In Spite of Record-Setting Top Ends, Times-to-Advance Slow at Budapest 2022

2022 FINA WORLD AQUATICS CHAMPIONSHIPS

The first session of swimming is in the books at the 2022 World Aquatics Championships in Budapest, Hungary.

With national records from France, Brazil, Austria, South Korea, Israel, Italy, and a number of other smaller swimming nations, plus some really fast relay splits, we have to be careful about saying that the first prelims session of the meet was slow. It was not slow, and many swimmers came to swim fast.

But what we can say is that the first prelims session exposed the lack of depth that we knew was going to be present at this meet. In each of the 8 Olympic events from Saturday morning, the time to advance from the prelims was slower than the same time at the Tokyo Olympics.

That lack of depth is driven by a few things. There are a number of other international meets this summer (Commonwealth Games, Mediterranean Games, European Championships) that athletes are either putting their full taper on (Matt Sates) or bypassing Worlds altogether for (Emma McKeon). We are also still in the midst of the pandemic, which has already claimed a few swimmers at this meet.

The effect isn’t the simple output of being a post-Olympic year (though it could be chalked up to being this post-Olympic year, which is among the most unique post-Olympic years since the World Championships began).

Even if we compare to the 2019 and 2017 World Championships, times-to-advance are still slower in most cases – with the men’s 50 fly, a non-Olympic race, being the biggest exception.

The deficits in some races is bigger than others: the men’s 400 free, for example, is only 8-tenths of a second slower than top 8 was in Tokyo. That’s low as compared to the women’s 400 free, for example, which has a 2.37 second gap.

The men’s 100 breaststroke and women’s 100 butterfly races were particularly challenging on day 1, with both over a second slower than Tokyo even in just a 100 meter race.

One race that isn’t as far as it seems is the men’s 400 IM. This is a race where we’ve seen global depth improve a lot recently, though it’s still a fairly thin event. While the time to advance was about 2.30 seconds slower than Tokyo, but the times in Tokyo after the top 10 dropped off really fast. So it’s only a few spots (4:12.50 was 14th in Tokyo prelims) as compared to other races (59.46 in the women’s 100 fly would have been 25th in Tokyo, for example).

Below, see a table comparing the time-to-advance-from-prelims across the last two World Championship meets plus the Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympics.

Gender Event Budapest 2022 Advance from Prelims Time Tokyo Advance from Prelims Time Difference Gwangju Advance from Prelims Time Budapest 2017 Advance from Prelims Time
Women’s 200 IM 2:13.20 2:12.21 -.99s 2:12.98 2:13.03
Men’s 400 Free 3:46.47 3:45.68 -.79s 3:46.34 3:46.14
Women’s 100 Fly 59.46 58.08 -1.38s 58.33 58.66
Men’s 50 Fly 23.53 N/A 23.63 23.66
Women’s 400 Free 4:06.44 4:04.07 -2.37s 4:07.10 4:06.48
Men’s 100 Breast 1:00.70 59.68 -1.02s 59.75 59.95
Men’s 400 IM 4:12.50 4:10.20 -2.30s 4:15.24 4:15.69
Women’s 400 Free Relay 3:39.04 3:35.93 -3.11s 3:38.55 3:38.29
Men’s 400 Free Relay 3:14.26 3:13.13 -1.13s 3:13.90 3:14.88

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PFA
1 year ago

I will say though the 4 IM is historically faster than almost every year except last year and I think 08.

Steve Nolan
1 year ago

Ctrl+F “Russia” 0/0

Horninco
Reply to  Steve Nolan
1 year ago

Yeah, that explains some of it

Roger
Reply to  Steve Nolan
1 year ago

Swimming LCM, compared to SCY, is stagnant. Not improving nearly at the same rate. Weight room does not help nearly as much in the long pool.

fred
1 year ago

not that much slower than Gwangju 2019 though
I think it’s normal that at the Olympics everbody goes fast even in prelims not to risk
Also we have to consider that in Tokyo there were evening prelims, here we have morning prelims

Last edited 1 year ago by fred
fred
Reply to  fred
1 year ago

i think overall it will be a really fast World champs edition even with some stars missing

Stephen
1 year ago

Wow someone mentioned that on an earlier post…hmmm

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, …

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