Swimming at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Women's 4 × 200 metre freestyle relay explained

Event:Women's 4 × 200 metre freestyle relay
Games:2000 Summer
Venue:Sydney International Aquatic Centre
Dates:September 20, 2000 (heats & final)
Competitors:69
Nations:15
Win Value:7:57.80
Gold:
Samantha Arsenault, Diana Munz, Lindsay Benko, Jenny Thompson, Julia Stowers*, Kim Black*
Silver:
Susie O'Neill, Giaan Rooney, Kirsten Thomson, Petria Thomas, Jacinta van Lint*, Elka Graham*
Bronze:
Franziska van Almsick, Antje Buschschulte, Sara Harstick, Kerstin Kielgass, Britta Steffen*, Meike Freitag*
*Indicates the swimmer only competed in the preliminary heats.
Prev:1996
Next:2004

The women's 4 × 200 metre freestyle relay event and place at the 2000 Summer Olympics took place on 20 September at the Sydney International Aquatic Centre in Sydney, Australia.[1]

The U.S. women's team established a new Olympic record to defend their title with the help of a sterling anchor leg from Jenny Thompson. Throughout most of the race, the Americans were trailing slightly behind the host nation Australia until Thompson dived into the pool at the final exchange. Thompson held off a sprint battle from Petria Thomas on the final stretch until she touched the wall by seven-tenths of a second (0.70) with a remarkable split of 1:59.35 to deliver the foursome of Samantha Arsenault (1:59.92), Diana Munz (1:59.19), and Lindsay Benko (1:59.34) a gold-medal time in 7:57.80.[2] As the Americans celebrated their triumph in the pool, Thompson picked up her ninth career medal to break a tie with former East Germany's Kristin Otto for the most golds, a total of seven, and to maintain her position as the most successful woman in Olympic history.[3] [4] [5] [6]

After leading three-fourths of the race, Australia's Thomas (2:00.32), Susie O'Neill (1:58.70), Giaan Rooney (1:59.37), and Kirsten Thomson (2:00.13) powered home with a silver in 7:58.52. Meanwhile, Germany's Franziska van Almsick (1:59.51), Antje Buschschulte (2:00.35), and Sara Harstick (2:00.88) helped their teammate Kerstin Kielgass produce a striking anchor of 1:57.90 to capture the bronze medal in 7:58.64. For the first time in Olympic history, all three teams finished the race under an eight-minute barrier.[7] [8]

Outside the club, Romania's Camelia Potec (1:59.10), Simona Păduraru (2:01.52), Ioana Diaconescu (2:01.47), and Beatrice Câșlaru (1:59.54) missed the podium with a fourth-place time of 8:01.63, worthy enough for a national record. Canada (8:02.65), Great Britain (8:03.69), Italy (8:04.68), and France (8:05.99) rounded out the championship finale.[8]

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 Nation Swimmers Time Notes
1 2 4 Samantha Arsenault (1:59.38)
Julia Stowers (2:01.51)
Kim Black (2:01.41)
Diana Munz (1:59.39)
8:01.69 Q
2 1 4 Elka Graham (2:01.91)
Kirsten Thomson (2:00.31)
Jacinta van Lint (2:01.97)
Giaan Rooney (1:59.07)
8:03.26 Q
3 2 3 Camelia Potec (2:00.27)
Florina Herea (2:01.86)
Lorena Diaconescu (2:01.13)
Simona Păduraru (2:01.98)
8:05.24 Q
4 2 6 Cecilia Vianini (2:00.91)
Luisa Striani (2:02.02)
Sara Parise (2:00.05)
Sara Goffi (2:03.20)
8:06.18 Q
5 2 5 Britta Steffen (2:02.01)
Sara Harstick (2:00.68)
Meike Freitag (2:02.86)
Antje Buschschulte (2:00.97)
8:06.52 Q
6 1 6 Solenne Figuès (2:01.92)
Laetitia Choux (2:01.49)
Katarin Quelennec (2:02.24)
Alicia Bozon (2:01.38)
8:07.03 Q
7 1 3 Jessica Deglau (2:01.92)
Shannon Shakespeare (2:01.36)
Katie Brambley (2:02.40)
Jen Button (2:01.44)
8:07.12 Q
8 1 5 Claire Huddart (2:03.12)
Karen Legg (2:01.28)
Nicola Jackson (2:00.93)
Janine Belton (2:02.08)
8:07.41 Q
9 2 7 Wang Luna (2:03.45)
Chen Yan (2:02.10)
Sun Dan (2:02.16)
Yang Yu (1:59.98)
8:07.69
10 2 1 Yuliya Fomenko (2:02.84)
Irina Ufimtseva (2:00.96)
Lyubov Yudina (2:03.16)
Nadezhda Chemezova (2:01.07)
8:08.03 NR
11 1 7 Carla Geurts (2:00.56)
Chantal Groot (2:04.42)
Haike van Stralen (2:02.22)
Manon van Rooijen (2:01.33)
8:08.53 NR
12 2 2 Nina van Koeckhoven (2:01.49)
Yseult Gervy (2:04.22)
Fabienne Dufour (2:05.46)
Sofie Goffin (2:01.20)
8:12.37
13 1 2 Laura Roca (2:02.25)
Angels Bardina (2:04.47)
Natalia Cabrerizo (2:04.94)
Paula Carballido (2:02.16)
8:13.82
14 2 8 Anna Korshikova (2:06.99)
Anjelika Solovieva (2:15.59)
Yekaterina Tochenaya (2:10.56)
Nataliya Korabelnikova (2:08.07)
8:41.21 NR
1 1

Final

Rank Lane Nation Swimmers Time Time behind Notes
4 Samantha Arsenault (1:59.92)
Diana Munz (1:59.19)
Lindsay Benko (1:59.34)
Jenny Thompson (1:59.35)
7:57.80
5 Susie O'Neill (1:58.70)
Giaan Rooney (1:59.37)
Kirsten Thomson (2:00.13)
Petria Thomas (2:00.32)
7:58.52 0.72 OC
2 Franziska van Almsick (1:59.51)
Antje Buschschulte (2:00.35)
Sara Harstick (2:00.88)
Kerstin Kielgass (1:57.90)
7:58.64 0.84 NR
4 3 Camelia Potec (1:59.10)
Simona Păduraru (2:01.52)
Lorena Diaconescu (2:01.47)
Beatrice Câșlaru (1:59.54)
8:01.63 3.83 NR
5 1 Marianne Limpert (1:59.85)
Shannon Shakespeare (2:01.78)
Joanne Malar (2:00.50)
Jessica Deglau (2:00.52)
8:02.65 4.85
6 8 Nicola Jackson (2:00.56)
Karen Legg (2:01.55)
Janine Belton (2:00.79)
Karen Pickering (2:00.79)
8:03.69 5.89
7 6 Sara Parise (2:00.55)
Cecilia Vianini (1:59.46)
Luisa Striani (2:01.47)
Sara Goffi (2:03.20)
8:04.68 6.88
8 7 Solenne Figuès (1:59.67)
Laetitia Choux (2:01.86)
Katarin Quelennec (2:03.19)
Alicia Bozon (2:01.27)
8:05.99 8.19

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Swimming schedule . Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 14 September 2000. 14 May 2013.
  2. News: Longman. Jere. Sydney 2000: Swimming; Thompson Delivers Another Victory. New York Times. 21 September 2000. 28 June 2013.
  3. News: Fitzpatrick. Frank. Misty Hops Up A Golden Mountain Hyman Tops Aussie Icon In Butterfly. Philadelphia Inquirer. 21 September 2000. 4 June 2013.
  4. News: Dillman. Lisa. Surprise! Hyman Stuns O'Neill in 200 Butterfly; De Bruijn Smashing Again; Thompson Wins 7th Career Gold. Los Angeles Times. 21 September 2000. 28 June 2013.
  5. News: U.S. relay team sets Olympic record. ESPN. 20 September 2000. 28 June 2013.
  6. News: Thompson Wins Seventh Swimming Gold. ABC News. 20 September 2000. 21 June 2013.
  7. Seventh heaven: Thompson leads U.S. relay to gold, wins her seventh gold. Sports Illustrated. CNN. 20 September 2000. 28 June 2013.
  8. 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.