Swimming at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Women's 50 metre freestyle explained

Event:Women's 50 metre freestyle
Games:2000 Summer
Venue:Sydney International Aquatic Centre
Date:22 September 2000 (heats &<br />semifinals)
23 September 2000 (final)
Competitors:74
Nations:66
Win Value:24.32
Gold:Inge de Bruijn
Goldnoc:NED
Silver:Therese Alshammar
Silvernoc:SWE
Bronze:Dara Torres
Bronzenoc:USA
Prev:1996
Next:2004

The women's 50 metre freestyle event at the 2000 Summer Olympics took place on 22–23 September at the Sydney International Aquatic Centre in Sydney, Australia.[1]

Dutch rising star Inge de Bruijn added a third gold to her medal tally in swimming at these Games. She powered past the field to touch the wall first in 24.32, the second-fastest of all-time.[2] [3] Earlier in the semifinals, she blasted her own world record of 24.13 to snatch a top seed for the final.[4] Sweden's Therese Alshammar captured the silver in 24.51, while U.S. legend Dara Torres powered home with the bronze in a new American record of 24.63, edging out defending Olympic champion Amy Van Dyken (25.04) by 41-hundredths of a second. The podium placements also replicated the results of the 100 m freestyle (with the exception of Jenny Thompson), held on the sixth night of the Games.[5] [6]

Slovakia's Martina Moravcová finished off the podium in fifth place at 25.24, and was followed in the sixth spot by Germany's Sandra Völker in 25.27. Great Britain's Alison Sheppard (25.45) and Japan's Sumika Minamoto (25.65) closed out the field.[6]

Notable swimmers missed out the top 8 final, featuring Australia's overwhelming favorite Susie O'Neill; Völker's teammate Katrin Meissner, who shared bronze medals with Jill Sterkel in the event's inception in 1988 as a member of the former East German squad; and Estonia's Jana Kolukanova, who grabbed the final spot from the prelims after winning a three-person swimoff.[7]

One of the most popular highlights in the event took place in the first heat. Dubbed as the Crawler, Paula Barila Bolopa had finally completed a unique double for Equatorial Guinea, as she swam the slowest ever race by a female in Olympic history with a time of 1:03.97.[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.

Date Event Name Nationality Time Record
22 September Heat 10 align=left 24.46
22 September Semifinal 2 align=left 24.13

Results

Heats

Rank Heat Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
1 10 4 24.46 Q,
2 8 4 24.96 Q
3 10 5 25.04 Q
4 9 4 25.24 Q
5 10 7 25.39 Q, NR
6 9 5 25.44 Q
7 10 3 25.52 Q
10 1 Q, NR
9 8 5 25.53 Q
10 10 2 25.64 Q
11 10 6 25.67 Q
12 8 7 25.73 Q
13 8 6 25.79 Q
14 9 3 25.81 Q
15 6 6 25.87 Q, NR
16 6 7 25.96
7 8
9 7
19 8 2 25.99
20 8 3 26.00
21 9 1 26.01
22 8 8 26.04
23 8 1 26.05
6 1
25 9 8 26.07
26 7 6 26.10
27 9 2 26.19
28 7 4 26.21
7 7
30 7 5 26.23
31 9 6 26.26
32 6 3 26.36
33 7 3 26.37
34 6 5 26.55
35 6 8 26.57
36 6 2 26.58
37 7 1 26.71
38 10 8 26.79
39 1 4 26.80
40 5 2 26.84
41 6 4 26.88
4 3 NR
43 7 2 26.90
44 5 8 27.28
45 5 3 27.31
46 5 4 27.32
47 5 7 27.38
48 5 6 27.46
49 4 6 27.48
50 5 1 27.54
51 5 5 27.58
52 4 5 27.66
53 4 4 27.70
54 4 1 27.75
55 4 7 28.08
56 4 2 28.11
57 3 5 28.20
58 3 7 28.78
59 3 4 28.79
60 3 8 28.81
61 3 6 29.20
62 3 2 29.31
63 3 3 29.79
64 2 5 29.88
65 2 3 30.05
66 2 6 31.28
67 2 2 31.71
68 3 1 32.22
69 2 7 32.36
70 2 1 33.11
71 2 4 35.51
72 4 8 Aissatou Barry 35.79
73 1 3 1:03.97
1 5

Swimoff

[9]

Rank Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
1 5 25.87 Q, NR
2 4 26.00
3

Semifinals

Semifinal 1

Rank Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
1 5 24.80 Q
2 4 24.98 Q
3 3 25.22 Q
4 6 25.43 Q
5 2 25.62
6 7 25.74
7 1 25.87
8 8 26.03

Semifinal 2

Rank Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
1 4 24.13 Q,
2 5 25.00 Q
3 2 25.32 Q
4 3 25.49 Q
5 1 25.61
5 6 25.61
7 7 25.88
8 8 25.95

Final

Rank Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
4 24.32
5 24.51
3 24.63 AM
4 6 25.04
5 8 25.24 NR
6 2 25.27
7 7 25.45
8 1 25.65

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Swimming schedule . Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 14 September 2000. 14 May 2013.
  2. News: Clarey. Christopher. Sydney 2000 : Roundup; De Bruijn Surges For Third Gold Medal. New York Times. 23 September 2000. 14 June 2013.
  3. News: American Torres wins bronze. ESPN. 23 September 2000. 14 June 2013.
  4. News: Whitten. Phillip. Olympic Day 7 Finals (50 Free, 800 Free, 200 Back, 100 Fly). Swimming World Magazine. 22 September 2000. 13 May 2013.
  5. News: Dillman. Lisa. She's a Goldy Little Bruijn. Los Angeles Times. 23 September 2000. 14 June 2013.
  6. News: Whitten. Phillip. Olympic Day 8 Finals – Complete. Swimming World Magazine. 23 September 2000. 28 May 2013. dead. https://archive.today/20130615050126/http://www.swimmingworldmagazine.com/lane9/news/1820.asp. 15 June 2013. dmy-all.
  7. News: Whitten. Phillip. Olympic Day 7 Prelims (50 Free, 1500 Free, 400 Medley Relay). Swimming World Magazine. 22 September 2000. 14 June 2013.
  8. News: 'Paula the Crawler' sets record. ESPN. 22 September 2000. 14 June 2013.
  9. Web site: Sydney 2000: Swimming Results (September 22, 2000). Sydney 2000. ESPN. 14 June 2013.