2025 Worlds, Day 5 North America Recap: Illness Lingers, But U.S. Step Up With Gritty Swims

2025 World Championships

There was a stark contrast in the performances from the American swimmers on Day 5 of the World Championships in Singapore.

It was either really good, or fell well shy of expectations—including multiple scratches—and there wasn’t much in between.

The day didn’t start on a high note, with Gretchen Walsh scratching the prelims of the women’s 100 freestyle as one of the gold medal favorites, and Josh Matheny dropping the men’s 200 breast prelims after he was an Olympic finalist last summer.

During the morning session, Jack Aikins failed to advance to the semis of the men’s 200 back as the top seed, which wasn’t a massive surprise after he was well off form earlier in the 100 back.

Just as the evening session was getting underway, USA Swimming announced Carson Foster would not be contesting the final of the men’s 200 IM. As finals rolled on, Alex Walsh, who was one of the bronze medal favorites in the women’s 200 breast, missed the final by a wide margin, adding three seconds to her personal best time set less than two months ago.

That’s five medal hopefuls either scratching an event or missing out on advancing to the final, showing the stomach illness that plagued the U.S. team early in the meet is still lingering.

However, on the flip side of things, most of the swimmers who did race during Day 5 finals stepped up big and performed.

  • Regan Smith opened the session by winning silver in the women’s 200 fly, clocking 2:04.99 in her eighth swim in the last four days. Summer McIntosh wasn’t going to be touched for gold, as the Canadian clocked 2:01.99 to come within 18 one-hundredths of the super-suited world record. In her World Championship final debut, Caroline Bricker had a solid swim for the U.S., placing 6th.
  • In the semis of the women’s 100 free, Torri Huske, who has been fighting illness all week and been well off form in her appearances (after dropping the 100 fly), put together her best swim of the meet to qualify for the final in 4th (53.21).
  • Shaine Casas was incredible in the final of the men’s 200 IM, giving Leon Marchand a real run for his money as the American won silver in a time of 1:54.30, moving up to #4 all-time and coming within 14 one-hundredths of Michael Phelps‘ career best time (1:54.16) and within three-tenths of Ryan Lochte‘s mark of 1:54.00 which previously stood as the world record for 14 years.
  • Jack Alexy followed up his American Record swim in the semis of the men’s 100 free by winning silver in the final, putting together the third sub-47 swim of his career in 46.92. Patrick Sammon also impressed in his individual World Championship final debut, taking 6th in 47.58.
  • Kate Douglass looked smooth in the semis of the women’s 200 breast, comfortably winning her heat and advancing 2nd into the final in a time of 2:20.96.
  • Katharine Berkoff and Smith went 1-2 in the final of the women’s 50 back, marking the first time any country has won gold and silver in the same event in Singapore. At the World Championships, the last 1-2 finish for the U.S. women came in the 200 IM in 2023, when Kate Douglass won gold and Alex Walsh nabbed silver. At the 2024 Olympics, the lone U.S. 1-2 came in the women’s 100 fly with Torri Huske and Gretchen Walsh.
  • Racing in his first evening swim at a LC World Championships, AJ Pouch delivered in the semis of the men’s 200 breast, winning his heat to advance 2nd into the final in a time of 2:08.34.
  • The U.S. quartet of Claire Weinstein (1:54.83), Anna Peplowski (1:54.75), Erin Gemmell (1:56.75) and Katie Ledecky (1:53.71) delivered a new American Record in the women’s 4×200 free relay as they won silver behind the Australians in a time of 7:40.01. For Gemmell, the split came one night after she failed to crack 2:00 in the women’s 200 free final—five seconds off her best time, indicating the illness was affecting her. The relay swim lowered the previous National Record of 7:40.73 set by the U.S. squad that won silver at the 2021 Olympics in Tokyo.

So, despite a portion of the team still dealing with the stomach bug that first started impacting swimmers at their pre-Worlds training camp in Thailand, with a number of medal opportunities falling by the wayside on Thursday, the athletes who did compete managed to deliver.

OTHER DAY 5 NORTH AMERICA HIGHLIGHTS

  • Summer McIntosh decimated the field en route to winning gold in the women’s 200 fly in a time of 2:01.99, the second-fastest performance ever. The 18-year-old Canadian broke her own Commonwealth, Americas and Canadian Record, as well as the textile world record, which she set at 2:02.26 last month. She also broke the super-suited Championship Record of 2:03.41, but clearly wasn’t satisfied after narrowly missing the vaunted 2:01.81 world record.
  • Kylie Masse matched her finish from the 2023 World Championships with a 4th-place finish in the women’s 50 back (27.33), while Canadian teammate Ingrid Wilm took 8th in 27.56.
  • Oliver Dawson reset his Canadian Age Group Record in the boys’ 15-17 200 breaststroke twice on Thursday, clocking 2:11.07 in the prelims and then 2:10.32 in the semis to place 11th overall. Dawson set the previous record of 2:11.25 at the Canadian Trials in June.
  • Blake Tierney throttled the Canadian Record in the prelims of the men’s 200 back, clocking 1:55.17 to erase the previous mark by well over a second, and then re-lowered it in the semis in 1:55.03 to advance 5th into tomorrow’s final.

North America Medal Table Through Day 5

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 USA 4 10 4 18
2 Canada 3 0 2 5

Overall Medal Table Through Day 5

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Australia 5 1 5 11
2 United States 4 10 4 18
3 Canada 3 0 2 5
4 Germany 2 1 1 4
5 France 2 0 1 3
6 Romania 2 0 0 2
7 Italy 1 4 1 6
8 China 1 3 4 8
9 Neutral Athletes B [a] 1 1 0 2
10 South Africa 1 0 0 1
Tunisia 1 0 0 1
12 Belgium 0 1 0 1
Poland 0 1 0 1
Switzerland 0 1 0 1
15 Hungary 0 0 1 1
Japan 0 0 1 1
Kyrgyzstan 0 0 1 1
Netherlands 0 0 1 1
South Korea 0 0 1 1

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John
10 months ago

nothing of note from Mexico (the other other NA country)?

Billy
10 months ago

Who heading the USA swim team is responsible for this continuing debacle? Did the Aussie, Canadian, Japanese, Chinese and other teams get sick and have this problem? I guessing no…. It’s apparent that our team managers DID NOT do their homework regarding staying in Thailand. I feel badly for our athletes who trained their rear ends off, made the team (a huge accomplishment) and got too sick to compete. What a fiasco this meet turned out to be

Charge
Reply to  Billy
10 months ago

pretty sure no more animal sanctuary visits in the future. But illness, food poisoning etc can happen anywhere, anytime. Part of traveling.

Susan
10 months ago

So many athletes have gotten ill at this meet, from many countries GB, Italy, Switzerland, Australia etc…US is more noticable due to high seeds and media. The athletes are showing real grit. Anyone who has gotten sick at a meet knows what it feels like..fatigue, heaviness in the water, and loss of strength.

Kittykat
10 months ago

I think there is a nicer way to point out the omission. SwimSwam is swamped with multiple high level meet results right now. Something is bound to get missed.

Khachturian
10 months ago

USA is gonna get a surge in golds from the womens side, 50 fly, 50 free, medley relay. It will be close, but I think they will still take the medal table. Especially since most of the gold events that Australia would get have already passed.

Pea brain
Reply to  Khachturian
10 months ago

Australia look good for the 1 free and depends how Gretchen and torri look for the 50

Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
10 months ago

I’ll give two thumbs up to Erin Gemmell for a gutsy performance.

👍👍

VA Steve
10 months ago

Great story and context.

IU Swammer
10 months ago

10 silvers is frustrating. I can’t fault any of the silver performances, and it’s not like we keep getting out touched or something embarrassing. It’s just frustrating to be one gold behind Australia, which has just 1 silver.

DMSWIM
Reply to  IU Swammer
10 months ago

Yes all of the silvers were great swims. None were races where the athlete faltered.

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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