by DAVID RIEDER - SENIOR WRITER SWIMMING WORLD MAGAZINE
Australian Women Set to Show Off
Freestyle Talent and Depth Again in 2023
Last week’s Australian Championships
were hardly more than a tune-up, a glorified exhibition. Sure, national titles
are plenty meaningful, but without selection for any major meets on the line,
most of the country’s top performers had little need to disrupt their training,
especially with the country’s World Championships selection trials just two
months later and the World Championships in Fukuoka just one month after that.
But even without needing to swim
their best, the Aussie women issued stern reminders of their abilities in the
freestyle events: depth and speed currently unmatched among the rest of the
world, and that’s why they will undoubtedly be favored once again to win world
titles in the 400 and 800 free relays in July.
This Australian women’s 400 free
relay group has one loss in a decade — and it was a narrow defeat at the 2017
World Championships, with the group finishing 0.29 behind the victorious
Americans. Before that, the Aussies had finished a mere 0.12 behind the U.S. in
2013 at Worlds. Otherwise, going back to 2012, Australia has won three Olympic
gold medals, three world titles, three Commonwealth Games gold medals and two
Pan Pacific Championships triumphs. Of those 11 wins, Cate Campbell has been
part of nine (all except last year’s world title and Commonwealth Games win),
followed by Emma McKeon’s eight golden relays and Bronte Campbell’s seven.
Last year, reigning 100 free Olympic
champion McKeon skipped the World Championships, and Australia still defeated
runnerup Canada by 1.20 seconds in this relay. That team was led by two
swimmers who were not part of the finals quartet from the Olympics one year
earlier: Mollie O’Callaghan and Shayna Jack, with Meg Harris and Madison Wilson
joining them. In the early going of 2023, O’Callaghan (52.63) and Jack (52.64)
have the two quickest times in the world in the 100 free with their times from
the Australian Championships, with McKeon (53.22), Harris (53.46), Wilson
(53.78) and Cate Campbell (53.78) not far behind.
Add up those top four times, and the
resulting composite relay is 3:31.95, two tenths quicker than Canada’s
silver-medal time from Budapest last year. And yes, that’s without any of the
swimmers performing close to their best and without relay exchanges. Beating
the Aussies in this event is a pipe dream.
The situation has been far different
in the 800 free relay, where Australia has entered the 2021 Olympics and 2022
World Championships as favorites but failed to win gold on either occasion. But
at the Commonwealth Games last year, the team of Wilson, Kiah Melverton,
O’Callaghan and Ariarne Titmus crushed the world record, their time of 7:39.29
beating the Americans’ world-title-winning mark by over two seconds.
Once again, the first top swims of
2023 only augment Australia’s favorite status. At last week’s championships,
O’Callaghan edged out Titmus, the Olympic champion and second-fastest performer
ever, with a blistering finishing split. O’Callaghan touched in 1:55.15, and
Titmus took second in 1:55.28. Third and fourth, however, were swimmers hardly
known for their 200 free speed.
Jack swam a time of 1:55.37,
clobbering her previous best of 1:57.29. Same story for Kaylee McKeown, the
double Olympic backstroke gold medalist, who dropped from 1:58.21 to 1:56.88.
Combine those times with the best
marks of Titmus (1:53.09), O’Callaghan (1:54.01), Wilson (1:55.86) and
Melverton (1:55.94), and you get the idea of the sort of special swim Australia
could be capable of this year. Make no mistake: the Americans will have a
chance at another upset with Katie Ledecky likely to be joined by an improving
teenage group (Bella Sims, Erin Gemmell, Claire Weinstein and Katie Grimes are
among the possibilities), and you can’t count out a Canadian team led by Summer
McIntosh. But the talent level dictates that this is an Australian race to
lose.
It’s early in the long course season
with plenty of major developments to come, but the Australian women have opened
the year in the same position as they finished 2022: freestyle favorites.
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