Tokyo 2020 Olympic Swimming Relay Qualification Status

In about 6 weeks, top swimming nations around the world will begin to ramp up their selection procedures for the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo, Japan. While those meets will do a lot of the selecting for who gets chosen for relays at the Games, which countries are eligible for relays are chosen by a wholly different process.

Olympic Swimming relay selection process

  1. The top 12 teams from prelims of each Olympic relay at the World Championships are selected to the Olympics. The finish order from prelims is what matters, so if a team is disqualified in the final (like the Dutch mixed 400 medley relay was), the team’s spot at the Olympics is secure.
  2. The next 4 best relays from the qualification period, March 1st, 2019 through May 22nd*, 2020, will receive a spot – if the relay is swum at a FINA approved Olympic qualifying event. This includes most Olympic Trials meets, the Southeast Asian Games, the World Championships, World Juniors, Euro Juniors, the World University Games, the FINA World Cups (where a few countries have actually swum times that will get them selected), and a selection of other important international meets.
  3. If any of the top 12 teams from the World Championships, or any of the next 4 best teams during the selection period, decline their spot, then the next-fastest team during the selection period goes. So, if a top-12 team at the World Championships declines their spot, it’s not necessarily the 13th team from the World Championships that is selected.

* note: the May 22nd final date for relay qualification is moved up from the original date of May 31st, although May 31st is still listed on some FINA documentation. May 22nd comes shortly after the conclusion of swimming at the European Championships.

A few notes:

  • Countries can swim any athlete that is entered in any individual event in a relay, even if they have not achieved the OST/”B” standard for the corresponding stroke and distance of the relay in which they are entered.
  • Each NOC gets additional relay-only athletes, but those athletes must have hit the OST/”B” standard for the corresponding stroke and distance of the relay in which they are entered. So, if a swimmer is racing the breaststroke leg of the medley relay, that swimmer must have at least a “B” cut in the 100 breaststroke, if they are a relay only swimmer. If that breaststroker on the medley relay has no cut in the 100 breaststroke but is swimming, say, the 1500 free, they’re still eligible for the relay.
  • Countries must confirm their participation in a relay no later than June 10th, 2020 and must confirm their relay-only athletes by no later than June 19th, 2020.
  • No ‘aggregate relay times,’ the relay must actually be raced to be considered.

Relay-only swimmers, if a country has:

  • 1 qualified relay – 2 additional athletes
  • 2 qualified relays – 4 additional athletes
  • 3 qualified relays – 6 additional athletes
  • 4 qualified relays – 8 additional athletes
  • 5 qualified relays – 10 additional athletes
  • 6 or 7 qualified relays – 12 additional athletes

These relay-only athletes that are chosen for a specific event must swim that event in prelims or finals, or the nation will be disqualified in that relay.

A lot could change in these rankings between now and Tokyo, especially with the European Championships yet to come in mid-May, but headed into the start of Trials season, we wanted to give an update on who is in, who is out, and who is close.

Note: this doesn’t consider having enough swimmers with individual events or FINA “B” cuts to form a relay. We presume that countries with qualifying relays will be able to find 4 swimmers to race them, if they choose.

Editor’s note: FINA doesn’t officially publish an up-to-date ranking for relay qualifying, so we’ve done our best to compile the current rankings manually.

Women’s 400 Free Relay:

Switzerland has a good pair a thte top of their lineup with Maria Ugolkova and Nina Kost, but get pretty thin after that. They should be nervous, because Italy is lurking as first-team-out. Italy’s 4 best flat-start times from last season, led by Federica Pellegrini in 53.40, comes to a 3:38.73, which easily gets them in. They didn’t swim this relay at Worlds, however, and so their current entry on this list comes from the World University Games. Italy has a relay with potential of making a final at the Olympics, but probably not one that will medal, so it’s possible they won’t push too hard or use Pellegrini to try and make this cut, if they enter a relay at all. That’s a very different story for their 400 medley.

Also missing from this list: Great Britain, which controversially refused to enter a relay at Worlds last year. That was in spite of having potentially the 4th-best relay in the world thanks to the development of Freya Anderson and Anna Hopkin. If the Brits decide to swim this event at the European Championships, they can easily move into a top 4 qualifying position, even without much of a taper. This is a relay that is both very good and very young (all 4 swimmers 23-or-younger). It would be a shame to miss that opportunity.

Womens’ 400 Free Relay
Australia Worlds #1 3:30.21
United States Worlds #2 3:31.02
Canada Worlds #3 3:31.78
Netherlands Worlds #4 3:35.32
China Worlds #5 3:35.83
Sweden Worlds #6 3:36.33
Japan Worlds #7 3:36.79
Germany Worlds #8 3:39.07
Russia Worlds #9 3:38.94
Hong Kong Worlds #10 3:40.40
Czech Republic Worlds #11 3:40.78
Poland Worlds #12 3:41.01
France Wildcard #1 3:39.69
Brazil Wildcard #2 3:40.39
Singapore Wildcard #3 3:40.92
Switzerland Wildcard #4 3:41.30
Italy Out #1 3:41.84
Denmark Out #2 3:42.20
South Korea Out #3 3:42.58
Turkey Out #4 3:43.03

Women’s 800 Free Relay:

There will be an Olympic dogfight at the top of this relay, both for gold and the World Record, between the US and Australia, with Canada looking very good for bronze.

This one is a bit odd, because the top wildcard teams (Italy, Great Britain) are far faster than some of the teams that have automatic qualifying spots from the World Championships. It would again be a shame to not see Pellegrini nor Anderson in the 800 free relay, but neither country stacks enough with their star swimmers to really have a chance at a medal here. Italy’s qualifying relay was done at the World University Games, while Britain’s was done at the European Junior Championships, so we don’t know yet if either will chose to race at Worlds.

The French relay here is also from the European Junior Championships. That’s another relay that with it’s top-tier athletes, led by Charlotte Bonnet, could probably make the Olympic final. France was 4th at the 2018 European Championships.

Women’s 800 Free Relay
Australia Worlds #1 7:41.50
United States Worlds #2 7:41.87
Canada Worlds #3 7:44.35
China Worlds #4 7:46.22
Russia Worlds #5 7:48.25
Hungary Worlds #6 7:54.57
Germany Worlds #7 7:55.63
Japan Worlds #8 7:56.31
Poland Worlds #9 8:01.70
New Zealand Worlds #10 8:03.28
Hong Kong Worlds #11 8:04.98
South Korea Worlds #12 8:08.38
Italy Wildcard #1 7:59.68
Great Britain Wildcard #2 8:03.77
Spain Wildcard #3 8:06.97
Singapore Wildcard #4 8:07.00
Brazil Out #1 8:07.77
Thailand Out #2 8:11.88
France Out #3 8:12.60
Denmark Out #4 8:13.03

Women’s 400 Medley Relay:

Without Pernille Blume to anchor, with Rikke Moeller Pedersen retired, and with Mie Nielsen struggling, the Danish women, silver medalists at the 2018 European Championships, flopped at the World Championships in 2019, finishing 16th. If they want a spot from the European Championships, they’ll easily have it. France’s top relay, done at the French Open in 2019, could also move up these rankings in a hurry if they so wished, bumping South Korea and Hong Kong into a precarious position.

The real unknown here is South Africa. Led by breaststroker Tatjana Schoenmaker, the South Africans have a good young core of swimmers that could put together a 4-minute medley, even with a big weakness on backstroke (Marielle Venter swam 1:02.8 to lead this relay off at Worlds – the 2nd-slowest split in the field).

Women’s 400 Medley Relay
United States Worlds #1 3:50.40
Australia Worlds #2 3:53.42
Canada Worlds #3 3:53.58
Italy Worlds #4 3:56.50
China Worlds #5 3:57.11
Japan Worlds #6 3:58.14
Sweden Worlds #7 3:58.39
Great Britain Worlds #8 3:59.38
Germany Worlds #9 4:00.91
Netherlands Worlds #10 4:01.42
Switzerland Worlds #11 4:01.85
Russia Worlds #12 4:02.26
South Korea Wildcard #1 4:03.38
Hong Kong Wildcard #2 4:03.52
Poland Wildcard #3 4:04.27
France Wildcard #4 4:04.32
Denmark Out #1 4:04.33
Brazil Out #2 4:04.96
South Africa Out #3 4:05.12
Spain Out #4 4:05.32

Men’s 400 Free Relay:

There are no un-qualified relays that are too interesting in this field. It seems odd to not see the Chinese men here, but with no Ning Zetao, they’re still very thin in the sprints – the relay finished 17th at the World Championships.

If Joseph Schooling, back training with Sergio Lopez, can regain his previous form, Singapore could make a run at a relay swim here, but the question for them would be ‘is it worth tapering pre-Olympics to get it?’

Men’s 400 Free Relay
United States Worlds #1 3:09.06
Russia Worlds #2 3:09.97
Australia Worlds #3 3:11.22
Italy Worlds #4 3:11.39
Great Britain Worlds #5 3:11.81
Brazil Worlds #6 3:11.99
Hungary Worlds #7 3:12.85
France Worlds #8 3:13.34
Japan Worlds #9 3:14.16
Greece Worlds #10 3:14.44
Germany Worlds #11 3:14.58
Poland Worlds #12 3:14.78
Canada Wildcard #1 3:15.06
Belgium Wildcard #2 3:15.34
Serbia Wildcard #3 3:15.72
Netherlands Wildcard #4 3:15.77
China Out #1 3:16.23
Singapore Out #2 3:16.82
Switzerland Out #3 3:16.85
Ireland Out #4 3:17.38

Men’s 800 Free Relay:

The Canadian men have some good youth in this relay, led by Markus Thormeyer and Alex Pratt, but to make any noise here they need to get their other 2 legs at least into the 1:48s. It’s imaginable that 20-year oldRuslan Gaziev could get there, and a few other guys are close, but Canada will probably be more focused on the medley relays (men’s and mixed) and it would make sense for them to skip this 800 free relay altogether.

Note Ireland teetering in the 16th spot without an obvious challenger. They are not known as a great middle-distance country, but are in a qualifying position thanks to simply a great step-up-and-swim performance from their 4 at Worlds (including Jack McMillan and Robert Powell, both teenagers).

Men’s 800 Free Relay
Australia Worlds #1 7:00.85
Russia Worlds #2 7:01.81
United States Worlds #3 7:01.98
Italy Worlds #4 7:02.01
Great Britain Worlds #5 7:02.04
China Worlds #6 7:04.74
Brazil Worlds #7 7:07.64
Germany Worlds #8 7:07.65
Japan Worlds #9 7:09.23
Israel Worlds #10 7:11.99
Poland Worlds #11 7:12.01
Switzerland Worlds #12 7:12.08
Belgium Wildcard #1 7:12.99
New Zealand Wildcard #2 7:13.06
Hungary Wildcard #3 7:13.64
Ireland Wildcard #4 7:13.91
Canada Out #1 7:14.01
South Korea Out #2 7:15.05
Serbia Out #3 7:15.28
Singapore Out #4 7:17.88

Men’s 400 Medley Relay:

With no Mehdy Metella, France is unlikely to improve their qualifying time in this medley relay, even with Florent Manaudou. They’re vulnerable to being bumped by the Dutch, who were a 3:35.24 at the European Championships in 2018 even without Jesse Puts on their anchor. Arno Kamminga’s 58.6 flat-start in the 100 breaststroke in January, in fact, gives them an outside chance at a final. I’d expect them to go after a qualification at the European Championships.

Men’s 400 Medley Relay
Great Britain Worlds #1 3:28.10
United States Worlds #2 3:28.45
Russia Worlds #3 3:28.81
Japan Worlds #4 3:30.35
Australia Worlds #5 3:30.42
Brazil Worlds #6 3:30.86
China Worlds #7 3:31.61
Germany Worlds #8 3:32.86
Belarus Worlds #9 3:34.56
Canada Worlds #10 3:34.79
Lithuania Worlds #11 3:34.88
Hungary Worlds #12 3:35.11
Italy Wildcard #1 3:35.23
Ireland Wildcard #2 3:35.86
South Korea Wildcard #3 3:36.53
France Wildcard #4 3:36.61
Netherlands Out #1 3:36.77
Turkey Out #2 3:36.85
Switzerland Out #3 3:36.98
Croatia Out #4 3:37.18

Mixed 400 Medley Relay

This is the hairiest qualification scenario available, given how many countries still don’t seem to take this mixed medley seriously, in spite of it being an Olympic event. For example, China, which was DQ’ed in prelims at Worlds, swam a 3:43.79 at the Jinan Swimming World Cup stop in August, which broke the World Cup Record and would have been 7th at the World Championships. Chinese swimmers have indicated to Chinese media that they’re interested in this relay at Worlds, and so they shouldn’t be overlooked as medal contenders in spite of their wildcard status. The same is true for Japan, which also would’ve final’ed at Worlds if they hadn’t been disqualified in prelims.

Mixed 400 Medley Relay
Australia Worlds #1 3:39.08
United States Worlds #2 3:39.10
Great Britain Worlds #3 3:40.68
Russia Worlds #4 3:40.78
Canada Worlds #5 3:43.06
Italy Worlds #6 3:43.28
Germany Worlds #7 3:45.07
Netherlands Worlds #8
DQ/3:44.67 (prelims)
Belarus Worlds #9 3:45.88
Israel Worlds #10 3:48.06
Poland Worlds #11 3:48.21
Hungary Worlds #12 3:48.44
China Wildcard #1 3:43.79
Japan Wildcard #2 3:44.75
South Korea Wildcard #3 3:47.92
Brazil Wildcard #4 3:48.61
Switzerland Out #1 3:48.98
Denmark Out #2 3:49.10
South Africa Out #3 3:49.90
Turkey Out #4 3:50.49

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Lorenz
4 years ago

Does anyone know what happens with the men’s rankings if China gets DQ’ed because of Sun Yang? Does everyone move one up?

Jeff
4 years ago

Start lists out for McCulloch Open in Ireland – lots of Brits in the mix with O Connor, Peaty and Scott and some strong Irish talent.

Thomas Selig
Reply to  Jeff
4 years ago

Would you have a link? (yes, I’m a lazy sod)

Jeff
Reply to  Thomas Selig
4 years ago

https://www.swimireland.ie/files/images/general/mc-cullagh-international.pdf
Most interesting entries are O Connors. She’s entered in 200 free, 50 fly, 100 breast and 200 IM.

Thomas Selig
Reply to  Jeff
4 years ago

Ta for that. Sizeable British contingent there, be good to see how some of the more promising youngsters get on.

Thomas Selig
4 years ago

GB’s selection policy for Euros is not to select athletes who qualified for Tokyo, albeit there are exceptions for needing to qualify relays. I guess they could also time trial potential relays at trials.

Traditionally the selectors have showed little interest in putting out relays unless they’re genuine medal contenders, but there were some signs recently that this might just be changing: Glasgow SC Euros they entered all the relays, and last year’s Worlds with the 4×100 free relay, which did really well. Hopefully the success of these experiments will lead to them being less stubbornly stupid about this in the future.

Another issue is the tough QTs they set for relays at trials, for instance:
– 3:35:64 for… Read more »

torchbearer
Reply to  Thomas Selig
4 years ago

Good points- it just blows my mind that GB Swimming denies the chance to go to the Olympics to a couple of swimmers (3rd/4th/ or even 5th and 6th) in each relay, even if it is just for the experience. Kids work their butts off, have done enough to squeeze on to the team as number 3 or 4 on a relay, and they are basically told you have wasted those 4 years.
Why would you let your kid go through that? So sad.

GB Coach
4 years ago

The higher ups at British Swimming have their heads so far up their own butts that they’ll never do what’s right for the swimmers. Another in a long list of stupid decisions. But it’s fine, they’ll bring Peaty’s best friend and 3-4 of Jimmy’s lane mates to Tokyo to swim prelims of their off events.

D. Bercough
4 years ago

These listings (highlighting 2019 Worlds) are a good reminder that nothing is given, and that the USA will have to work very hard to earn relay silvers and even hardest to get relay golds.

torchbearer
4 years ago

Why didn’t countries like GB just swim the prems at the worlds and get this sorted out last year…they could have even entered a ‘B” Team .now all uncertainty, tapering, scheduling mess in the months leading to the actual Games.

Jack
Reply to  torchbearer
4 years ago

Not gonna lie there is no way a “B” team from GB would make the top 12 at worlds. Our 5th to 8th fastest last year were all 55 highs. British swimming would have had to take our Number 4 (Lucy Hope) to swim with Anderson, Hopkin and SMOC which would have meant them sending another person to worlds and we all know what british swimming are like when sending big squads to competitons, if it isn’t 100% a medal chance its not happening.

Dee
Reply to  Jack
4 years ago

Georgia Davies & Georgia Coates have been 55s flat start in the 100fr and were both on the team. Even if you swam both of them with Hopkin & Anderson amd left out SMOC you’re looking at well sub 3.40. Top 12 took 3.41. It was a nonsense decision from British swimming.

KatyJ
Reply to  Jack
4 years ago

They should take Hope and get on with it. More female teams at this level keeps more in the sport for longer.

The unoriginal Tim
Reply to  torchbearer
4 years ago

They didn’t need to enter a B team there had enough of the A team athletes there. The coaches just seem to think coming any less than 3rd is worthless.

Moddiddle
Reply to  The unoriginal Tim
4 years ago

Does FINA charge a fee for relay entries like USA/masters swimming does? Maybe they didn’t want to pay that fee?

Sapnu puas
Reply to  torchbearer
4 years ago

Someone give me an @ for British swimming. I just wanna talk !!

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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