Andrew Wilson Becomes 4th American Ever Under 59 Seconds in 100 Breast

2019 FINA WORLD AQUATICS CHAMPIONSHIPS

Swimming in the first semifinal of the men’s 100 breast tonight at Worlds, Andrew Wilson finished second to qualify fifth for the final with a new lifetime best of 58.95.

With that time, Wilson becomes only the fourth American man to ever break the 59-second barrier. Kevin Cordes (58.64 AR), Cody Miller (58.87), and Eric Shanteau (58.96) are the only other Americans to have ever done so, with Wilson joining their ranks tonight. He becomes the third-best American performer in history, as well as the 15th-best overall performer in history.

In prelims, Wilson was 59.26, his second-best time ever. His best until tonight was a 59.19, done at the 2018 Atlanta Pro Swim Series. He split 27.85 going out tonight, coming home in a 31.10; that back half is actually .13 quicker than Cordes was in the 2017 Worlds semifinals when he set the current American record. Wilson, who swam collegiately with Division III Emory, has spent time training with Texas’s pro group and has been stationed with the Athens Bulldogs at UGA since last fall.

With a lane in the final tomorrow night, Wilson will have a shot at taking down Cordes’ American Record, or at least jumping Miller’s #2 U.S. time in history of 58.83.

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Gator
4 years ago

Brilliant swim!!!

IM FAN
4 years ago

The medley savior. I think the U.S has it unless pesty goes a 54 on the relay lol…

Really
4 years ago

Very glad to see this. Between him and Cody getting healthy again we may see a 58 split next summer.

Charge
4 years ago

With his 58.8 and Apple’s 46.8 (or Adrian’s 47.0) the American’s look to be stronger here than we thought unless Greenbank has a 53.00 or faster

USA can go 51.9/58.4/49.7/46.9 and go in the 3:27 flat range

GBR is looking like 53.8/56.3/50.3/47.3 and be 3:27 mid/high

But if Greenbank can get 53.0 and/or USA has a bad leg all bets are off.

World Record is on notice by both teams.

About Karl Ortegon

Karl Ortegon

Karl Ortegon studied sociology at Wesleyan University in Middletown, CT, graduating in May of 2018. He began swimming on a club team in first grade and swam four years for Wesleyan.

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