Swimming at the 2008 Summer Olympics – Men's 4 × 100 metre medley relay explained

Event:Men's 4 × 100 metre medley relay
Games:2008 Summer
Venue:Beijing National Aquatics Center
Date:August 15, 2008 (heats)
August 17, 2008 (final)
Competitors:75
Nations:16
Win Value:3:29.34
Gold:
Aaron Peirsol, Brendan Hansen, Michael Phelps, Jason Lezak, Matt Grevers*, Mark Gangloff*, Ian Crocker*, Garrett Weber-Gale*
Silver:
Hayden Stoeckel, Brenton Rickard, Andrew Lauterstein, Eamon Sullivan, Ashley Delaney*, Christian Sprenger*, Adam Pine*, Matt Targett*
Bronze:
Junichi Miyashita, Kosuke Kitajima, Takuro Fujii, Hisayoshi Sato
*Indicates the swimmer only competed in the preliminary heats.
Prev:2004
Next:2012

The men's 4 × 100 metre medley relay event at the 2008 Olympic Games took place on 15 and 17 August at the Beijing National Aquatics Center in Beijing, China.[1]

Since the event's inception in 1960, the U.S. men's team dominated the race from the start to demolish a new world record, to defend their title, and most importantly, to wrap up the greatest performance in Olympic history for Michael Phelps. Joining Aaron Peirsol (53.16), Brendan Hansen (59.27), and Jason Lezak (46.76), Phelps delivered a butterfly split of 50.15 to maintain a leading pace and claim a historic gold for the Americans with a world-record time of 3:29.34, shaving 1.34 seconds off their standard from Athens in 2004. By capturing his eighth gold, Phelps also eclipsed Mark Spitz's 1972 record of seven for the most in a single Games, raising his career total to 16 medals (14 golds and 2 bronze).[2] [3] [4]

The Aussie foursome of Hayden Stoeckel (53.80), Brenton Rickard (58.56), Andrew Lauterstein (51.03), and Eamon Sullivan (46.65) trailed behind their greatest rivals in the pool by exactly seven-tenths of a second (0.70), but took home an admirable silver in an Oceanian record of 3:30.04.[5] Meanwhile, Japan's Kosuke Kitajima fueled the field on the breaststroke leg with a terrific split of 58.07 to deliver the foursome of Junichi Miyashita (53.87), Takuro Fujii (50.89), and Hisayoshi Sato (48.35) a bronze-medal time in 3:31.18, worthy enough for an Asian record.[6] [7]

Russia's Arkady Vyatchanin (53.36), Roman Sloudnov (59.45), Yevgeny Korotyshkin (51.62), and Yevgeny Lagunov (47.49) missed the podium by almost three-fourths of a second (0.75) with a fourth-place effort in 3:31.92, while Daniel Bell (54.52), Glenn Snyders (59.46), Corney Swanepoel (52.12), and Cameron Gibson (47.99) established a New Zealand record of 3:33.39 to claim the fifth spot in the final, holding off the British quartet of Liam Tancock (54.69), Chris Cook (59.65), Michael Rock (52.02), and Simon Burnett (47.33) by 0.30 seconds, a national record of 3:33.69.[8] [9] South Africa's Gerhard Zandberg (54.69), Cameron van der Burgh (59.40), Lyndon Ferns (51.39), and Darian Townsend (48.22) finished closer to the Brits by a hundredth of a second (0.01) with a seventh-place time of 3:33.70. As the entire field came to a dramatic finish in the pool, Italy was disqualified from the race because of an early relay takeoff on the final exchange by freestyle anchor Filippo Magnini.[7]

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 Nationality Name Time Notes
1 2 4 Matt Grevers (53.59)
Mark Gangloff (1:00.35)
Ian Crocker (50.85)
Garrett Weber-Gale (47.96)
3:32.75 Q
2 1 4 Ashley Delaney (53.74)
Christian Sprenger (59.95)
Adam Pine (51.66)
Matt Targett (47.41)
3:32.76 Q, OC
3 1 5 Junichi Miyashita (54.29)
Kosuke Kitajima (58.79)
Takuro Fujii (50.86)
Hisayoshi Sato (48.87)
3:32.81 Q, AS
4 2 3 Arkady Vyatchanin (53.86)
Roman Sloudnov (59.63)
Nikolay Skvortsov (51.62)
Andrey Grechin (48.48)
3:33.59 Q, EU
5 1 6 Liam Tancock (54.67)
Chris Cook (59.40)
Michael Rock (51.99)
Simon Burnett (47.77)
3:33.83 Q
6 2 8 Daniel Bell (54.52)
Glenn Snyders (59.46)
Corney Swanepoel (52.12)
Cameron Gibson (47.99)
3:34.09 Q
7 2 6 Gerhard Zandberg (54.19)
Cameron van der Burgh (59.68)
Lyndon Ferns (52.33)
Darian Townsend (47.96)
3:34.16 Q, AF
8 2 7 Mirco di Tora (54.05)
Alessandro Terrin (1:01.25)
Mattia Nalesso (51.96)
Filippo Magnini (47.06)
3:34.32 Q
9 2 1 Benjamin Stasiulis (55.46)
Hugues Duboscq (59.29)
Christophe Lebon (51.97)
Fabien Gilot (48.06)
3:34.78
102 5 Jake Tapp (55.16)
Mike Brown (1:00.98)
Joe Bartoch (52.58)
Brent Hayden (46.84)
3:35.56
111 2 Simon Sjödin (55.27)
Jonas Andersson (1:01.22)
Lars Frölander (51.13)
Jonas Persson (48.21)
3:35.83 NR
122 2 Gordan Kožulj (54.91)
Vanja Rogulj (1:01.30)
Mario Todorović (51.52)
Duje Draganja (49.96)
3:37.69
131 1 Răzvan Florea (54.81)
Valentin Preda (1:01.41)
Ioan Gherghel (52.44)
Norbert Trandafir (49.34)
3:38.00
141 3 Guilherme Guido (54.78)
Felipe França Silva (1:02.06)
Kaio de Almeida (53.31)
Nicolas Oliveira (48.51)
3:38.66
151 7 Oleksandr Isakov (56.66)
Valeriy Dymo (1:00.61)
Sergiy Breus (52.38)
Yuriy Yegoshin (49.11)
3:38.76
161 8 Pavel Sankovich (55.11)
Viktar Vabishchevich (1:01.89)
Yevgeniy Lazuka (52.63)
Stanislau Neviarouski (49.76)
3:39.39

Final

Rank Lane Nationality Name Time Time behind Notes
4 Aaron Peirsol (53.16)
Brendan Hansen (59.27)
Michael Phelps (50.15)
Jason Lezak (46.76)
3:29.34
5 Hayden Stoeckel (53.80)
Brenton Rickard (58.56)
Andrew Lauterstein (51.03)
Eamon Sullivan (46.65)
3:30.04 0.70 OC
3 Junichi Miyashita (53.87)
Kosuke Kitajima (58.07)
Takuro Fujii (50.89)
Hisayoshi Sato (48.35)
3:31.18 1.84 AS
4 6 Arkady Vyatchanin (53.36)
Roman Sloudnov (59.45)
Yevgeny Korotyshkin (51.62)
Yevgeny Lagunov (47.49)
3:31.92 2.58 EU
5 7 Daniel Bell (54.74)
Glenn Snyders (59.87)
Corney Swanepoel (51.78)
Cameron Gibson (47.00)
3:33.39 4.05 NR
6 2 Liam Tancock (54.69)
Chris Cook (59.65)
Michael Rock (52.02)
Simon Burnett (47.33)
3:33.69 4.35 NR
7 1 Gerhard Zandberg (54.69)
Cameron van der Burgh (59.40)
Lyndon Ferns (51.39)
Darian Townsend (48.22)
3:33.70 4.36 AF
8

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Olympic Swimming Schedule. USA Today. 9 August 2008. 14 May 2013.
  2. Wang. Cynthia. Phelps Wins Eighth Gold, Breaks Spitz's Record. People. 17 August 2008. 4 July 2013.
  3. Phelps claims Olympic-record eighth gold medal with relay win. Sports Illustrated. CNN. 13 August 2008. 3 July 2013.
  4. News: Phelps wins historic eighth gold medal. CNN. 16 August 2008. 3 July 2013.
  5. News: Phelps claims historic eighth gold in Beijing. ABC News Australia. 17 August 2008. 3 July 2013.
  6. News: Odeven. Ed. Phelps' achievement leaves nothing to the imagination. The Japan Times. 18 August 2008. 3 July 2013.
  7. Lohn. John. Eight is Great for Michael Phelps, U.S. Comes From Behind To Win Men's 400 Medley Relay with World Record. Swimming World Magazine. 16 August 2008. 4 July 2013. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130513122819/http://www.swimmingworldmagazine.com/lane9/news/18856.asp. 13 May 2013.
  8. News: Phelps bags record eighth gold. Stuff.co.nz. 17 August 2008. 4 July 2013.
  9. News: Phelps wins historic eighth gold. BBC Sport. 17 August 2008. 4 July 2013.