Katie Ledecky Remains Goat’ed After Winning a Legendary 800 Free at the World Championships

2025 World Championships

The GOAT of women’s swimming remained GOAT’ed on Saturday in Singapore. 28-year-old American swimmer Katie Ledecky, who earlier this year set a surprise World Record in the 800 meter free, won her 7th straight full-World Championship title in the event (excluding the odd 2024 event), holding off both the prodigy Summer McIntosh of Canada and an absolutely gutsy swim from Australian Lani Pallister.

Racing her signature event, Ledecky hasn’t lost a significant international race in this 800 free since bursting onto the scene at 15 at the 2012 Olympic Games.

While the 18-year-old McIntosh rightly has the current strongest claim to ‘best in the world,’ conversations have already begun about what she might need to do to supplant Katie Ledecky as the best female swimmer of all-time.

While McIntosh has had one of the best three-year runs in swimming history, while her breadth of events is incredible, and while her scare of the 200 fly World Record earlier this week was breathtaking, Ledecky still has two things that McIntosh can’t match. One is the length of dominance, spanning now 14 years of Ledecky sitting atop her throne.

The other is this head-to-head win. This was the Jordan-Kobe moment, harkening back to the late 90s basketball era when the basketball GOAT Michael Jordan was at the end of his career. While Bryant won 5 of the 8 head-to-head matchups between the two, Jordan averaged more points in those games (24.5 vs. 22.8) – though the first tow of those were before Kobe really became ‘full Kobe.’

This was that moment for Ledecky, and while McIntosh beat her earlier in the meet in the 400 free, this was the race that all eyeballs were on to see where this paper debate really stood. One of McIntosh’s coaches, Fred Vergnoux, thinks that she can break 8 minutes.

It has been a long, gross meet for swimmers around the world. The food poisoning and various gastrointestinal illnesses has marred the first six-and-a-half days of competition, but that obscures the fact that this was the race that everyone was waiting for coming into the meet.

The presence of the Australian Pallister, who charged out with the two leaders and found enough ‘stuff’ late to pull by McIntosh in the best final 50 you will ever see in an 800 free, just made the meet all the better. She’s a swimmer with a big story too, the daughter of an Olympian who had her first Olympic run to Tokyo disrupted by heart surgery.

Ledecky’s time will soon come to an end. Whether that’s in LA, or some time after that. “Competitiveness” isn’t really an archetype that’s generally associated with Ledecky, because for most of her career she’s been so far ahead of the field that it hasn’t felt that competitive. But the thing about the Greats of All-Time, the Jordans, the Phelpses, the Bradys, the Serena Williamses, is that even when they get to the tail end of their careers, you can never count them out. They have a deep internal knowledge of greatness, and while the repeatability of that ultimate greatness may become more difficult, it is always there bubbling beneath the surface, waiting to remind the world of who they are.

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sjostrom stan
10 months ago

Genuinely curious to know what the difference maker this year was. she was 8:11 in Paris, and now have had her career renaissance in some ways out of nowhere with times we haven’t seen out of her since like 2017. Really hope it keeps going and we learn more about what changed so much this season

Mr Piano
Reply to  sjostrom stan
10 months ago

She took about two months off after Paris, her longest break in like… ever. Pretty sure that’s what lead to a rejuvenated Ledecky

Troyy
Reply to  Mr Piano
10 months ago

If Ledecky didn’t get access to that home pool during the pandemic she might have learned the lesson sooner. Ever since the forced couple of months out of the water early the pandemic SPW have been taking a break each year.

Boomer
10 months ago

China misses the final as well

Boomer
10 months ago

Chalmers 48.3 definitely a shocker

Aaron
10 months ago

Katie still has the best gear on the planet.

danjohnrob
10 months ago

If Summer’s goal is to win 5 individual Olympic golds and be the “female Phelps”, IMO the 800 free is the wrong event to focus on. One of the things that made Phelps so amazing was his ability to excel in the decathalon of swimming (400 IM) as well as sprint events like the 100 Fly and Free (He held the American Record in it after the Beijing Olympics). Why not focus on the 200 free as her 5th individual event and try to lead the Canadian team to a medal in the 4×200? Also, I strongly suspect she could get her 100 fly and free times down to contribute significantly tmo her nation’s relays. That means a lot to… Read more »

jeff
Reply to  danjohnrob
10 months ago

bruh what its gonna be way harder to beat gretchen in the 100 fly than ledecky in the 800 free in 2028

Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
10 months ago

World Aquatics Championships
Individual Gold Medals
Ledecky, K. – 18
Phelps, M. – 15

comment image

It was destiny.

Last edited 10 months ago by Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
10 months ago

At the age of 28, to post three (3) of the five (5) fastest all-time performances including the World Record in the women’s 800 meter freestyle is remarkable.

LePatron
10 months ago

The duel btw triple elite swimmers in the legendary 800 free at the Worlds endorses the invincibility of Ledecky as a de-facto the greatest female distance swimmer as of today.

Elessar
Reply to  LePatron
10 months ago

What would people be saying if she lost to Pallister?

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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