2020 United States Olympic trials (swimming)
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{{Infobox Swim meet
|name = 2020 United States Olympic trials (swimming)
|image =
|imagesize =
|hostcity = Omaha, Nebraska, U.S.
|teams =
|nations =
|athletes =
|events = 28 (men: 14; women: 14)
|dates = Wave I: June 4 – 7, 2021
Wave II: June 13 – 20, 2021
|venues = CHI Health Center Omaha
|previous = 2016 trials
|next = 2024 trials
}}
The 2020 USA Swimming Olympic trials was held at CHI Health Center Omaha in Omaha, Nebraska, for a fourth consecutive time. Originally scheduled from June 21 to 28, 2020, it was rescheduled to June 4 to 7, 2021, (wave I) and June 13 to 20, 2021, (wave II) due to the COVID-19 pandemic resulting in the postponement of the 2020 Summer Olympics to 2021. The meet served as the national championships in swimming for the United States.{{cite web|url=https://www.swimmingworldmagazine.com/news/usa-swimming-announces-2020-olympic-trials-will-return-to-omaha/|title=USA Swimming Announces 2020 Olympic Trials Will Return to Omaha|publisher=Swimming World|author=Rieder, David|date=May 1, 2017|accessdate=April 22, 2020}}{{cite web|url=https://olympics.nbcsports.com/2020/04/10/olympic-swimming-trials-dates-2021/|title=U.S. Olympic Swimming Trials set new dates in 2021 in Omaha|publisher=NBC Sports|date=April 10, 2020|accessdate=April 11, 2020}}[https://www.usaswimming.org/news/2021/01/26/2020-u.s.-olympic-team-trials---swimming-split-into-two-events "2020 U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Swimming Split Into Two Events"]. USA Swimming. January 26, 2021. Retrieved July 4, 2021. Those qualifying competed for the United States in swimming at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan.
Qualification criteria
A maximum of 52 swimmers (26 of each sex, not including open water swimmers) were chosen for the 2020 Summer Olympics from Wave II. To make the Olympic team, a swimmer must place in the top two in one of the fourteen individual events. To be considered for the U.S. 4×100-meter and 4×200-meter freestyle relay teams, a swimmer must place in the top six in the 100-meter and 200-meter freestyle, respectively. Swimmers must have achieved a time standard to be eligible to compete in the U.S. Olympic trials:
class="wikitable" style="text-align:right" | ||||
Event | Men | Women | Men | Women |
---|---|---|---|---|
! colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | Wave I
! colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | Wave II | ||||
50 m freestyle | 23.19 | 25.99 | 22.71 | 25.65 |
100 m freestyle | 50.49 | 56.49 | 49.74 | 55.56 |
200 m freestyle | 1:50.79 | 2:01.69 | 1:49.65 | 2:00.24 |
400 m freestyle | 3:57.29 | 4:16.89 | 3:54.21 | 4:13.28 |
800 m freestyle | 8:12.99 | 8:48.09 | 8:08.95 | 8:44.01 |
1500 m freestyle | 15:44.89 | align="center"| 16:49.19 | 15:35.69 | 16:44.60 |
100 m backstroke | 56.59 | 1:02.69 | 55.51 | 1:01.49 |
200 m backstroke | 2:02.99 | 2:14.69 | 2:00.81 | 2:12.94 |
100 m breaststroke | 1:03.29 | 1:10.99 | 1:01.97 | 1:09.55 |
200 m breaststroke | 2:17.89 | 2:33.29 | 2:15.28 | 2:30.49 |
100 m butterfly | 54.19 | 1:00.69 | 53.37 | 59.59 |
200 m butterfly | 2:01.19 | 2:14.59 | 1:59.63 | 2:12.56 |
200 m individual medley | 2:04.09 | 2:17.39 | 2:03.02 | 2:15.26 |
400 m individual medley | 4:25.99 | 4:51.79 | 4:23.24 | 4:47.72 |
Two wave structure
In January 2021, USA Swimming announced its decision to break the Olympic trials into two meets called waves. This decision was made in part to follow social distancing protocols and keep attendees, athletes, and workers safer during the COVID-19 pandemic.Bachman, Rachel (January 26, 2021). [https://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-olympic-swimming-trials-will-be-cut-in-half-11611610224 "U.S. Olympic Swimming Trials Will Be Cut in Half"]. The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved July 4, 2021.D'Addona, Dan (January 26, 2021). [https://www.swimmingworldmagazine.com/news/usa-olympic-swimming-trials-to-be-split-into-two-waves-for-better-social-distancing/ "USA Olympic Swimming Trials to be Split into Two Waves For Better Social Distancing"]. Swimming World. Retrieved July 4, 2021.Keith, Braden (January 26, 2021). [https://swimswam.com/update-usa-swimming-will-split-2021-olympic-trials-into-two-separate-meets/ "(UPDATE) USA Swimming Will Split 2021 Olympic Trials Into Two Separate Meets"]. SwimSwam. Retrieved July 4, 2021. Each wave had a different set of qualification time standards. The time standards took effect January 28, 2021 and an initial qualifying period for both waves ended May 30, 2021. Wave I swimmers who met the time standards for Wave II at the Wave I meet and finished first or second in their event qualified to compete at the Wave II meet. Finals for Wave I were conducted in an A-final and B-final format.USA Swimming (June 7, 2021). [https://www.omegatiming.com/File/0001150002FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF22.pdf "2020 U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Wave I: Results Book"]. Omega Timing. Retrieved October 24, 2022.
A total of 50 swimmers from Wave I qualified to compete in Wave II.Shinn, Peggy (June 8, 2021). [https://www.teamusa.com/news/2021/june/08/50-athletes-from-swimmings-us-olympic-team-trials-wave-i-qualify-for-wave-ii "50 Athletes From Swimming's U.S. Olympic Team Trials Wave I Qualify For Wave II"]. TeamUSA.org. Retrieved July 4, 2021. The first swimmer who swam in the Wave I meet and advanced to a second swim, semifinal or final, at the Wave II meet was Heather MacCausland in the women's 100-meter breaststroke on June 14, 2021.Johnson, Annika (June 14, 2021). [https://swimswam.com/womens-100-breast-prelims-sees-first-wave-i-swimmer-to-make-semis/ "Women's 100 Breast Prelims Sees First Wave I Swimmer to Make Semi's"]. SwimSwam. Retrieved July 4, 2021. The most watched YouTube video from the entire Olympic trials came from Wave I not Wave II. It was a clip of Kayla Han winning the B-final of the women's 400-meter individual medley and breaking a USA Swimming national age group record in the process.Thuc Nhi Nguyen (August 21, 2022). [https://www.latimes.com/sports/olympics/story/2022-08-21/kayla-han-rising-star-paris-2024-olympics "La Mirada teen swimmer Kayla Han makes national waves with Paris 2024 on horizon"]. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 21, 2022.
Between Wave I and Wave II, 2,285 individuals competed at the 2020 Olympic trials, a decrease of over 700 swimmers from the 2016 Olympic trials. As a whole, proportionally fewer Wave I swimmers and proportionally more Wave II swimmers swam faster than their seed times compared to swimmers at the 2016 Olympic trials.Johnson, Annika (July 12, 2021). [https://swimswam.com/more-swimmers-beat-their-seed-times-at-u-s-olympic-trials-in-2020-than-in-2016/ "More Swimmers Beat Their Seed Times at U.S. Olympic Trials in 2020 Than in 2016"]. SwimSwam. Retrieved July 12, 2021.
Events
The meet featured twenty-eight individual events in a long course (50-meter) pool—fourteen events for men and fourteen events for women. Events 200 meters and shorter were held with preliminaries, semifinals and finals, while events 400 meters and longer were held with preliminaries and finals. Semifinals featured sixteen swimmers in two heats; the finals included eight swimmers in a single heat. Preliminaries were seeded with ten lanes. Event order, which mimicked that of the 2020 Olympics, with the exception of the Olympic relay events, were the following for Wave II:{{cite web|url=https://www.usaswimming.org/news-landing-page/2019/03/20/2020-u.s.-olympic-team-trials---swimming-event-order|title=2020 U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Swimming Wave II Event Order|publisher = USA Swimming|accessdate=April 22, 2020}}
class=wikitable style="text-align:center" |
bgcolor=#DDDDDD
! Date ! Sunday ! Monday ! Tuesday ! Wednesday |
M o r n i n g | Men's 400 IM (heats) | Women's 100 backstroke (heats) | Women's 200 freestyle (heats) | Men's 100 freestyle (heats) |
---|
E v e n i n g |Men's 400 IM (final) | Women's 100 butterfly (final) | Women's 200 freestyle (semi-finals) | Men's 100 freestyle (semi-finals) |
bgcolor=#DDDDDD colspan=7| |
bgcolor=#DDDDDD
! Date ! Thursday ! Friday ! Saturday ! Sunday |
M o r n i n g | Women's 100 freestyle (heats) | Women's 800 freestyle (heats) | Men's 50 freestyle (heats) |No morning session. |
E v e n i n g | Men's 800 freestyle (final) | Women's 200 breaststroke (final) | Men's 100 butterfly (final) |Men's 50 freestyle (final) |
U.S. Olympic Team
=Men=
Michael Andrew, Zach Apple, Hunter Armstrong, Bowe Becker, Gunnar Bentz, Michael Brinegar, Patrick Callan, Brooks Curry, Caeleb Dressel, Nic Fink, Bobby Finke, Townley Haas, Zach Harting, Chase Kalisz, Drew Kibler, Jay Litherland, Bryce Mefford, Jake Mitchell, Ryan Murphy, Blake Pieroni, Andrew Seliskar, Tom Shields, Kieran Smith, Andrew Wilson.
=Women=
Phoebe Bacon, Erika Brown, Claire Curzan, Catie DeLoof, Kate Douglass, Hali Flickinger, Brooke Forde, Katie Grimes, Natalie Hinds, Torri Huske, Lydia Jacoby, Lilly King, Annie Lazor, Katie Ledecky, Paige Madden, Simone Manuel, Katie McLaughlin, Allison Schmitt, Bella Sims, Regan Smith, Olivia Smoliga, Erica Sullivan, Alex Walsh, Abbey Weitzeil, Emma Weyant, Rhyan White.
U.S. Olympic Team members in open water swimming events:
=Men=
=Women=
Results
Key:
{{legend2|#F3F781|text=|Highlighted swimmers achieved the qualification conditions to be included in the Olympic team in that respective event.|border=solid 1px #AAAAAA}}
= Men's events =
= Women's events =
Olympics freestyle relay qualifiers
Key:
{{legend2|#F3F781|text=|Highlighted swimmers achieved the qualification conditions to be included in the Olympic team in that respective relay event based on their
performance in the corresponding 100 meter or 200 meter freestyle individual event.|border=solid 1px #AAAAAA}} The qualifying rules for the 2020 Olympics specified that a country could not have more than 12 swimmers, men and women combined, that would race only in relays; of the four sixth-place finishers, Held ranked lowest in his event in USA Swimming's world rankings, so he was left off the team.
=Men=
class="wikitable" | ||||||||
width=140|Place →
! 1st ! 2nd ! 3rd ! 4th ! 5th ! 6th ! 7th ! 8th | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4×100 m freestyle | bgcolor=#F3F781| Caeleb Dressel 47.39 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Zach Apple 47.72 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Blake Pieroni 48.16 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Brooks Curry 48.19 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Bowe Becker 48.22 | Ryan Held 48.46 | Brett Pinfold 48.47 | Coleman Stewart 48.51 |
4×200 m freestyle | bgcolor=#F3F781| Kieran Smith 1:45.29 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Townley Haas 1:45.66 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Drew Kibler 1:45.92 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Andrew Seliskar 1:46.34 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Zach Apple 1:46.45 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Patrick Callan 1:46.49 | Blake Pieroni 1:46.57 | Carson Foster 1:46.67 |
=Women=
class="wikitable" | ||||||||
width=140|Place →
! 1st ! 2nd ! 3rd ! 4th ! 5th ! 6th ! 7th ! 8th | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4×100 m freestyle | bgcolor=#F3F781| Abbey Weitzeil 53.53 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Erika Brown 53.59 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Olivia Smoliga 53.63 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Natalie Hinds 53.84 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Catie DeLoof 53.87 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Allison Schmitt 54.12 | Kate Douglass 54.17 | Linnea Mack 54.32 |
4×200 m freestyle | bgcolor=#F3F781| Katie Ledecky 1:55.11 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Allison Schmitt 1:56.79 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Paige Madden 1:56.80 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Katie McLaughlin 1:57.16 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Bella Sims 1:57.53 | bgcolor=#F3F781| Brooke Forde 1:57.61 | Gabby DeLoof 1:57.86 | Leah Smith 1:58.13 |
Television coverage and viewership
Two national television networks covered the US Olympic trials in swimming in the United States, NBC and NBCSN.Keith, Braden (May 27, 2021). [https://swimswam.com/nbc-networks-will-air-12-nights-of-olympic-swimming-trials-coverage-in-june/ "NBC Networks Will Air All 12 Nights of Olympic Swimming Trials Coverage in June"]. SwimSwam. Retrieved July 2, 2021. NBCSN aired the heats later the same day and NBC aired the finals and some of the semifinals same day.[https://www.nbcolympics.com/news/us-olympic-team-trials-tv-and-streaming-schedule "U.S. Olympic Team Trials TV and streaming schedule"]. NBC Olympics. May 27, 2021. Retrieved July 2, 2021. This coverage was part of the NBC Olympics television and digital programming covering the U.S. Olympic Team trials in various sports that set a new record in number of hours of coverage of the Olympic trials for all sports in the United States at 85.25 hours.
Sunday coverage of the U.S. Olympic Team trials in swimming on NBC made it into the top 20 most viewed programs for the day.Elber, Lynn (June 22, 2021). [https://apnews.com/article/olympic-trials-health-coronavirus-pandemic-entertainment-tokyo-a6598981a66ef98ff15bdf1f2da19bad "Olympic trials pique viewer interest in Tokyo Summer Games"]. Associated Press. Retrieved July 2, 2021. For the top five most viewed days of U.S. Olympic Team trials across all sports, the swimming team trials had one day make it in the top five along with two days from team trials in track and field and two days from gymnastics team trials.McCormick, Jack (July 2, 2021). [https://swimswam.com/tokyo-2020-round-up-us-gymnastics-leads-all-trials-viewership/ "Tokyo 2020 Round-Up: US Gymnastics Leads All Trial's Viewership"]. SwimSwam. Retrieved July 2, 2021.
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{official|https://www.usaswimming.org/}}
- [https://www.usaswimming.org/Home/events/olympic-trials Official website of the 2020 U.S. Olympic Trials (swimming)]
- [https://www.omegatiming.com/File/0001150002FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF22.pdf Results book – Wave I]
- [https://www.omegatiming.com/File/0001150003FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF22.pdf Results book – Wave II]
{{United States Olympic Swimming Trials}}
{{Footer USA Swimming 2020 Summer Olympics}}
Category:Sports in Omaha, Nebraska
Category:United States Olympic trials (swimming)