2026 AUSTRALIAN SWIMMING TRIALS
- Monday, June 8 – Saturday, June 13, 2026
- Sydney, Australia
- Sydney Olympic Park Aquatic Centre
- LCM (50 meters)
- Meet Central
- Commonwealth Selection Criteria
- Pan Pac Selection Criteria
- Psych Sheets
- Live Results
- Live Stream
- Storylines To Watch
- Live Recaps:
- Day 3 Finals Heat Sheet
The third night of finals from the 2026 Australian Swimming Trials promising to be an exciting one with a star-studded lineup set to compete, including two reigning world champions.
Mollie O’Callaghan, the reigning Olympic and world champion in the women’s 200 freestyle, will kick tonight’s action off in her best event, and perhaps she’s got Ariarne Titmus‘ world record in her sights after producing a pair of 1:53-mids earlier this year.
O’Callaghan, who previously held the world record at 1:52.85, saw Titmus take down her mark at the 2024 Australian Olympic Trials in a time of 1:52.23, while O’Callaghan produced the second-fastest performance ever in 1:52.48 in the same heat.
So far this year, O’Callaghan has gone 1:53.52 in March and 1:53.69 in April, faster than she was throughout the entirety of 2025, which is a positive sign heading into tonight.
The women’s 50 breaststroke will be headlined by 17-year-old Sienna Toohey, who won the 100 breast last night in a new Aussie Age Record and her first time under the 1:06 barrier.
The men’s 50 freestyle will feature world record holder and reigning Olympic and world champion Cameron McEvoy, who took down the super-suited world record of 20.88 at the China Open in March. McEvoy may be looking to respond to Russia’s Egor Kornev clocking 21.06 at the Russian Swimming Championships on Tuesday.
We’ll then see three male swimmers riding the hot hand head up the last three able-bodied events of the night, with Harrison Turner in the 200 fly, Sam Williamson in the 50 breast and Sam Short in the 800 free.
Turner, the 2025 World Championship bronze medalist in the 200 fly, set a pair of best times en route to 3rd-place finishes in the 200 free and 100 fly on Tuesday, giving him some momentum entering his best event.
Williamson, coming off a knee injury that kept him out of action last year, won the 100 breast on Monday in a time of 59.07, which is a positive sign heading into the 50, which has historically been his better event.
The session will conclude with the fastest seeded heat of the 800 free, where Short will be the big favorite to make it three-for-three in terms of both victories and personal bests in Sydney after winning the 400 free on Monday and the 200 free on Tuesday.
South Korean Kim Woomin posted the fastest time out of the morning heats in 7:53.42, while Miami’s Tomo Shadforth was the top Australian in 8:02.68.
WOMEN’S 200 FREESTYLE – FINAL
- World Record: 1:52.23, Ariarne Titmus (AUS) – 2024
- Commonwealth Record: 1:52.23, Ariarne Titmus (AUS) – 2024
- Australian Record: 1:52.23, Ariarne Titmus – 2024
- All Comers Record: 1:52.23, Ariarne Titmus (AUS) – 2024
- SA Qualifying Time: 1:56.03
‘A’ Final
- Mollie O’Callaghan (St. Peters Western), 1:52.86
- Lani Pallister (St. Peters Western), 1:53.65
- Inez Miller (Highlanders), 1:56.41
- Hannah Casey (Bond), 1:56.85
- Brittany Castelluzzo (Tea Tree Gully), 1:57.01
- Milla Jansen (St. Peters Western), 1:57.13
- Jenna Forrester (St. Peters Western), 1:57.36
- Meg Harris (Rackley), 1:57.63
Reigning Olympic and world champion Mollie O’Callaghan flirted with the world record throughout the final of the women’s 200 freestyle, and despite the WR line pulling away from her over the last few meters, she still produced one of the fastest swims ever.
The 22-year-old put up a time of 1:52.86, the third-fastest swim of her career and the fifth-fastest in history to reset her world-leading time of 1:53.52 set at the China Open in March.
O’Callaghan has been quicker twice; she broke the super-suited world record at the 2023 World Championships in a time of 1:52.85, and then at the 2024 Australian Olympic Trials, she was the runner-up to the world record-breaking Ariarne Titmus with the second-fastest swim ever in 1:52.48.
All-Time Performances, Women’s 200 Freestyle (LCM)
- Ariarne Titmus (AUS), 1:52.23 – 2024 Australian Olympic Trials
- Mollie O’Callaghan (AUS), 1:52.48 – 2024 Australian Olympic Trials
- Mollie O’Callaghan (AUS), 1:52.85 – 2023 World Championships
- Mollie O’Callaghan (AUS), 1:52.86 – 2026 Australian Swimming Trials
- Federica Pellegrini (ITA), 1:52.98 – 2009 World Championships
O’Callaghan was well under Titmus’ world record pace through each of the three turns, including sitting more than half a second back at the 150 (1:23.43 to 1:23.95) before splitting 29.43 coming home, compared to Titmus, who closed in 28.28 when she broke the all-time mark.
Notably, O’Callaghan was a massive 1.57 seconds quicker than she was at the 2025 Trials (1:54.43).
Taking the runner-up position with a standout performance of her own was Lani Pallister, O’Callaghan’s St. Peter’s Western teammate who became just the eighth woman under 1:54 barrier.
Pallister had clearly established herself in the 2nd position at the final turn, and then threw down the fastest closing 50 in the field in 28.90 to clock a blistering 1:53.65, tying her with Canadian Summer McIntosh for 5th all-time in the event.
All-Time Performers, Women’s 200 Freestyle (LCM)
- Ariarne Titmus (AUS), 1:52.23 – 2024 Australian Olympic Trials
- Mollie O’Callaghan (AUS), 1:52.48 – 2024 Australian Olympic Trials
- Federica Pellegrini (ITA), 1:52.98 – 2009 World Championships
- Allison Schmitt (USA), 1:53.61 – 2012 Olympic Games
- Summer McIntosh (CAN) / Lani Pallister (AUS), 1:53.65 – 2023 World Championships / 2026 Australian Swimming Trials
Pallister also moves into #2 in the world this season behind O’Callaghan.
2025-2026 LCM Women 200 FREE
O'CALLAGHAN
1:52.86
| 2 | Lani PALLISTER | AUS | 1:53.65 | 06/10 |
| 3 | Summer MCINTOSH | CAN | 1:53.80 | 03/06 |
| 4 | Siobhan Haughey | HKG | 1:54.13 | 05/28 |
| 5 | Freya COLBERT | GBR | 1:54.34 | 04/16 |
Nineteen-year-old Inez Miller, who is coming off her freshman year at the University of Texas, was back in 6th at the 150-meter mark, but charged home in 29.35 to pull up into 3rd in a time of 1:56.41, nearly a full second under the personal best time she set in the prelims of 1:57.30. Coming into the meet, her PB stood at 1:57.32.
Rounding out the top four and solidifying a spot on the Commonwealth and Pan Pac teams was Bond’s Hannah Casey, who was up in 3rd at the final turn and despite fading, held on for 4th in a time of 1:56.85. The 20-year-old owns a PB of 1:56.09 from last year.
MEN’S 200 IM MC– FINAL
Top Three
- Timothy Hodge SM10 (Blacktown), 2:13.82 – 960 pts
- Ricky Betar SM14 (UWA West Coast), 2:08.77 – 924 pts
- Samuel Gould SM9 (Griffith), 2:15.26
Reigning Paralympic champion Timothy Hodge topped the men’s multi-class 200 IM in a time of 2:13.82, scoring the SM10 swimmer 960 para points and qualifying him for the Para Pan Pacs. Hodge has already been named to the Para Commonwealth team.
Hodge won the SM9 gold medal in the men’s 200 IM at the 2024 Paralympics in a time of 2:13.31.
UWA West Coast’s Ricky Betar (SM14) posted the fastest time of the field in 2:08.77, good for 924 para points and 2nd place overall.
MEN’S 150 IM MC– FINAL’
Top Three
- Grant Patterson SM3 (Central Cairns), 3:11.43 – 586 pts
- Ahmed Kelly SM3 (Yarra Plenty), 3:12.71 – 574 pts
Central Cairns’ Grant Patterson edged out Yarra Plenty’s Ahmed Kelly in the men’s multi-class 150 IM, as the two SM3 athletes posted respective times of 3:11.43 and 3:12.71.
Kelly out-split Patterson on both the breaststroke and freestyle 50s, but his backstroke deficit (nearly five seconds) was too much to overcome. Both qualify for the Para Pan Pac team with these performances.
WOMEN’S 50 FREESTYLE MC – FINAL
Top Three
- Jasmine Greenwood S10 (Woden Valley), 28.00 – 907 pts
- Kirralee Hayes S13 (Genesis), 28.12 – 843 pts
- Madeleine McTernan S14 (Griffith), 27.95 – 808 pts
After winning the multi-class 100 fly last night, Jasmine Greenwood added another event to her Para Pan Pac program tonight in the women’s 50 free, posting a time of 28.00 to score 907 para points as an S10 athlete.
Kirralee Hayes, classified in S13, scored 843 points with her 28.12 clocking to place 2nd and also land a spot at Para Pan Pacs.
WOMEN’S 50 BREASTSTROKE – FINAL
- World Record: 29.16, Ruta Meilutyte (LTU) – 2023
- Commonwealth Record: 29.72, Lara van Niekerk (RSA) – 2022
- Australian Record: 30.05, Chelsea Hodges – 2022
- All Comers Record: 30.15, Chelsea Hodges (AUS) – 2022
- SA Qualifying Time: 30.37
‘A’ Final
- Sienna Toohey (Albury), 30.57
- Lily Koch (Melbourne Vicentre), 30.97
- Mia O’Leary (Griffith), 31.23
- Sienna Harben (Griffith), 31.28
- Matilda Smith (Miami), 31.69
- Sienna Walo (Southport), 31.75
- Kyla Brown (Bond), 31.91
- Tilly King (Bond), 32.11
Sienna Toohey recovered from a slow start to eventually pull away from the field in the final of the women’s 50 breaststroke, using her high stroke rate to claim the national title in a time of 30.57
The time is only one one-hundredth faster than she was on the opening 50 of her victorious 100 breast last night, having split 30.58 on the way to a breakthrough 1:05.97 swim, and despite missing the SA qualifying time of 30.37, she’ll still be able to swim the 50 at both the Commonwealth Games and Pan Pacs having already made both teams.
The 17-year-old Albury product owns a personal best time of 30.39, set this past April at the Australian Open, which ranks her tied for 10th in the world this season.
Toohey said in her post-race interview that she doesn’t specifically train for the 50 and that the 100 has been her primary focus of late.
Melbourne Vicentre’s Lily Koch had an impressive showing, setting a new lifetime best of 30.97 to claim the runner-up spot and breaking 31 seconds for the first time. The 17-year-old’s previous best stood at 31.09, set last year.
Griffith University teammates Mia O’Leary and Sienna Harben finished 3rd and 4th, respectively, posting times of 31.23 and 31.28. Both have broken 31 seconds before, including O’Leary setting her PB of 30.72 earlier this year.
MEN’S 50 FREESTYLE – FINAL
- World Record: 20.88, Cameron McEvoy (AUS) – 2026
- Commonwealth Record: 20.88, Cameron McEvoy (AUS) – 2026
- Australian Record: 20.88, Cameron McEvoy – 2026
- All Comers Record: 21.19, Ashley Callus (AUS) – 2009
- SA Qualifying Time: 21.77
‘A’ Final
- Cameron McEvoy (Somerville House), 21.32
- Jamie Jack (St. Peters Western), 21.52
- Flynn Southam (Bond), 21.72
- Ollie Moclair (SOPAC), 21.79
- Ben Armbruster (Bond), 21.80
- Isaac Cooper (St. Andrew’s), 21.90
- Thomas Nowakowski (USC Spartans), 22.06
- Thomas Robinson (Cruiz), 22.42
It wasn’t the perfect performance we saw earlier this year in China, but Cameron McEvoy still did enough to claim the national title in the men’s 50 freestyle in a time of 21.32, tying the 11th-fastest performance of his career.
The 32-year-old Somerville House swimmer stunned the world when he broke the super-suited world record at the China Open in March in a time of 20.88. He said post-race that it was a surprise to him as well, and that his goal is to re-break the mark at the Commonwealth Games in July.
Behind McEvoy, it was a blazing-fast field with an incredible six men under the 22-second barrier after five did it this morning.
St. Peters Western’s Jamie Jack came through to make his first senior international team by clocking a season-best of 21.52, comfortably under the SA qualifying time of 21.77 and moving him into 7th in the world this season.
2025-2026 LCM Men 50 FREE
McEvoy
WR 20.88
| 2 | Egor KORNEV | RUS | 21.06 | 06/09 |
| 3 | Quintin McCarty | USA | 21.43 | 05/24 |
| 3 | Chris GUILIANO | USA | 21.43 | 03/07 |
| 5 | Andrej BARNA | SRB | 21.48 | 05/23 |
| 6 | Maxime GROUSSET | FRA | 21.51 | 12/20 |
| 7 | Jamie JACK | AUS | 21.52 | 06/10 |
After placing 5th at the Australian Trials in 21.84, Jack dropped a stunning new lifetime best of 21.43 last summer racing at the U.S. Pro Championships, which was faster than what was required to win bronze at the 2025 World Championships.
Bond’s Flynn Southam dropped 13 one-hundredths off his personal best to claim 3rd place in a time of 21.72, also getting under the qualifying time to likely earn a spot on the Commonwealth and Pan Pac teams.
Sydney’s Ollie Moclair, who set a best time of 21.73 in April at the Aussie Age Championships, was just shy of that mark in 21.79 for 4th, showing impressive consistency for the 18-year-old after he was 21.83 in the heats.
Southam’s Bond teammate Ben Armbruster chipped four one-hundredths off his PB in 21.80 for 5th, while Isaac Cooper was the sixth man sub-22 in 21.90. Cooper owns a best time of 21.65 from 2023.
MEN’S 200 BUTTERFLY – FINAL
- World Record: 1:50.34, Kristof Milak (HUN) – 2022
- Commonwealth Record: 1:52.96, Chad Le Clos (RSA) – 2012
- Australian Record: 1:54.17, Harrison Turner – 2025
- All Comers Record: 1:52.09, Michael Phelps (USA) – 2007
- SA Qualifying Time: 1:54.94
‘A’ Final
- Harrison Turner (Nudgee College), 1:55.18
- Se-Bom Lee (SOPAC), 1:57.85
- Alex Quach (Nudgee College), 1:58.49
- Sean Alcorn (Peel), 1:59.53
- Caio Gallo (Logan Vikings), 1:59.67
- Caleb Dryer (Carlile), 2:00.04
- Harvey Larke (Griffith), 2:00.81
- William Jordan (Brisbane Grammar), 2:01.14
Coming off an incredibly tough double on Tuesday, Harrison Turner dominated the final of the men’s 200 fly one night later, establishing a big lead early to ultimately claim the national title in a time of 1:55.18.
Turner, the 2025 World Championship bronze medalist in this event, employed his typical race strategy by going out hard which led to him tightening up a bit on the last 50, splitting 25.18/29.39/29.57/31.04.
The time is the sixth-fastest of his career, having clocked 1:54 four times in 2025, including setting the Aussie Record of 1:54.17 in Singapore, and hitting a season-best of 1:55.07 this past December.
However, his 31.04 closing 50 tonight was actually faster than he was in any of his 1:54 swims—though he was quicker when he went 1:55.07 (30.49). He didn’t quite have the same pop on the front half that he did last year, which is likely due in part to the 200 free/100 fly double he took on last night.
Despite missing the SA qualifying time of 1:54.94, Turner landed a spot on the Commonwealth and Pan Pac rosters last night in the 200 free so will still represent Australia in the 200 fly this summer.
MEN’S 50 FREESTYLE MC – FINAL
Top Three
MEN’S 50 BREASTSTROKE – FINAL
- World Record: 25.95, Adam Peaty (GBR) – 2017
- Commonwealth Record: 25.95, Adam Peaty (GBR) – 2017
- Australian Record: 26.32, Sam Williamson – 2024
- All Comers Record: 26.58, Cameron van der Burgh (RSA) – 2018
- SA Qualifying Time: 26.93
‘A’ Final
WOMEN’S 200 IM MC– FINAL
Top Three
WOMEN’S 150 IM MC– FINAL
Top Three
MEN’S 800 FREESTYLE – TIMED FINAL
- World Record: 7:32.12, Zhang Lin (CHN) – 2009
- Commonwealth Record: 7:37.76, Sam Short (AUS) – 2023
- Australian Record: 7:37.76, Sam Short – 2023
- All Comers Record: 7:40.39, Sam Short (AUS) – 2023
- SA Qualifying Time: 7:46.36
‘A’ Final

Turner’s swim was overall well-paced, he just died on the last 50.
OMG IT WAS NOT A PB FOR JAMIE JACK. STOP SAYING IT WAS!
The last two men’s races seem to have Meh winning times considering what they’re both capable of. After a 1:52 swim from Mollie to start the night I was hoping it would be a cracking night of swimming
Yes I definitely expected more 🙁
There’s too much dead space in this schedule.
They’re not even doing medal presentations like in past Trials.. the atmosphere at the pool is also dead, turnout is small, no merchandise or stalls, it should be like a carnival atmosphere for spectators to give the atmosphere some buzz
Did Turner overload his schedule in the first few days. Gone from worlds medallist to not breaking 1:55
It’s definitely not a great schedule for him with no events on the last two days. Hope he still has enough gas to impress in the 100 free tomorrow.
idk I think this schedule just sucks for him, doing 4x races yesterday and now a 200 fly today
thankfully he’s already on the team. Will need to see the CG schedule, hopefully he can put a better foot forward there
COME ON HARRY LET’S GET IT
McEvoy & Jamie congratulations both and Good race for Flynn and Ollie