Melbourne: Mollie O’Callaghan upset Olympic gold medallist Ariarne Titmus with the fastest 200m freestyle of the year yesterday to book a world championship slot from a stacked field at the Australian trials.
Reigning 100m world champion O’Callaghan produced a sizzling final 50m to touch in 1:53.83 ahead of Titmus (1:54.14), who easily won the 400 free on the opening night of the meet in Melbourne on Tuesday.
Both qualified for the world championships in Japan next month and will be hot favourites alongside American great Katie Ledecky and Canadian teenager Summer McIntosh, who previously held the year’s quickest time.
“I’m absolutely amazed by that race,” said 19-year-old O’Callaghan after a career-best swim over the distance.
“I was so nervous and just hoping for a personal best and try and get top two. I’m just so happy, overjoyed. It’s exciting for the worlds and let’s see what I can do.”
Such was the quality of the field that all the top six – including Lani Pallister, Maddie Wilson, Kiah Melverton and Brianna Throssell – went under the automatic qualifying time.
They will be in contention for spots on Australia’s formidable world-record holding 4x200m relay team. Surprisingly, Shayna Jack, who had swum a 1.55 this year, missed the final while backstroke queen Kaylee McKeown was a no-show after her sizzling 100m back performance – the third fastest in history – on Wednesday.
Australia’s most successful Olympian, Emma McKeon, also opted out, forgoing a 200m relay place to focus on the sprint butterfly and freestyle events.
She instead suited up for the 50 fly but in another upset was squeezed into third behind Alex Perkins (25.92) and Lily Price (25.97).
McKeon won the 100m butterfly earlier this week to book her seat to Japan.
Prodigious young talent Sam Short, 19, put himself in gold medal contention by swimming the world’s fastest 800m freestyle this year, by nearly two seconds, hitting the wall in 7:40.39.
Elijah Winnington came second to also qualify.
“That hurt a lot, but I got it and very stoked,” said Short.
“I held off Elijah in the 400 so I had a lot of confidence. I knew if I was with him at 400 that would give me the best shot.”
Matt Temple was the top seed and fastest qualifier in the men’s 200 fly, but pulled out of the final. That opened the door to Bowen Gough to touch first in 1:56.01, but outside the qualifying time.
Australia may deploy
McKeown as breaststroke weapon
World record holder Kaylee McKeown has turned heads for her blistering backstroke times but could end up swimming the breaststroke at next month’s world championships to help Australia’s bid for gold in the medley relay.
Australia are currently light on breaststroke options for Fukuoka, with top contenders Jenna Strauch and Chelsea Hodges sidelined with injuries.
McKeown, the Olympic 100m and 200m backstroke champion, would be a shoo-in for the backstroke leg of the medley but her breaststroke times have given head coach Rohan Taylor food for thought.
The improvement in 100m freestyle world champion Mollie O’Callaghan’s backstroke has also added to Australia’s “good” selection headache.
“I think all options are on the table, absolutely,” Taylor told reporters at Australia’s world championship trials in Melbourne yesterday. “Kaylee obviously has put a time down in the 100 breaststroke, which is at the moment the quickest we’ve seen this season. So we have to consider that. And obviously Mollie with her backstroke, that she’s probably third in the world in rankings.
“So we’re lucky there. So I do have some options, but that will all kind of play out.”
McKeown has been in fine form at world trials this week, posting a scintillating time of 57.50 seconds in the 100m backstroke on Wednesday, the third-fastest mark of all-time and just 0.05 seconds short of her world record (57.45) set in 2021.
It follows the 21-year-old’s world record in the 200m backstroke at the New South Wales State Open championships in Sydney in March