Kate Douglass Drops Stunning 2:12.72 To Smash World Record In Women’s 200 Breast

2024 WORLD AQUATICS SWIMMING WORLD CUP – SINGAPORE

Kate Douglass unleashed a jaw-dropping performance on the opening night of the World Cup stop in Singapore, not only re-lowering the world record in the women’s 200 breaststroke that she set one week ago, but absolutely annihilating it.

Douglass rocketed to a time of 2:12.72, slashing 1.44 seconds off her previous record of 2:14.16. That performance from Douglass last week took down Rebecca Soni‘s super-suited record of 2:14.57 set in 2009, and now Douglass sits nearly two seconds clear of that mark.

Quicker than her previous record on all four 50s, the biggest difference-maker for Douglass was the last 50, closing nearly six-tenths quicker in 34.39 relative to 34.96 in Incheon.

She was also nearly seven-tenths quicker over the first 100 meters, turning in 1:04.07. That time notably would’ve placed 2nd in the 100 breast at the Incheon leg of the World Cup, though Douglass hasn’t been racing the event this series.

Split Comparison

Soni — 2009 Duel In The Pool Douglass — 2024 Incheon World Cup Douglass — 2024 Singapore World Cup
50 31.05 30.68 30.47
100 1:05.18 (34.13) 1:04.75 (34.07) 1:04.07 (33.60)
150 1:40.00 (34.82) 1:39.20 (34.45) 1:38.33 (34.26)
200 2:14.57 (34.57) 2:14.16 (34.96) 2:12.72 (34.39)

Now the fastest swimmer in history by 1.85 seconds, only two other swimmers have joined Douglass in the sub-2:15 club, making the fact that Douglass is sub-2:13 all the more incredible.

All-Time Performers, Women’s 200 Breaststroke (SCM)

  1. Kate Douglass (USA), 2:12.72 – 2024
  2. Rebecca Soni (USA), 2:14.57 – 2009
  3. Evgeniia Chikunova (RUS), 2:14.70 – 2022
  4. Rikke Moeller Pedersen (DEN), 2:15.21 – 2013
  5. Leisel Jones (AUS), 2:15.42 – 2009

Douglass’ swim also landed her the Triple Crown bonus for the World Cup series in the 200 breast, having won the opening leg in Shanghai (2:15.96) and then breaking the world record in Incheon (2:14.16) before blowing everyone away once again in Singapore.

Douglass won the race on Thursday by a whopping six seconds, with Belarusian Alina Zmushka (competing as an individual neutral athlete) finishing as the runner-up in 2:18.79.

RACE VIDEO

The 22-year-old followed up by completing the Triple Crown in the women’s 100 IM less than 30 minutes later, resetting her lifetime best in 56.57 to win the event for the third straight time.

Douglass is also the reigning Olympic champion in the 200 breast, the NCAA, U.S. Open and American Record holder in the short course yards version of the event, and will be defending her Short Course world title in December after winning gold two years ago in Melbourne.

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barelyaswammer
54 minutes ago

This is what peak performance looks like

Swimmerparent
1 hour ago

Amazing swim. Can’t believe a story about a dual meet forfeiture has over four times more comments than this out of world performance.

Fraser Thorpe
1 hour ago

What in the Mary T?!!

Ginny
1 hour ago

Awesomeness

Weinstein-Madden-Ledecky-Gemmell
2 hours ago

Imagine the University of Virginia women’s swimming practices. Can the likes Alex Walsh and Anna Keating even draft behind Kate Douglass in the 200 BR?

Connor
3 hours ago

2:12 SCM 200 brst. American record holder 50 LCM freestyle…………????

Robbos
Reply to  Connor
2 hours ago

Just mind boggling!!!! The diversity this lady has.

Oleg
3 hours ago

This girl is on fire

Goingforaswim
4 hours ago

What a swim!!!
Wonder if we will hear from Brett Hawke? 🤔

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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