Swim of the Week: Shoma Sato’s 2:06.40 In 200 Breaststroke

Disclaimer: Swim of the Week is not meant to be a conclusive selection of the best overall swim of the week, but rather one Featured Swim to be explored in deeper detail. The Swim of the Week is an opportunity to take a closer look at the context of one of the many fast swims this week, perhaps a swim that slipped through the cracks as others grabbed the headlines, or a race we didn’t get to examine as closely in the flood of weekly meets.

19-year-old Shoma Sato is ready for his home nation to host the 2020 Olympics (in 2021).

In Japan’s sole Olympic qualifying meet, Sato crushed the second-fastest 200 breaststroke of all-time, going 2:06.40 to blow out one of the best national breaststroking fields on the planet.

Sato dropped nearly four tenths of a second off his lifetime-best from earlier in the season. His 2:06.40 ranks him #2 all-time and just three tenths from Anton Chupkov‘s world record:

Top LCM 200 Breaststroke Performers All-Time:

  1. Anton Chupkov (RUS) – 2:06.12, 2019
  2. Shoma Sato (JPN) – 2:06.40, 2021
  3. Matt Wilson (AUS) – 2:06.67, 2019
  4. Ippei Watanabe (JPN) – 2:06.67, 2017
  5. Arno Kamminga (NED) – 2:06.85, 2020

Sato has now been 2:06 on three separate occasions and owns three of the eight fastest swims in history.

For what felt like many years, no swimmer could break the 2:07-barrier, though many approached it. Now, 2:06 has become a common occurrence, with a crowded field hunting Chupkov’s world record at this summer’s Olympics.

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Hank
3 years ago

Wow 😨 How fast is his 100?

Khachaturian
Reply to  Hank
3 years ago

hasn’t even broke 59 yet

Arisuin
Reply to  Khachaturian
3 years ago

Too bad that JASF set the qualifying standards that too high for most events and won’t let their best swimmers compete at the olympics. I hope that they’ll let them pass. They deserve the chance to compete at their home olympics, and they would probably do really well.

mileSwim
Reply to  Khachaturian
3 years ago

Yeah, he put down a 59 low the other day, shame he didn’t make the team in that event, he seems to be improving fast

Last edited 3 years ago by mileSwim
Swimmerfromjapananduk
Reply to  mileSwim
3 years ago

He has improved rapidly ever since swimming has been reopened in japan, but even before the whole covid situation, sato was still fast for his age but no means a contender for the top spots in the breaststroke rankings. It is exciting to see how he will perform at my home olympics

swimfan210_
3 years ago

What a stud

Khachaturian
3 years ago

19 year old….. so he is born probably 2001,2002? Sheesh, I am feeling pretty old

boknows34
Reply to  Khachaturian
3 years ago

YOB – 2001

Sun Yangs Hammer
3 years ago

It’s only Wednesday. Give Dean a chance

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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