Swimming at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Women's 4 × 100 metre medley relay

Women's 4 × 100 metre medley relay
at the Games of the XXXI Olympiad
Venue Olympic Aquatics Stadium
Dates 12 August 2016 (heats)
13 August 2016 (final)
Competitors 76 from 16 nations
Teams 16
Winning time 3:53.13
Medalists
1st, gold medalist(s)  United States
Kathleen Baker, Lilly King, Dana Vollmer, Simone Manuel, Olivia Smoliga*, Katie Meili*, Kelsi Worrell*, Abbey Weitzeil*
2nd, silver medalist(s)  Australia
Emily Seebohm, Taylor McKeown, Emma McKeon, Cate Campbell, Madison Wilson*, Madeline Groves*, Brittany Elmslie*
3rd, bronze medalist(s)  Denmark
Mie Nielsen, Rikke Møller Pedersen, Jeanette Ottesen, Pernille Blume
*Indicates the swimmer only competed in the preliminary heats.

The women's 4 × 100 metre medley relay event at the 2016 Summer Olympics took place on 12–13 August at the Olympic Aquatics Stadium.[1]

The U.S. women's team outlasted the rest of the field to solidify its Olympic title defense in the medley relay final with the help of a freestyle anchor leg from Simone Manuel. Leading from the start, the foursome of Kathleen Baker (59.00), Lilly King (1:05.70), Dana Vollmer (56.00), and Manuel (52.43) put together a perfect ending with a final time of 3:53.13 to give the Americans their tenth gold medal in this event, and their thousandth overall in Summer Olympic history.[2][3][4]

Australia's Emily Seebohm (58.83), Taylor McKeown (1:07.05), and Emma McKeon (56.95) struggled to hold on their momentum throughout the race, until Cate Campbell jumped into the pool at the final exchange. Then, Campbell produced a freestyle anchor split of 52.17 to deliver the Australian relay team a silver medal in 3:55.00.[5][6] After winning the 50 m freestyle title an hour earlier, anchor Pernille Blume (53.21) helped her fellow Danish swimmers Mie Nielsen (58.75), Rikke Møller Pedersen (1:06.62), and Jeanette Ottesen (56.43) shatter the European record for the bronze in 3:55.01, a hundredth of a second behind Australia.[7][8]

China's Fu Yuanhui (59.53), Shi Jinglin (1:06.00), Lu Ying (56.49), and Zhu Menghui (53.16) slipped off the podium to fourth in 3:55.18, while the Canadian combination of Kylie Masse (58.77), Rachel Nicol (1:06.81), Penny Oleksiak (56.75), and Chantal van Landeghem (53.16) established a national record of 3:55.49 to take the fifth spot.[9] Russia's Anastasia Fesikova (59.49), Yuliya Yefimova (1:04.98), Svetlana Chimrova (57.54), and Veronika Popova (53.65) finished sixth with a 3:55.66, holding off the British quartet of Georgia Davies (59.43), Chloe Tutton (1:06.43), Siobhan-Marie O’Connor (57.47), and Francesca Halsall (53.63) by 1.3 seconds, a seventh-place time in 3:56.96.[10] Meanwhile, Italy (3:59.50), anchored by freestyle swimmer and four-time Olympian Federica Pellegrini, rounded out the championship field.[8]

Records

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

World record United States (USA)
Missy Franklin (58.50)
Rebecca Soni (1:04.82)
Dana Vollmer (55.48)
Allison Schmitt (53.25)
3:52.05London, United Kingdom4 August 2012
Olympic record United States (USA)
Missy Franklin (58.50)
Rebecca Soni (1:04.82)
Dana Vollmer (55.48)
Allison Schmitt (53.25)
3:52.05London, United Kingdom4 August 2012

Results

Heats

A total of sixteen countries have qualified to participate. The best eight from two heats advanced to the final.

RankHeatLaneNationSwimmersTimeNotes
125 United StatesOlivia Smoliga (59.57)
Katie Meili (1:04.93)
Kelsi Worrell (56.47)
Abbey Weitzeil (53.70)
3:54.67Q
213 CanadaKylie Masse (58.66) NR
Rachel Nicol (1:06.97)
Noemie Thomas (57.66)
Taylor Ruck (53.51)
3:56.80Q, NR
315 DenmarkMie Nielsen (59.48)
Rikke Møller Pedersen (1:06.88)
Jeanette Ottesen (57.38)
Pernille Blume (53.24)
3:56.98Q
412 RussiaAnastasia Fesikova (1:00.16)
Yulia Efimova (1:05.78)
Svetlana Chimrova (57.65)
Veronika Popova (53.85)
3:57.44Q
523 AustraliaMadison Wilson (59.38)
Taylor McKeown (1:07.48)
Madeline Groves (57.87)
Brittany Elmslie (53.07)
3:57.80Q
624 ChinaFu Yuanhui (59.20)
Zhang Xinyu (1:07.86)
Lu Ying (57.45)
Shen Duo (53.72)
3:58.23Q
722 ItalyCarlotta Zofkova (1:01.42)
Arianna Castiglioni (1:06.33)
Ilaria Bianchi (57.76)
Federica Pellegrini (53.58)
3:59.09Q
826 Great BritainGeorgia Davies (59.35)
Chloe Tutton (1:07.25)
Siobhan-Marie O’Connor (57.61)
Georgia Coates (55.13)
3:59.34Q
914 SwedenMichelle Coleman (1:01.13)
Jennie Johansson (1:06.62)
Sarah Sjöström (56.70)
Louise Hansson (55.00)
3:59.45
1016 JapanNatsumi Sakai (1:01.57)
Satomi Suzuki (1:07.40)
Rikako Ikee (56.73)
Miki Uchida (54.12)
3:59.82
1117 FinlandMimosa Jallow (1:01.03)
Jenna Laukkanen (1:06.49)
Emilia Pikkarainen (59.02)
Hanna-Maria Seppälä (55.07)
4:01.61
1227 GermanyJenny Mensing (1:01.27)
Vanessa Grimberg (1:07.99)
Alexandra Wenk (58.55)
Annika Bruhn (54.38)
4:02.19
1311 BrazilNatalia de Luccas (1:01.93)
Jhennifer da Conceição (1:08.23)
Daynara de Paula (58.18)
Larissa Oliveira (54.49)
4:02.83
1418 Hong KongStephanie Au (1:01.55)
Yvette Kong (1:08.39)
Sze Hang Yu (59.54)
Camille Cheng (54.37)
4:03.85
21 FranceBéryl Gastaldello (1:00.60)
Fanny Deberghes (1:08.83)
Marie Wattel
Charlotte Bonnet
DSQ
28 Czech RepublicSimona Baumrtová (1:01.27)
Martina Moravčíková
Lucie Svěcená
Barbora Seemanová
DSQ

Final

RankLaneNationSwimmersTimeNotes
1st, gold medalist(s)4 United StatesKathleen Baker (59.00)
Lilly King (1:05.70)
Dana Vollmer (56.00)
Simone Manuel (52.43)
3:53.13
2nd, silver medalist(s)2 AustraliaEmily Seebohm (58.83)
Taylor McKeown (1:07.05)
Emma McKeon (56.95)
Cate Campbell (52.17)
3:55.00
3rd, bronze medalist(s)3 DenmarkMie Nielsen (58.75)
Rikke Møller Pedersen (1:06.62)
Jeanette Ottesen (56.43)
Pernille Blume (53.21)
3:55.01EU
47 ChinaFu Yuanhui (59.53)
Shi Jinglin (1:06.00)
Lu Ying (56.49)
Zhu Menghui (53.16)
3:55.18
55 CanadaKylie Masse (58.77)
Rachel Nicol (1:06.81)
Penny Oleksiak (56.75)
Chantal van Landeghem (53.16)
3:55.49NR
66 RussiaAnastasia Fesikova (59.49)
Yulia Efimova (1:04.98)
Svetlana Chimrova (57.54)
Veronika Popova (53.65)
3:55.66NR
78 Great BritainGeorgia Davies (59.43)
Chloe Tutton (1:06.43)
Siobhan-Marie O’Connor (57.47)
Francesca Halsall (53.63)
3:56.96NR
81 ItalyCarlotta Zofkova (1:01.29)
Arianna Castiglioni (1:06.65)
Ilaria Bianchi (58.21)
Federica Pellegrini (53.35)
3:59.50

References

  1. "Women's 4×100m Medley Relay". Rio 2016. Archived from the original on 1 September 2016. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
  2. Armstrong, Paul (13 August 2016). "Color no barrier: Simone Manuel steers Team USA to 1,000th Olympic gold at Rio 2016". CNN. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  3. Fenno, Nathan (13 August 2016). "Simone Manuel helps U.S. to gold in 400 medley relay". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  4. Kitching, Chris (14 August 2016). "Simone Manuel's victory alongside relay teammates is medal number 1,000 for the USA in 120 years of the Olympics". Daily Mail. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  5. "Campbell fires as Aussies win silver in women's 4x100m medley". ESPN. 26 August 2016. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  6. Peters, Daniel; Carney, John (14 August 2016). "Two more for the trophy cabinet! Australia storms home with silver in women's 4x100m medley relay and bronze in the men's". Daily Mail. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  7. "Denmark gets first gold as Blume wins 50m freestyle". The Local. 13 August 2016. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  8. 1 2 "USA Women Earn 10th 400 Medley Relay Gold; 1,000th Gold Medal In USA Olympic Summer Games History". Swimming World Magazine. 13 August 2016. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  9. Ng, Callum (13 August 2016). "Canadian relay women fall short of medal on final night of swimming". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  10. "Rio 2016 Olympics: Team GB win 4x100m medley relay silver as Michael Phelps claims 23rd gold". London Evening Standard. 13 August 2016. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
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