In-form McKeown Smashes Short Course 200 Meter Backstroke Record

Reuters
By Reuters
November 28, 2020Sports News
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In-form McKeown Smashes Short Course 200 Meter Backstroke Record
18th FINA World Swimming Championships, Women’s 200 meter (656 feet) Backstroke Semi-Finals, Nambu University Municipal Aquatics Center, Gwangju, South Korea, on July 26, 2019. Kaylee McKeown of Australia competes. (Kim Hong-Ji/Reuters)

SYDNEY—Tokyo Olympic hopeful Kaylee McKeown has confirmed her rich vein of form by claiming a 200 meter (656 feet) backstroke short course world record at the virtual Australian national championships in Brisbane.

The teenager clocked 1:58.94 seconds on Friday to take nearly half a second off Hungarian Katinka Hosszu’s 2014 mark (1:59.23).

“Short course is something we don’t get to do very often, so I was excited to see what I could put up after some solid training this year,” said 19-year-old McKeown.”I headed over to my team mates and my coach and they said, ‘You just got a world-record!’, and I was like, ‘What?’ I didn’t actually know till a few minutes later.”

Australia’s national short course swimming championships were moved to a virtual platform this year because of the pandemic, with swimmers competing simultaneously in pools in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, and Hobart.

In long course meets, McKeown won gold in the 50 meter (164 feet), silver in the 100 meter (328 feet), and bronze in the 200 meter (656 feet) backstroke at the 2018 Youth Olympics before claiming a senior world championship silver in the 200 meter in Gwangju last year.

She swam the seventh-fastest 200 meter (2:05.83) and ninth-fastest 100 meter (58.62) of all time in January before the COVID-19 pandemic put her season on hold.

She returned to improve her personal bests in the 100 meter to 58.11 and the 200 meter to 2:04.49 to take the Australian records in Brisbane earlier this month.

The health crisis also forced the postponement of the Tokyo Olympics by 12 months, but that has not diminished McKeown’s determination to earn a place at the biggest swimming meet of them all.

“In Australia, we have some of the top women in the world racing in my events, so it’s tough,” she told the Olympic website last month. “But being able to go to the Olympic Games is what I’ve been dreaming of.”

By Nick Mulvenney

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