2023 World Swimming World Cup – Berlin
After two full days of fast swimming, we have arrived at the final session of the 2023 World Cup in Berlin. As with all previous sessions, the final will be livestreamed on YouTube via the link below.
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3rd day final schedule:
- Men’s 400 IM — Fastest Heat
- Women’s 800 Freestyle — Fast Heat
- Women’s 100 Butterfly — Final
- Men’s 50 Butterfly — Final
- Women’s 200 Backstroke — Finals
- Men’s 100 Backstroke — Finals
- Women’s 50m Breaststroke — Finals
- Men’s 200m Breaststroke — Finals
- Women’s 100 Freestyle — Finals
- Men’s 200 Freestyle — Finals
- Women’s 200IM — Final
The session begins with the fastest heat of the men’s 400 IM.There we have the 2021 World Cup Series Winner Matthew Seitz He will aim for his third win this weekend. On the second day, he won both the 200 IM and 200 fly, swimming his personal best in the latter.
racing in front of the home crowd; angelina koehler He recorded the fastest time of the morning (57.34 seconds).This allowed her to close the gap by 0.5 seconds. tori husk (57.85) and Zhang Yufei (57.94), past two-time world champion. Zhang in particular has been swimming well in Berlin, and is within one-tenth of the Asian record in the 50 fly, so it would be quite an upset if Koehler were to walk away with the win.
Yesterday’s 100 Breaststroke Winner Eneri Jefimova She set a new World Cup record in the 50 breaststroke events.She leads the field, including world record holders Ruta Meiltite. The young Estonian’s qualifying time of 30.23 seconds was just 0.15 seconds off his personal best in Fukuoka.
Men’s 400 IM — Fastest Heat
- World record: 4:02.50 — Leon Marchand, France (2023)
- World Cup record: 4:11.41 — Daiya Seto, Japan (2019)
- Junior World Record: 4:10.02 — Ilya Borodin, Russia (2021)
Podium:
Women’s 800 Freestyle — Fast Heat
- World record: 8:04.79 — Katie Ledecky, USA (2016)
- World Cup record: 8:22.24 — Kia Melverton, Australia (2019)
- Junior World Record: 8:11.00 — Katie Ledecky, USA (2014)
Podium:
Women’s 100 Butterfly — Final
- World record: 55.48 — sarah sjostromSweden (2016)
- World Cup record: 56.46 — sarah sjostromSweden (2018)
- Junior World Record: 56.43 — Claire Curzan, USA (2021)
Podium:
Men’s 50 Butterfly — Final
- World record: 22.27 — Andriy Govorov, Ukraine (2018)
- World Cup record: 22.82 — Andriy Govorov, Ukraine (2018)
- Junior world record: 22.96 — Diogo Ribeiro, Portugal (2022)
Podium:
Women’s 200 Backstroke — Finals
- World record: 2:03.14 — Kayley McKeownAustralia (2023)
- World Cup record: 2:06.94 — Emily Seebohm, Australia (2015)
- World junior record: 2:03.35 — Regan Smith, USA (2019)
Podium:
Men’s 100 Backstroke — Finals
- World record: 51.60 — Thomas CecconItaly (2022)
- World Cup record: 52.11 — Mitch Larkin, Australia (2015)
- Junior world record: 52.53 — Kliment Kolesnikov, Russia (2018)
Podium:
Women’s 50m Breaststroke — Finals
- World record: 29.16 — Ruta MeiltiteLithuania (2023)
- World Cup record: 30.23 — Eneli Jefimova, Estonia (2023)
- Junior World Record: 29.30 — Benedetta Pilate, Italy (2021)
Podium:
Men’s 200m Breaststroke — Finals
- World record: 2:05.48 — Qin Haiyang, China (2023)
- World Cup record: 2:07.59 — Anton Chupkov, Russia (2018)
- Junior World Record: 2:08.04 — Dong Zhihao, China (2023)
Podium:
Women’s 100 Freestyle — Finals
- World record: 51.71 — sarah sjostromSweden (2017)
- World Cup record: 52.34 — Kate Campbell, Australia (2019)
- Junior World Record: 52.70 — Penny Oleksiak, Canada (2016)
Podium:
Men’s 200 Freestyle — Finals
- World record: 1:42.00 — Paul Biedermann, Germany (2009)
- World Cup record: 1:44.38 — Danas Lapsis, Lithuania (2019)
- Junior World Record: 1:42.97 — David Popovici, Romania (2023)
Podium:
Women’s 200IM — Final
- World record: 2:06.12 — Katinka Hossu, Hungary (2015)
- World Cup Record: 2:08.15 — Katinka Hossu, Hungary (2019)
- Junior World Record: 2:06.89 — Summer McIntosh, Canada (2023)
Podium: