Blueseventy Swim of the Week: Sjostrom Lights Up 100 Freestyle

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Disclaimer: BlueSeventy Swim of the Week is not meant to be a conclusive selection of the best overall swim of the week, but rather one Featured Swim to be explored in deeper detail. The BlueSeventy Swim is an opportunity to take a closer look at the context of one of the many fast swims this week, perhaps a swim that slipped through the cracks as others grabbed the headlines, or a race we didn’t get to examine as closely in the flood of weekly meets.

It’s no secret that Sarah Sjostrom is the world’s best sprint butterflyer by a wide margin. But she’s spent the past week proving that she might just be the best sprint freestyler, too.

Sjostrum has rocked the Mare Nostrum series’ first two stops, culminating in a 52.28 swim in the Barcelona 100 freestyle final that holds up as the fourth-best swim of all-time. Two of the swims ahead of her are supersuit-aided 2009 swims from Germany’s Britta Steffen, and Sjostrom is just .22 seconds off the world record set just under a year ago by Cate Campbell.

Here’s a look at the top 5 swims in history:

  1. 52.06 Cate Campbell, WR, 2016
  2. 52.07 Britta Steffen, 2009
  3. 52.22 Britta Steffen, 2009
  4. 52.28, Sarah Sjostrom, 2017
  5. 52.33, Cate Campbell, 2013

With Campbell bowing out of the World Championships this summer, it’s Sjostrom’s event to lose. Only Cate’s sister Bronte has been under 53 seconds this year, and her season-best is 52.85 – a good six tenths back of Sjostrom. Campbell is the defending world champ in the event, but has never been faster than the 52.52 she put up to win that world title in 2015.

Ever remarkably consistent, Sjostrom has been 52-mid multiple times already this season, and was 52.6 on Sunday night in Monaco. She’s now looking like a threat to become one of the most-decorated female swimmers ever at a single World Championships.

Sjostrom holds the world’s #1 rank in the 50 free, 100 free, 50 fly and 100 fly. It would be beyond shocking to see her lose either of the butterflies, and with Cate Campbell out of the way, there aren’t too many key swimmers left with the firepower to challenge her in either freestyle. (Though those events are always a bit of a toss-up; how many of us had Kyle Chalmers, Simone Manuel and Penny Oleksiak winning Olympic 100 free titles last summer?)

Though Sweden didn’t win any Olympic relay medals last year, they were finalists in both free relays and 9th in the medley. Between Sjostrom and Michelle Coleman, the Swedes have two stellar legs on any of the three relays, and with Jennie Johansson swimming as fast as she ever has in breaststroke, the medley might be Sweden’s best shot. They won silver in that race in 2015 with a European record, and all four legs should be back this summer.

That means it’s possible Sjostrom could win 4 individual world titles and a relay medal or two. Four golds in Budapest would push her to 8 career golds and 12 career medals at long course World Championships. Only 5 swimmers (per our research) have won more than a dozen total World Champs medals. Below are the current lists of most-decorated female athletes from long course World Championships in both total medals and gold medals:

Most Total Medals, Women at LC World Champs

  1. Natalie Coughlin, 20
  2. Missy Franklin, 16
  3. Libby Trickett, 15
  4. Jenny Thompson, 14
  5. Leisel Jones, 14

Most Gold Medals, Women at LC World Champs

  1. Missy Franklin, 11
  2. Katie Ledecky, 9
  3. Libby Trickett, 8
  4. Kornelia Ender, 8
  5. 5-way tie at 7

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tea rex
6 years ago

The 100 free is a difficult race to pace.
It took her a little time to figure out pacing for the 100 fly too (she didn’t break the WR until a year after her insane 50 fly).
For someone sub-24 in the 50 and sub-1:55 in the 200, I knew Sarah could be faster than 52 high. Exciting to see what she can do this summer!

Prickle
Reply to  tea rex
6 years ago

I think this meet was of some special importance to Sarah Sjostrom, but not an intermediate exercise before WC. It looks like she tried and actually did prove something. I hope the preparation for it hasn’t included tapering and full resting.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
6 years ago

Sarah is the clear favorite for the 50 & 100 free in Budapest . But Manuel will probably deliver something special this summer

Tom
6 years ago

Yeah….Missy was such a busy….only 11 gold medals 🙁

Tom
Reply to  Tom
6 years ago

Bust

Prickle
Reply to  Tom
6 years ago

Seven of them – relays.

Carlo
Reply to  Prickle
6 years ago

Yeah too many medals in swimming. Relays alone are a gold mine.
I mean someone can realistically (theoretically ) win 4 golds in relays alone.

friula
Reply to  Carlo
6 years ago

How many medals you can get of course also depend on nationality. No surprise all on the top 5 list (for total medals) are Americans or Australians. To count individual medals are more interesting imo.

Rafael
Reply to  friula
6 years ago

If the Hungarian ladies were American imagine how many medals they would have?

Prickle
Reply to  Rafael
6 years ago

Some Hungarian lady can get American citizenship at any minute. She’s chosen not to. And not only because of strong patriotic feelings I think.

NickB
6 years ago

Gahh! Where’s the video!

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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