Maria Fernanda Costa Becomes First Brazilian Olympic Finalist in Women’s 400 Free Since 1948

2024 PARIS SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES

Maria Fernanda Costa may have missed her own national record in Paris on Saturday night, but the 21-year-old still made history by becoming the first Brazilian woman in 76 years to make the Olympic final in the 400-meter freestyle.

Costa placed 7th in 4:03.53 after qualifying 7th this morning in 4:03.47. She owns the Brazilian record in the 400 free at 4:02.86 from February’s World Championships, where she placed 4th.

The last Brazilian woman to final in the 400 free was Piedade Coutinho, who placed 6th (5:29.4) at the 1948 Olympics in London.

Costa, who is making her Olympic debut in Paris, will have a quick turnaround with her only other individual event — the women’s 200 free — scheduled for Sunday with the final on Monday.

In other South American action from Saturday, 25-year-old Guilherme Costa placed 5th in the men’s 400 free (3:42.76), just .26 seconds off the podium. He was visibly distraught after the race despite breaking Larsen Jensen‘s Americas record of 3:42.78 set at the Beijing 2008 Olympics. Costa also lowered his own South American record of 3:43.31 from the 2022 World Championships. Tonight he was beat by Germany’s Lukas Maertens (3:41.78), Elijah Winnington (3:42.21), South Korea’s Kim Woomin (3:42.50), and Australia’s Sam Short (3:42.64).

The Brazil women’s 4×100 free relay placed 12th (3:40.60) while the men placed 10th (3:14.22) in prelims this morning.

Ana Carolina Vieira led off the Brazilian women’s relay in 54.81, well off her personal-best 53.22. Rising Michigan sophomore Stephanie Balduccini had the fastest swinging split on the squad at 53.83, faster than her best flat-start time of 54.05 from February’s World Championships.

Rising Tennessee junior Gui Caribe led off the Brazilian men’s relay in 48.57, not far off his personal-best 47.82 from 2022. Marcelo Chierighini boasted the quickest split at 48.21.

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Diehard
5 hours ago

Are the Costas brother and sister?

Martins
Reply to  Diehard
4 hours ago

No, just a coincidence. Costa is a very common lastname in Brazil.
They are both from Rio de Janeiro, but it is also a coincidence.

Last edited 4 hours ago by Martins

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 …

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