Lochte; Dwyer to Join Klueh and McLean in Finals of 800 Free Relay

Ryan Lochte and Conor Dwyer have been added to the finals lineup of the men’s 800 free relay to go along with Michael Klueh and Matt McLean, who both swam very well in prelims.

The American relay was 4th in the morning heats, behind Germany, Russia, and Australia, and will have to make up a three second gap in finals to take gold. The Germans, however, have maxed-out their lineup and will return the same four in finals (though in a different order). They will need better swims from three of their legs, though Yannick Lebherz in 1:43.02 was a monster in the morning.

As fort he Americans, they stuck with their standard methodology for picking finals swimmers by rolling-forward the two fastest times, minus reaction, from prelims. Klueh was a 1:44.37 (minus .33 for reaction) and McLean was a 1:45.45 (minus .70 for reaction). Wisconsin Badger Michael Weiss was also very good in prelims with a 1:45.3, but he was also much quicker off of the blocks.

McLean will hopefully be able to hit that start a bit quicker tonight to really make the Americans comfortable, though with the gold and bronze medalists from the individual 200 joining, they won’t sweat too much.

The biggest challenge might be from the Russians, who are the defending champions and World Record holders. They, like the Germans, will have no new faces in their finals relay though, so any improvements would have to be from simple time drops.

The Australians (3rd seed in 7:01.77) swapped in Bobby Hurley for Travis Mahoney. That could be as much as a 4 second drop off of their time, so they are in strong medal contention as well.

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11 years ago

Will be a giant battle for the best splits to match up . Speciallly , the starts will be worked seriously to be just the best ones in the exchanges … Oh OH OH

coacherik
11 years ago

.7 for a relay exchange, yikes. A VERY conservative knowing a spot in finals was pretty much a guarantee? That’s enough time to high five each other during the exchange…

Joel Lin
11 years ago

Biedermann’s lightening is right back in the bottle because his time is negated by the fastest legs coming in for US, Russia and Aussie. The race is the sum of the other legs. I don’t think gold has any over 1:44.5 splits on it, that is the bigger thing for Germany to be concerned about with the same four.

Tonite will be really fun, this relay is going to be very competitive between four teams.

Rafael
11 years ago

Bieldermann was only 1:44 on the morning.. wait a 2 second drop at least..

Reply to  Rafael
11 years ago

u can expect a good 1.41 maybe 1.42 from Lochte , 1.43 from Dwyer , 1.44 for the 2 others.

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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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