Swimming at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's 200 metre backstroke

Men's 200 metre backstroke
at the Games of the XXVII Olympiad
Venue Sydney International Aquatic Centre
Date September 20, 2000 (heats &
semifinals)
September 21, 2000 (final)
Competitors 46 from 42 nations
Winning time 1:56.76 OR
Medalists
1st, gold medalist(s) Lenny Krayzelburg  United States
2nd, silver medalist(s) Aaron Peirsol  United States
3rd, bronze medalist(s) Matt Welsh  Australia

The men's 200 metre backstroke event at the 2000 Summer Olympics took place on 20–21 September at the Sydney International Aquatic Centre in Sydney, Australia.[1]

Soviet-born American Lenny Krayzelburg became the fourth swimmer in Olympic history to strike a backstroke double, since Roland Matthes did so in 1968 and 1972, John Naber in 1976, and Rick Carey in 1984. He powered past his nearest rivals Aaron Peirsol and Australia's overwhelming favorite Matt Welsh to hit the wall first in a new Olympic record of 1:56.76.[2][3] At only 17 years of age, Peirsol trailed behind by almost half a second (0.50) to take a silver in 1:57.35, handing an entire medal haul for the U.S. team with a one–two finish. Meanwhile, Welsh settled only for the bronze in an Oceanian record of 1:57.59.[4][5]

Iceland's Örn Arnarson came up with a spectacular swim to earn a fourth spot in 1:59.00, holding off Italy's Emanuele Merisi (1:59.01), bronze medalist in Atlanta four years earlier, by a hundredth of a second (0.01). Romania's Răzvan Florea finished sixth with a time of 1:59.05, while Brazil's Rogério Romero (1:59.27), competing at his fourth Olympics, and Croatia's Gordan Kožulj (1:59.38) closed out the field. For the first time in Olympic history, all eight swimmers went under a two-minute barrier.[5]

Earlier, Krayzelburg established a new Olympic standard of 1:58.40 on the morning prelims to cut off Martin López-Zubero's eight-year record by seven hundredths of a second (0.07). Followed by an evening session, he eventually lowered it to 1:57.27 in the semifinals.[6][7]

Records

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

World record Lenny Krayzelburg (USA)1:55.87Sydney, Australia27 August 1999
Olympic record Martin López-Zubero (ESP)1:58.47Barcelona, Spain28 July 1992

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

DateEventNameNationalityTimeRecord
20 SeptemberHeat 6Lenny Krayzelburg United States1:58.40OR
20 SeptemberSemifinal 2Lenny Krayzelburg United States1:57.27OR
21 SeptemberFinalLenny Krayzelburg United States1:56.76OR

Results

Heats

[8]

RankHeatLaneNameNationalityTimeNotes
164Lenny Krayzelburg United States1:58.40Q, OR
254Aaron Peirsol United States1:59.10Q
366Cameron Delaney Australia1:59.61Q
465Matt Welsh Australia1:59.76Q
541Răzvan Florea Romania1:59.79Q
648Örn Arnarson Iceland1:59.80Q, NR
756Emanuele Merisi Italy1:59.92Q
862Sergey Ostapchuk Russia2:00.17Q
944Gordan Kožulj Croatia2:00.19Q
1055Rogério Romero Brazil2:00.48Q
1146Chris Renaud Canada2:00.51Q
1257Marko Strahija Croatia2:00.72Q
1352Yoav Gath Israel2:00.80Q
1432Klaas-Erik Zwering Netherlands2:00.94Q, NR
1543Volodymyr Nikolaychuk Ukraine2:01.07Q, NR
1645Leonardo Costa Brazil2:01.08Q
1753Simon Dufour France2:01.09
1867Adam Ruckwood Great Britain2:01.11
1961Simon Militis Great Britain2:01.20
2068Dustin Hersee Canada2:01.34
2163Ralf Braun Germany2:01.35
2235Scott Talbot-Cameron New Zealand2:01.53
2337Blaž Medvešek Slovenia2:01.67
2422Neisser Bent Cuba2:02.05
2551Mirko Mazzari Italy2:02.13
2647Fu Yong China2:02.70
2734Markus Rogan Austria2:02.84
2833Alejandro Bermúdez Colombia2:03.43
2958Guillermo Mediano Spain2:03.45
3024Mario Carvalho Portugal2:03.82
3136Miroslav Machovič Slovakia2:04.73
3238Arūnas Savickas Lithuania2:05.06
3313Alex Fong Hong Kong2:05.47NR
3426Eduardo Germán Otero Argentina2:05.51
3527Torwai Sethsothorn Thailand2:05.52
3623Ahmed Hussein Egypt2:06.10
3728Gary Tan Singapore2:06.32
3814Andrei Mihailov Moldova2:06.67
3921Lee Jong-min South Korea2:07.14
4015Ivan Angelov Bulgaria2:07.30
4117Guillermo Cabrera Dominican Republic2:08.22
4231Alex Lim Malaysia2:08.23
4316Miloš Cerović Yugoslavia2:09.07
4412Aleksandr Yegorov Kyrgyzstan2:13.85
42Viktor Bodrogi HungaryDSQ
25Simon Thirsk South AfricaDNS

Semifinals

Semifinal 1

RankLaneNameNationalityTimeNotes
14Aaron Peirsol United States1:58.44Q
25Matt Welsh Australia1:58.57Q
33Örn Arnarson Iceland1:58.99Q, NR
42Rogério Romero Brazil1:59.69Q
57Marko Strahija Croatia1:59.85
61Klaas-Erik Zwering Netherlands2:00.06NR
76Sergey Ostapchuk Russia2:00.47
88Leonardo Costa Brazil2:02.26

Semifinal 2

RankLaneNameNationalityTimeNotes
14Lenny Krayzelburg United States1:57.27Q, OR
23Răzvan Florea Romania1:59.44Q, NR
32Gordan Kožulj Croatia1:59.56Q
46Emanuele Merisi Italy1:59.78Q
55Cameron Delaney Australia2:00.39
67Chris Renaud Canada2:01.19
78Volodymyr Nikolaychuk Ukraine2:02.27
81Yoav Gath Israel2:03.80

Final

RankLaneNameNationalityTimeNotes
1st, gold medalist(s)4Lenny Krayzelburg United States1:56.76OR
2nd, silver medalist(s)5Aaron Peirsol United States1:57.35
3rd, bronze medalist(s)3Matt Welsh Australia1:57.59OC
46Örn Arnarson Iceland1:59.00
58Emanuele Merisi Italy1:59.01
62Răzvan Florea Romania1:59.05NR
71Rogério Romero Brazil1:59.27
87Gordan Kožulj Croatia1:59.38

References

  1. "Swimming schedule". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 14 September 2000. Retrieved 14 May 2013.
  2. "Double gold for Krayzelburg". BBC Sport. 18 September 2000. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  3. Dillman, Lisa (22 September 2000). "Thrills & Chills". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2 June 2013.
  4. Berlin, Peter (22 September 2000). "De Bruijn Takes Second Gold; Hungarian and Italian Also Triumph : European Swimmers Steal the Show". New York Times. Retrieved 2 June 2013.
  5. 1 2 Whitten, Phillip (21 September 2000). "Olympic Day 6 Finals". Swimming World Magazine. Archived from the original on 3 February 2011. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  6. Whitten, Phillip (20 September 2000). "Olympic Day 5 Prelims". Swimming World Magazine. Archived from the original on 24 June 2013. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  7. Peterson, Lauren (21 September 2000). "States Athletic Teams Krayzelburg, Ervin Advance in Sydney". New York Times. Retrieved 2 June 2013.
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