Luca Hoek, Cesar Castro Become First-Ever Spaniards Under 48 Seconds In 100 Freestyle

2026 SPANISH OPEN TRIALS

The 2026 Spanish Open Trials saw day two unfold from Mallorca, with history being made in the final of the men’s 100m freestyle.

After yesterday’s relatively disappointing 50m free, where no competitor cleared the 22-second barrier, tonight’s 1free main event saw not one, but two men dip under the 48-second threshold.

Leading the pack was 18-year-old standout Luca Hoek, blasting a lifetime best and new Spanish national record of 47.72.

Hoek opened in 22.63 and closed in 25.09 to get the job done, breaking his former PB and Spanish standard of 48.04 notched at the 2025 World Championships. That means he becomes the first-ever Spaniard to clock a time under 48 seconds with tonight’s outing.

But the teen wasn’t alone, as runner-up Cesar Castro also beat the 48-second barrier.

At 27 years of age, Castro ripped a monster PB of 47.98 to earn the silver, joining Hoek in qualifying for the European Championshps in the process.

Entering this competition, Castro’s career-swiftest mark rested at the 48.86 he produced at this same competition two years ago.

Just like that, however, the veteran hacked nearly a second off that former PB in his attempt to run down Hoek with a final 50m of 24.70.

Miguel Perez-Godoy rounded out the podium in 48.38 to also get under the 48.58 benchmark needed to qualify for the European Championships.

As for Hoek, a split comparison between his former and new national records shows how he was patient on the front half, saving his surge for the final 50m, where he was much quicker to produce the record.

Guenedal’s Old 48.04 NR Guenedal’s New 47.72 NR
22.56 22.63
25.48 25.09

Hoek also joins the exclusive list of 18-and-under swimmers to have broken the 48-second barrier, becoming just the 10th male to do it before his 19th birthday.

All-Time 18 & Under Performers, Men’s 100 Freestyle (LCM)

  1. David Popovici (ROU), 46.86 – 2022
  2. Pan Zhanle (CHN), 47.22 – 2023
  3. Hwang Sunwoo (KOR), 47.56 – 2021
  4. Andrei Minakov (RUS), 47.57 – 2020
  5. Kyle Chalmers (AUS), 47.58 – 2016
  6. Jacob Mills (GBR) / Luca Hoek (ESP), 47.72 – 2026 / 2026
  7. Flynn Southam (AUS), 47.77 – 2023
  8. Carlos D’Ambrosio (ITA), 47.78 – 2025
  9. Wang Haoyu (CHN), 47.89 – 2023

Spain has been looking for a new male star since 2009, when butterflyer Rafael Munoz and backstroker Aschwin Wildeboer. Hugo Gonzalez has been making waves for Spain, winning a gold and silver medal in the backstroke events at the 2024 World Championships, but he missed qualification times for last year’s World Championships.

Hoek already has some international medal credentials on his resume, having earned silver in the 50m free and men’s medley relay in 2024, followed by four additional pieces of hardware last year in Slovakia. He claimed gold in the 100m free and mixed 4x100m free relay, while also securing bronze in the 50m free and men’s medley relay events.

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RipRoomZoom
57 minutes ago

47.72 at 18… where does that stand in the all-time 18&U rankings?

Popovici’s the only one I can think of off the top of my head. Chalmers went 47.58 righttt after he turned 19

Dee
Reply to  RipRoomZoom
51 minutes ago

Depends on if you are going by age or age on 31st december?

Popovici, Minakov, Chalmers (he had just turned 18, not 19) and Pan all swam faster. Mills swam the exact same time at British champs, but he’s a few months older and will be 19 in September (swam 47.74 aged 17 last summer).

Last edited 49 minutes ago by Dee
Admin
Reply to  RipRoomZoom
48 minutes ago

Pan 47.43.
Hwang 47.56
Chalmers 47.58

Will flush out the full list and add it to the above.

Dee
1 hour ago

Cesar Castro Valle was a prodigious distance freestyle talent (World junior medals over 800 & 1500 11 years ago, when he was just 16). Persistent shoulder injuries led to surgery and a shift to shorter distances, and there were many other bumps along the way, but it is so great to see him finding success after much adaption and dedication.

Éxito es hijo de la perseverancia!

Congrats to both Luka and Cesar.

Very strong Spanish relay – What is happening with Luis Dominguez in the US?

Last edited 1 hour ago by Dee
Fanatical Freestyler
Reply to  Dee
47 minutes ago

Wow that’s awfully young to need shoulder surgery, hope he stays healthy

About Retta Race

Former Masters swimmer and coach Loretta (Retta) thrives on a non-stop but productive schedule. Nowadays, that includes having earned her MBA while working full-time in IT while owning French 75 Boutique while also providing swimming insight for BBC.

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