Swimming at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Women's 200 metre butterfly

Women's 200 metre butterfly
at the Games of the XXXI Olympiad
VenueOlympic Aquatics Stadium
Dates9 August 2016 (heats &
semifinals)
10 August 2016 (final)
Competitors28 from 20 nations
Winning time2:04.85
Medalists
   Spain
   Australia
   Japan
Swimming at the
2016 Summer Olympics
Qualification
Freestyle
50 m   men   women
100 m men women
200 m men women
400 m men women
800 m women
1500 m men
Backstroke
100 m men women
200 m men women
Breaststroke
100 m men women
200 m men women
Butterfly
100 m men women
200 m men women
Individual medley
200 m men women
400 m men women
Freestyle relay
4×100 m men women
4×200 m men women
Medley relay
4×100 m men women
Marathon
10 km men women

The women's 200 metre butterfly event at the 2016 Summer Olympics took place between 9–10 August at the Olympic Aquatics Stadium.[1]

Spain's Mireia Belmonte stormed home on the final lap to upgrade her silver from London 2012 with an Olympic title in this event, writing a historic milestone to become the country's first female swimming champion.[2] Closing the gap between herself and Madeline Groves at the 150-metre turn, she pipped the Australian challenger with a half-stroke swim on the final stretch to a striking gold-medal triumph in 2:04.85.[3][4] Groves commanded a solid lead through the first half of the race, but could not catch the Spaniard near the wall, stopping just 0.03 seconds behind with a 2:04.88 for the silver.[5] Meanwhile, Japan's Natsumi Hoshi delivered a powerful back-half strategy to hold on the two leaders and repeat her bronze-medal feat from London 2012 in 2:05.20.[6][7]

Swimming in lane eight, Cammile Adams of the United States missed out on the podium by seven tenths of a second, as she moved up from the outside to fourth with a lifetime best of 2:05.90.[8] Separated from each other by a 0.03-second gap, Chinese duo Zhou Yilin (2:07.37) and Zhang Yufei (2:07.40) picked up the fifth and sixth spots respectively.[9] Adams' teammate Hali Flickinger (2:07.71) and Australian youngster Brianna Throssell (2:07.87) closed out the field.[7]

Notable swimmers missed the final roster, including British duo Hannah Miley and Aimee Willmott, Germany's Franziska Hentke, the reigning European champion, and Hungary's Katinka Hosszú, who later scratched the afternoon prelims to prepare herself instead for a historic medley double that happened in the evening session of the same day.[10]

Records

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

World record  Liu Zige (CHN) 2:01.81 Jinan, China 21 October 2009
Olympic record  Jiao Liuyang (CHN) 2:04.06 London, United Kingdom 1 August 2012

Results

Heats

Rank Heat Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
1 4 5 Mireia Belmonte  Spain 2:06.64 Q
2 3 5 Cammile Adams  United States 2:06.67 Q
4 2 Hali Flickinger  United States Q
4 4 6 Liliána Szilágyi  Hungary 2:06.99 Q
5 4 4 Madeline Groves  Australia 2:07.22 Q
6 2 3 Suzuka Hasegawa  Japan 2:07.35 Q
7 3 4 Natsumi Hoshi  Japan 2:07.37 Q
8 2 5 Zhang Yufei  China 2:07.55 Q
9 2 4 Franziska Hentke  Germany 2:07.59 Q
10 3 3 Brianna Throssell  Australia 2:07.76 Q
11 4 1 Martina van Berkel  Switzerland 2:08.00 Q
12 4 3 Zhou Yilin  China 2:08.21 Q
13 2 7 An Se-hyeon  South Korea 2:08.42 Q
14 3 1 Anja Klinar  Slovenia 2:08.43 Q
15 2 6 Alessia Polieri  Italy 2:08.95 Q
16 2 2 Audrey Lacroix  Canada 2:09.21 Q
17 4 8 Stefania Pirozzi  Italy 2:09.40
18 3 7 Lara Grangeon  France 2:09.69
19 2 1 Aimee Willmott  Great Britain 2:09.71
20 3 2 Judit Ignacio  Spain 2:09.82
21 4 7 Park Jin-young  South Korea 2:09.99
22 1 5 Nida Eliz Üstündağ  Turkey 2:10.02
23 2 8 Andreina Pinto  Venezuela 2:10.60
24 3 8 Joanna Maranhão  Brazil 2:10.69
25 1 4 Helena Gasson  New Zealand 2:12.18
26 1 3 Virginia Bardach  Argentina 2:13.58
27 1 6 María Far Núñez  Panama 2:23.89
28 Katinka Hosszú  Hungary DNS

Semifinals

Semifinal 1

Rank Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
1 7 Zhou Yilin  China 2:06.52 Q
2 6 Zhang Yufei  China 2:06.95 Q
3 2 Brianna Throssell  Australia 2:07.19 Q
4 4 Cammile Adams  United States 2:07.22 Q
5 3 Suzuka Hasegawa  Japan 2:07.33
6 5 Liliána Szilágyi  Hungary 2:07.34
7 1 Anja Klinar  Slovenia 2:09.44
8 8 Audrey Lacroix  Canada 2:09.95

Semifinal 2

Rank Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
1 3 Madeline Groves  Australia 2:05.66 Q
2 4 Mireia Belmonte  Spain 2:06.06 Q
3 6 Natsumi Hoshi  Japan 2:06.74 Q
4 5 Hali Flickinger  United States 2:07.02 Q
5 2 Franziska Hentke  Germany 2:07.67
6 7 Martina van Berkel  Switzerland 2:07.90 NR
7 1 An Se-hyeon  South Korea 2:08.69
8 8 Alessia Polieri  Italy 2:09.35

Final

Rank Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
1st, gold medalist(s) 5 Mireia Belmonte  Spain 2:04.85
2nd, silver medalist(s) 4 Madeline Groves  Australia 2:04.88
3rd, bronze medalist(s) 6 Natsumi Hoshi  Japan 2:05.20
4 8 Cammile Adams  United States 2:05.90
5 3 Zhou Yilin  China 2:07.37
6 2 Zhang Yufei  China 2:07.40
7 7 Hali Flickinger  United States 2:07.71
8 1 Brianna Throssell  Australia 2:07.87

References

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