NSW Day 1 Prelims: McEvoy Fires Off 48.1 100 Free For World’s Top Time

2017 NSW STATE OPEN CHAMPIONSHIPS

  • Friday, March 3rd – Sunday, March 6th
  • Sydney Olympic Park Aquatic Center (SOPAC)
  • Prelims at 9am local (5pm Eastern night before)/Finals at 6pm local Thurs/Fri (2am Eastern), 5:30pm local Sat (1:30am Eastern)
  • Meet Central
  • Entry Lists
  • Results – Meet Mobile: 2017 NSW State Open Championships

Just one session of the 2017 NSW State Open Championships in Sydney has concluded and the world rankings have already been rattled. The fastest 100m freestyler ever in a textile suit, Cameron McEvoy, made his presence known early in this pre-National Championships tune-up event, taking the 100 free event top seed in convincing fashion. 48.13 is what the 22-year-old athlete known as ‘The Professor’ for his physics-oriented studies registered in prelims, claiming the pole position by over a second. The next closest was veteran James Roberts, who notched 49.24.

For McEvoy, his morning outing already outdid what American rival Nathan Adrian produced in his post-Rio debut at the Arena Pro Swim Series in Indianapolis, which is running simultaneously. Adrian nabbed the gold in Indy in a mark of 48.66. McEvoy and Adrian are now positioned as the world’s top 2 swimmers in the event his season, with McEvoy’s final yet to go.

2016-2017 LCM Men 100 FREE

2Mehdy
METELLA
FRA47.6507/26
3Nathan
ADRIAN
USA47.8707/28
4Duncan
SCOTT
GBR47.9004/20
5Cameron
McEVOY
AUS47.9104/12
View Top 26»

The reigning Olympic gold medalist in the event, 18-year-old Kyle Chalmers wound up not swimming the event, as was the case with Korean national champion Park Tae Hwan. We are checking into the no-show circumstances and will report once known.

A heroic effort characterized the effort by 24-year-old Cate Campbell, the current 100m freestyle world record holder who has battled back from a disappointing Rio performance individually and post-Olympics injury recovery. Her prelim effort of 53.58 checks in as 3rd fastest in the world and is just .3 of a second off of her 53.24 time from Rio that rendered her as a 6th place finisher. That should give Campbell a confidence boost heading into tonight’s final, one that will include Swedish speedster Michelle Coleman and Olympic bronze medalist in the 200m freestyle, Emma McKeon. Both Coleman and McKeon each notched 54.07 to tie for the 2nd seed, with Cate’s sister and 2015 double world champion Bronte Campbell just behind in 54.20.

Additional Notable Prelims Winners:

  • St. Peters Western’s David McKeon just edged out 2016 Olympic gold medalist Mack Horton in the 400m freestyle, nabbing the top seed in 3:50.79 to Horton’s 3:51.90.
  • Emma McKeon and Emily Seebohm tied at 26.82 to take the top seed in the women’s 50m butterfly. Seebohm would also go on to take the 2nd seed in the 200m backstroke in 2:13.18 behind Melbourne Vicentre’s Sian Whittaker who led the morning’s field in 2:11.93.
  • 21-year-old Taylor McKeown, who finaled in the women’s 200m breaststroke in Rio, earned the top seed in the 100m breaststroke in 1:07.82. Of note, Russia’s Yulia Efimova finished in 4th place after the morning, having clocked a time of 1:08.54.

In This Story

12
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

12 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
SWIMMANIC
7 years ago

Bought tickets for 2 Pax to Budapest World Champs for Men 100free heats – final & Men 4×100 med relay heats – final. Front row seats, close to finishing line (all sold out). Cannot go due to personal issues. if anyone wants them, let me know http://www.ebay.com/itm/-/262894433414?

SPF
7 years ago

The finals tonight at the NSW State championships, Cate Campbell does it again in the finals 53.15. Not too shabby for a first event of the year. Bronte came third after a much better start in the finals, behind Coleman, and ahead of McKeon. Australian order restored, C1, C2 and McKeon. Happiness for those 3 girls, especially Cate and Bronte, who came in with a cloud of “part time” training and injuries. Let alone the saga of Cate’s meltdown. Big kudos to Bronte who has had a torrid time with injuries of late, none more so than with the current shoulder injury (conceding she would need spades of patience to deal with the injury). Its nice to see she had… Read more »

Person
7 years ago

That’s a very fast time… I think out of all the 100 freestylers in the world right now McEvoy has the best chance to break 47 out of them just because he has the perfect mix of speed and endurance. 21.4 in the 50, 1:45.4 in the 200. Who else can do that? I think he’ll be much better from now on since he’s gone in as a favorite to a big meet, he should learn to preform under pressure.

Dee
Reply to  Person
7 years ago

While I get the reasoning – If 50/200 times were a faultless indicator of 100s, Sjöström would be streaking Care Campbell day in, day out. Stroke rate/economy is far more important. Cate Campbell’s sprint stroke/kick is mind-blowingly ecinomical when you watch under-water footage. Sjöströms 50 & 100 strokes don’t look like the same swimmer – Her sprint is not conducive to 2 laps.

Chalmers looks to have an ideal economy & dps.

Cmon
7 years ago

The more he dominates non-olympic meets the more everyone scratches there head about Rio. Although I guess that’s half of the Australian team.

E Gamble
7 years ago

He goes really fast when Kyle Chalmers is absent. I’m just saying.

Definitely Not Sun Yang
Reply to  E Gamble
7 years ago

He set the textile world record next to Chalmers. Just saying.

E Gamble
Reply to  Definitely Not Sun Yang
7 years ago

That was before Kyle Chalmers won gold in Rio. Not anymore. I’m just saying.

LLSB
Reply to  E Gamble
7 years ago

They haven’t even raced since Rio hahahaha

Team Rwanda
Reply to  E Gamble
7 years ago

At what other meet after Rio did he go slow ? Just asking

channel
Reply to  E Gamble
7 years ago

Chalmers was there at nationals last year when he went 47.0

E Gamble
Reply to  channel
7 years ago

Yes….he was there at nationals. McEvoy got the 47.0 and Chalmers got the gold in Rio. You have to be able to perform when it counts the most. And that’s every 4 years at the Olympics. And Kyle Chalmers stepped up when it counted the most and took it from McEvoy.

About Retta Race

Retta Race

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

Read More »