Mary T. Meagher Will Race Meters in a Masters Meet This Weekend

Every swimmer, after they end the initial phase of their competitive swimming career, experiences a range of emotions. Some combination of nostalgia, relief, and wondering.

Anybody who went through a serious swimming career has a timeline on how long it takes them to process and return in some capacity to a different variety of competition. Some launch right into Masters swimming, while others never compete again.

World Record holder and American swimming legend Mary T. Meagher retired from swimming after the 1988 Olympic Games, and is now returning to competition – in Masters competition.

After swimming a pair of meets in yards in March, Meagher will swim her first meters meet that we could find in 37 years this weekend in Augusta, Georgia. Meagher, who know goes by Mary M Plant, is entered in the 50, 100 and 200 meter butterflies – the same stroke in which she once dominated the world.

The 60-year-old Meagher is entered with estimated times.

In March, she swam 42.52 in the 50 yard free in her first meet, back, and then a week later swam 28.34 in the 50 yard fly, 1:04.03 in the 100 yard fly, and 2:29.48 in the 200 yard fly. That 50 fly time was just 1.33 seconds off the USMS National Record for the 60-64 age group that was set by Ellen Reynolds earlier this year.

In her first swimming career, Meagher won five Olympic medals, including golds in the 100 fly, 200 fly, and 400 medley relay at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. She held the World Record in the 100-meter fly from 1980 until 1999 and the 200 fly from 1979 until 2000, setting those records when she was 15 and 14, respectively.

Her 200 fly time of 2:05.96 from 1981 remains the U.S. National Age Group Record in that event 44 years later, one of the oldest records on the books.

Whether it was the nostalgia of an upcoming Los Angeles Olympics, curiosity, or decades of processing that led to her return, Meagher’s presence in Masters Swimming will be a thrill for a generation of her fans who now find themselves competing against the swimmer who was once the star of the sport. That’s a fun full-circle moment for the sport. The times and the results don’t necessarily carry the same weight as they once did, but the pathway back to the racing certainly does for all of us.

Watch Meagher’s World Record in the 200 fly from 1981 below:

34
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

34 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Ice Age Swimmer
9 months ago

Does anybody know how Mary T did this past weekend at the meet in Augusta?

Swammer
Reply to  Ice Age Swimmer
9 months ago

Yes
31.57/1:09.59/2:44.99
And she neg split the 2fly lol

She’s racing again in Mission Viejo in a little over a week

WR for her age group (60-64) is 2:41. I bet she gets it.

Fly Forever
9 months ago

Beautiful stroke…what a swim! Thanks for sharing the video.

Swammer
10 months ago

No googles, no tech suit. 100% Legend.

Ken Akerman
Reply to  Swammer
9 months ago

How could swimmers swim without goggles?

Pat Schneider
10 months ago

I swam with Mary T in Louisville in the mid to late seventies at Plantation Country Club. She was always awesome and a cool kid. It is great to see her back in the pool. Maybe I will run into her at a future Masters meet. I would be great to run into her again.

YMCA Swammer
10 months ago

Jennifer Mihalik set a world record at this meet

Jennifer Mihalik
Reply to  YMCA Swammer
10 months ago

Thanks for the shout out! Meeting Mary T was definitely the highlight of the day and the record was a bonus!

Parker
10 months ago

She was actually 14 in 1979 when she broke her first world record in 2fly- three times that summer.
And then the next spring in 1980 when she was 15 was the first time she broke her 100 fly world record.

Last edited 10 months ago by Parker
Andy Hardt
10 months ago

“In March, she swam 42.52 in the 50 yard free in her first meet, back, and then a week later swam 28.34 in the 50 yard fly”

What in the world sort of week-to-week improvement is that?!

BR32
Reply to  Andy Hardt
10 months ago

Goat progression

OrangeSwammer
10 months ago

She saw Bricker and Howley knock her down 2 spots this summer and said “ENOUGH!”

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, …

Read More »