LIVEBARN Race of the Week: USA, Australia Set Men’s 4×100 Medley Relay WR in Epic Tie

Never count out Kyle Chalmers.

The 24-year-old Aussie sprint ace erased a 1.3-second deficit on the final leg of the men’s 4×100 medley relay on Sunday at the 2022 Short Course World Championships, helping his Australian squad tie the United States for gold and set a new world record (3:18.98) along the way.

Chalmers’ 44.63 split on the freestyle anchor is the fastest in history, giving Australia its national-record 13th gold medal in the last race of the meet. His performance wasn’t the only comeback of the race as 22-year-old American Kieran Smith out-split Italy’s Alessandro Miressi by three-tenths over the final 25 meters to get his hand on the wall with Chalmers. For a detailed breakdown of this back-and-forth relay, click here.

This is your LIVEBARN Race of the Week because of the multiple comebacks that took place during the last length of the pool alone. Chalmers went from about half a body length behind at the final turn to ahead of the pack in the blink of an eye, but Smith’s surge at the end was almost as impressive. No one likes sharing, but in this case we’ll make an exception: Both the U.S. and Aussie quartets certainly deserved this crown.

Australia (3:18.98), U.S. (3:18.98), and Italy (3:19.06) were all under the Russian Federation’s previous world record of 3:19.16 that had stood untouched since 2009.

ABOUT LIVEBARN

LiveBarn is the global leader in live streaming of amateur and youth sporting events and is the official supplier of live and on-demand video streaming services for swimming pools utilized by USA Swimming member clubs. LiveBarn works directly with USA Swimming clubs to install their Live Streaming technology in pools across the country. LiveBarn is installed in over 1,200 venues broadcasting over 2,700 streams with additional partners added weekly. As a global company, they provide live streaming from US, Canada, Sweden and Israel, broadcasting swimming, ice hockey, baseball, basketball/volleyball and soccer. To learn more, please visit livebarn.com.

FOLLOW LIVEBARN

Instagram

Facebook

Twitter

LiveBarn is a SwimSwam partner.

In This Story

4
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

4 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Hank
1 year ago

Has this ever happened before in swimming at any WC or Olympic meet? I wonder what the odds are of it happening again?

Andy
1 year ago

How do the WR splits get used for future relays? Do they go alphabetically?

Miss M
Reply to  Andy
1 year ago

I vote for two simultaneous lines

torchbearer
1 year ago

I suspect there will never be a more dramatic end to a swim meet in world history!

About Riley Overend

Riley is an associate editor interested in the stories taking place outside of the pool just as much as the drama between the lane lines. A 2019 graduate of Boston College, he arrived at SwimSwam in April of 2022 after three years as a sports reporter and sports editor at newspapers …

Read More »