shot to split 49 on this relay. He split 49.7 back in 2017.

It’ll be Michael Andrew or Andrew Wilson on breaststroke. Wilson had the faster time last year (59.19 mid-season), but Andrew won the U.S. National title (59.38). The medley relay falls on the last day of Worlds, so it’ll be the faster of the two in the individual 100 who earns the finals spot. The same will likely go for freestyle. Dressel and Blake Pieroni (48.08 at Nationals) will swim the 100 free individually, but depending on who stands out in the 4×100 free relay, the spot could go to any of Pieroni, Zach Apple (48.03 in prelims at Pan Pacs last year) or 2012 Olympic champ Nathan Adrian (who split 47.2 on a Pan Pacs relay last year, but missed much of this year for testicular cancer treatment). Townley Haas (48.3 last summer) and Michael Chadwick (48.44 last year) would have outside shots as well.

All-in-all, the Americans should have distinct back and fly advantages. The question will be whether they can hold their own in breaststroke and/or pick the right 100 freestyler to deal with the murderer’s row of anchors across the rest of the top relays.

Great Britain was second at Worlds in 2017, about a second from toppling the Americans. Their great advantage is breaststroke, where Adam Peaty is a good second faster than anyone else in the world. Peaty split 56.9 at 2017 Worlds, though he’s not always on top form for relays. (He was 57.1 individually last year to set the world record, but split 57.5 at both Commonwealths and European Championships). The Brits also have an outstanding young freestyler, Duncan ScottThe 22-year-old is a relay phenom. He was only 48.0 individually last year, but split 47.3 at Euros. In 2017, he was 47.9 individually and split 47.0 trying to run down the Americans. He’s already 47.8 this year, and could legitimately be a 46-second anchor if he’s on point come relay time. The Brits also have consistent flyer James Guy (50.8 split at 2017 Worlds; 50.9 splits at both Commonwealths and Euros in 2018), and they’re in the process of shoring up their big backstroke weakness. After struggling to 54-second splits at 2017 Worlds, 2018 Commonwealths and 2018 Euros, team GBR now has 21-year-old Luke Greenbank coming of age. Greenbank went 53.9 at British Champs this spring. If he can stay close enough to Murphy to allow Peaty to build a lead (rather than just catch up) on breaststroke, Great Britain could survive Dressel’s fly leg and have a shot to eke out the win on a big Scott anchor.

Russia holds the world junior record, and half of that relay have now aged into senior status and should hold key legs on this year’s relay. The Russians are extremely young, so it’s safe to say they have one of the higher ceilings – if one of the more unpredictable floors – of the top teams. Russia was second at Euros last year to Great Britain. Kliment Kolesnikov wreaked havoc on the British backstroke weakness, and he’s set to do it again. The 18-year-old Kolesnikov was 52.5 last summer and is steadily dropping time. 22-year-old Anton Chupkov is rapidly developing his speed, going 59.0 last year, though he needs to be much better than his 1:00.4 Euros split, which pretty much sunk the Russian team last summer. The back half of the relay are new additions. 17-year-old Andrei Minakov blasted a 51.12 Russian record in the 100 fly last fall, and should be able to split 50-point, perhaps up to a full second faster than Egor Kuimov’s 51.4 at Euros last year. Vladimir Morozov (47.4 at Euros) is still in the mix at the free spot, but Vladislav Grinev22, has already been 47.4 individually this season.

China had the fastest time in the world last year, winning a thriller over Japan at the Asian Games. China has arguably the chief backstroke threat to Murphy: Xu Jiayu has already been 52.2 this year, he’s one of only three men to ever break 52, and he was .01 off of Murphy’s world record in 2017. China also has rising breaststroker Yan Zibeiwho split 58.8 and was 58.9 individually last year, and who has already been faster this year in 58.7 from a flat start. That big front half could win the thing for China, but they’ll need a solid lead. Li Zhuhao is a 51-low flyer who split a nice 50.6 at Asian Games – but that’s not going to be enough to hold off the Americans unless Dressel is off his mark. Former world champ Ning Zetao‘s retirement this spring leaves China with either He Junyi (48.1 individually this year) or Yu Hexin (47.9 split at Asian Games last year), who would need to swim out of their minds to hold off the field.

Those four feel like the favorites, with the highest ceilings and very good chances to break 3:30. There are a handful of other teams that could challenge the foursome, though, provided things come together at the right time.

We’d be remiss not to mention Japan, which had the second-best time in the world last year, .04 behind China. Japan is a consistent finalist, but seems to have a slightly lower ceiling than the top four nations. Ryosuke Irie is a paragon of consistency with 52-mid-to-high backstroke swims, but he’s also 29 and hasn’t had a lifetime-best since 2014, so it’s hard to project much improvement for him. Their best leg is breaststroke, where Yasuhiro Koseki is another ultra-stable performer. He split 58.6 at the Rio Olympics, 58.5 at 2017 Worlds, 58.6 at 2018 Pan Pacs and 58.4 at 2018 Asian Games. The marginal improvement is nice, and the 27-year-old Koseki feels like a lock for somewhere between 58.2 and 58.8 on this relay this year. Naoki Mizunuma is the newcomer on butterfly, dropping down to 51.4 already this year, and he’s the youngest on the relay at 22. Some combination of Shinri Shioura and Katsumi Nakamura should yield somewhere between 47-mid and 47-high on the anchor leg.

Australia has long had a breaststroke weakness, but the discipline is starting to come around. Jake Packard split 59.0 at Pan Pacs last summer, but he’s not on the Worlds roster this year. Matthew Wilson (59.6 individually) should be able to put up a similar split. Meanwhile Mitch Larkin (52.38 backstroke this year) is looking as strong as ever among the world’s top backstrokers. And Kyle Chalmers has legitimate 46-potential on the end – he split 46.9 at Pan Pacs last summer and has already been 47.3 individually this year.

Italy is a wild card. They swam a lineup of alternates at Euros last year and got burned with a 9th-place prelims showing. That was one of the few things that didn’t go brilliantly for Italy last summer – the rise of a huge class of fast swimmers makes them a real final threat in this relay, if they can avoid another misstep. Euros 100 fly champ Piero Codia (50.64 individually) and 100 free champ Alessandro Miressi (47.92 individually) combine for a potent back half. 30-year-old Fabio Scozzoli went a career-best 59.05 this spring, but it’s possible he’s supplanted by 19-year-old Nicolo Martinenghi, who was on the fast-track to world breaststroke stardom with a national-record 59.01 before missing last year with a groin injury. Martinenghi was 59.30 earlier this year. The wild card is backstroke, where the Italians are relying on 18-year-old Thomas Cecconthe rising versatile age group star who went 53.60 earlier this year in the 100 back and is three tenths of a second off of the national record.

Keep an eye on Brazil, which should have its own star anchor in Marcelo Chierighini (47.6 already this year). Vini Lanza is a solid and rising fly leg, with a choice between Joao Gomes and Felipe Lima on breast and swapping out last year’s back leg Gabriel Fantoni (not on the roster) for Guilherme Guido. Germany has a solid back half with fast-rising flyer Marius Kusch (51.3 this year individually) and young sprinter Damian Wierling (47.7 split last year). Christian Diener is swimming as well as he ever has in backstroke, and Fabian Schwingenschlogl has a good shot at a sub-minute breaststroke leg.

There’s a crowd of others fighting for spots in the back-end of the championship final. Belarus made the final at both 2017 Worlds and 2018 Euros. They very likely have the fastest non-Peaty breaststroke leg in Ilya Shymanovichwho went 58.2 individually earlier this year. Yauhen Tsurkin could also split 50-point, but they’ll struggle on either end. Canada has a rising backstroker/freestyler in Markus Thormeyerand should be decently solid on breast and free, but they’ll need a flyer under 52. Lithuania missed a Euros medal by two tenths, getting a big 58.8 breaststroke from Andrius Sidlauskas and a 47.8 from Simonas Bilis on the end. Meanwhile Hungary has a great young core, including a beastly back half of Kristof Milak (51.3 fly split last summer and 51.5 individually this year) and Nandor Nemeth (a monster 47.1 split at Euros last summer, though he was only 48.3 individually.

TOP 8 PICKS:

Place Country 2018 Best
2017 Worlds Finish
1 USA 3:30.20 1st
2 Great Britain 3:30.44 2nd
3 Russia 3:32.03 3rd
4 China 3:29.99 6th
5 Japan 3:30.03 4th
6 Australia 3:30.52 9th
7 Italy 3:37.24 11th
8 Brazil 3:32.16 5th

Dark horse: South Africa loses longtime breaststroker Cameron van der Burgh, who retired in December. But they still have star flyer Chad le Clos, and backstroker Chris Reid has already been 53.9 in back this year. (That’s almost two seconds faster than South Africa’s back leg at Commonwealths last year). If Michael Houlie can be 59-mid on his split in relief of van der Burgh, this relay could have a fighting chance at a high finish.

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Lexsoft
4 years ago

I just find that Michael Andrew is very talented, he is unique. He is very impressive in all of 50m races. Even today, he managed to set 22.80 in 50m fly, only 0.01 behind 50m fly specialist, Nicholas Santos who got the bronze. I read his PB on 50m free is 21.46.That is very good. Unfortunately, in 100m races, his records aren’t impressive, esp in freestyle. His height (6’6) is advantageous, and seeing that he is still 20, he can improve. I can see him winning 200m individual medley in Olympic, with a new WR. If he can improve his 100m free, he could win 400m individual medley too.

Lexsoft
4 years ago

Now seeing that Zack Apple set the best split (46.86) in the 4x100m free relay final yesterday, he should be the anchor. China seem to be leading after 3 legs, so USA have to rely on their best recent performer for the freestyle : Zack Apple.

Robbos
4 years ago

It’s US of A all the way for me here, only Peaty stands a chance to upset the cart.
The race for me is for the podium minor medals, with GBR leading the way with Peaty, Russia, China & Australia.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
4 years ago

there have been 111 comments so far as i came in to read the comments again ….this shows me they wont DQ this year .

Ol' Longhorn
Reply to  ERVINFORTHEWIN
4 years ago

Either that or 3 out of 4 legs get DQ’d.

Dave
4 years ago

I don’t see the US losing. Dressel will bury the field on fly and ain’t nobody gonna catch whoever we put out there on free.

Rafael
Reply to  Dave
4 years ago

Put Andrew on free them

Horninco
Reply to  Rafael
4 years ago

No. Just no.

Swimnerd
4 years ago

South Africa should have Coetzee fly and Le Clos free

Superfan
Reply to  Swimnerd
4 years ago

Will LeClos Swim the relay? He wouldn’t in 2017 when they had a very legit breastroker? He isn’t a huge team guy!

commonwombat
4 years ago

This is looking a very intriguing context. USA’s “every 6th year curse” may or may not bite but its hard to go past them as strong favourites, even if their breast-stroke leg is not as solid as they may like. However having the likes of Murphy on back and Dressel on fly should have that breas-stroker in front for the bulk of that leg and Dressel should have the US anchor in clear water.

The rest of the podium, however, looks very fluid as to its make-up. In the case of GBR, its a case of “my kingdom for a backstroker” !!”. Peaty is on another level to his breast-stroke competition and both Guy & Scott are likely to be… Read more »

Teddy
Reply to  commonwombat
4 years ago

The interval between the loses (6 years) has occured twice. The very minimum to consider anything a repeated pattern. Good for making a narrative though I guess.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  Teddy
4 years ago

no repeating patterns if the Coaches & swimmers decide to …..its not that simple but with clear focus on what matters (not messing up relay exchanges or going beyond 15 meter limit underwater ) there is no worry to have here .

Tea rex
4 years ago

Side bet: the final has 10 or more swimmers with significant US training backgrounds.

With Irie, Lanza, Lima, Chierighini, Morozov, Minakov, and maybe Kusch/Schwingenschlogl/Condorelli/Bilis/Reid, I think the odds are good.

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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