Swimming at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's 4 × 100 metre medley relay

Men's 4 × 100 metre medley relay
at the Games of the XXVII Olympiad
Venue Sydney International Aquatic Centre
Date September 22, 2000 (heats)
September 23, 2000 (final)
Competitors 102 from 24 nations
Winning time 3:33.73 WR
Medalists
1st, gold medalist(s)  United States (USA)
Lenny Krayzelburg, Ed Moses, Ian Crocker, Gary Hall, Jr., Neil Walker*, Tommy Hannan*, Jason Lezak*
2nd, silver medalist(s)  Australia (AUS)
Matt Welsh, Regan Harrison, Geoff Huegill, Michael Klim, Josh Watson*, Ryan Mitchell*, Adam Pine*, Ian Thorpe*
3rd, bronze medalist(s)  Germany (GER)
Stev Theloke, Jens Kruppa, Thomas Rupprath, Torsten Spanneberg
*Indicates the swimmer only competed in the preliminary heats.

The men's 4×100 metre medley relay event at the 2000 Summer Olympics took place on 22–23 September at the Sydney International Aquatic Centre in Sydney, Australia.[1]

Since the event's inception in 1960, the U.S. team dominated the race from the start to demolish a four-year-old world record and most importantly, to defend their Olympic title. Lenny Krayzelburg (53.87), Ed Moses (59.84), Ian Crocker (52.10), and Gary Hall, Jr. (47.92, an American) put together a blazing fast finish of 3:33.73 to cut off their own standard by 1.11 seconds. Moses also produced a mighty effort in the breaststroke leg as he became the first ever swimmer to record a sub one-minute barrier split.[2][3] After accepting their golds in front of the Aussie home crowd, the U.S. men unfurled a banner reading: "Sydney 2000. In our hearts forever. Thanks Australia."[4]

The Aussie team of Matt Welsh (54.29), Regan Harrison (1:01.48), Geoff Huegill (51.33), and Michael Klim (48.17) finished behind their greatest rivals by a couple of seconds, but made a surprise packet with the silver in an Oceanian record of 3:35.27. Meanwhile, Stev Theloke (55.07), Jens Kruppa (1:00.52), Thomas Rupprath (52.14), and Torsten Spanneberg (48.15) earned their first medley relay medal for Germany since the nation's reunification in 1990, taking home the bronze in a European record of 3:35.88.[4][5][6]

Netherlands' Klaas-Erik Zwering (56.83), Marcel Wouda (1:01.20), Joris Keizer (52.26), and anchor Pieter van den Hoogenband (47.24, the fastest split of the race) missed the podium by more than a full body length over the Germans with a fourth-place time of 3:37.53. Hungary (3:39.03), Canada (3:39.88), France (3:40.02), and Great Britain (3:40.19) completed a close finish at the rear of the championship finale.[6]

Records

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

World record United States (USA)
Jeff Rouse (53.95)
Jeremy Linn (1:00.32)
Mark Henderson (52.39)
Gary Hall, Jr. (48.18)
3:34.84Atlanta, United States26 July 1996
Olympic record United States (USA)
Jeff Rouse (53.95)
Jeremy Linn (1:00.32)
Mark Henderson (52.39)
Gary Hall, Jr. (48.18)
3:34.84Atlanta, United States26 July 1996

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

DateEventNameNationalityTimeRecord
September 23FinalLenny Krayzelburg (53.87)
Ed Moses (59.84)
Ian Crocker (52.10)
Gary Hall, Jr. (47.92)
 United States3:33.73WR

Results

Heats

[7]

RankHeatLaneNationSwimmersTimeNotes
133 GermanyStev Theloke (55.54)
Jens Kruppa (1:01.39)
Thomas Rupprath (52.39)
Torsten Spanneberg (49.18)
3:38.50Q, NR
217 HungaryPéter Horváth (55.74)
Károly Güttler (1:01.52)
Zsolt Gáspár (52.36)
Attila Zubor (48.96)
3:38.58Q, NR
334 United StatesNeil Walker (55.10)
Ed Moses (1:01.34)
Tommy Hannan (53.32)
Jason Lezak (48.83)
3:38.59Q
435 Great BritainNeil Willey (56.13)
Darren Mew (1:01.01)
James Hickman (52.84)
Sion Brinn (49.62)
3:38.60Q
524 AustraliaJosh Watson (55.39)
Ryan Mitchell (1:02.29)
Adam Pine (52.87)
Ian Thorpe (48.83)
3:39.38Q
625 NetherlandsKlaas-Erik Zwering (56.99)
Marcel Wouda (1:01.74)
Joris Keizer (52.24)
Mark Veens (49.13)
3:40.10Q
716 FranceSimon Dufour (55.82)
Hugues Duboscq (1:02.16)
Franck Esposito (52.60)
Frédérick Bousquet (49.73)
3:40.31Q
815 CanadaChris Renaud (56.26)
Morgan Knabe (1:00.88)
Shamek Pietucha (53.27)
Yannick Lupien (50.15)
3:40.56Q
914 RussiaVladislav Aminov (56.53)
Dmitry Komornikov (1:01.70)
Igor Marchenko (53.75)
Denis Pimankov (48.85)
3:40.83
1013 SwedenMattias Ohlin (57.05)
Martin Gustavsson (1:01.86)
Daniel Carlsson (53.30)
Stefan Nystrand (48.67)
3:40.88
1136 UkraineVolodymyr Nikolaychuk (56.41)
Oleg Lisogor (1:01.84)
Denys Sylantyev (52.99)
Vyacheslav Shyrshov (49.81)
3:41.05
1223 BrazilAlexandre Massura (55.83)
Eduardo Fischer (1:03.49)
Fernando Scherer (53.80)
Gustavo Borges (49.19)
3:42.31
1321 South AfricaSimon Thirsk (56.88)
Brett Petersen (1:02.51)
Theo Verster (53.52)
Nicholas Folker (49.53)
3:42.44AF
1438 CroatiaGordan Kožulj (56.52)
Vanja Rogulj (1:02.19)
Miloš Milošević (54.08)
Duje Draganja (49.94)
3:42.73NR
1532 SpainDavid Ortega (55.68)
Santiago Castellanos (1:03.15)
Daniel Morales (53.91)
Javier Botello (50.02)
3:42.76
1612 SwitzerlandPhilipp Gilgen (57.31)
Remo Lütolf (1:01.64)
Philippe Meyer (53.95)
Karel Novy (49.88)
3:42.78NR
1727 IsraelEithan Urbach (56.12)
Tal Stricker (1:02.65)
Yoav Meiri (54.54)
Yoav Bruck (50.08)
3:43.39NR
1837 ArgentinaEduardo Germán Otero (58.00)
Sergio Andres Ferreyra (1:02.73)
Pablo Martín Abal (53.96)
José Meolans (48.92)
3:43.61
1918 KyrgyzstanAleksandr Shilin (57.88)
Alexander Tkachev (1:03.69)
Konstantin Ushkov (54.05)
Sergey Ashihmin (51.08)
3:46.70
2031 CubaRodolfo Falcón (55.97)
Gunter Rodríguez (1:05.40)
Yohan García (55.65)
Marcos Hernández (49.86)
3:46.88
2128 ChinaFu Yong (58.34)
Zhu Yi (1:03.35)
Ouyang Kunpeng (53.96)
Xie Xufeng (51.72)
3:47.37
2211 MalaysiaAlex Lim (58.48)
Elvin Chia (1:03.18)
Anthony Ang (55.70)
Allen Ong (50.96)
3:48.32
26 FinlandJani Sievinen (56.49)
Jarno Pihlava
Tero Välimaa
Jere Hård
DSQ
22 PolandDNS

Final

RankLaneNationSwimmersTimeTime behindNotes
1st, gold medalist(s)3 United StatesLenny Krayzelburg (53.87)
Ed Moses (59.84)
Ian Crocker (52.10)
Gary Hall, Jr. (47.92)
3:33.73WR
2nd, silver medalist(s)2 AustraliaMatt Welsh (54.29)
Regan Harrison (1:01.48)
Geoff Huegill (51.33)
Michael Klim (48.17)
3:35.271.54OC
3rd, bronze medalist(s)4 GermanyStev Theloke (55.07)
Jens Kruppa (1:00.52)
Thomas Rupprath (52.14)
Torsten Spanneberg (48.15)
3:35.882.15EU
47 NetherlandsKlaas-Erik Zwering (56.83)
Marcel Wouda (1:01.20)
Joris Keizer (52.26)
Pieter van den Hoogenband (47.24)
3:37.233.80NR
55 HungaryPéter Horváth (55.90)
Károly Güttler (1:01.23)
Zsolt Gáspár (52.95)
Attila Zubor (49.01)
3:39.095.36
68 CanadaChris Renaud (55.66)
Morgan Knabe (1:01.23)
Mike Mintenko (52.66)
Craig Hutchison (50.33)
3:39.886.15
71 FranceSimon Dufour (55.67)
Hugues Duboscq (1:01.69)
Franck Esposito (52.80)
Frédérick Bousquet (49.86)
3:40.026.29
86 Great BritainNeil Willey (56.49)
Darren Mew (1:01.76)
James Hickman (52.53)
Sion Brinn (49.41)
3:40.196.46

References

  1. "Swimming schedule". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 14 September 2000. Retrieved 14 May 2013.
  2. Fitzpatrick, Frank (23 September 2000). "U.S. Swimmers Didn't Take A Back Seat Australia Was Expected To Dominate In The Pool At This Olympics. The Americans Proved That Wrong". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
  3. Clarey, Christopher (23 September 2000). "Sydney 2000: Swimming; U.S. Makes Biggest, and the Final, Waves". New York Times. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
  4. 1 2 "Thrilling conclusion". Sports Illustrated. CNN. 22 September 2000. Retrieved 28 June 2013.
  5. "Thompson wins eighth gold medal". ESPN. 22 September 2000. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
  6. 1 2 Whitten, Phillip (23 September 2000). "Olympic Day 8 Finals – Complete". Swimming World Magazine. Archived from the original on 15 June 2013. Retrieved 28 May 2013.
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