Swimming at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Women's 200 metre butterfly explained

Event:Women's 200 metre butterfly
Games:2000 Summer
Venue:Sydney International Aquatic Centre
Date:September 19, 2000 (heats &<br />semifinals)
September 20, 2000 (final)
Competitors:36
Nations:27
Win Value:2:05.88
Gold:Misty Hyman
Goldnoc:USA
Silver:Susie O'Neill
Silvernoc:AUS
Bronze:Petria Thomas
Bronzenoc:AUS
Prev:1996
Next:2004

The women's 200 metre butterfly event at the 2000 Summer Olympics took place on 19–20 September at the Sydney International Aquatic Centre in Sydney, Australia.[1]

U.S. swimmer Misty Hyman stunned Australia's defending champion Susie O'Neill to claim the Olympic title in front of a raucous home crowd. Seen as almost a lock victory for O'Neill, Hyman seized off a powerful lead and held a full body length over the champion at the 150-metre turn to maintain her relentless pace and touch the wall first in one of the oldest Olympic records in the book. She improved a sterling lifetime best of 2:05.88 to erase Mary T. Meagher's 1984 record by 1.02 seconds, but her time was just a 0.07-margin closer to O'Neill's world record.[2] [3] In a signature race, O'Neill ended up with only a silver in 2:06.58, adding it to her gold from Atlanta in 1996 and bronze from Barcelona in 1992. Meanwhile, Petria Thomas took home the bronze in 2:07.12, handing the entire medal lock for the Aussies with a two–three finish.[4] [5] [6]

Danish star Mette Jacobsen, competing in her fourth Olympics, finished off the podium by over a second in 2:08.24, while Poland's Otylia Jędrzejczak posted a fifth-place time of 2:08.48. Racing next to her teammate Hyman in lane seven, Kaitlin Sandeno picked up a sixth spot with a time of 2:08.81.[7] Japanese duo Yuko Nakanishi (2:09.66) and Maki Mita (2:10.72) closed out the field.[6]

Records

Prior to this competition, the existing world and Olympic records were as follows.

The following new world and Olympic records were set during this competition.

Results

Heats

Rank Heat Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
1 3 5 2:07.87 Q
2 5 4 2:07.97 Q
3 4 4 2:08.70 Q
4 5 Q
5 3 4 2:09.30 Q
6 5 5 2:09.85 Q
7 5 3 2:09.92 Q
8 3 3 2:10.22 Q
9 2 3 2:10.78 Q, NR
10 5 6 2:10.96 Q
11 3 2 2:11.09 Q
12 4 2 2:11.32 Q
13 5 2 2:11.35 Q
14 4 7 2:11.38 Q, AF
15 4 6 2:11.59 Q
16 3 8 2:11.62 Q, NR
17 3 7 2:11.74
18 3 1 2:11.94
19 4 1 2:12.32
20 2 1 2:12.59 NR
21 5 1 2:12.79
22 4 3 2:12.86
23 2 4 2:13.29 NR
24 2 5 2:14.47
25 5 7 2:14.66
26 5 8 2:14.87
27 2 6 2:15.19
28 3 6 2:15.68
29 4 8 2:16.23
30 2 7 2:17.01
31 2 2 2:17.60
32 2 8 2:17.62
33 1 3 2:19.86
34 1 5 2:21.02
35 1 4 2:21.23
36 1 6 2:31.78

Semifinals

Semifinal 1

Rank Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
1 4 2:07.57 Q
2 5 2:07.63 Q
3 3 2:09.88 Q
4 6 2:09.89 Q
5 2 2:10.24
6 1 2:10.58 AF
7 8 2:11.68
8 7 2:11.83

Semifinal 2

Rank Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
1 5 2:07.81 Q, EU
2 4 2:07.96 Q
3 3 2:08.11 Q, NR
4 6 2:09.40 Q
5 7 2:10.33 NR
6 8 2:10.49
7 2 2:10.78 =NR
8 1 2:11.07

Final

Rank Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
6 2:05.88
4 2:06.58
5 2:07.12
4 2 2:08.24
5 3 2:08.48
6 7 2:08.81
7 8 2:09.66
8 1 2:10.72
* Also an American record.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Swimming schedule . Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 14 September 2000. 14 May 2013.
  2. News: Hyman, Van den Hoogenband win gold. ESPN. 20 September 2000. 22 June 2013.
  3. News: Fitzpatrick. Frank. Misty Hops Up A Golden Mountain Hyman Tops Aussie Icon In Butterfly. The Philadelphia Inquirer. 20 September 2000. 22 June 2013.
  4. News: Misty day: American Hyman upsets O'Neill in 200 butterfly. Sports Illustrated. CNN. 20 September 2000. 22 June 2013.
  5. News: Longman. Jere. Sydney 2000: Swimming; Hyman, in Surprise, Joins No. 1 van den Hoogenband. New York Times. 20 September 2000. 23 May 2013.
  6. News: Whitten. Phillip. Olympic Day 5 Finals (200 Breast, 100 Free, 200 Fly, 800 Free Relay). Swimming World Magazine. 20 September 2000. 23 May 2013. dead. https://archive.today/20130624174144/http://www.swimmingworldmagazine.com/lane9/news/1809.asp. 24 June 2013.
  7. News: Thompson Wins Seventh Swimming Gold. ABC News. 20 September 2000. 21 June 2013.