The Top 30 Swims From The 2024 Paris Olympics

2024 PARIS SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES

With the Paris Olympics complete, it is time to look at the top swims at the meet. After so many good performances, narrowing a list down to only 30 swims is very difficult but here are the top 30 swims from the 9-day meet.

30. Leon Marchand‘s 4:02.95 400 IM

Marchand already is the World Record holder in the men’s 400 IM after swimming a 4:02.50 last summer at the World Championships to break Michael Phelps‘ record of a 4:03.84. Marchand swam a 4:02.95 in Paris to win the event by over five and a half seconds.

29. Qin Haiyang 57.98 Breaststroke Split

Qin threw down this split and had his best swim of the meet when he needed to. Despite being the World Record holder, Qin missed the 200 breast final and also missed the podium in the 100 breast. He did not break the 59-second mark in any of his 3 swims in the individual 100 breast, making it seem as it a 58-mid was likely for the relay. Instead, he threw down a 57.98, a split that was necessary to end the US streak in the men’s 4×100 medley relay to close the meet.

28. Mollie O’Callaghan 52.24 Free Lead Off

O’Callaghan missed the podium in the individual 100 freestyle but swam a 52.24 on the lead off leg for the Australian women’s 4×100 free relay, giving them a lead from the start. Her swim would have won silver in the individual race.

27. Paige Madden 8:13.00 800 Free

Madden has soared up the all-time rankings in the women’s 800 freestyle in the last year. She swam a personal best to make the event at US Olympic Trials, swam another lifetime best in prelims, and then went even faster for bronze in finals. She dropped a total of 14.99 seconds from when she swam the event at the 2023 Pan Am Games last fall.

26. Roman Mityukov 1:54.85 200 Back

Mityukov swam a new national record en route to bronze at the meet, winning the only medal for Switzerland in the pool as well. He also became the first man from Switzerland to ever final in the 200 backstroke, ensuring they had a place on the medal table.

25. Anastasiia Kirpichnikova 15:40.35 1500 Free

Kirpichnikova swam to a new lifetime best and French national record in front of the home crowd as she won silver behind Katie Ledecky of the US in the 1500 free. Kirpichnikova swam for Russia at the Tokyo Olympics but gained French citizenship last year and has seen success since the move.

24. Sarah Sjostrom 52.16 100 Free

Sjostrom did not even plan to swim the 100 freestyle at the beginning of the year and even after swimming on the relay on day 1, but her coach encouraged her to stay in the race. Instead of scratching the event, she earned gold with a 52.16 earning her 2nd ever Olympic gold medal.

23. Tatjana Smith 1:05.28 100 Breast

After winning silver in the 100 breast in Tokyo, Smith earned gold in Paris, touching in a 1:05.28. She announced her retirement from the sport as well but was able to end on a high note with gold in the 100 and silver in the 200 breast. Her medal(s) also earned South Africa a spot on the medal table.

22. Caeleb Dressel 49.41 100 Fly Split

Dressel came through for the US men splitting a 49.41 on the butterfly leg for the 4×100 medley relay. After missing the individual final in the event with a 51.57 in semifinals, throwing down a 49.41 is a big rebound and was clutch to keep the US ahead of France for silver.

21. Kaylee McKeown 57.33 100 Backstroke

McKeown swam to a new Olympic record for a few days and a gold medal with a 57.33 in the 100 back. That also tied her own Oceania record that she swam last fall which stood as the World Record until Regan Smith of the US swam a 57.13 at US Trials.

20. Apostolos Christou 1:54.82 200 Back

Christou became the first medalist for Greece in the pool in over a century, winning silver in the 200 back in a new national record as well. He was not even seeded in the top 16 in the event but moved up the rankings with his historic swim.

19. Josh Liendo 49.99 100 Butterfly

Liendo broke a barrier with this swim, becoming the 5th man to ever break the 50-second mark in the 100 fly as he swam to silver. He also led a 2-3 finish alongside Ilya Kharun who won bronze. The two became the first Canadian men to stand on the podium together.

18. Torri Huske 52.29 100 Free

Huske was seeded 7th coming into the 100 free and it seemed as if the Australians would stand on the podium instead of the US. That was not the case as Huske won silver and no Australians made the podium. She came into the meet with a best time of a 52.90, a time that would have been 7th in finals.

17. Mona McSharry 1:05.59 100 Breast

With some momentum coming into the meet, McSharry looked to be a contender in the breaststroke events and she came through. She became the 2nd swimmer to ever medal in swimming for Ireland with bronze in the 100 breast and her moment on the podium is one to remember.

16. Regan Smith 57.28 100 Back Lead Off

Smith’s lead off for the women’s 4×100 medley relay would have won gold in the individual event earlier in the week and it sits as the #2 performance all-time as Smith is the World Record holder with a 57.13 from US Trials in June. She started the US relay out on the right foot as they went on to win gold in a new World Record.

15. Katie Ledecky 15:30.02 1500 Free

Defending her title in a new Olympic Record time, Katie Ledecky now holds the top 20 performances in the 1500 free all-time as her time of a 15:30.02 sits at #8. She is the only woman to ever win the event at the Olympic level.

14. Kate Douglass 2:19.24 200 Breast

Winning her first individual Olympic gold medal, the legend of Kate Douglass grows as she captured the 200 breaststroke title. She broke her own American Record that she swam in January.

13. Katie Ledecky 8:11.04 800 Free

Making history with her swim, Ledecky became the first woman and 2nd swimmer all-time to win the same event at four Olympics as only Michael Phelps has done so winning the 200 IM four times. Ledecky holds the top 17 performances all-time as this swim is #14.

12. Daniel Wiffen 7:38.19 800 Free

The other 800 freestyle winner, Daniel Wiffen of Ireland also made history in the process. Wiffen became the first man from Ireland to ever make an Olympic final and went beyond that, capturing gold as well. He also is the 3rd Irish swimmer to ever medal.

11. Leon Marchand 2:05.85 200 Breast

On the back half of his “dirty double,” Marchand swam to become the #2 performer all-time in the 200 breaststroke. He broke Zac Stubblety-Cook‘s Olympic Record in the process as well as Stubblety-Cook swam to silver in the race.

10. Leon Marchand 1:51.25 200 Fly

Chasing down Kristof Milak on the final 50 fueled by a strong turn, Marchand swam an Olympic Record on the front half of his dirty double as well. He became the #2 performer all-time to sit only behind Milak and now ahead of Michael Phelps in the process.

9. Sarah Sjostrom 23.66 50 Free (Semifinals)

Sjostrom set an Olympic Record and had the #3 performance all-time in semifinals of the women’s 50 free before going on to win gold in the race as well. She was just off her World Record of a 23.61 that she swam last year.

8. Torri Huske 51.88 Free Relay Split

Swimming the fastest relay split of her career so far, Huske kept the US ahead of China in the mixed medley relay with a 51.88 anchor leg. China’s Yang Junxuan came home in a 51.92 so Huske’s 51.88 was necessary to keep the US ahead of China as Huske earned the touch at the end only 0.12 ahead of Yang.

7. Summer McIntosh 2:03.03 200 Fly

The Canadian teenager swam to a new Olympic Record in the 200 fly and also became the #2 performer all-time as she won gold in the women’s 200 fly. She also broke her own World Junior Record.

6. Leon Marchand 1:54.06 200 IM

In the #2 performance all-time, Marchand came so close to holding another World Record as Ryan Lochte of the US holds the 200 IM World Record with a 1:54.00. Nonetheless, Marchand broke Michael Phelps‘ Olympic Record en route to another gold in front of his home crowd.

5. Gretchen Walsh 55.03 Fly Split

Walsh swam what is tied for the fastest 100 fly split of all-time with Sarah Sjostrom with a 55.03 in the women’s 4×100 medley relay. After winning silver in the individual race, the World Record holder threw down a split that would help the US women to a new World Record.

4. Pan Zhanle 45.92 100 Free Split

Another relay split, Pan swam faster than Jason Lezak‘s split at the 2008 Olympics. Pan became the first sub-46 split of all-time, just one of his many big swims while in Paris. Pan dove in 3rd at the final exchange and his historic split was enough to overtake France and the US, ending the US men’s medley relay streak in the process.

3. Summer McIntosh 2:06.56 200 IM

In a race that was given a lot of hype, McIntosh delivered with a 2:06.56, breaking Katinka Hosszu‘s Olympic Record in the process. McIntosh also became the first Canadian to ever win three gold medals in the same Olympics with her swim.

2. Pan Zhanle 100 Free 46.40

Pan broke his own World Record of a 46.80 that he swam in February at the 2024 World Championships. He dominated the field in Paris, winning by over a full second ahead of Kyle Chalmers‘ 47.48.

1. Bobby Finke 14:30.67 1500 Free

What puts Finke’s swim at #1 is the fact that he did not hold the World Record before. He also won the event almost 9 seconds faster than he did in Tokyo as he was a 14:39.65 then, breaking Sun Yang’s World Record from 2012 as well.

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yep
2 minutes ago

Nice

Last edited 2 minutes ago by yep
Wahoowa
4 minutes ago

Statistically, Pan’s swim is much better than Fink’s swim. Using a ‘Population’ of the top 8 finals swimmers, the Mean and Standard Deviation (SD) of the 100M Free are 47.54 and 0.47. Pan’s swim is 2.42 SDs away from the mean. The Mean and SD of the 1500M Free are 880.95 (seconds) and 6.16. Finke’s swim is only 1.67 SDs away from the mean. To put Pan’s swim into historical perspective, I looked at the Women’s 200M Fly results from the 1981 Nationals. The Mean and SD of this event are 133.49 (Seconds) and 3.09. Mary T Meagher’s swim was 2.43 SDs away from the mean. Using a population of the top 8 finals swimmers allows us to compare ‘Apples’… Read more »

Happy Slappy
6 minutes ago

Top 30 swims? Might as well make it top 50 and add everyone.

snailSpace
15 minutes ago

The criteria for a swim to get onto this list aren’t very clear, but as I understand it boils down to: how fast it was period, how fast it was compared to the swimmer’s best, how unexpected it was and how memorable it was. The problem is, the list is inconsistent with its own criteria at quite a few places.

  1. Ledecky’s 800 free shouldn’t be on the list while Titmus’s should be. Ledecky was much slower than last year, her winning margin was smaller, and it was like her 36th fastest swim or something. Titmus’s is a PB and Australian record, and she broke 8:13 for the first time in her career. I can respect the logic that puts
… Read more »

wusalu32
28 minutes ago

I don’t want to sound harsh but I find the quality of swimswam writing has come down quite dramatically over the last year or so. What has happened? I remember swimswam (when it first started more than 10 years ago) being a high quality, less biased swim web site comparing to the now non-existent swimnews.com

Sapiens Ursus
Reply to  wusalu32
6 minutes ago

I mean this is sports news filler, but yeah…

Last edited 6 minutes ago by Sapiens Ursus
Andy Hardt
39 minutes ago

I don’t agree with some of the order, and might have chosen different swims in a few places (e.g. Titmus), but it’s fun to see little summaries of so many of the top swims from Paris!

Claveria
44 minutes ago

If slower times are better ranked, then the swimmer is american. Everytime and always. Stop this nonsensical bias, please

Facts
45 minutes ago

Winning your first Olympic gold medal in the second fastest time in history in front of a roaring home crowd…30th best swim of the meet!

TXSwimDad
Reply to  Facts
32 minutes ago

agree this one jumped out to me as way too low also

Emily Se-Bom Lee
Reply to  Facts
28 minutes ago

and it’s ranked behind a 1:54 200 back

Facts
Reply to  Emily Se-Bom Lee
15 minutes ago

Not just one 1:54 200 back but two and not even the winner. I can kind of understand the Christou choice if you put overachievement and emotional context into the swim but Mityukov was already a medal contender and 1:54 isn’t amazing so an odd choice foresure over something like Lukas Maertens winning his first Olympic gold in the 400m free in a 3:41

About Anya Pelshaw

Anya Pelshaw

Anya has been with SwimSwam since June 2021 as both a writer and social media coordinator. She was in attendance at the 2022, 2023, and 2024 Women's NCAA Championships writing and doing social media for SwimSwam. She also attended 2023 US Summer Nationals as well as the 2024 European Championships …

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