Blueseventy Swim of the Week #2: Prenot Explodes In 200 Breast

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With the explosion of fast swimming at the U.S. Olympic Trials dominating coverage last week, we’re rolling last week’s Blueseventy Swim of the Week into this week’s in a U.S. Olympic Trials Double Feature. Yesterday, we looked at the best swim of the first four days of Trials, and today, we check in with the top swim of the meet’s second four days.

“Prenot? More like Pre-Yes!”

Consider that one sportswriter’s suggestion for a terrible pun for someone to make during live coverage of the Rio Olympics, where Josh Prenot will enter as one of the fastest-rising swimmers in the world.

Olympic Trials was an all-out explosion for Prenot, who shockingly came closer than any other American to a world record despite entering the meet more than a second and a half away.

Prenot uncorked a blistering 2:07.17 in finals of the 200 breast, just .16 off a world record that suddenly seems to have as many suitors as Odysseus’s wife Penelope in Homer’s classic epic.

The craziest part? Prior to Olympic Trials, Prenot hadn’t been within a half-second of that record. One year ago, he had barely been under 2:09.

Here’s a quick look at Prenot’s progression of lifetime-bests leading up to that 200 breast final:

Date Meet Time
August 2014 2014 Summer Nationals 2:10.43
May 2015 Charlotte Pro Swim Series 2:09.49
July 2015 World University Games 2:08.90
April 2016 Canadian Olympic Trials 2:08.58
June 2016 U.S. Olympic Trials – Semifinals 2:08.41
June 2016 U.S. Olympic Trials – Finals 2:07.17

That’s an absurd drop of 1.4 seconds in all at Olympic Trials for Prenot, who now leads the world by half a second and should be in prime gold medal contention if he can repeat or better his time in Rio.

2015-2016 LCM Men 200 BREAST

JoshUSA
PRENOT
06/30
2.07.17
2Ippei
WATANABE
JPN2.07.22*OR08/09
3Dmitriy
BALANDIN
KAZ2.07.4608/10
4Marco
KOCH
GER2.07.6901/30
5Anton
CHUPKOV
RUS2.07.7008/10
View Top 24»

And if he does win the event, this sportswriter stands by his terrible “Pre-Yes” suggestion for NBC’s live TV commentary. Someone pass it along to Rowdy Gaines.

 

Because choosing just one race is so difficult, here are a few honorable mentions from the last four days of Trials:

  • Women’s 100 Free: With a 53.28, Abbey Weitzeil is closing in the first sub-53 second swim in American history. And while the Australians are still the front-runners, things are looking good for the American 4×100 free relay. 6 Americans are now in the top 20 in the world ranks this season. Australia has 5, but no other country has more than 2 inside the top 20.
  • Men’s 50 Free: Props to Anthony Ervin, who makes his 3rd Olympic trip and continues to befuddle Father Time. And equal respect to Nathan Adrian, who will contend for Olympic medals in both sprint free races after missing the Olympic team in this event last time around. Plus, who doesn’t love a race that comes down to .01 seconds between two longtime training partners?
  • Men’s 200 Back: A full-second drop for Ryan Murphy is no joke. He and teammate Jacob Pebley sit #2 and #4 in the world this year and toppled 2012 Olympic champ Tyler Clary in a hard-fought battle.
  • Men’s 200 IM: The victory lap for Michael Phelps and Ryan Lochte, who continue their stranglehold on this event. The two have gone 1-2 in the 200 IM at the past 4 Olympic Trials, and could very well end their careers with a gold-silver sweep in Rio.

And one quick honorable mention from the other side of the world:

  • Cate Campbell‘s 100 Free: The world record no one saw coming, even Cate Campbell. We focused our two-part Swim of the Week on the U.S. Trials, but the Australian Campbell’s genuine surprise at her world record is just too good – and so is her swim.

About blueseventy

Aptly named to suggest 70% of the earth is covered in water, blueseventy is the world leader in the pool, triathlon and open water wetsuits and swimskins. Since 1993, we design, test, refine and craft products using superior materials and revolutionary details that equate to comfort, freedom from restriction and ultimately a competitive advantage in the water. blueseventy products have instilled confidence in beginners as well as carried world-class athletes to countless Olympic and World victories.

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Hi josh :)
8 years ago

Josh Prenot is super hot………that’s all I wanted to say

Swammer
Reply to  Hi josh :)
8 years ago

I was thinking the same thing! He’s gorgeous!

Joshy :)
Reply to  Swammer
8 years ago

I know I’m literally obsessed with him i love him

M Palota
8 years ago

I’m not saying that Josh Prenot’s 200 breast wasn’t an enormously impressive swim but Cate Campbell’s 52.06 is off the charts.

I suppose one could argue that Prenot’s accomplishment was achieved in more pressure packed environment but there’s no denying that 52.06 is absurdly, outlandishly fast.

Coach Mike 1952
8 years ago

Where is the world record holder? Other than the video posted online on SwimSwam last week, has anyone heard or seen much of him to date?

bobo gigi
Reply to  Coach Mike 1952
8 years ago

Yamaguchi
2011. 2.11.50
2012. 2.07.01 World record
2013. 2.09.31
2014. 2.10.33
2015. 2.10.29
2016. 2.13.11 Didn’t qualify for semifinals at last Japanese olympic trials.

fatsmcgee
Reply to  bobo gigi
8 years ago

Poor guy, wonder what happened to him

Track
Reply to  fatsmcgee
8 years ago

He was still very young when he set the record, probably had to focus on school and his training may have been messed up.

Penguin
Reply to  fatsmcgee
8 years ago

Lost motivation.
He got fast because he had faster people to look up to.
Problem with that is… once you break a world record, who do you look up to? Whose stroke do you study when yours is better? Whose race plan do you study when yours is the best? Whose pull downs do you study when yours got you to a 2:07.0 and theirs produced a 2:07.5?

bobo gigi
Reply to  Coach Mike 1952
8 years ago

I don’t know if it will be deleted but here’s an article in 2013 from another swimming website about Yamaguchi’s struggles.
By the way I’ve seen that some people who comment on swimswam also comment there. Happy to see that the famous Aswimfan, champion of Australian swimming, is still alive. I wonder why he has quit swimswam 2 or 3 years ago.
For my part I remain faithful to swimswam. 🙂

http://www.swimvortex.com/yamaguchi-struggling-with-his-wr-status/

Rajon
8 years ago

That race produced 3 top 5 times in the World. Licon is tied for 5 at 208.14.

Ice age swimmer
8 years ago

I think I would have put CC’s swim at the top of the list. Talk about not shaved and tapered.

carlo
8 years ago

Koch gets the gold and breaks the WR.
The silver is gonna be between Daniel gyurta, Kevin cordes, yasuhiro Koseki, Josh prenot and Dmitry balandin.

Penguin
Reply to  carlo
8 years ago

and all of them are capable of breaking the world record.
Koch, cordes can be 2:05

Track
8 years ago

Now hears the real question though, Prenot was probably on full taper, as anyone not named Phelps or Ledecky can’t get away with that at trials. When Koch went on his 2:07 spree early this year, was he fully rested and tapered. Shaved yes, rested probably, but I doubt he was fully tapered. Koch is still the favorite for Rio in my opinion

Irish Ringer
Reply to  Track
8 years ago

Koch is a solid bronze behind Prenot and Cordes.

Billabong
Reply to  Irish Ringer
8 years ago

Why do I think Cordes looks a little shakey? It’s only because Prenot blitzed him so hard in the last 15m…..he made him look vulnerable to similar attacks from others. If he gets the pacing right in Rio, he may well get the Silver, but holding off Koch will be very difficult for both of them.

FluidG
Reply to  Track
8 years ago

Cordes was not even close to fully rested. 28.8 in eleven strokes going out. If he can keep his composure on the last 50, no one will catch him.

swammer
8 years ago

2004, 2008, 2012, 2016. Lochte and Phelps have gone 1-2 in the past 4 trials, not just 3.

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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