Marchand, Ponti, and Zirk Break Respective National Records In 200 Fly

2022 FINA WORLD AQUATICS CHAMPIONSHIPS

MEN’S 200 BUTTERFLY – SEMI-FINALS

Top 8 Qualifiers:

  1. Kristof Milak (HUN), 1:52.39
  2. Tomoru Honda (JPN), 1:54.01
  3. Noe Ponti (SUI), 1:54.20
  4. Leon Marchand (FRA), 1:54.32
  5. Luca Urlando (USA), 1:54.50
  6. Tamas Kenderesi (HUN), 1:54.79
  7. Alberto Razzetti (ITA), 1:54.87
  8. James Guy (GBR), 1:54.91

In the semifinals of the men’s 200 fly, three European national records were broken.

The fastest out of all of them was Noe Ponti‘s Swiss record, which was broke in a time of 1:54.20 to take down his mark of 1:54.75 from prelims. In a day, Ponti has lowered his own record by 0.85 seconds, as his best time set before this meet was a 1:55.05 from the 2021 Olympic Games. He finished third in the semifinals behind Kristof Milak and Tomoru Honda, earning himself a spot in the finals tomorrow night.

Placing in forth behind Ponti was Leon Marchand, who broke Franck Esposito‘s 20-year old French record of 1:54.62 that was set back in 2002. Marchand clocked a time of 1:54.32, over a second faster than his previous best time of 1:55.40 set last June. The Frenchman is already having a stellar meet, having previously won the 400 IM in a time of 4:04.28 that was just 0.44 seconds off Michael Phelps’s world record, the oldest one standing in the books right now. Tomorrow, he will look to continue his streak of strong performances in the 200 fly final.

Ponti and Marchand are now the 18th and 22nd fastest performers in the history of the men’s 200 fly respectively.

The third national record from these semis came from Kregor Zirk. Although he finished 11th, he still went a best time, breaking both the Estonian and Baltic records in a time of 1:55.62. Zirk lowered his Estionian and Baltic twice today, going 1:56.12 in prelims to beat his old mark of 1:56.63 from the 2021 European Championships and then dropping 0.5 seconds in the semifinals.

Six out of the eight finalists in the 200 fly, including gold medal favorite Milak, are European. This continues the trend of European dominance at this meet, as they already have twelve medals so far after three days.

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Troyy
2 years ago

Marchand is really gonna be a multi-event monster in Paris.

Reid
2 years ago

I remember the times Zirk had when he started training and competing with Energy Standard, I kind assumed he got to stick around because he was a chill dude or had an uncle who worked at Nintendo or something. Nice to see him come into his own as a legitimate world level swimmer

Last edited 2 years ago by Reid

About Yanyan Li

Yanyan Li

Although Yanyan wasn't the greatest competitive swimmer, she learned more about the sport of swimming by being her high school swim team's manager for four years. She eventually ventured into the realm of writing and joined SwimSwam in January 2022, where she hopes to contribute to and learn more about …

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