Contextualizing Leon Marchand’s 1:52.69 200 IM (Or Trying To)

2025 World Championships

Graphs and data here came courtesy of Barry Revzin and Andrew Mering, as well as the excellent ‘The Chlorinated Chronicles‘ on Substack

Leon Marchand absolutely shattered Ryan Lochte’s world record in the 200 IM in the semi-finals tonight, clocking a time of 1:52.69 to hack 1.31 seconds off the mark from 2011.

His coach Bob Bowman spoke about going for the 200 IM World Record when explaining the decision to drop the 200 fly and 200 breast, where he is the reigning Olympic Champion and #2 performer all-time in both. However, Marchand had only been 1:57.23 so far this year, and was just 1:57.63 this morning.

That did include a 53.88 front end, just off World Record pace – something was clearly brewing for the Frenchman.

We’ve tried to put together some stats and graphs to contextualize this swim, and although a picture may be worth a thousand words we don’t quite have the server space to include all the images we’d need to fully capture the feeling of watching it. We’ve tried our best though – here’s an even (bakers) dozen.

 

1.31 seconds

The amount of time which Marchand broke Ryan Lochte‘s record by. There are only two other events currently – the short course women’s 400 IM and 1500 free – where the scaled gap between the #1 and #2 swim all-time is as large. The women who own those marks are Summer McIntosh and Katie Ledecky – two of the most dominant swimmers in history.

2.44 seconds

The amount of time, that Shaine Casas, the second-fastest swimmer in the semi-finals, finished behind Marchand. Casas swam the #22 swim all-time and became the 6th-fastest man in history with his time of 1:55.13.

1.149%

That is the margin which he was under the previous world record by. As single record jumps go that is the 15th-largest since 2000, and #6 if you only count races 100m or longer. Of those non-sprint drops ahead of him, two are super-suited, and two are Michael Phelps.

Swimmer Date Event New Record Previous Record
Inge de Bruijn 05/27/2000 100 fly 56.69 57.88
Michael Phelps 03/28/2007 200 fly 1:52.09 1:53.71
Zhang Lin 07/29/2009 800 free 7:32.12 7:38.65
Liu Zige 10/21/2009 200 fly 2:01.81 2:03.41
Michael Phelps 07/25/2003 200 IM 1:56.04 1:57.52
Leon Marchand 07/30/2025 200 IM 1:52.69 1:54.00
Ariana Kukors 06/26/2009 200 IM 2:07.03 2:08.45
Aaron Peirsol 07/31/2009 200 back 1:51.92 1:53.08
Evgeniia Chikunova 04/21/2023 200 breast 2:17.55 2:18.95
Kate Ziegler 06/17/2007 1500 free 15:42.54 15:52.10
Liu Zige 07/14/2007 200 fly 2:04.18 2:05.40

 

4.00 seconds

That is now the margin in seconds between Marchand and the 25th-fastest performer of all time, Australia’s Leith Brodie. There are zero (0) men’s events in which this gap (scaled to distance) is larger.

1.88 seconds

How far ahead of the record Marchand was at the 150m mark – he turned in 1:24.63 to Lochte’s 1:26.51

31

The number of swims there have been between 1:54.00 and 1:55.31 – the same gap as between Marchand’s time tonight and the #2 swim all-time. Just look at the gulf between Marchand’s swim any every single other swim in history.

5116 days

That is how long Ryan Lochte’s record had stood for – the longest-lived textile World Record. Lochte had one of the best single-meet performances in history in 2011 when he set this mark, which was the first time a super-suited record had been broken since the suits were banned.

7

The number of swims across both the 200 IM and 400 IM that have been faster than the times Phelps swam at the Beijing Olympics. One is from Phelps himself, the 200 IM in 2011, two are by Ryan Lochte, and four are from Marchand – all in the last 24 months. It would not be a leap to say that this number will be nine in four days time.

2.94 meters

Marchand’s distance-per-stroke on the breaststroke leg. He took just 17 strokes through this 50, two fewer than Lochte, and was a full 0.90 seconds faster as he split 32.13.

-4.96597

The Z-Score of Leon Marchand‘s new world record compared to the top 100 performances in history – a measure of how many standard deviations his time is faster than the mean of that group. Ryan Lochte‘s record is just -2.70172 (and was only -2.8699 when he set it), and even Summer McIntosh‘s 400 IM, the next-best of the current records, is only slightly above -4.

For external context, a Z-Score of 5 was enough to conclusively prove the existence of the Higgs boson (a sub-atomic particle) back in 2011.  This number is really, truly, out of this world.

2

The number of medals Marchand would have won in the stroke 200’s (excl. breaststroke) at the Paris Olympics with this time – gold in backstroke and bronze in fly.

69.72 SPM

Marchand’s stroke rate on backstroke. He split 28.40 on this leg – the fastest backstroke split in history.

3rd

This is where Marchand’s swim would rank on the all-time 200 backstroke list, behind only Aaron Peirsol and Ryosuke Irie‘s swims from 2009. On textile swims only, the fastest 200 IM swim is now faster than the fastest 200 backstroke swim – something which has never happened before.

The closest the two have come before is 0.29 seconds back in 2008, and again looking at textile only, 0.54 seconds from 2007.

On fly, his swim would rank 20th all-time and he would be the 6th fastest performer, behind Kristof Milak, Michael Phelps, Luca Urlando, Daiya Seto, and himself.

The current gap between the 200 back and 200 IM records (0.77 seconds), and 200 fly and 200 IM records (2.35 seconds), is the smallest it has been in any period except for one – the Michael Phelps era.

 

“What’s crazy is that it’s a whole second… and it’s still hard to believe. A 1:52 in the 200m — that’s insane. I’m so happy, it’s just incredible.”

You and us both, Leon.

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Observer of absurd drops
10 months ago

A 1.31-second WR in a 200m race? 😆
Imagine if that happened in the track 800m. Nobody would believe it was “real.” 😆
There isn’t enough bicarb is the world, they’d say.😆
(I don’t even know if Marchand is using bicarb.🤷‍♂️)

Rubberducky
10 months ago

Is there a financial or rationale reason for him to not take such significant time off the wr? Instead lowering it several times for cash bonuses or other incentives. Curious if this would prevent other huge drops like this amongst others.

Admin
Reply to  Rubberducky
10 months ago

There are WR bonuses, both at this meet and often in suit contracts. In theory that all could be offset financially by having such an explosive swim and the PR of all of that.

But regardless, swimming isn’t like pole vaulting where you can just do enough to win and then stop. That’s a really bad game to play in swimming.

Steve Nolan
10 months ago

oops

Last edited 10 months ago by Steve Nolan
Andysup
10 months ago

Another number missing in the article.

9

The number of 200s that Lochte had swam at the 2011 championship before setting the 1:54 record. We will never know what it could have been if his schedule was only IMs like Marchand is doing this meet.

The 200 free final in 2011 was a dog fight as well. I believe the top 5 guys were within 0.5s of each other and all under 1:45

summerbreezin
10 months ago

really fun read, thanks for the care

ooo
10 months ago

Seeing Liu Zige twice in the first list tells you how crazy fast the 200 fly is. Surprised that Biedermann’s 200 free does not make the list.

Suiii
10 months ago

1:52.24 tonight

Mira
10 months ago

These charts and graphs are amazing. Some of these numbers are truly insane. Especially knowing that he took 2 fewer strokes on breaststroke than Lochte and was .9 faster!

I think we need to stop saying backstroke is his weak stroke. He is a world class backstroker. He now has an actual 200 backstroke time that is under the Aqua A standard. And he just split the fastest backstroke ever. His actual weakest stroke is freestyle, which is absurd. Imagine what his final 50 could be if he someone chasing him, like Lochte did.

Last edited 10 months ago by Mira
mds
Reply to  Mira
10 months ago

In the SCY equivalent 200 IM record swim, the backstroke leg had the same effect. I was in the first row of the stands and when I saw it I twisted around so hard I came close to losing balance and going over the edge. His backstroke was :22.98 on his way to his record 1:46.34. SCY:22.98 translates to LCM :27.52. I don’t believe I’ve ever seen another SCY backstroke split under :24.0.

His :28.4LCM in the back leg of the semi-final was actually softer than the :22.98SCY as demonstrated by his holding on for a strong finish on the freestyle (:28.06LCM), whereas in the SCY swim, Destin Lasco ran down a significant portion of Leon’s lead on freestyle.… Read more »