Gretchen Walsh Shatters 100 IM World Record In 55.98, First Swimmer Sub-56

Florida vs. Virginia

  • October 18, 2024
  • Charlottesville, Virginia
  • 25 Meters (SCM)
  • Results on Meet Mobile: “Virginia vs Florida”
  • Full Meet Recap

After setting three American Records during the first hour of racing during Virginia’s short course meter dual meet with Florida, Gretchen Walsh was far from done.

Competing in a 100 IM time trial, Walsh rocketed to a time of 55.98, demolishing the world record of 56.51 set by Katinka Hosszu back in 2017.

Walsh is the first swimmer in history under 56 seconds, and breaks the hours-old American Record of 56.99 set by Kate Douglass earlier on Friday at the Shanghai stop of the World Cup.

It’s obvious Walsh is a better fly/back sprinter than Hosszu and Douglass when comparing their splits, as Walsh was nine-tenths clear of Hosszu at the 50 with a scintillating opening of 25.07, while she was nearly two seconds head of Douglass.

Douglass came back faster than anyone, leaning on her breaststroke prowess, but the gap created by Walsh on the opening 50 was enough to put her more than half a second clear of the world record and over a second clear of the American Record.

Split Comparison

Hosszu, Old WR Douglass, Old AR Walsh, New WR
25.97 26.96 25.07
56.51 (30.54) 56.99 (30.03) 55.98 (30.91)

All-Time Performers, Women’s 100 IM (SCM)

  1. Gretchen Walsh, USA – 55.98
  2. Katinka Hosszu, Hungary – 56.51
  3. Kate Douglass, USA – 56.99
  4. Sarah Sjostrom, Sweden – 57.10
  5. Beryl Gastaldello, France – 57.30
  6. Charlotte Bonnet, France – 57.47
  7. (TIE) Alicia Coutts, Australia/Marrit Steenbergen, Netherlands – 57.53
  8. (TIE) Mariia Kameneva, Russia/Siobhan-Marie O’Connor, Great Britain/Anastasiya Shkurdai, Belarus – 57.59

RACE VIDEO

Earlier this month, Walsh recorded the fourth-fastest 100 IM of all-time in short course yards (52.63), with Douglass owning the fastest time ever at 51.97.

If Walsh’s swim is ratified and recognized by World Aquatics, it will qualify her to swim the 100 IM at the Short Course World Championships, which she’s scheduled to contest in December.

Douglass is also expected to race the 100 IM after registering an official time on Friday in Shanghai.

When the U.S. announced its roster for the championships last week, there were no entrants in the 100 IM as no one had posted a qualifying time. Assuming it’s Walsh and Douglass representing the U.S. in the event in Budapest, the Americans will more than likely be looking at a 1-2 finish.

Earlier in the dual meet with Florida, Walsh set American Records in the 50 free (23.10), 50 back (25.37) and 100 back (54.89), ranking t-4th, 3rd and t-2nd all-time.

In a single afternoon, she did some serious damage on the SCM record books with more to come later this year in Budapest.

Event WR (Pre-UVA/FLORIDA) AR (Pre-UVA/FLORIDA) Walsh @ UVA/FLORIDA
50 free 22.93 (Kromowidjojo) 23.44 (Weitzeil) 23.10
50 back 25.25 (MacNeil) 25.54 (Curzan) 25.37
100 back 54.56 (McKeown) 55.04 (Smoliga) 54.89
100 IM 56.51 (Hosszu) 56.99 (Douglass) 55.98

According to USA Swimming’s database, Walsh has never raced SCM in an official meet until today.

Find the full live recap of the dual meet here.

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jeff
1 hour ago

When’s the last time any world record was broken at a meet this low level? I’m thinking maybe Ledecky’s 800 free at the woodlands senior invite in 2014, or is there something more recent?

Vaswammer
2 hours ago
Tomek
Reply to  Vaswammer
51 minutes ago

I hope you are right but mentioning the time on Instagram is not yet official ratification of the title.

Neature
3 hours ago

Love the SCY/SCM formats and think they’re generally the most exciting races for viewers – with that said would like to see the NCAA experiment with moving D1 NCAA Champs to LCM for the next 4 years.

Would be interesting to see if forcing all D1 programs, that are vying for top 25 finishes, to prioritize training LCM consistently could have a significant impact on Team USA’s performance in 2028.

Again, personally love SCY’s and think it’s a great training tool for LCM, but would be fun to see if shifting the ‘measuring stick’ at a collegiate level would have an impact on LCM development at a national level. Definitely no equitable way to make this happen, but… Read more »

ALEXANDER POP-OFF
3 hours ago

Folks! Guess what? That silver medal is going to get us some CRAZY swimming from GW. She is HUNGRY and abs I don’t feel comfortable doubting her in anything tbh.

Last edited 3 hours ago by ALEXANDER POP-OFF
theroboticrichardsimmons
4 hours ago

I swear, I could just Rowdy off in the distance, faintly complaining about her reaction time.

theroboticrichardsimmons
4 hours ago

Oh hey, she’s pretty fast.

CVilleDub
4 hours ago

Just wanna say GW is currently at a local brewery taking pics with kids. Absolute LEGEND

Spieker Pool Lap Swimmer
Reply to  CVilleDub
50 minutes ago

Um, what are kids doing at a brewery?

Yikes
Reply to  Spieker Pool Lap Swimmer
2 minutes ago

Getting wasted, probably.

Jk a lot of breweries are also like.. restaurants? Maybe this is just the Wisconsin in me, but my kids have been to many breweries. A lot of them have lawn games and family friendly activities. It’s basically a restaurant that brews its own beer

Cannonball
4 hours ago
phelps swims 200 breast rio
Reply to  Cannonball
3 hours ago

fantastic, thanks for the link

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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