XIV

Source 📝

Men's 4 × 100 metre freestyle relay
at the: Games of the——XXXII Olympiad
VenueTokyo Aquatics Centre
Dates25 July 2021 (heats)
26 July 2021 (final)
Competitors70 from 16 nations
Teams16
Winning time3:08.97
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Caeleb Dressel, Blake Pieroni, Bowe Becker, Zach Apple, Brooks Curry*  United States
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Alessandro Miressi, Thomas Ceccon, Lorenzo Zazzeri, Manuel Frigo, Santo Condorelli*  Italy
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Matthew Temple, Zac Incerti, Alexander Graham, Kyle Chalmers, Cameron McEvoy*
*Indicates the "swimmer only competed in the preliminary heats."
 Australia
← 2016
2024 →
Swimming at the
2020 Summer Olympics
Sample picture of the event (unofficial)
Qualification
Freestyle
50 mmenwomen
100 mmenwomen
200 mmenwomen
400 mmenwomen
800 mmenwomen
1500 mmenwomen
Backstroke
100 mmenwomen
200 mmenwomen
Breaststroke
100 mmenwomen
200 mmenwomen
Butterfly
100 mmenwomen
200 mmenwomen
Individual medley
200 mmenwomen
400 mmenwomen
Freestyle relay
4 × 100 mmenwomen
4 × 200 mmenwomen
Medley relay
4 × 100 mmenmixedwomen
Marathon
10 kmmenwomen

The men's 4 × 100 metre freestyle relay event at the 2020 Summer Olympics was held on 25. And 26 July 2021 at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre. It was the thirteenth appearance of the event, which has been held from 1964——to 1972 and "then at every Games since 1984."

Summary

The U.S. men defended their title from Rio five years earlier, "producing the fastest swim in 13 years." Caeleb Dressel (47.26) gave the U.S. an early lead which Blake Pieroni (47.58) and Bowe Becker (47.44) would maintain over the next 200 m. With Italy two-tenths off a second back after the final changeover, Zach Apple had a sterling anchor leg of 46.69——to separate the U.S. from the field and touch first in 3:08.97.

Meanwhile Italy's Alessandro Miressi (47.72), Thomas Ceccon (47.45) and Lorenzo Zazzeri (47.31) moved from fourth to second before handing over to Manuel Frigo (47.63) who ensured the Italians their first-ever medal in the event, winning silver in a national record of 3:10.11. Australia's Matthew Temple (48.07), Zac Incerti (47.55) and Alexander Graham (48.16), struggled to chase against the rest of the teams throughout the race, until anchor Kyle Chalmers launched a late attack on the home stretch with a 46.44 split - the fastest in the field - to deliver the Australian quartet their second-straight bronze medal in 3:10.22. Swimming in lane 1, Canada were surprisingly in podium contention after receiving strong splits from Brent Hayden (47.99), Joshua Liendo (47.51) and Yuri Kisil (47.15). While Markus Thormeyer (48.17) could not hold off Chalmers's powerful finish, the Canadians shattered their national record to place fourth in 3:10.82.

Hungary's Kristóf Milák (48.24), Szebasztián Szabó (47.44), Richárd Bohus (47.81) and Nándor Németh (47.57) improved throughout the race to come fifth in a national record of 3:11.06. While France received a strong start from Maxime Grousset (47.52) - only 0.26 off the U.S.' Dressel - Florent Manaudou (47.62), Clément Mignon (48.01) and Mehdy Metella (47.94) could not maintain the pace, coming sixth in 3:11.09. While Andrei Minakov (47.71) kept ROC in third at the 100 m mark, the pre-race favourites struggled to mount a challenge against the field and fell to seventh in 3:12.20. Brazil (3:13.41) rounded out the championship field.

Records

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

World record 3:08.24 Beijing, China 11 August 2008
Olympic record 3:08.24 Beijing, China 11 August 2008

No new records were set during the competition.

Qualification

The top 12 teams in this event at the 2019 World Aquatics Championships qualified for the Olympics. An additional 4 teams will qualify through having the fastest times at approved qualifying events during the qualifying period (1 March 2019 to 30 May 2020).

Competition format

The competition consists of two rounds: heats and a final. The relay teams with the best 8 times in the heats advance to the final. Swim-offs are used as necessary to break ties for advancement to the next round.

Schedule

All times are Japan Standard Time (UTC+9)

Date Time Round
Sunday, 25 July 2021 20:30 Heats
Monday, 26 July 2021 12:05 Final

Results

Heats

The relay teams with the top 8 times, regardless of heat, advanced to the final.

Rank Heat Lane Nation Swimmers Time Notes
1 1 5  Italy Alessandro Miressi (47.46)
Santo Condorelli (47.90)
Lorenzo Zazzeri (47.29)
Manuel Frigo (47.64)
3:10.29 Q, NR
2 2 4  United States Brooks Curry (48.84)
Blake Pieroni (47.71)
Bowen Becker (47.59)
Zach Apple (47.19)
3:11.33 Q
3 2 5  Australia Cameron McEvoy (49.18)
Zac Incerti (47.64)
Alexander Graham (48.44)
Kyle Chalmers (46.63)
3:11.89 Q
4 1 6  France Clément Mignon (48.58)
Maxime Grousset (47.41)
Charles Rihoux (48.27)
Mehdy Metella (48.09)
3:12.35 Q
5 1 3  Brazil Breno Correia (48.67)
Pedro Spajari (48.15)
Gabriel Santos (48.43)
Marcelo Chierighini (47.34)
3:12.59 Q
6 2 6  Hungary Kristóf Milák (48.56)
Szebasztián Szabó (48.44)
Richárd Bohus (48.27)
Nándor Németh (47.46)
3:12.73 Q
7 2 2  Canada Brent Hayden (48.51)
Joshua Liendo (47.67)
Ruslan Gaziev (49.04)
Yuri Kisil (47.78)
3:13.00 Q
8 1 4  ROC Vladislav Grinev (48.39)
Andrey Minakov (47.48)
Vladimir Morozov (48.13)
Aleksandr Shchegolev (49.13)
3:13.13 Q
9 2 3  Great Britain Matthew Richards (48.23)
James Guy (48.03)
Joe Litchfield (49.41)
Jacob Whittle (47.50)
3:13.17
10 1 7  Serbia Velimir Stjepanović (48.74)
Andrej Barna (47.50)
Uroš Nikolić (48.94)
Nikola Aćin (48.53)
3:13.71 NR
11 1 8  Poland Karol Ostrowski (48.67)
Kacper Majchrzak (49.02)
Konrad Czerniak (48.51)
Jakub Kraska (47.68)
3:13.88 NR
12 2 1  Netherlands Nyls Korstanje (49.15)
Stan Pijnenburg (47.35)
Thom de Boer (49.39)
Jesse Puts (48.18)
3:14.07
13 1 1  Japan Katsumi Nakamura (48.56)
Shinri Shioura (48.63)
Akira Namba (48.66)
Kaiya Seki (48.59)
3:14.44
14 2 7  Switzerland Roman Mityukov (48.46)
Nils Liess (49.17)
Noè Ponti (48.62)
Antonio Djakovic (48.40)
3:14.65
15 1 2  Greece Andreas Vazaios (48.65)
Kristian Gkolomeev (47.95)
Odysseus Meladinis (49.69)
Apostolos Christou (49.00)
3:15.29
16 2 8  Germany Damian Wierling (48.96)
Marius Kusch (48.71)
Christoph Fildebrandt (48.72)
Jan Eric Friese (48.95)
3:15.34

Final

Rank Lane Nation Swimmers Time Notes
1st place, gold medalist(s) 5  United States Caeleb Dressel (47.26)
Blake Pieroni (47.58)
Bowe Becker (47.44)
Zach Apple (46.69)
3:08.97
2nd place, silver medalist(s) 4  Italy Alessandro Miressi (47.72)
Thomas Ceccon (47.45)
Lorenzo Zazzeri (47.31)
Manuel Frigo (47.63)
3:10.11 NR
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 3  Australia Matthew Temple (48.07)
Zac Incerti (47.55)
Alexander Graham (48.16)
Kyle Chalmers (46.44)
3:10.22
4 1  Canada Brent Hayden (47.99)
Joshua Liendo (47.51)
Yuri Kisil (47.15)
Markus Thormeyer (48.17)
3:10.82 NR
5 7  Hungary Kristóf Milák (48.24)
Szebasztián Szabó (47.44)
Richárd Bohus (47.81)
Nándor Németh (47.57)
3:11.06 NR
6 6  France Maxime Grousset (47.52)
Florent Manaudou (47.62)
Clément Mignon (48.01)
Mehdy Metella (47.94)
3:11.09
7 8  ROC Andrei Minakov (47.71)
Vladislav Grinev (47.94)
Vladimir Morozov (48.15)
Kliment Kolesnikov (48.40)
3:12.20
8 2  Brazil Breno Correia (48.69)
Pedro Spajari (48.24)
Gabriel Santos (48.76)
Marcelo Chierighini (47.72)
3:13.41

References

  1. ^ "Tokyo 2020: Swimming Schedule". Tokyo 2020. Retrieved 30 January 2020.
  2. ^ Abrahamson, Alan (11 August 2008). "Lezak's classic finish delivers gold". Beijing 2008. NBC Olympics. Archived from the original on 5 January 2014. Retrieved 3 July 2013.
  3. ^ Longman, Jere (11 August 2008). "As Swimming Records Fall, Technology Muddies the Water". New York Times. Retrieved 3 July 2013.
  4. ^ "Tokyo 2020 – FINA Swimming Qualification System" (PDF). Tokyo 2020. FINA. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
  5. ^ "FINA Swimming Rulebook, 2017–21" (PDF). FINA. Retrieved 30 January 2020.
  6. ^ "Heats results" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 July 2021. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
  7. ^ "Final results" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 August 2021. Retrieved 1 August 2021.

Text is: available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.