For the first time since December of 2009, there is a new fastest man in swimming history. Australian Cameron McEvoy broke ...
Australia’s Cameron McEvoy has broken the longstanding 50m freestyle world record, one of swimming’s oldest records dating back to the supersuit era. Racing at the China Open on Friday night, McEvoy ...
The standard of excellence in the men’s 200-yard freestyle relay lasted for 14 years, from the height of the polyurethane suit era until two teams blasted through that mark at the 2023 NCAA ...
Canadian Summer McIntosh clocked the second-fastest 400m freestyle swim in history on Thursday, touching in 3min 55.37sec to win at the US Open long course meeting in Austin, Texas. McIntosh, winner ...
Australian Associated Press on MSN

Speed Cam: Aussie becomes fastest swimmer in history

Australian speed king Cameron McEvoy has broken the long-standing 50 metres freestyle world ‌record at the China Swimming ...
Katie Ledecky continues to prove she's the greatest female swimmer ever whenever she steps foot into a pool. The nine-time Olympic gold medalist posted the second-fastest swim ever in the 1,500-meter ...
How good is your memory? If it’s solid, take a trip back to the 2009 NCAA Championships. That year, among other records, featured an incredible 1:14.08 clocking from Auburn University in the 200-yard ...
Katie Ledecky swam the 13th-fastest time ever in the 800-meter freestyle, only she wasn’t racing the 800. She still had 700 meters to go. The American swimming star challenged her own unmatchable ...
As if there was any doubt, Katie Ledecky is still very fast at swimming. Ledecky took to the pool for her first top-level race since the Paris Olympics on Wednesday and posted the second-fastest ...
A semifinal swimming triumph for a White Plains native turned into a “creepy moment” for some watching the 2024 Olympics. It was no fault of Claire Weinstein, who finished first in her 200m freestyle ...
The 50-yard freestyle is swimming’s equivalent of track and field’s 100-yard dash. There is no margin for error, and the smallest mistake can be the difference between a gold medal and no medal at all ...