Danish women destroy 200 medley relay world record with historic split from Ottesen

After three days in Doha, both 4×50 medley relay world records have fallen, with the women’s mark dropping to the loaded Danish team.

Denmark already technically held the record from a swim just under a year ago, but this is the first time they’ll get the thrill of actually setting the record in the moment. That’s because there’s some interesting history with this record – at last year’s European Short Course Championships, both the Russian relay and the Danish relay broke the world record, with Russia swimming a bit faster and officially claiming it in the record books. But Russia’s world record was vacated earlier this year in the aftermath of Yulia Efimova‘s doping suspension, giving the mark back to Team Denmark.

But now Denmark has lowered it even further, nearly a full second below their own world record and still a half-second faster than the vacated Russian mark. That was led by butterflyer Jeanette Ottesen, who put up a split significantly faster than the corresponding one on either previous record-holding relay.

Here’s a look at the splits compared to both Denmark’s 2013 world record and the vacated 2013 Russian world record:

2014 Denmark 2013 Denmark 2013 Russia (vacated)
Back 26.39 – Mie Nielsen 26.47 – Nielsen 27.57 – Daria Ustinova
Breast 29.56 – Rikke Moller Pedersen 29.73– Moller Pedersen 28.30 – Yuliya Efimova
Fly 24.09 – Jeanette Ottesen 24.59 – Ottesen 25.15 – Svetlana Chimrova
Free 24.00 – Pernille Blume 24.03 – Blume 23.65 – Rosalia Nasretdinova
Final Time 1:44.04 1:44.81 1:44.67

Those splits pretty accurately show just how fast Ottesen was. Even compared to her 2013 split, Ottesen was a full half-second faster, and she outsplit her Russian counterpart by over a second.

All four Danish women showed improvements from last year. Mie Nielsen was a tenth faster leading off, Rikke Moller Pedersen was two tenths faster on breaststroke and Pernille Blume was a couple hundredths quicker on the anchor leg. This is a foursome that’s really making waves internationally, and has really become the team to beat in both short course and long course just two years out from the Rio Olympic Games.

Also of note: in the same event, the second-place American foursome of Felicia Lee, Emma Reaney, Claire Donahue and Natalie Coughlin absolutely crushed the American record in the event, going 1:44.92. In prelims they broke the old mark of 1:49.71 using Amanda Weir on the anchor leg, and in finals they swapped out Weir for the veteran Coughlin to lower the mark another two seconds.

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ERVINFORTHEWIN
9 years ago

Very well doen for the Danish team ! Ottesen is a beast on butterfly short course 50’s . But Usa did something special as well – with 2 young swimmers on that team . WOWWW , congrats girls . They were only less than a second behind the Danish team – that’s something special . New talents are slowly rising up to the task . Love it

DanishSwimFan
Reply to  ERVINFORTHEWIN
9 years ago

Should be a good rematch in the 4×100.

Why do we have the both the 4×50 and 4×100 of of each relay anyway?

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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