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

Men's 4 × 200 metre freestyle relay
at the Games of the XXVII Olympiad
Venue Sydney International Aquatic Centre
Dates September 19, 2000 (heats & final)
Competitors 75 from 16 nations
Winning time 7:07.05 WR
Medalists
1st, gold medalist(s)  Australia (AUS)
Ian Thorpe, Michael Klim, Todd Pearson, Bill Kirby, Grant Hackett*, Daniel Kowalski*
2nd, silver medalist(s)  United States (USA)
Scott Goldblatt, Josh Davis, Jamie Rauch, Klete Keller, Nate Dusing*, Chad Carvin*
3rd, bronze medalist(s)  Netherlands (NED)
Martijn Zuijdweg, Johan Kenkhuis, Marcel Wouda, Pieter van den Hoogenband, Mark van der Zijden*
*Indicates the swimmer only competed in the preliminary heats.

The men's 4×200 metre freestyle relay event at the 2000 Summer Olympics took place on 19 September at the Sydney International Aquatic Centre in Sydney, Australia.[1]

After defeating the Americans to capture the 4×100 m freestyle relay title four days earlier, the Australians added another relay gold medal to their hardware in the event by the delight of a raucous home crowd. Dominating the race from start to finish, the Aussie foursome of Ian Thorpe (1:46.03), Michael Klim (1:46.40), Todd Pearson (1:47.36), and Bill Kirby (1:47.26) posted a sterling time of 7:07.05 to demolish a new world record and cut off the former Soviet Union's 1992 Olympic standard by almost four seconds.[2][3]

Team USA's Scott Goldblatt (1:49.66), Josh Davis (1:46.49), Jamie Rauch (1:48.74) sent Klete Keller to be an anchor for a second-place battle. Trailing behind the Dutch and the Italians with only 25 metres left, Keller fought off a tight challenge with a split of 1:47.75 to snatch the silver for the Americans in 7:12.64. Meanwhile, the Netherlands moved from fifth-place turns by Martijn Zuijdweg (1:49.60), Johan Kenkhuis (1:51.18), and Marcel Wouda (1:48.56) to race on the final stretch for the bronze in 7:12.70, after producing a superb anchor of 1:44.88, the fastest split of all time, set by Olympic champion Pieter van den Hoogenband.[4][5][6]

The Italian team of Andrea Beccari (1:49.67), Matteo Pelliciari (1:48.41), Emiliano Brembilla (1:48.92), and Massimiliano Rosolino (1:45.91) missed the podium with a fourth-place time of 7:12.91, holding off the fast-pacing Brits' Edward Sinclair (1:49.61), Paul Palmer (1:47.15), Marc Spackman (1:48.85), and James Salter (1:47.37) by seven-hundredths of a second (7:12.98).[7] Germany (7:20.19), Canada (7:21.92), and Russia (7:24.37) rounded out the championship finale.[6]

Records

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

World record Australia (AUS)
Ian Thorpe (1:46.28)
Bill Kirby (1:48.96)
Grant Hackett (1:46.30)
Michael Klim (1:47.25)
7:08.79Sydney, Australia25 August 1999
Olympic record Unified Team (EUN)
Dmitry Lepikov (1:49.55)
Vladimir Pyshnenko (1:46.58)
Veniamin Tayanovich (1:48.99)
Yevgeny Sadovyi (1:46.83)
7:11.95Barcelona, Spain27 July 1992

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

DateEventNameNationalityTimeRecord
September 19FinalIan Thorpe (1:46.03)
Michael Klim (1:46.40)
Todd Pearson (1:47.36)
Bill Kirby (1:47.26)
 Australia7:07.05WR

Results

Heats

[8]

RankHeatLaneNationSwimmersTimeNotes
124 AustraliaGrant Hackett (1:50.31)
Bill Kirby (1:47.76)
Todd Pearson (1:47.68)
Daniel Kowalski (1:48.52)
7:14.27Q
214 United StatesChad Carvin (1:49.65)
Nate Dusing (1:49.44)
Jamie Rauch (1:48.94)
Klete Keller (1:49.19)
7:17.22Q
315 ItalyAndrea Beccari (1:49.30)
Klaus Lanzarini (1:49.77)
Simone Cercato (1:50.36)
Matteo Pelliciari (1:48.26)
7:17.69Q
423 GermanyHeiko Hell (1:50.48)
Michael Kiedel (1:50.64)
Christian Keller (1:49.12)
Stefan Herbst (1:49.71)
7:19.95Q
526 NetherlandsMartijn Zuijdweg (1:49.60)
Mark van der Zijden (1:51.18)
Johan Kenkhuis (1:50.27)
Marcel Wouda (1:49.62)
7:20.67Q
625 Great BritainJames Salter (1:49.62)
Andrew Clayton (1:51.87)
Marc Spackman (1:49.94)
Edward Sinclair (1:49.26)
7:20.69Q
713 CanadaMark Johnston (1:50.24)
Brian Johns (1:51.19)
Mike Mintenko (1:49.79)
Rick Say (1:50.23)
7:21.45Q
816 RussiaAndrey Kapralov (1:49.52)
Aleksey Yegorov (1:52.67)
Sergey Lavrenov (1:51.68)
Dmitry Chernyshov (1:49.71)
7:23.58Q
922 RomaniaDragoș Coman (1:50.25)
Cezar Bădiță (1:49.90)
Răzvan Florea (1:52.85)
Ioan Gherghel (1:51.06)
7:24.06
1011 HungaryAttila Czene (1:52.66)
Zsolt Gáspár (1:51.86)
Jácint Simon (1:50.32)
Bela Szabados (1:49.64)
7:24.48NR
1127 DenmarkJacob Carstensen (1:49.80)
Henrik Steen Andersen (1:51.51)
Jeppe Nielsen (1:51.98)
Dennis Otzen Jensen (1:51.34)
7:24.63
1217 BelarusIgor Koleda (1:49.44)
Pavel Lagoun (1:52.83)
Dmitry Koptur (1:51.14)
Valeryan Khuroshvili (1:51.42)
7:24.83
1312 BrazilEdvaldo Silva Filho (1:51.68)
Leonardo Costa (1:51.53)
Luiz Lima (1:51.81)
Rodrigo Castro (1:51.40)
7:26.42
1421 UkraineSergey Fesenko (1:54.11)
Igor Snitko (1:52.31)
Artem Goncharenko (1:52.98)
Rostyslav Svanidze (1:52.76)
7:32.16
1528 GreeceAthanasios Oikonomou (1:52.72)
Dimitrios Manganas (1:54.58)
Spyridon Bitsakis (1:55.23)
Spyridon Gianniotis (1:53.24)
7:35.77
18 KyrgyzstanAndrei Pakin
Dmitri Kuzmin
Aleksandr Shilin
Ivan Ivanov
DSQ

Final

RankLaneNationSwimmersTimeTime behindNotes
1st, gold medalist(s)4 AustraliaIan Thorpe (1:46.03)
Michael Klim (1:46.40)
Todd Pearson (1:47.36)
Bill Kirby (1:47.26)
7:07.05WR
2nd, silver medalist(s)5 United StatesScott Goldblatt (1:49.66)
Josh Davis (1:46.49)
Jamie Rauch (1:48.74)
Klete Keller (1:47.75)
7:12.645.59
3rd, bronze medalist(s)2 NetherlandsMartijn Zuijdweg (1:49.89)
Johan Kenkhuis (1:49.37)
Marcel Wouda (1:48.56)
Pieter van den Hoogenband (1:44.88)
7:12.705.65NR
43 ItalyAndrea Beccari (1:49.67)
Matteo Pelliciari (1:48.41)
Emiliano Brembilla (1:48.92)
Massimiliano Rosolino (1:45.91)
7:12.915.86
57 Great BritainEdward Sinclair (1:49.61)
Paul Palmer (1:47.15)
Marc Spackman (1:48.85)
James Salter (1:47.37)
7:12.985.93
66 GermanyStefan Pohl (1:50.83)
Christian Keller (1:50.01)
Stefan Herbst (1:49.05)
Christian Tröger (1:50.30)
7:20.1913.14
71 CanadaMark Johnston (1:50.44)
Mike Mintenko (1:49.94)
Rick Say (1:48.71)
Yannick Lupien (1:52.83)
7:21.9214.87
88 RussiaDmitry Chernyshov (1:50.44)
Andrey Kapralov (1:51.16)
Sergey Lavrenov (1:51.65)
Alexei Filipets (1:51.12)
7:24.3717.32

References

  1. "Swimming schedule". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 14 September 2000. Retrieved 14 May 2013.
  2. Longman, Jere (20 September 2000). "Sydney 2000: Swimming; Malchow Lies Low, Then Rockets To the Wall". New York Times. Retrieved 8 June 2013.
  3. Morrissey, Rick (20 September 2000). "It's Wet And Wild". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
  4. "Aussies rule relays". Sports Illustrated. CNN. 20 September 2000. Retrieved 15 June 2013.
  5. "Malchow sets Olympic record in 200 fly". ESPN. 19 September 2000. Retrieved 22 June 2013.
  6. 1 2 Whitten, Phillip (19 September 2000). "Olympic Day 4 Finals". Swimming World Magazine. Archived from the original on 30 September 2007. Retrieved 8 June 2013.
  7. Lonsbrough, Anita (19 September 2000). "Swimming: Britons denied as Dutchman dominates". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 27 June 2013.
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