Maya DiRado Upsets Katinka Hosszu, Moves to 5th All-Time in 200 Back

2016 RIO OLYMPIC GAMES

Add one more upset to the tally for this week.  Tonight, in a video that coaches everywhere will undoubtedly use to show age groupers the importance of nailing the finish, Maya DiRado touched out the Iron Lady, Katinka Hosszu, to take gold in the women’s 200 back.

Hosszu came in to Rio as one of the clear favorites in this event, and had already won the 100 back, 200 IM, and the 400 IM, the latter of which in world record time.  She had the fastest time in the field in both the preliminaries and the semifinals in this event.

After Hosszu stormed out to an early lead, DiRado slowly began reeling her in.  The last 25m appeared to show DiRado gaining a little on Hosszu, but Hosszu still appeared to have the lead going into the wall.  It came down to the the final touch, and DiRado lunged while Hosszu took one more stroke.  When the results appeared, DiRado had beaten Hosszu 2:05.99 to 2:06.05.

That time ranks DiRado as the 5th-fastest swimmer ever in this event, displacing Hosszu and her 2:06.03 that she swam in the semifinals.  Here’s the all-time list:

2:04.06 – Missy Franklin, USA
2:04.81 – Kirsty Coventry, ZIM
2:04.94 – Anastasia Fesikova, RUS
2:05.81 – Emily Seebohm, AUS
2:05.99 – Maya DiRado, USA
2:06.03 – Katinka Hosszu, HUN

DiRado has promised that this is her first and last Olympics.  If she holds true to that plan, then she will finish her Olympic career with one individual gold of each medal.  She faced Hosszu in all three individual races, and DiRado took silver in the 400 IM and the bronze in the 200 IM.  Additionally, she earned a gold medal in the 4×200 free relay after swimming a very solid splits in finals, despite not competing in the individual event at Olympic Trials.

In This Story

16
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

16 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
aviatorfly
7 years ago

That was maybe the most shocking Olympic finish ever. Awesome

Naya Missy
7 years ago

Didn’t Missy also swim a 2:04 in 2013?

5wimmer
Reply to  Naya Missy
7 years ago

5th fastest performer, not performance

Prickle
7 years ago

What a day! Maya DiRado, Katie Ledecky, Anthony Ervin. Triple miracle in one night. Couldn’t even dream of such thing happening. Thank you guys very much. You are the most likeable members of this great team.

Cate
Reply to  Prickle
7 years ago

Amen

Tigerswim22
7 years ago

Maya D is a total class act and is fearless and knows how to finish a race!!°

Baker\'s Pearl Earrings
7 years ago

The 4 swimmers above her on that list were all swimming the 200 back at the games and were all beaten by Maya. If she decides to stay in the sport, this is just the beginning for her.

ADSF
7 years ago

So happy for May! I think she shoukd turn pro and continue to train to 2020 Olympics. She can defer the McKinsey job for the next 4 years. Or work here 2 years and then come back to compete.

Sean S
Reply to  ADSF
7 years ago

I don’t know what kind of company would allow an employee to get hired and then not start working for years.

Wahooswimfan
Reply to  Sean S
7 years ago

A company that values talented smart motivated employees.

SinkSunk
Reply to  ADSF
7 years ago

I’d like to see Maya work at McKinsey for a few years, then come back, not to swim as an athlete, but to run USA Swimming.

Dan
Reply to  SinkSunk
7 years ago

If she does 2 years at McKinsey, then an MBA, which is a fairly standard trajectory for McKinsey, she could end up back at a university in time to train for another olympics.

Cate
Reply to  ADSF
7 years ago

What kind of company do you work for? Mine sure wouldn’t do that.

Cheatinvlad
7 years ago

Change the title to “MAYA DIRADO UPSETS SHANE TUSUP, SWIMS 5TH-FASTEST 200 BACK EVER” 🙂

Cate
Reply to  Cheatinvlad
7 years ago

Sexist. Tusup is not the one in the water.

About Robert Gibbs