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

The women'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]

Women's 4×100 metre medley relay
at the Games of the XXIX Olympiad
VenueBeijing National Aquatics Center
DateAugust 15, 2008 (heats)
August 17, 2008 (final)
Competitors74 from 16 nations
Winning time3:52.69 WR
Medalists
 Australia (AUS)
Emily Seebohm, Leisel Jones, Jessicah Schipper, Lisbeth Trickett, Tarnee White*, Felicity Galvez*, Shayne Reese*
 United States (USA)
Natalie Coughlin, Rebecca Soni, Christine Magnuson, Dara Torres, Margaret Hoelzer*, Megan Jendrick*, Elaine Breeden*, Kara Lynn Joyce*

 China (CHN)
Zhao Jing, Sun Ye, Zhou Yafei, Pang Jiaying, Xu Tianlongzi*


*Indicates the swimmer only competed in the preliminary heats.

Dominating the race from the start, the Aussie women's relay team solidified their triumph to destroy the world record and to defend the Olympic title over their American rivals for the second straight time. The foursome of Emily Seebohm (59.33), Leisel Jones (1:04.58), Jessicah Schipper (56.25), and Lisbeth Trickett (52.53) put together a perfect ending with a blazing fast time of 3:52.69 to shave three seconds off their standard from the 2007 FINA World Championships in Melbourne.[2][3]

Team USA's Natalie Coughlin (58.94), Rebecca Soni (1:05.95), Christine Magnuson (56.14), and legend Dara Torres (52.27) trailed behind their greatest rivals in the pool by six-tenths of a second (0.60), but finished under a world-record time to take home a magnificent silver in a new American standard of 3:53.30.[4][5] Competing in her fifth Olympics since 1984, at age 41, Torres also picked up her twelfth career medal to match Jenny Thompson's record as the most successful American woman in Olympic history.[6] Delighted by a raucous home crowd inside the Water Cube, the Chinese quartet of Zhao Jing (59.56), Sun Ye (1:06.75), Zhou Yafei (57.40), and Pang Jiaying (52.40) ended on a spectacular fashion with a bronze medal in an Asian record of 3:56.11.[7][8][9]

Great Britain's Gemma Spofforth (59.05), Kate Haywood (1:07.51), Jemma Lowe (58.13), and Francesca Halsall (52.81) missed the podium by over a single second, but powered home with a fourth-place effort in a European record of 3:57.50, holding off the Russian foursome of Anastasia Zuyeva (59.16), Yuliya Yefimova (1:06.46), Natalya Sutyagina (58.09), and Anastasia Aksenova (54.13) by 0.34 seconds, a fifth-place time of 3:57.84.[10][11] Japan's Reiko Nakamura (59.74), Asami Kitagawa (1:07.04), Yuka Kato (58.17), and Haruka Ueda (54.59) cleared a four-minute barrier to claim a sixth spot in 3:59.54, leaving Canada's Julia Wilkinson (1:01.35), Annamay Pierse (1:06.91), Audrey Lacroix (59.01), and Erica Morningstar (54.08) out of the fence in 4:01.35. As the entire field came to a dramatic finish in the pool, Sweden was disqualified from the race because of an early relay takeoff on the final exchange by freestyle anchor Josefin Lillhage.[9]

Records

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

World record Australia (AUS)
Emily Seebohm (1:00.79)
Leisel Jones (1:04.94)
Jessicah Schipper (57.18)
Lisbeth Lenton (52.83)
3:55.74Melbourne, Australia31 March 2007[12]
Olympic record Australia (AUS)
Giaan Rooney (1:01.18)
Leisel Jones (1:06.50)
Petria Thomas (56.67)
Jodie Henry (52.97)
3:57.32Athens, Greece21 August 2004-

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

DateEventNameNationalityTimeRecord
August 17FinalEmily Seebohm (59.33)
Leisel Jones (1:04.58)
Jessicah Schipper (56.25)
Lisbeth Trickett (52.53)
 Australia3:52.69WR, OR

Results

Heats

RankHeatLaneNationalityNameTimeNotes
124 AustraliaEmily Seebohm (59.95)
Tarnee White (1:06.81)
Felicity Galvez (56.82)
Shayne Reese (54.36)
3:57.94Q
225 Great BritainGemma Spofforth (1:00.33)
Kate Haywood (1:08.00)
Jemma Lowe (57.34)
Francesca Halsall (53.47)
3:59.14Q, EU
314 United StatesMargaret Hoelzer (59.29)
Megan Jendrick (1:07.17)
Elaine Breeden (58.59)
Kara Lynn Joyce (54.10)
3:59.15Q
415 ChinaXu Tianlongzi (1:01.13)
Sun Ye (1:06.85)
Zhou Yafei (56.94)
Pang Jiaying (54.29)
3:59.21Q, AS
523 RussiaKseniya Moskvina (1:01.05)
Yuliya Yefimova (1:06.45)
Natalya Sutyagina (58.31)
Anastasia Aksenova (53.85)
3:59.66Q
613 JapanHanae Ito (1:00.34)
Asami Kitagawa (1:07.33)
Yuka Kato (57.69)
Haruka Ueda (54.55)
3:59.91Q
727 SwedenSarah Sjöström (1:02.48)
Joline Höstman (1:08.48)
Anna-Karin Kammerling (57.57)
Josefin Lillhage (53.59)
4:02.12Q
822 CanadaJulia Wilkinson (1:00.90)
Annamay Pierse (1:07.22)
Audrey Lacroix (59.84)
Erica Morningstar (54.17)
4:02.13Q
918 GermanyAntje Buschschulte (1:00.51)
Sarah Poewe (1:08.95)
Daniela Samulski (59.78)
Britta Steffen (53.29)
4:02.53
1012 BrazilFabíola Molina (1:00.71)
Tatiane Sakemi (1:10.42)
Gabriella Silva (56.97)
Tatiana Barbosa (54.51)
4:02.61
1111 FranceAlexianne Castel (1:01.28)
Sophie de Ronchi (1:08.75)
Aurore Mongel (58.64)
Alena Popchanka (54.28)
4:02.95
1226 South AfricaMelissa Corfe (1:02.62)
Suzaan van Biljon (1:07.90)
Mandy Loots (58.76)
Lize-Mari Retief (54.92)
4:04.20
1316 NetherlandsFemke Heemskerk (1:02.97)
Jolijn van Valkengoed (1:10.85)
Inge Dekker (57.41)
Ranomi Kromowidjojo (53.51)
4:04.74
1428 ItalyRomina Armellini (1:02.49)
Roberta Panara (1:08.36)
Ilaria Bianchi (58.09)
Federica Pellegrini (55.99)
4:04.93
1517 SpainNina Zhivanevskaya (1:00.77)
Mireia Belmonte García (1:10.46)
Angela San Juan (1:00.08)
María Fuster (55.09)
4:06.40
1621 UkraineIryna Amshennikova (1:03.63)
Yuliya Pidlisna (1:09.53)
Kateryna Zubkova (59.65)
Darya Stepanyuk (55.81)
4:08.62

Final

Leisel Jones' breaststroke split was the fastest in the race by 1.37 seconds and gave Australia a decisive lead.
RankLaneNationalityNameTimeTime behindNotes
4 AustraliaEmily Seebohm (59.33)
Leisel Jones (1:04.58)
Jessicah Schipper (56.25)
Lisbeth Trickett (52.53)
3:52.69WR
3 United StatesNatalie Coughlin (58.94)
Rebecca Soni (1:05.95)
Christine Magnuson (56.14)
Dara Torres (52.27)
3:53.300.61AM
6 ChinaZhao Jing (59.56)
Sun Ye (1:06.75)
Zhou Yafei (57.40)
Pang Jiaying (52.40)
3:56.113.42AS
45 Great BritainGemma Spofforth (59.05)
Kate Haywood (1:07.51)
Jemma Lowe (58.13)
Francesca Halsall (52.81)
3:57.504.81EU
52 RussiaAnastasia Zuyeva (59.16)
Yuliya Yefimova (1:06.46)
Natalya Sutyagina (58.09)
Anastasia Aksenova (54.13)
3:57.845.15
67 JapanReiko Nakamura (59.74)
Asami Kitagawa (1:07.04)
Yuka Kato (58.17)
Haruka Ueda (54.59)
3:59.546.85
78 CanadaJulia Wilkinson (1:01.35)
Annamay Pierse (1:06.91)
Audrey Lacroix (59.01)
Erica Morningstar (54.08)
4:01.358.66
1 SwedenSarah Sjöström (1:02.63)
Joline Höstman (1:08.11)
Anna-Karin Kammerling (58.51)
Josefin Lillhage
DSQ

References

  1. "Olympic Swimming Schedule". USA Today. 9 August 2008. Retrieved 14 May 2013.
  2. "Phelps claims Olympic-record eighth gold medal with relay win". Sports Illustrated. CNN. 16 August 2008. Retrieved 4 July 2013.
  3. Jeffery, Nicole (18 August 2008). "Medley girls enjoy perfect ending to deny US". The Australian. Retrieved 5 July 2013.
  4. "Team USA ends the competition at Water Cube with 31 medals". USA Swimming. 17 August 2008. Retrieved 5 July 2013.
  5. "Australia defeats US to win women's 400 medley". USA Today. 17 August 2008. Retrieved 5 July 2013.
  6. Bondy, Filip (17 August 2008). "Dara Torres settles for silver medal in 50-meter freestyle". New York Daily News. Retrieved 5 July 2013.
  7. "Phelps passes Spitz with eighth Olympic gold". Team USA. 17 August 2008. Retrieved 5 July 2013.
  8. Bryan, Rebecca (18 August 2008). "With 8 gold, Phelps passes Spitz record". China Post. Retrieved 5 July 2013.
  9. Lohn, John (16 August 2008). "Olympics, Swimming: Australia Wins Women's 400 Medley Relay in World Record". Swimming World Magazine. Archived from the original on 17 October 2012. Retrieved 4 July 2013.
  10. Lonsbrough, Anita (17 August 2008). "Michael Phelps completes record-breaking haul of eight gold medals". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 5 July 2013.
  11. Gardner, Alan (17 August 2008). "Olympics: British women's relay team pipped to bronze in 4x100m medley". Guardian.co.uk. Retrieved 5 July 2013.
  12. "Rooney wins backstroke gold". ABC News Australia. 29 March 2005. Retrieved 24 March 2008.
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