Kaylee McKeown Announces She Will Drop 200 IM From International Competitions Moving Forward

Five-time Olympic champion Kaylee McKeown has announced that she will be forgoing individual medley races at all international competitions moving forward. She told 7News Sunshine Coast, “Training for medley is something I’ll still do and keep up in maybe domestic racing, just not internationally.”

The 23-year-old, best known for her historic double-double sweep of both backstroke events at the Tokyo 2020 and Paris 2024 Olympic Games, has long shown promise in the individual medley events since her junior years.

She entered the Tokyo Olympics as a slight favorite for gold in the 200 IM but ultimately dropped the event. Her season-best time that year would have been enough to win gold had she competed. After Tokyo, McKeown’s longtime coach at the University of the Sunshine Coast (USC), Chris Mooney, took a new job, prompting her to seek a new coaching environment rather than follow him. She subsequently began training under Michael Bohl at Griffith, who strongly encouraged her to pursue the IM at the international level.

While McKeown set an Australian record of 4:28.22 in the 400 IM at the Australian Open in April 2024—earning her the #3 all-time performer status—she only chose to compete in the 200 IM at the 2022 and 2023 World Championships, in addition to the 2024 Paris Games. She won silver in 2022 but was disqualified in 2023 due to a controversial crossover turn call. In Paris, she initially touched 4th in 2:08.08, but was bumped onto the podium after Team USA’s Alex Walsh—the 2022 world champion and original third-place finisher—was disqualified for a crossover turn violation.

At the Australian Trials a month prior, McKeown threw down a 2:06.63—just 0.07 off the eventual winning time of 2:06.56 by Canadian Summer McIntosh in Paris.

After Paris, McKeown eased off her training, competing lightly at the Short Course Nationals and the first leg of the World Cup in October before withdrawing. She then took four months completely off from training and has only been back in the pool for a few short months.

When she returned, McKeown relocated back to USC, where Michael Sage is now at the helm.

“It’s been a long three years away, but I couldn’t be more thankful to be back in this environment with people I know. The environment here just feels more like me, and I’m fitting in quite nicely,” she said.

“I didn’t touch a pool or a gym (during that break), so it’s been quite refreshing but also really hard getting back into it. I just felt like I needed a bit of a change.”

Moving forward, McKeown emphasized that she wants to prioritize happiness in the later stages of her career. She also expressed a desire to compete at the World Championships in Singapore this July, despite taking an extended break. With the Australian World Trials scheduled for next month, she remains uncertain about which events—and how many—she will swim.

“Tokyo was, I like to say, for my dad. Paris, I just kind of wanted to prove a point—that I wasn’t a one-hit wonder. And I’d like to think that LA is just going to be for me. I’ve worked so hard over the past seven years to do what I’ve done, and I really want to enjoy the end of my career,” McKeown said.

“I would love to go to Worlds. I’m yet to figure out what events I’m going to swim. I’m not as fit as I’d like to be and not as confident as I’d like to be, but in saying that, I like a challenge.”

She currently holds the world records in the 50 and 200 backstroke events and leads the world rankings in those two distances. In the 100 back, she’s situated in 2nd, just two tenths of a second behind American world record holder and her closest competitor across all three distances, Regan Smith.

The 50 back was recently added to the Olympic program by the IOC, and with an additional backstroke event potentially on her schedule for the Los Angeles Games in 2028, it could have played a key role—along with her desire to enjoy the backend of her career by swimming the events she wants—in her decision to drop the IM races.

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The unoriginal Tim
2 hours ago

This is why they shouldn’t have added stroke 50s.

The Albatross
3 hours ago

It is an obvious choice for since the 50m backstroke became an olympic event.

Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
3 hours ago

After finishing third in the W 100 IM to Katie Douglass and Yu Yiting on the first day of the 2024 World Aquatics Swimming World Cup – Shanghai, Kaylee McKeown booked the first flight back to Australia.

Cassandra
4 hours ago

kinda annoying that 3 of the 4 players in the most thrilling race in paris are likely to be skipping the 200 im this year…

at least kaylee still plans to race it domestically — i still think she and alex walsh have the highest ceiling (aka wr potential) in the race given their versatility

if youre torri huske or regan smith does this make you more seriously target the 200 im this year? it seems poised to be a bit sleepier this year w the main podium contenders as alex, yiting, wood, harvey — none of whom no shade appear to be immovable forces. i think it makes more sense in regans program than torris but it… Read more »

I miss the ISL (Go dawgs)
Reply to  Cassandra
3 hours ago

How is Alex not a runaway favorite without Summer KD or McKeown? Her PB is much faster than Yiting, Wood, Harvey, etc.

Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
Reply to  I miss the ISL (Go dawgs)
3 hours ago

Has Summer McIntosh decided to swim the W 400 FR (heats/final) or the W 200 IM (heats/semis) on Day 1 of the World Aquatics Championships?

Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
Reply to  Cassandra
3 hours ago

A top two finish in the W 100 BR at the 2025 USA Swimming National Championships is hardly a guarantee for Kate Douglass. Until the psych sheets come out, I will assume that Kate Douglass will keep the W 200 IM option open.

Kate Douglass
2025 USA Swimming National Championships
Day 1: W 100 FR
Day 2: W 200 BR, W 50 FL (optional)
Day 3: W 100 FL (optional), W 50 BR (optional)
Day 4: W 100 BR
Day 5: W 200 IM

Admin
4 hours ago

End of an era😢 but dang, how crazy was it that we got a Walsh-Douglass-McKeown-McIntosh showdown, in the Olympic final no less

Eddie
Reply to  Coleman Hodges
3 hours ago

easily the craziest event of the entire meet – ofc it ended in a shocking way with the DQ, but thrilling race nonetheless

LelloT89
Reply to  Eddie
3 hours ago

Best race of the olympics for me, only wish McKeown was at her best. She admitted she was tired and was never close to get Gold (which she could of she was rested). I’m a huge Summer fan, so I was more than happy with the result, but still I’d loved a rematch with all girls at their best

Pea Brain
Reply to  LelloT89
3 hours ago

You could make the same excuses for anyone else? Maybe Kate was tired from her heavy schedule too 🤷‍♂️ she didn’t fumble and finish in 4th

LelloT89
Reply to  Pea Brain
1 hour ago

I’m not making excuses for anyone, just reporting what she said, as I said I’m a Summer supporter, so I have no interest in defending McKeown. And probably Summer herself was the one who swam the most before that race

Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
Reply to  Coleman Hodges
3 hours ago

Alex Walsh needs to work on her backstroke to breaststroke turn.

Go Bucky
Reply to  Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
2 hours ago

On I wonder if she’s though of that… good call. You should coach! /s/

Last edited 2 hours ago by Go Bucky
Samuel Huntington
5 hours ago

Makes sense. 50, 100, 200 back + medley relay is a full schedule.

SwimStats
Reply to  Samuel Huntington
5 hours ago

Especially with possibly an increased focus on the 50 for LA.

Patra
6 hours ago

Summer should seriously consider choosing 200 IM over 400 free if she wants to maximize her gold medal chances. But it looks like she loves 400 free more and always chose it over 200 IM in the past.

Pea Brain
Reply to  Patra
4 hours ago

Has she said she likes 4 free more? To me it seems like it’s just always been one of her best and she didn’t have much of a choice but I think she proved it a bit to herself this summer that she can come out on top in the 2 IM too

I miss the ISL (go dawgs)
6 hours ago

Today is like Christmas for Alex Walsh