Which Olympic Medalists Are “In” and Which Are “Out” for the 2024 SC World Championships?

2024 World Swimming Championships (25m)

  • December 10-December 15, 2024
  • Duna Arena, Budapest, Hungary
  • Short Course Meters (25 meters)
  • Official Meet Site

In spite of a $2.1 million prize pool available at the 2024 Short Course World Swimming Championships in Budapest starting later this month, most of the Olympic medalists from the Paris 2024 Olympic Games will not be participating.

In fact, only 10/42 (23.8%) of individual Olympic medals in men’s events and only 20/42 (47.6%) of individual Olympic medals in women’s events will be represented at the Short Course World Championships, with at least one more committed high-profile swimmer rumored to be on the ropes.

When original rosters and winter plans were announced, the numbers looked much better, but the defection of a couple of high profile swimmers like Leon Marchand, Torri Huske, and Kaylee McKeown have whacked the anticipated starpower of the meet.

Among other medalists, some, like Tatjana Schoenmaker Smith, have retired. Others, like home-nation star Kristof Milak, need time to train. The same goes for Nicolo Martinenghi of Italy.

Some, like Katie Ledecky, just don’t race Short Course Worlds (she never has).

For whatever the reason, the charts below show who is in, and who is out, as of today, from the Budapest Short Course world Championships.

That still leaves some good matchups – like Summer McIntosh versus Kate Douglass in the 200 IM or Lukas Maertens versus Elijah Winnington in the 400 free – but will also leave some wide open events – like the men’s 100 free, 200 IM, 100 breast, and the men’s distance events, which will have no Olympic medalists participating.

That leaves opportunities – especially for swimmers who excel in short course versus long course – to win big medals and big money.

That includes swimmers like Canadian Ilya Kharun, who has been electric early in the NCAA season, and Regan Smith, who broke World Records in the 100 and 200 backstrokes in short course meters during the World Cup Series.

Below is a table of who is in and who is out among Paris 2024 Olympic medalists.

H/T to SwimSwam reader Caeleb GOAT, who found this format on Weibo.

Men’s In/Out

Green = in, Red = out

For colorblind folks:

Women’s In/Out

Green = in, Red = out

For colorblind folks:

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ALEXANDER POP-OFF
2 hours ago

Will Gretchen set 4 more world records? Looking forward.

Sherry Smit
3 hours ago

When did Huske decide to not go? I could swear I saw her on the original roster…

Emily Se-Bom Lee
Reply to  Sherry Smit
2 hours ago
Sherry Smit
Reply to  Emily Se-Bom Lee
1 hour ago

Gotcha, thank you!

Sportinindc
3 hours ago

I am volunteering for six days at the Championships. Excited to experience the energy.

Fraser Thorpe
3 hours ago

Once again, swimming being carried by women

bne
4 hours ago

Wow, so 2 oly champs for both gender

Revsticky
5 hours ago

Didn’t someone say Regan is out also?

Emily Se-Bom Lee
Reply to  Revsticky
4 hours ago

that was a joke

BadShoulder
5 hours ago

Thanks for collating this information, but could you please use a different color scheme? I’m red-green colorblind and it’s almost impossible for me to differentiate between the red and green cells in the tables.

Cruiserchuck
Reply to  BadShoulder
5 hours ago

I have the same issue. You are discriminating against us color blind folks.

BadShoulder
Reply to  Braden Keith
4 hours ago

That’s quite helpful, thanks!

Swimpop
Reply to  Braden Keith
3 hours ago

Much, thank you, saw the first graphic and thought everybody was still in, which I knew wasn’t the case.

Swim Fan
Reply to  Braden Keith
1 hour ago

Thank you. I could not read the original.

Diehard
5 hours ago

Who have retired? Probably some of them I imagine

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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