Kaylee McKeown Shaves a Tenth Off Her Australian Record in the 200 IM

2022 FINA SHORT COURSE WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS

Australian Kaylee McKeown flexed her versatility in the 200 IM on Tuesday to kick off her World Short Course Championships with a bronze medal and new Australia Record of 2:03.57.

That time put her behind Americans Alex Walsh (2:03.37) and Kate Douglass (2:02.12) on the podium, but made McKeown the fastest swimmer from Australia (and broader Oceania) ever. It also marks her as the 4th-fastest performer in history, which is actually two spots lower than she was before the day began.

McKeown’s relative strengths on the field was her backstroke – not surprising as a World Record holder in that stroke. She split 30.50 on the backstroke leg, as compared to 30.57 from Alex Walsh (surprisingly close as its probably her 4th-best stroke right now, even though it’s the one that first put her on the National Team), and a 31.29 from Kate Douglass.

Perhaps the most impressive part is that in a field heavy with strong breaststrokers (Bonnet, Wood, Pickrem, Walsh, and Douglass), McKeown held her own with a 36.22 split. That’s slower than Walsh and Douglass, but not by as much as it could have been.

Record-Breaking Splits Comparison:

Kaylee McKeown
New Australian Record
Old Australian Record
Fly 27.16 27.46
Back 30.50 30.79
Breast 36.22 35.94
Free 29.69 29.49
2:03.57 2:03.68

McKeown’s prior record-setting swim was done in 2020 at a virtual return-to-competition event held by Swimming Australia.

This is not a discipline where Australia has done much in short course, in spite of a lot of big long course success from the likes of Alicia Coutts and Stephanie Rice. The next-best performer of all-time in the country is Emily Seebohm in 2:05.46, and McKeown is the country’s first short course medalist in any IM for men or women since Lara Carroll took bronze in 2006.

McKeown has only raced this event a handful of times in short course meters – she doesn’t race short course often – but the best time bodes well for her backstroke races later in the meet, with World Records in her eyes.

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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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