Swimming-Sjostrom's 100m freestyle world record in peril as sub-52 club grows


Paris 2024 Olympics - Swimming - Women's 100m Freestyle Final - Paris La Defense Arena, Nanterre, France - July 31, 2024. Sarah Sjostrom of Sweden celebrates after winning gold REUTERS/Agustin Marcarian

May 28 (Reuters) - Olympic champion Sarah ⁠Sjostrom's 100 metres freestyle world record appears on shaky ground as Dutch dynamo ⁠Marrit Steenbergen and young American Anna Moesch shake up the women's all-time ‌rankings.

Moesch, a 20-year-old from the University of Virginia, clocked 51.94 seconds in her win at the AP Race London International this week, only the third sub-52 swim in history.

It was briefly the second-fastest ever, ​behind only Sjostrom's world record of 51.71 set with ⁠the leadoff leg of the 4x100m ⁠relay at the 2017 world championships in Budapest.

On Wednesday, though, Moesch's mark was bettered ⁠by ‌world champion Steenbergen, who clocked 51.86 on the south coast of France at the Canet stop of the Mare Nostrum series.

Steenbergen finished seventh behind Sjostrom in ⁠the 100 final at the 2024 Paris Olympics but ​has been setting the ‌standards since the Swede went on maternity leave.

She brushed off her Paris disappointment ⁠by successfully defending ​her world title in Singapore last year, edging Australia's former world champion Mollie O'Callaghan.

Sjostrom, 32, returned to competition at a home meet last month but has focused on the 50m freestyle ⁠and butterfly as she builds towards the European championships ​in Paris in July-August.

For U.S. swimming, Moesch's rise may be a game-changer for a nation that has been foiled repeatedly by Australia's women in the Olympic 4x100 relays.

The Americans ⁠were runners-up at Paris as Australia won a fourth successive gold medal in the event.

New Jersey native Moesch adds another weapon to a formidable U.S. programme boasting the versatile Kate Douglass and Torri Huske, the individual 100m silver medallist at Paris.

Moesch swam a ​heat in the 100 relay at last year's world championships ⁠but was dropped for the final as Simone Manuel, Douglass, Erin Gemmell and Huske finished ​second to Australia.

Australia's women will provide a glimpse ‌of their form midway through the Olympic cycle ​when they compete at national trials next month for the Glasgow Commonwealth Games starting on July 23.

(Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Editing by Peter Rutherford)

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