Three Individual Olympic Champions Will Face Each Other In The Women’s 200 IM

2024 PARIS SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES

The women’s 200 IM looks to be an even higher-stakes race than expected.

Prior to the start of the 2024 Paris Olympic Games, it was already known than the women’s 200 IM would be one of the most competitive events, with four of the top eight performers of all time—Kate Douglass, Kaylee McKeown, Alex Walsh, and Summer McIntosh—all participating. But six days into the games, the event still feels impossible to predict, as the three top seeds have all won Olympic gold medals and set personal best times.

Douglass won the 200 breast in American record fashion, McKeown tied her best time in the 100 back and is favored to win the 200 back, and McIntosh won both the 400 IM and 200 fly while setting a textile world record in the latter race. And then there’s Walsh, who has the 200 IM as her only race of the meet and won’t have to deal with the event load that her competitors have.

With all competitors seemingly in top form, nobody can be ruled out for being “off” yet. Every swimmer must be at their absolute best if they want a shot at winning.

In addition, the 200 IM could also determine who is the most decorated female swimmer of the meet in terms of individual performance. Assuming McKeown wins the 200 back, both she and McIntosh will be at two individual golds, and their placings in the 200 IM will determine who has a better individual tally. Meanwhile, if Douglass wins, in addition to McKeown winning the 200 back and Katie Ledecky winning the 800 free, there will be four different women at this meet with two individual gold medals.

In that scenario, McIntosh would likely take the crown as the only swimmer with four individual medals — but if Douglass breaks the 200 IM world record and is the only woman at this meet to do so, will she have a case to make for swimmer of the meet?

Another interesting variable for this 200 IM race will be the conditions of this pool, which is shallower than recommended and has been responsible for slower-than-normal times across the board in several events. The shallow pool has generated more waves and turbulence — how will that affect swimmers in this race? Douglass, McKeown, Walsh, and McIntosh are all known to have different race strategies and strengths in different strokes, and it will be interesting to see whether the pool affects how they swim.

After three years of these four swimmers trading top timers, they will finally come together to compete in one race on the highest stage. And with everyone on-form, this race is going to be even better than what we thought it would be.

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Personal Best
6 minutes ago

Out of the challengers who have already competed, all setting or equaling PBs in their events tell us they’re in great form.

Really can’t split them yet… Probably at the 160m mark we’ll have an idea.

Kaylee’s the only one who hasn’t yet swum her 200 races though, and she’s the one with closest final to the 200IM, so will be interesting to see how she fares in the 200 back. She probably will have to fight for the win in the back… Regan is strong over 200s, and I don’t feel it will be a walk in the park.

Summer’s fly though – huge time.
Will be exciting for sure.

Awsi Dooger
22 minutes ago

Kate Douglass should throw a party and allow all the Australian commenters to taste her gold medal.

McIntosh seldom loses unless Titmus is in the race. That’s the easiest reference point I detect.

I’d like Douglass and McIntosh to share gold

VA Steve
27 minutes ago

I think Kate will get it but it will be a dogfight and anyone of four can win. Alex is definitely one of them.

Tracy Kosinski
30 minutes ago

I thought the 400 FR would be the race of the century, but it’s the 200 IM.

I think Summer will get them on the freestyle, no matter what position she’s in at the 150 mark. She’s got the distance training to back her up. If she’s first going into the freestyle, no one else stands a chance.

I am rooting for all of these ladies to win and would love to see this WR go down.

VA Steve
Reply to  Tracy Kosinski
17 minutes ago

Kate is the fastest in 3 of the 4 strokes. We’ll see.

iLikePsych
32 minutes ago

I want Douglass to win, but I’d have to call Summer at this point since she’s the one who dropped by far the most time this meet.

Bob
Reply to  iLikePsych
31 minutes ago

She added multiple seconds in the other IM.

Ben
Reply to  Bob
1 minute ago

But does that really matter when she still won by more than 6 seconds, and has the world record anyway?

NCSwimFan
53 minutes ago

Thinking that Summer’s massive breaststroke improvements that were evident in her Canadian Trials 400 IM may be enough to take it. But who knows, this is going to be an absolute battle of the titans.

NUSwimFan
58 minutes ago

This race is insane. Between the 3 of them, they will end up winning more than a third (6 out of 14 if Kaylee wins the 200 back, 5 out of 14 if she doesn’t) of all the women’s individual races in Paris.

I miss the ISL (go dawgs)
1 hour ago

If KD can’t do it, I really hope Summer does.

E.P.
Reply to  I miss the ISL (go dawgs)
1 hour ago

Summer is gorgeous.

ScovaNotiaSwimmer
Reply to  E.P.
45 minutes ago

And underage

Bob
Reply to  ScovaNotiaSwimmer
26 minutes ago

Isn’t canadian age of consent 16? And if e.p. were under 24, it would be legal in Sarasota as well.

LBSWIM
Reply to  E.P.
41 minutes ago

Ewww

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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