Only Seven Super-Suited World Records Are Still On The Books

This month, Lukas Märtens took down the super-suited 400 freestyle world record at the Stockholm Open, becoming the first man to break the 3:40 barrier with a 3:39.96. It was one of the oldest long-course world records remaining, and carried historical weight as Märtens not only broke a time barrier but took another super-suited mark off the books by erasing countrymate Paul Biedermann’s mark from the 2009 World Championships.

Now that super-suited mark is gone, how many super-suited world records remain?

We last checked in on this question in October, when Kate Douglass took down Rebecca Soni’s short-course meter 200 breaststroke mark at the Incheon stop of the Swimming World Cup. After Douglass’ swim, only ten super-suited world records were left. Now, that mark is in single digits, with just seven records left.

Thanks to a blistering 2024 Short Course World Championships, there are no super-suited short-course meters world records left. Heading into December’s Short Course World Championships, there were two—the men’s 200 freestyle and women’s 50 butterfly. Luke Hobson broke the 200 freestyle mark, another Biedermann record, leading off the men’s 4×200 freestyle relay, then lowered the mark again in the individual final. Gretchen Walsh broke the women’s 50 butterfly record at the beginning of her historic championships, becoming the first woman sub-24 seconds with a 23.94 in the event semifinals.

The asterisk there is France’s 1:20.77 in the men’s 4×50 freestyle relay, which is still the world’s fastest swim in that event. But it was not ratified by World Aquatics (then FINA) so the official world record stands at 1:21.80, swum by the United States in 2018.

So, there are only long-course super-suited records still standing, one on the women’s side and six on the men’s.

Women

The remaining women’s super-suited world record is of course Liu Zige’s 2:01.81 200 butterfly. This is widely regarded as the toughest world record on the women’s side; Summer McIntosh swam the fastest effort we’ve seen since Liu for gold at the Paris Olympics. Her 2:03.03 makes the second-fastest performer all-time and the fastest performer in a textile suit. She’s still 1.22 seconds off Liu’s pace, with active swimmers Regan Smith (2:03.84) and Zhang Yufei (2:03.86) ranked fourth and fifth all-time.

McIntosh showed off excellent in-season form at the Westmont Pro Series with a 2:04.00 to take over the season’s world rankings.

Men

As we noted in October, freestyle events dominate the men’s list of remaining super-suited world records. Five of the six are freestyle events, with the exception being Aaron Piersol’s 200 backstroke (1:51.92).

It’s been a difficult mark for textile-suit swimmers to approach. Four of the top five performances in 200 backstroke history were swum in super-suits and Ryan Lochte owns the textile world in a 1:52.96 effort he logged in 2011. Since then, no swimmer has broken 1:53, with Mitch Larkin swimming 1:53.17 in 2015 and Evgeny Rylov hitting 1:53.23 in 2021. Rylov has since been banned from World Aquatics competitions and both Ryan Murphy (1:53.57) and Xu Jiayu (1:53.99) swam their fastest times in 2018.

In this next wave of backstrokers, all eyes are on reigning Olympic champion Hubert Kos in the 200 backstroke. He’s taken hold of this event since he first beat Murphy for the 2023 world title and owns a lifetime best 1:54.14, ninth-fastest in history, which makes him the most likely candidate to get into the 1:53 range, especially after his performances so far this spring. Hugo Gonzalez and Keaton Jones also swam 1:54s in 2024, with Gonzalez hitting 1:54.51 at Spanish Trials and Jones 1:54.61 at U.S Trials.

Now, let us turn our attention to the freestyle events.

Cesar Cielo owns the world record in the men’s 50 freestyle with a 20.91. 40.6% of voters in a recent A3 Performance poll on SwimSwam voted this as the most likely super-suited world record to fall next.  There have been no sub-21 second swims in the intervening years, though Caeleb Dressel clocked 21.04 for the textile world record, which reigning Olympic champion Cameron McEvoy scared with a 21.06. Ben Proud (21.11) and Florent Manaudou, who is taking a break from competition, are the only other active swimmers with a lifetime best under 21.20.

After Hobson and Märtens antics, Biedermann’s last remaining world record is the 200 freestyle, which he holds at 1:42.00. David Popovici is the prime candidate to break this world record as he clocked a 1:42.97 at the 2022 European Championships.

No other active swimmer has broken 1:44, though there is some question about whether we could see a surge in this event post-shallow Olympic pool. Prime candidates for the next man to break 1:44 include Märtens (1:44.14), Pan Zhanle (1:44.65), and Hobson (1:44.76). There’s a trio of Brits separated by .08 in the 1:44-low range though with British record holder Dean taking a relaxed approach to this season, it is Duncan Scott (1:44.26) or Matt Richards (1:44.30) who are the most likely British swimmers to get under that mark. Still, all these 1:44+ swimmers have some work to do before they challenge the world record in the way that even Popovici has, which is to say, come within a second of the mark.

The 800 freestyle is another matter entirely. Zhang Lin’s 7:32.12 from the 2009 World Championships is more than three seconds faster than the next fastest time, a 7:35.27 Ous Mellouli swam in the same race. Despite the distance renaissance that’s happened in men’s swimming over the last Olympic quad, no man has broken the 7:37 barrier since. Ahmed Hafnaoui, who was recently suspended by World Aquatics for a whereabouts violation, and Sam Short are the only two to break 7:38, as they pushed each other to 7:37.00 and 7:37.76, respectively, at the 2023 World Championships.

Dan Wiffen got close in Paris, swimming a 7:38.19 for gold and has made no secret of his world-record goals. Bobby Finke owns a 7:38.67 best from 2023 Worlds and Märtens followed up his 400 freestyle world record with a German record 7:39.10. That makes him the ninth-fastest swimmer all-time, checking in just behind Finke. This is arguably the field you want chasing this world record, but they’ve still got a significant amount of ground to make up.

Finally, there are two super-suited world records still on the men’s books. First is the 4×100 freestyle relay mark, which the United States set at 3:08.24 during the 2008 Olympics. The U.S team of Dressel, Blake Pieroni, Bowe Becker, and Zach Apple are the only quartet to break 3:09 in textile suits with their 3:08.97 from the Tokyo Games. France’s team from the 2012 Olympics and Russia’s 2019 Worlds squad are the only non-U.S. teams to break the 3:10 barrier.

The U.S. also holds the 4×200 freestyle relay world record, swimming a 6:58.55 at the 2009 World Championships that improved their time from Beijing by a hundredth. Unsurprisingly given their trio of 1:44s in the 200 freestyle, it’s Great Britain’s Dean, Scott, Richards, and James Guy that has gotten the closest to this mark. The quartet owns the third, fourth, and sixth fastest performances in history. They are the only team with active swimmers faster than 7:00, a mark they’ve cleared three times. However, the U.S. team of Hobson, Carson Foster, Jake Mitchell, and Kieran Smith got close at the 2023 World Championships with a 7:00.02.

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David
3 days ago

Let’s go the other way.. convert Brian Goodalls 15.02 in Montreal to today.. Cap, better turns, Arena current suit.. Best swim ever maybe. Also John Nabors 100/200 backstroke was crazy good.

Mr._Magoo
3 days ago

You still on that conversation of shallow Olympic pool? You have to be kidding me. It has no significant influence on performance. The reality of the Olympics is that the pressure + logistics + the stressful season of trials and Olympics have a 10x more impact than the depth of the pool.

Steve Johnson
3 days ago

Piersol’s record was set wearing only legs. I don’t know that science ever showed that just legs was worth much.

1650
Reply to  Steve Johnson
3 days ago

I asked about this on a previous article and got downvoted into oblivion- Does anyone know if him wearing a legs only suit didn’t have as great an affect on his time as wearing a full body suit would? This is genuine curiosity, I’m not trying to discredit others or make a claim that Peirsol could have gone faster.

snailSpace
Reply to  1650
3 days ago

He peaked later than male swimmers typically do and his fastest non-suited time is 2.5 seconds off his WR. The suit definitely helped him significantly. Though if he wore the full-body suit, it could have helped him even more, possibly.

SwimStats
Reply to  Steve Johnson
3 days ago

He had an interview with SwimSwam (I think) in which he basically said the legs made him a lot faster.

Sparkle
Reply to  Steve Johnson
3 days ago

I remember wearing legs only during a state meet and a full body at nationals, and while the full body was obviously more buoyant, the legs also gave a lot of buoyancy too. I think one of the reasons the suits were so good was that your hips didn’t drop as you got tired throughout a race, so even legs only were a significant boost

oldnotdead
Reply to  Steve Johnson
3 days ago

He said he thought the suit helped him – plus, he never broke 1:54 in textile.

Hank
4 days ago

Hot take. Any super suited records not broken by a certain date say 2030 should be wiped. If they aren’t beatable over 20 years advancement of the sport then they are unfair records.

Last edited 4 days ago by Hank
Ervin
4 days ago

Women’s 200 fly is the most unbreakable

mahmoud
Reply to  Ervin
3 days ago

I disagree. The Men’s 800 free is the most unbreakable. The 200 fly for women might be the most attainable given Summer’s talent and protectory over the next few years.

Alison England
Reply to  Ervin
3 days ago

Summer will break it soon.

Thomas The Tank Engine
Reply to  Ervin
2 days ago

7:32 says hello

mahmoud
4 days ago

the 4×200 free relay will be the first too go on the mens side. I believe GB were 6.58.58 in toyko, only 0.03 any from the world record. Summer will break the 200 fly sooner or later. I do think the 200 back, 200 free and 800 free world records are going to be broken by a generational swimmer. That 1.51.92 world record in the 200 back in so underrated. Doesn’t get the attention in deserves.

Mclovineta
Reply to  mahmoud
3 days ago

Brits window is still open but wont be for long. Funnily enough the weakest leg right now might be Tom Dean, the one who ruined the record 4 years ago.

Emma Eckeon
4 days ago

The world best in 4×50 free is France. Weird to be recognize by EA and not WA when it’s was swam multiple times in short course worlds

Thomas The Tank Engine
Reply to  Emma Eckeon
4 days ago

Didn’t they wear double suits in Rijeka?

Emily Se-Bom Lee
Reply to  Emma Eckeon
3 days ago

world aquatics only introduced the 4x50s in 2014, so any potential ratification was always going to come after that point. the 2008 swim’s unratified status would be due to it needing (and failing) to comply with the suit regulations made effective from 2010 onwards

Last edited 3 days ago by Emily Se-Bom Lee
@RealJoeSchooling
4 days ago

No disrespect to Zhang (I have never understood the amount of hate people give some swimmers for having success as if they were responsible for the introduction of the supersuits) but that swim truly embodies the problematic advantage those suits provided over older and even modern wear, I’m don’t think that field in 09 was breaking 7:40 (07 was won in 7:47) without the magic plastic buoyancy. Just one year later Sun was scaring Hackett’s 1500m WR without the supersuit. Hypothetically let’s just say he’s born a couple years earlier, I think we’re talking about some comical 14:2x time then being on the books then. I’m already in fantasyland so let’s throw prime Thorpe in one… 7:32 I don’t think… Read more »

Last edited 4 days ago by @RealJoeSchooling
Khachaturian
Reply to  @RealJoeSchooling
3 days ago

He also had the best swim of his life. I think it is similar to how Beamon did that crazy long jump, Zhang Lin swam the race as perfectly for himself as he could in that moment.

About Sophie Kaufman

Sophie Kaufman

Sophie grew up in Boston, Massachusetts, which means yes, she does root for the Bruins, but try not to hold that against her. At 9, she joined her local club team because her best friend convinced her it would be fun. Shoulder surgery ended her competitive swimming days long ago, …

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