Ultra Swimmer of the Month: Chris Guiliano

Ultra Swim Swimmer of the Month is a recurring SwimSwam feature shedding light on a U.S.-based swimmer who has proven themselves over the past month. As with any item of recognition, Swimmer of the Month is a subjective exercise meant to highlight one athlete whose work holds noteworthy context – perhaps a swimmer who was visibly outperforming other swimmers over the month, or one whose accomplishments slipped through the cracks among other high-profile swims. If your favorite athlete wasn’t selected, feel free to respectfully recognize them in our comment section.

There were just four swimmers who qualified to swim three individual events in Paris at the U.S. Olympic Trials. The list includes the greatest female swimmer we’ve ever seen, Katie Ledecky, multi-time individual world champions Kate Douglass and Regan Smith, and Chris Guiliano.

Guiliano was expected to contend for an individual berth in the men’s 100 freestyle, but he wasn’t even favored to make the final in either the 50 or 200 free, coming in as the 10th and 29th seed, respectively.

However, the 21-year-old performed incredibly over the nine-day competition at Lucas Oil Stadium, kicking things off by placing 2nd to Luke Hobson in the 200 free in a time of 1:45.38, more than three seconds faster than his lifetime best entering the meet. Guiliano came in with a PB of 1:48.75, set just one month earlier, and lowered it down to 1:46.83 in the prelims.

In the 100 free, his bread and butter, Guiliano ripped a new best time of 47.25 in the semis, downing his previous mark of 47.49 set in February to qualify 1st into the final ahead of newly-minted U.S. Open Record holder Jack Alexy—who went 47.08 in the prelims—and reigning Olympic champion Caeleb Dressel.

With all the pressure on in the final, it was Guiliano who came away with the victory, clocking 47.38 to top Alexy (47.47) and Dressel (47.53) in a scorching-fast race that saw the top six finishers all under 48 seconds.

Guiliano closed the meet out by reeling off the three fastest swims of his career in the 50 free. He brought his best time down from 21.96 to 21.83 in the heats, put up a time of 21.59 in the semis, and then touched in 21.69 in the final to snag the second Olympic spot behind Dressel (21.41), edging out Matt King (21.70) and Alexy (21.76).

Guiliano’s Progression

Event PB Pre-Trials Trials (Fastest) Percentage Improvement
50 free 21.96 21.59 (SF) 1.68%
100 free 47.49 47.25 (SF) 0.51%
200 free 1:48.75 1:45.38 3.10%

The rising Notre Dame senior became the first American since Matt Biondi in 1988 to qualify to represent the U.S. in the men’s 50, 100 and 200 free at the Olympics.

 

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Guiliano’s Olympic-qualifying performances in Indianapolis come after he got his feet wet on the international stage last year, winning bronze at the 2023 World Championships on the U.S. men’s 400 free relay while placing 18th in the 100 free.

This past season at Notre Dame, the Douglassville, Pa., native was on fire, sweeping the ACC titles in the men’s 50, 100 and 200 free before earning top-five finishes in all three events at NCAAs, leading the Fighting Irish to all-time program-best showings at both meets.

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i used to be fast now im just fat
3 months ago

how tall exactly is chris? i haven’t found a definitive result but dude looks like he towers over the rest of the men some of whom are well over 6 feet tall. is he taller than hunter and kieran?

Andrew
3 months ago

I love CG just as much as the next guy but it’s so hard to see him peaking again in a month in 3 different distances of free at the same time.

Prime Angel couldn’t even win a 100 free medal when he was 1:43.1 for example. I’m sure there’s plenty of other elite freestylers with the same issue

His 100 is wicked consistent and a podium threat, but he’s not dropping a second plus for a chance at a medal in the 200 let’s be real. Hard to see him medalling in the 50 but all it really takes is a well executed race and a minor slip up from the top guys.

I think CG drops the individual… Read more »

Hiswimcoach
Reply to  Andrew
3 months ago

Chill. He qualified. I say he swims all 3 and might not medal individually but he certainly stands a good chance

1500m Free Semifinals
Reply to  Andrew
3 months ago

He earned the spots. These are also not long races. He’s swimming all 3. Get over it.

Big Zippy
Reply to  1500m Free Semifinals
3 months ago

I think the things to feel better about

1-Last year qualifying was clearly a surprise, so taper plan / international experience was missing
2- Its Not a surprise he qualified this year, so they probably are planned for this a little bit + the experience from last year
3- He Swam 3 PBs @ ACCs and then Swam PBs in 50/200 @ NCAAs + was right at his PB in the 100 so they have experience with a successful double competition, double taper.

Hank
Reply to  Andrew
3 months ago

CG has earned the right to contest 3 individual events. Between now and then, things can happen. Someone can get sick or even suffer an injury. Team USA has options and all the coaches, athletes and CG himself know that this is a 2 part qualification. Trials is part 1, but being in form in Paris is part 2. Hypothetically if CG or anyone else was not in form, a parred down schedule with some relays or even individual swims being swum by someone else on the team is always a possibility right? Have there been instances recently when individual event swimmers not named Ledecky ceded their spots to other team members?

rollwithit
Reply to  Andrew
3 months ago

He was the best at all three at trials. Whoever else you’re suggesting couldn’t even get results there. Thats how it works.

SJS
3 months ago

PA proud!

Hope he can dig deep and improve even more on these performances in Paris.

Excited to see what CG he will accomplish.

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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