Gretchen Walsh Returns To Top Form With #2 Swim All-Time In 100 Fly, Shattering CR In 54.73

2025 World Championships

Gretchen Walsh put any questions about how she was feeling to bed on Monday night in Singapore, delivering a dominant performance in the women’s 100 butterfly en route to winning the first individual long course world title of her career.

Walsh, who was surprisingly removed from the U.S. women’s 4×100 free relay final as the team continues to deal with a stomach illness, bounced back in a big way 24 hours later, reminding everyone that she’s the best 100 butterflyer in the world and it’s not close.

The 22-year-old led from the jump, soaring to a time of 54.73 to mark the second-fastest swim in history and her third time under the 55-second barrier. She knocked eight-tenths of a second off the previous Championship Record of 55.53, set by Sarah Sjostrom in 2017, and beat runner-up Roos Vanotterdijk (55.84) by 1.11 seconds, the largest margin of victory in the event since Sjostrom in 2015.

Walsh became the first woman in history under the 55-second barrier earlier this year at the Fort Lauderdale Pro Swim in early May in a time of 54.60, and then followed up that swim by clocking 54.76 at the U.S. World Trials in early June.

Split Comparison

Walsh, 2025 Fort Lauderdale PSS Walsh, 2025 U.S. Trials Walsh, 2025 Worlds Sjostrom, Previous CR (2017)
25.32 25.19 25.16 25.67
54.60 (29.28) 54.76 (29.57) 54.73 (29.57) 55.53 (29.86)

All-Time Performances, Women’s 100 Butterfly (LCM)

  1. Gretchen Walsh (USA), 54.60 – 2025 Fort Lauderdale Pro Swim
  2. Gretchen Walsh (USA), 54.73 – 2025 World Championships
  3. Gretchen Walsh (USA), 54.76 – 2025 U.S. National Championships
  4. Gretchen Walsh (USA), 55.09 – 2025 Fort Lauderdale Pro Swim
  5. Gretchen Walsh (USA), 55.18 – 2024 U.S. Olympic Trials
  6. Gretchen Walsh (USA), 55.29 – 2025 U.S. National Championships
  7. Gretchen Walsh (USA), 55.31 – 2024 U.S. Olympic Trials
  8. Gretchen Walsh (USA), 55.38 – 2024 Olympic Games
  9. Sarah Sjostrom (SWE), 55.48 – 2016 Olympic Games
  10. Torri Huske (USA), 55.52 – 2024 U.S. Olympic Trials

Despite having a decorated resume that includes four Olympic medals and seven Short Course World Championship titles, this is Walsh’s first individual long course world title. At the 2023 Worlds in Fukuoka, she won gold as a member of the U.S. women’s 4×100 medley relay, and also won silver on the 4×100 free relay and bronze in the 50 fly. In the 100 fly, she finished 8th in a time of 57.58.

This is also Walsh’s first major individual long course title, period, as she was the silver medalist at last summer’s Olympics in the 100 fly behind American teammate Torri Huske, who was forced to withdraw from the event on Day 1 to focus on the relay as members of the U.S. team deal with illness.

Now that she appears to have rounded the corner from what was ailing her earlier, Walsh will tackle a loaded lineup over the next five days, with the women’s 50 free, 100 free and 50 fly on her individual schedule, with the likelihood we’ll also see her in three American relays. She’ll be off on Tuesday before the mixed 4×100 medley relay runs on Wednesday.

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20 Comments
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YGBSM
10 months ago

This is great to see.

iLikePsych
10 months ago

It’s crazy how much she’s taken over the top times list in just one year

Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
10 months ago

Now if T. Huske can return to form.

Swimmerfan
Reply to  Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
10 months ago

I think Torri Huske has been the hardest hit on the team by the virus.
She was very brave to show up for the relay and swim for her team.

Matt
Reply to  Swimmerfan
10 months ago

Probably Luka hardest hit or it just looked worse for him because a 400 is much further than a 100, but Torri up there too.

M d e
Reply to  Matt
10 months ago

Yep he was clearly struggling really bad.

The 56 backstroker too.

Swimmer
Reply to  Swimmerfan
10 months ago

good on Huske for being a team player and doing the relay for her country. Walsh had a great 100 fly but nevertheless let her team down by ducking the relay and cost them the gold that’s on her

Fish
Reply to  Swimmer
10 months ago

It’s very likely that if she was that sick her split would have been slower than Gemmell. Gemmell was like .5 slower than Walsh’s best split ever

Lisa
Reply to  Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
10 months ago

She did her job last night on the relay and probably needed more time to recover.

Thomas The Tank Engine
10 months ago

Gretchen Walsh wil win 50 free and fly

MOC would own the 150m WR
Reply to  Thomas The Tank Engine
10 months ago

Meg looks she could be on track to pb tho

M d e
Reply to  Thomas The Tank Engine
10 months ago

50 free there’s some contenders, but she will win the fly by heaps

Drylander
10 months ago

For a team debilitated by illness, I hope Walsh’s swim signals better times to come at this meet for everyone.

lilac
10 months ago

shes going to be like ledecky in the 1500 and sjostreom in the 50 in this event

tue
10 months ago

🤣5758-5473🤣

jess
10 months ago

Almost 3 seconds faster than her last world final. I know she was well off her pb at that meet but still just wow.

VA Steve
Reply to  jess
10 months ago

Hard to remember but she is still relatively new to LCM. I suspect we will see more bomb drops prior to LA.

Joel
Reply to  VA Steve
10 months ago

Sorry? Surely they have a LCM pool to access at UVA. Every summer the main championships are LCM, even in the USA.

Thomas The Tank Engine
Reply to  VA Steve
10 months ago

Lol what.

She won 50 and 100 free at 2019 worlds junior, beating MOC

That championship was in LCM.

You’re talking as if G Walsh were from Kyrgyzstan that does not have a single 50m pool.

Last edited 10 months ago by Thomas The Tank Engine
justkeepswimming
Reply to  Thomas The Tank Engine
10 months ago

and even Kyrgyzstan has medalists here

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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