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Why Torri Huske won Gold by 0.04s โฑ๏ธ๐ฅ
โIt wasnโt just the finish... it was the back half and the faster time over the water. Gretchen Walsh is faster on paper (WR 54.33 in Ft. Lauderdale!), but Huske executed the perfect race in Paris.
โWatch the full breakdown of the splits that decided the Olympic 100m Butterfly. ๐โโ๏ธ
โOlympic Final Results:
๐ฅ Torri Huske ๐บ๐ธ โ 55.59
๐ฅ 2. Gretchen Walsh ๐บ๐ธ โ 55.63
๐ฅ 3. Zhang Yufei ๐จ๐ณ โ 56.21
4. Angelina Kohler ๐ฉ๐ช โ 56.42
5. Maggie Mac Neil ๐จ๐ฆ โ 56.44
6. Emma McKeon ๐ฆ๐บ โ 56.93
7. Mizuki Hirai ๐ฏ๐ต โ 57.14 .hirai0307
8. Louise Hansson ๐ธ๐ช โ 57.34
โ
Data & analysis : &
Ever wonder how a race is won in the final 15 meters? It comes down to incredible physiological strength and masterful ex*****on.
While the field was neck-and-neck at the first 50m wall, Kaylee McKeown did something the rest didn't: she accelerated. While most swimmers see their speed naturally decrease due to fatigue, Kaylee actually increased her speed through every 50, pulling away from the field in the closing meters.
The Winning Formula:
Elite Underwaters: A baseline requirement. Everyone on that podium averaged over 2.0m/s underwaterโitโs the "minimum" to be in the hunt.
The "Long" Strategy: While others increased their stroke rate but "spun" (losing stroke length), Kaylee combined a high stroke rate with the longest stroke length in the field (save for Wilm).
Building the 50s: She finishes stronger than everyone else by effectively building her tempo and maintaining power when it's hardest.
"Swim long to finish strong."
The Finalists:
๐ฅ ๐ฆ๐บ Kaylee McKeown โ 57.33 (OR)
๐ฅ ๐บ๐ธ Regan Smith โ 57.66
๐ฅ ๐บ๐ธ Katharine Berkoff โ 57.98
4. ๐จ๐ฆ Kylie Masse โ 58.29
5. ๐ฆ๐บ Iona Anderson .anderson โ 58.98
6. ๐จ๐ฆ Ingrid Wilm โ 59.25
7. ๐ซ๐ท Emma Terebo emmaterebs โ 59.40
8. ๐ฌ๐ง Beryl Gastaldello โ 59.80
Data & Analysis: &
Swim Long to Finish Strong ๐
Efficiency > Effort. ๐โโ๏ธ๐
Thomas Cecconโs 100m Backstroke Gold wasn't just a win; it was a masterclass in stroke dynamics. While the rest of the field was "spinning" their wheels with high stroke rates, Ceccon stayed calm, held his water, and executed the only sub-27 second backend in the pool.
The Data breakdown:
โ
Max Reach: A massive 2.54m per stroke in the third 25m.
โ
The Fewest Strokes: Only 61 cycles to cover the whole 100m.
โ
The Surge: A clinical 26.90 split to close the door on the field.
In a sport won by hundredths of a second, how you move through the water matters more than how fast you move your arms.
Which stat surprises you the most? Drop a comment below! ๐
The Finalists
๐ฅ Thomas Ceccon:
๐ฅ Jiayu Xu:
๐ฅ Ryan Murphy:
๐ค Apostolos Christou:
๐ค Pieter Coetze: .coetze
๐ค Hugo Gonzalez:
๐ค Yohann Ndoye-Brouard:
๐ค Oliver Morgan:
How did Mollie OโCallaghan pull off that incredible Olympic Record? ๐โโ๏ธ๐จ
The data reveals a masterclass in strategy. While the rest of the field fought for position in the first 150m, Mollie stayed relaxed with a massive 2.5m stroke length. She wasn't just swimming; she was gliding, saving that aerobic power for the home stretch.
The real magic happened in the final 50m. Alongside teammate Ariarne Titmus, Mollie shifted gears, exploded her stroke rate, and utilized her secret weapon: the underwaters. Fun fact: Mollie spent 46 meters of that race underwater: nearly 25% of the entire 200m! ๐คฏ
Watch the breakdown to see how 's athletes turned the final lap into a historic Australian 1-2 finish.
๐ฅ 1:53.27 (OR)
๐ฅ 1:53.81
๐ฅ 1:54.55
4. 1:55.29
5. 1:55.38
6. 1:55.47
7. 1:55.59
8. 1:56.60
Data & analysis: &
This was easily one of the most mind-blowing performances in Olympic swimming history! ๐คฏ๐จ
Pan Zhanle didnโt just win the Menโs 100m Freestyle in Paris; he redefined what efficiency looks like in the pool.
While the rest of the field was battling it out, Pan was operating on a completely different level of physics.
๐ The Data Behind the Dominance:
Front End Speed: A blistering 22.2 opening split.
The Finish: A 24.1 back endโeven faster than the legendary closing speed of Kyle Chalmers.
Stroke Efficiency: The most insane stat? Pan only took 64 strokes for the entire 100 meters. Compare that to 67 for Chalmers and 69 for Popovici.
Maintaining a stroke length of 2.4 meters at that velocity is pure technical mastery. Itโs not just about power; itโs about moving more water with less effort. ๐โโ๏ธโจ
The gap wasn't just in the clock; it was in the mechanics.
The Finalists:
๐ฅ ๐จ๐ณ
๐ฅ ๐ฆ๐บ
๐ฅ ๐ท๐ดnandor.nn ๐ญ๐บ
๐ซ๐ทsalchow ๐ฉ๐ช
๐บ๐ธ
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The Women's 100 Freestyle in Paris was a masterclass in pacing.
๐โโ๏ธ Sarah Sjรถstrรถmโs ๐ 100m freestyle win at the Paris Olympics wasn't just a victory; it was a tactical work of art.
While the rest of the field pushed hard from the blocks, Sarah played the long game. By staying "easy" in the first 50mโcruising at 7% over her 50m PBโshe kept a massive speed reserve that no one else could match in the closing meters.
The breakdown of a champion:
1) The "Easy" Start: While others were at 3-5% of their PB, Sarah stayed relaxed at 7%.
2) The Gear Shift: In the second 50m, she actually increased her stroke rate to 53 strokes per minute while maintaining a 2-meter stroke length.
3) The Final Sprint: Head down at the 15m mark, zero breaths to the wall, and a blistering 2.48s final 5-meter segmentโ0.3s faster than the competition.
Thatโs how you turn "easy speed" into Olympic Gold. ๐ฅ
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Plan and write workouts for FREE with the Swimtraxx Hub app. Get it through the link in bio.
Want to win the 50m Freestyle?
Take notes from . ๐๐โโ๏ธ
โThe keys to her Paris victory:
1๏ธโฃ A clean 15m start (approx. 6 seconds).
2๏ธโฃ Dominating the 25mโ45m stretch.
3๏ธโฃ Holding a 1.9m stroke length under pressure at a high stroke rate (62spm)
had the early edge, but Sarahโs ability to maintain her stroke rate was the difference between Silver and Gold. ๐ธ๐ช
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Data & analysis: &
20/01/2026
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