Current:Home > FinanceGretchen Walsh breaks world record, then nearly does it again to lock up Olympic spot -AssetTrainer
Gretchen Walsh breaks world record, then nearly does it again to lock up Olympic spot
View
Date:2025-04-19 21:05:01
INDIANAPOLIS — The U.S. Olympic swimming trials are unforgiving, a grueling test of time and distance where first place goes to Paris, and second place too, but third? Third place goes home.
On Saturday, Gretchen Walsh, a 21-year-old University of Virginia standout, surprised herself and just about everyone else when she broke the nearly eight-year-old world record in the women’s 100-meter butterfly — in the semifinals.
Which meant that come Sunday, in the loaded final of the same race, Walsh had to either out-do or come close to matching that performance, or risk perhaps failing to make the Olympic team at all in that event. Nothing was guaranteed. Everything was up in the air.
So she went out and nearly did it again. Walsh won the 100 butterfly with a time just a sliver of a fingernail off her new world record of 55.18 seconds — 55.31 seconds — to hold off 2021 Olympian and former U.S. record holder Torri Huske, who finished second in 55.52, her fastest time ever. Both Walsh and Huske will go to Paris in this event.
“I was definitely nervous,” Walsh said. “I just had a lot of what-ifs going through my head of just being like coming off of breaking a world record, and then thinking I need to do that again or I might miss the team and what if I get third and what would that even look like?
“Going into this meet, I don’t think people had many expectations for me and last night kind of set a lot and so I had a talk with my confidence coach today. We were saying, all I had to do was execute.”
Huske, 21, who is taking a gap year from Stanford to train for the Olympics, would have been in all the headlines but for Walsh’s breakout performance. Her time of 55.52 makes her the third-fastest woman in history in the 100 fly, behind only Walsh and former world record holder Sarah Sjostrom of Sweden.
“That’s the same as how it was at the Olympics (in 2021), really fast,” Huske said. “Competition just brings out the best in you. That was my best time and I was just really excited to get up and race.”
In 2021, Huske won an Olympic silver medal in the women’s 4x100 medley relay while finishing fourth in the 100 butterfly after appearing to take the lead not far from the finish.
“Last time, when I first made the Olympics, I was kind of in awe the whole time,” she said. “It felt very unreal. The whole time I just felt like I couldn’t believe that I was even there. Now, this time, having that experience under my belt, I know what to expect. I know this isn’t the end. We still have more to come and I think having that mentality and moving forward, that will hopefully give me an advantage in the Olympics this time and I’ll just be able to do better than I did.”
Regan Smith, 22, was the odd woman out in this lightning quick race in third place with a time of 55.62 seconds, which made her the fifth fastest woman ever in this event. But because only two swimmers are allowed from each nation, Smith cannot go in this event, even though she could have medaled.
Smith, who won two silver medals and a bronze in Tokyo three years ago, still has other opportunities to make the Olympic team here this week. But for now, for her, no matter how fast she was, what was left Sunday night was the sting of being third.
veryGood! (537)
Related
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Former officer who shot Breonna Taylor points gun at suspect during arrest in new job
- Baltimore firefighter dies and 4 others are injured battling rowhouse fire
- Barry Williams says secret to a happy marriage is making wife 'your princess'
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Republicans are facing death threats as the election for speaker gets mired in personal feuds
- Jewish, Muslim, Arab communities see rise in threats, federal agencies say
- Pulse nightclub to be purchased by city of Orlando with plans of mass shooting memorial
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Marine killed in homicide at Camp Lejeune, fellow Marine taken into custody
Ranking
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Hurricane Norma weakens slightly on a path toward Los Cabos in Mexico
- Army private who fled to North Korea charged with desertion, held by US military, officials tell AP
- Corn Harvests in the Yukon? Study Finds That Climate Change Will Boost Likelihood That Wilderness Gives Way to Agriculture
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Anne Kirkpatrick, a veteran cop but newcomer to New Orleans, gets city council OK as police chief
- Michael Penix headlines the USA TODAY Sports midseason college football All-America team
- An alleged Darfur militia leader was merely ‘a pharmacist,’ defense lawyers tell a war crimes court
Recommendation
Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
Israeli mother recounts being held hostage by Hamas with her family, husband now missing
Martin Scorsese on new movie ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’: ‘Maybe we’re all capable of this’
Chick-fil-A releases cookbook to combine fan-favorite menu items with household ingredients
Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
Rob Kardashian Reveals His NSFW Reaction to Scott Disick’s Sex Life
Communities can’t recycle or trash disposable e-cigarettes. So what happens to them?
Protesters on Capitol Hill call for Israel-Gaza cease-fire, hundreds arrested