10 Super-Suit World Records Remain After Kate Douglass Breaks Rebecca Soni’s 200 Breast Mark

During the first finals session of the Incheon stop on the Swimming World Cup, Kate Douglass torched the women’s 200-meter breaststroke world record, setting her first individual world record. It’s a significant achievement for Douglass and it’s an important moment in swimming history, as she wiped another super-suited world record off the books.

Now that Douglass has taken down Rebecca Soni’s mark of 2:14.57 from the 2009 Duel In The Pool, just ten super-suited world records remain–a mark of how far the sport has progressed since the super-suit ban when many worried we would never see another world record.

Short Course Meters Records

There are only two super-suited short course meters records left, one on the women’s side, and one on the men’s.

Sweden’s Therese Alshammar owns the remaining women’s mark, courtesy of the 24.38 she swam at the 2009 World Cup. In the years since, Ranomi Kromowidjojo has gotten the closest to the record, swimming three 24.4s, including a 24.44 at the 2021 SC World Championships.

Sarah Sjoström is the third-fastest performer of all-time and the fastest active swimmer with a lifetime best of 24.51, also from the 2021 SC Worlds. Douglass and Claire Curzan are the next fastest, boasting bests of 24.54 and 24.55. Douglass swam her best—and American record—last week in Shanghai and we could see her lower that mark once again in Incheon.

Paul Biedermann’s first entry in this exercise is his short-course meters 200 freestyle world record of 1:39.37 from 2009. Again, the second-fastest swimmer—Yannick Agnel with a 1:39.70—is no longer active, but Hwang Sunwoo scared this mark at the 2022 SC World Championships with a 1:39.72.

In 2008, France’s squad of Agnel, Fabien Gilot, Amaury Leveauxand Fred Bousquet clocked 1:20.77 in the men’s 4×50 freestyle relay while wearing super-suits. However, this swim was not ratified by World Aquatics (then FINA) as a world record. So, while it is a world-best time, the official world record is a 1:21.80 by the United States in 2018.

Long Course Meters Records

Overall, there are ten super-suited world records still standing. Eight of those are in the long-course pool, and seven of those are on the men’s side.

The women’s super-suited world record remaining is Liu Zige’s 2:01.81 200 butterfly, which is widely regarded as the toughest world record on the women’s books. At the Paris Olympics, Summer McIntosh crushed the fastest effort we’ve seen since; her 2:03.03 makes her the second-fastest performer all-time, sandwiched between Liu and Jessica Schipper’s super-suited swims. She’s still 1.22 seconds off Liu’s pace. Regan Smith sits fourth at 2:03.84, and Zhang Yufei fifth at 2:03.86

The super-suited records still standing on the women’s side are both butterfly. For the men, the dominating stroke is freestyle—seven of the eight men’s world records are freestyle events, with the lone exception being Aaron Piersol’s 200 backstroke.

Many would say that the 800 freestyle world record is the most difficult of these men’s world records to break, but Piersol’s 1:51.92 is giving swimmers plenty of trouble too. Four of the top five performances in event history are super-suited swims from Piersol and Ryosuke Irie in 2009. In 2011, Ryan Lochte swam the fastest performance in a textile suit (1:52.96).

Mitch Larkin was 1:53.17 in 2015, and the fastest performer in the last nine years is Evgeny Rylov, who is banned from World Aquatics meets. He can still swim in Russian Federation meets, but the fastest active swimmer we could currently see at the World Championships or Olympics is Ryan Murphy. Murphy is the seventh-fastest performer and owns the 13th-fastest swim with a 1:53.57 from 2018. Rylov is the only man to break 1:54 since 2020.

Now, onto the men’s freestyle events. We’ll work our way up from the 50 freestyle, where Cesar Cielo’s 20.91 reigns supreme. Caeleb Dressel owns the textile world record at 21.04, which the new 50 freestyle Olympic champion Cameron McEvoy scared at the 2023 World Championships with a 21.06.

Biedermann is back in the 200 freestyle with his 1:42.00 from the 2009 World Championships. In the same pool 13 years later, David Popovici put together the fastest swim we’ve seen since, blazing 1:42.97. He sits third on the all-time performers list, .01 seconds behind Michael Phelps.

It’s all Biedermann again in the 400 freestyle. At the 2023 World Championships, it looked like either Ahmed Hafnaoui or Sam Short would be the one to break this mark. Lukas Märtens came on strong in the Olympic year while Hafnaoui and Short dealt with injury and sickness. After a 3:40.33 from Martens at the German Nationals, it looked like the world record was on borrowed time but Biedermann’s mark remained as Martens claimed Olympic gold.

Hafnaoui and Short’s sensational 2023 World Championships extended to the distance events as well; in the 800 freestyle, the pair swam 7:37.00 and 7:37.76 for the third and fourth fastest efforts in history. But even after 7:37.00, Hafnaoui still sits 4.88 seconds behind Zhang Lin’s world record of 7:32.12, again from 2009 Worlds.

The final two super-suited world records are the men’s 4×100 freestyle and 4×200 freestyle relays.

Three of the top five performances in the 4×100 freestyle relay are super-suited, including the top two from the 2008 Olympics. At the Tokyo Olympics, Caeleb Dressel, Blake Pieroni, Bowe Becker, and Zach Apple swam 3:08.97 to come .73 seconds away from the world record, held by the United States. Currently, they are the only squad to break 3:09 in textile suits. The fastest textile swim from a non-U.S. team is France’s 3:09.93 from the 2012 Olympics and the only other non-U.S. squad under the 3:10 barrier is Russia in 2019 (3:09.97). Meanwhile, the U.S. has been under that mark five times.

The U.S. also holds the 4×200 freestyle relay world record with a 6:58.55 from the 2009 World Championships, improving on their time from the Beijing Olympics by .01 second. Great Britain’s team of Tom Dean, James Guy, Matt Richards, and Duncan Scott got very close to that mark at the Tokyo Olympics, swimming 6:58.58 for gold.

This quartet has been incredible for Great Britain; they own the #3, #4, and #6 performances in history. After Tokyo, they swam 6:59.08 to win at the 2023 World Championships, then clocked 6:59.43 in Paris to become the first team to defend Olympic gold with the same quartet of swimmers.

Great Britain is the only nation with active swimmers to have been under the 7:00 mark, and they’ve done so three times. The U.S. team of Luke Hobson, Carson Foster, Jake Mitchell, and Kieran Smith came close at 2023 Worlds, swimming 7:00.02.

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Swimmer
1 month ago

Sees a Biedermann wr:
Steve Rogers: “Big man in a suit of armour take that off what are you?”

Last edited 1 month ago by Swimmer
dirtswimmer
Reply to  Swimmer
1 month ago

2x world bronze medalist and European champion

thezwimmer
Reply to  Swimmer
1 month ago

Olympian, world champion, national hero.

saltie
Reply to  Swimmer
1 month ago

“If you’re nothing without the suit, you shouldn’t have it” -Tony Stark

Cielo with peds
Beidermann with a fcking rubber canoe
Phelps with good old fashioned hard work

I guess people take different routes to success, but hard work wins in the end

Swimmer
Reply to  saltie
1 month ago

Very true. No doubt he worked hard to break those wr just like any athlete who has broken a wr has. No hate towards Beidermann he still managed to medal without that suit even if the times weren’t the same. The opportunity was there to use that line and it fits the super suit wr well.

Alison England
Reply to  Swimmer
1 month ago

Exactly. The suits were legal then. he broke no rules.

Alison England
Reply to  saltie
1 month ago

Didn’t Phelps take ADHD meds?

Dirtswimmer
1 month ago

I think Hobson or maybe Marchand has the best chance at getting that 200 free scm record. Not sure if it will happen at worlds this year as idk if either will be at their best

PFA
Reply to  Dirtswimmer
1 month ago

Hwang Sun-Woo just went 1:45.0 and was 1:39.7 2 years ago. I think he also has a shot at the record.

Titus2024
Reply to  Dirtswimmer
1 month ago

Neither of these two even have a 200m free scm best time in top 25 all time currently so it’s hella bold to pencil them in for this specific world record.

saltie
Reply to  Titus2024
1 month ago

but they have the two fastest SCY 200 freestyles, and while that isn’t that exact same as SCM, its only like 7 feet shorter, so its not like dirtswimmer is making an outrageous assumption

PFA
1 month ago

gotta do a 1-5 star rating of the likelihood of each suited record falling soon at least for the SCM ones I feel those are more likely to fall soon compared to certain LCM records. Also I still feel France’s 1:20.77 should be the WR for the 200 free relay. I am aware it is the recognized LEN record but I don’t agree with it being just the WBT that record may stand for another several years.

PK Doesn't Like His Long Name
Reply to  PFA
1 month ago

This is how I would order likelihood of each record going next:
Women’s 50 fly (scm)
Men’s 400 free (lcm)
Men’s 800 free relay (lcm)
Men’s 200 free (scm)
Men’s 50 free (lcm)
Men’s 400 free relay (lcm)
Men’s 200 free (lcm)
Women’s 200 fly (lcm)
Men’s 200 back (lcm)
Men’s 800 free (lcm)

Kevin
Reply to  PK Doesn't Like His Long Name
1 month ago

50 fly has a good chance of being broken 2-4x this year. KD has a good chance at it during the world cups and GW might break it multiple times at SCW

PK Doesn't Like His Long Name
1 month ago

Still makes me giggle that Sjostrom’s LCM best is better than her SCM best.

Rachel Maddog
Reply to  PK Doesn't Like His Long Name
1 month ago

PK: good observation. I was noticing that as well, and wondering if a long course time should supplant a short course record if it were faster. (This rarely happens, but when it does, it makes us appreciate Sarah’s prowess a wee bit more!)

Joel
Reply to  Rachel Maddog
1 month ago

It’s been a taking point for years. That her SC time was slower. They said a tailwind helped her LC.

Sapiens Ursus
Reply to  PK Doesn't Like His Long Name
1 month ago

It’s faster than every SCM swim except the WR…

She’s been 24.6 3 times getting as close as .17 away (closer than Govorov has been to his best) so I don’t quite buy some peoples attemepts to dismiss that swim as wind aided somehow, Sjostrom is just that dang fast on top of the water

Swimmerj
1 month ago

Gretchen is coming for that 50 SCM fly

Weinstein-Madden-Ledecky-Gemmell
1 month ago

Paul Biedermann, SwimSwam’s favorite swimmer [ducks for cover].

Khase Calisz
Reply to  Weinstein-Madden-Ledecky-Gemmell
1 month ago

I want to hear him talk since he owned so many of these records. At least with subtitles if he can’t speak English. It can’t just be about the suit right? There must also be a mentality, strategy, and technique that go along with it

N Lindsay
Reply to  Khase Calisz
1 month ago

I think a very good swimming with a very short, very high peak that coincided with the suits.

Like he medalled at the next two worlds where he swam the 200 free so not a scrub

About Sophie Kaufman

Sophie Kaufman

Sophie grew up in Boston, Massachusetts, which means yes, she does root for the Bruins, but try not to hold that against her. At 9, she joined her local club team because her best friend convinced her it would be fun. Shoulder surgery ended her competitive swimming days long ago, …

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