Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Swimming at the 2024 Summer Olympics – Women's 400-metre individual medley
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The women's 400-metre individual medley event at the 2024 Summer Olympics was held on 29 July 2024 at Paris La Défense Arena, which was converted to a swimming pool for the swimming events.
Canadian Summer McIntosh was the heavy favourite going into the event and ended up winning the race by over five seconds. Katie Grimes and Emma Weyant, both from the US, took second and third, respectively. McIntosh's victory secured Canada's first-ever gold medal in the event.
Remove ads
Background
Canadian Summer McIntosh won the event at the 2022 and 2023 World Championships, broke the world record in 2023 and 2024 and had a personal best over 7 seconds faster than anyone else entered into the competition.[1] SwimSwam opined that she was "perhaps the heaviest favorite among all the individual events",[1] and Swimming World also predicted she would win.[2] Other contenders were the 2022 and 2023 World Championships silver medallist Katie Grimes of the US, and 2024 World Championships winner Freya Colbert of the Great Britain.[a] Tokyo's Olympic champion Yui Ohashi failed to qualify.[1] Both McIntosh and Grimes were 17 years old at the time of the event.[3]
The event was held at Paris La Défense Arena, which was converted to a swimming pool for the swimming events.[4]
Remove ads
Qualification
Summarize
Perspective
Each National Olympic Committee (NOC) was permitted to enter a maximum of two qualified athletes in each individual event, but only if both of them had attained the Olympic Qualifying Time (OQT).[5] For this event, the OQT was 4:38.53. World Aquatics then considered athletes qualifying through universality; NOCs were given one event entry for each gender, which could be used by any athlete regardless of qualification time, providing the spaces had not already been taken by athletes from that nation who had achieved the OQT.[5][6] Finally, the rest of the spaces were filled by athletes who had met the Olympic Consideration Time (OCT), which was 4:39.92 for this event.[5] In total, 15 athletes qualified through achieving the OQT, no athletes qualified through universality places and one athlete qualified through achieving the OCT.[6]
Remove ads
Heats
Summarize
Perspective
Two heats (preliminary rounds) took place on 29 July 2024, starting at 11:00.[b][7] The swimmers with the best eight times in the heats advanced to the final.[8] Emma Weyant of the US won the first heat and McIntosh won the second. The qualifying time was three seconds slower than it was at the Tokyo Olympics.[9]
Remove ads
Final
Summarize
Perspective
The final took place at 20:30 on 29 July.[10] Canadian Summer McIntosh led from beginning to end, swimming ahead of the world record until 200 m and finishing over five seconds ahead of second place with a time of 4:27.71.[11][12][13] The US' Katie Grimes also retained second place from start to finish, while Emma Weyant of the US progressed from fifth to third over the final 200 m to claim bronze.[13] McIntosh's victory secured Canada's first-ever gold medal in the event.[3] In the post race data analysis, Dominique Hérailh of SwimSwam opined that McIntosh still had room for improvement in the breaststroke and underwaters.[14]
Remove ads
Notes
- All times are Central European Summer Time (UTC+2)
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads