Swimming at the 2008 Summer Olympics – Men's 4 × 100 metre freestyle relay


























Men's 4×100 metre freestyle relay
at the Games of the XXIX Olympiad


Podium4x100mBeijing.jpg
The medal ceremony of the event.

Venue Beijing National Aquatics Center
Dates August 10, 2008 (heats)
August 11, 2008 (final)
Competitors 72 from 16 nations
Winning time 3:08.24 WR
Medalists
















1st, gold medalist(s)

 United States (USA)
Michael Phelps, Garrett Weber-Gale, Cullen Jones, Jason Lezak, Nathan Adrian*, Matt Grevers*, Ben Wildman-Tobriner*
2nd, silver medalist(s)

 France (FRA)
Amaury Leveaux, Fabien Gilot, Frédérick Bousquet, Alain Bernard, Grégory Mallet*, Boris Steimetz*
3rd, bronze medalist(s)

 Australia (AUS)
Eamon Sullivan, Andrew Lauterstein, Ashley Callus, Matt Targett, Leith Brodie*, Patrick Murphy*



*Indicates the swimmer only competed in the preliminary heats.

← 2004


2012 →









































































































The men's 4 × 100 metre freestyle relay event at the 2008 Olympic Games took place on 10–11 August at the Beijing National Aquatics Center in Beijing, China.[1]


The U.S. men's team dominated the race from the start but fell behind in the third leg, and came from behind to set a new world record and most importantly, to capture the elusive freestyle relay title after 12 years. Diving into the pool at the final exchange, Jason Lezak chased down world record-holder Frenchman Alain Bernard on the 50-metre final length and touched the wall first with a scintillating anchor time of 46.06, the fastest ever split in the event's history, to deliver the foursome of Michael Phelps (47.51, an American record), Garrett Weber-Gale (47.02), and Cullen Jones (47.65) a gold-medal time in 3:08.24.[2][3]


France's Amaury Leveaux (47.91), Fabien Gilot (47.05), and Frédérick Bousquet (46.63) delivered Bernard a lead on the anchor by more than a half-second advantage (0.50), but Bernard's split of 46.73 was 0.67 seconds slower than Lezak's split, leaving them with silver in a European record of 3:08.32.[4] Meanwhile, Eamon Sullivan smashed the world record split of 47.24 to hand the Aussies an early lead, but his teammates Andrew Lauterstein (47.87), Ashley Callus (47.55), and Matt Targett (47.25) could not maintain the pace in the succeeding laps to end the race with a bronze-medal time of 3:09.91.[5][6]


Italy's Alessandro Calvi (48.49), Christian Galenda (47.49), Marco Belotti (48.23), and Filippo Magnini (47.27) finished fourth in 3:11.65, while the Swedish foursome of Petter Stymne (49.17), five-time Olympian Lars Frölander (48.02), Stefan Nystrand (47.25), and Jonas Persson (47.48) cracked a 3:12-barrier to earn a fifth spot in 3:11.92. Outside the club, Canada's Brent Hayden (47.56, a national record), Joel Greenshields (47.77), Colin Russell (48.49), and three-time Olympian Rick Say (48.44) posted a sixth-place time of 3:12.26, while defending Olympic champions and South African quartet of Lyndon Ferns (48.15), Darian Townsend (48.11), Roland Mark Schoeman (48.32), and Ryk Neethling (48.08) produced a seventh-place effort and an African record of 3:12.66 to lower their standard by more than half a second.[4] Great Britain's Simon Burnett (48.34), Adam Brown (47.75), Benjamin Hockin (48.50), and Ross Davenport (48.28) rounded out the field in eighth place at 3:12.87. Due to the presence of technology suits in the pool, all eight teams completed a historic relay finish under a 3:13-barrier.[6]


Earlier in the prelims, the U.S. men's team of Nathan Adrian (48.82), Cullen Jones (47.61), Ben Wildman-Tobriner (48.03), and Matt Grevers (47.77) took down the world record of 3:12.23 to cut off their own standard by 23-hundredths of a second.[7][8]




Contents






  • 1 Records


  • 2 Results


    • 2.1 Heats


    • 2.2 Final




  • 3 New records and feats


  • 4 References


  • 5 External links





Records


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

















World record
 United States (USA)
Michael Phelps (48.83)
Neil Walker (47.89)
Cullen Jones (47.96)
Jason Lezak (47.78)
3:12.46
Victoria, Canada
19 August 2006
Olympic record
 South Africa (RSA)
Roland Mark Schoeman (48.17)
Lyndon Ferns (48.13)
Darian Townsend (48.96)
Ryk Neethling (47.91)
3:13.17
Athens, Greece
15 August 2004

The following new world and Olympic records were set during this competition.



























Date Event Name Nationality Time Record
August 10 Heat 1
Nathan Adrian (48.82)
Cullen Jones (47.61)
Ben Wildman-Tobriner (48.03)
Matt Grevers (47.77)

 United States
3:12.23
WR, OR
August 11 Final
Michael Phelps (47.51) AM
Garrett Weber-Gale (47.02)
Cullen Jones (47.65)
Jason Lezak (46.06)

 United States
3:08.24
WR, OR


Results



Heats




























































































































































Rank Heat Lane Nationality Names Time Notes
1 1 4
 United States

Nathan Adrian (48.82)
Cullen Jones (47.61)
Ben Wildman-Tobriner (48.03)
Matt Grevers (47.77)
3:12.23 Q, WR
2 2 4
 France

Amaury Leveaux (47.76) OR
Grégory Mallet (48.14)
Boris Steimetz (49.83)
Frédérick Bousquet (46.63)
3:12.36 Q, EU
3 1 5
 Australia

Andrew Lauterstein (48.68)
Leith Brodie (48.42)
Patrick Murphy (48.09)
Matt Targett (47.22)
3:12.41 Q, OC
4 2 5
 Italy

Alessandro Calvi (48.58)
Christian Galenda (47.67)
Michele Santucci (49.56)
Filippo Magnini (46.84)
3:12.65 Q
5 1 3
 Sweden

Stefan Nystrand (48.31)
Petter Stymne (48.41)
Lars Frölander (48.35)
Jonas Persson (47.66)
3:12.73 Q
6 2 3
 South Africa

Lyndon Ferns (48.20)
Roland Mark Schoeman (48.85)
Ryk Neethling (48.51)
Darian Townsend (47.50)
3:13.06 Q, AF
7 1 2
 Canada

Brent Hayden (48.28)
Joel Greenshields (48.06)
Rick Say (49.11)
Colin Russell (48.23)
3:13.68 Q
8 2 1
 Great Britain

Simon Burnett (48.20) NR
Adam Brown (48.43)
Ben Hockin (48.55)
Ross Davenport (48.51)
3:13.69 Q, NR
9 2 6
 Russia

Yevgeny Lagunov (48.45)
Andrey Grechin (48.08)
Andrey Kapralov (49.07)
Sergey Fesikov (48.47)
3:14.07
10 1 6
 Netherlands

Mitja Zastrow (49.40)
Pieter van den Hoogenband (47.17)
Bas van Velthoven (49.08)
Robert Lijesen (49.25)
3:14.90
11 1 7
 New Zealand

Mark Herring (49.73)
Cameron Gibson (48.07)
Willy Benson (48.65)
Orinoco Faamausili-Banse (48.96)
3:15.41
NR
12 2 7
 China

Chen Zuo (49.16)
Huang Shaohua (48.83)
Lü Zhiwu (48.72)
Cai Li (49.45)
3:16.16
AS
13 2 8
 Switzerland

Dominik Meichtry (48.96)
Karel Novy (48.60)
Flori Lang (49.34)
Adrien Perez (49.90)
3:16.80
14 1 8
 Japan

Takuro Fujii (49.15)
Hisayoshi Sato (48.92)
Masayuki Kishida (50.00)
Yoshihiro Okumura (49.21)
3:17.28
15 1 1
 Germany

Steffen Deibler (49.61)
Jens Schreiber (49.58)
Benjamin Starke (49.65)
Paul Biedermann (49.15)
3:17.99
2 2
 Brazil

César Cielo (47.91) AM
Rodrigo Castro (49.23)
Fernando Silva (49.53)
Nicolas Oliveira
DSQ


Final




















































































Rank Lane Nationality Names Time Time behind Notes
1st, gold medalist(s) 4
 United States

Michael Phelps (47.51) AM
Garrett Weber-Gale (47.02)
Cullen Jones (47.65)
Jason Lezak (46.06)
3:08.24
WR
2nd, silver medalist(s) 5
 France

Amaury Leveaux (47.91)
Fabien Gilot (47.05)
Frédérick Bousquet (46.63)
Alain Bernard (46.73)
3:08.32 0.08
EU
3rd, bronze medalist(s) 3
 Australia

Eamon Sullivan (47.24) WR
Andrew Lauterstein (47.87)
Ashley Callus (47.55)
Matt Targett (47.25)
3:09.91 1.67
OC
4 6
 Italy

Alessandro Calvi (48.49)
Christian Galenda (47.49)
Marco Belotti (48.23)
Filippo Magnini (47.27)
3:11.48 3.24
NR
5 2
 Sweden

Petter Stymne (49.17)
Lars Frölander (48.02)
Stefan Nystrand (47.25)
Jonas Persson (47.48)
3:11.92 3.68
NR
6 1
 Canada

Brent Hayden (47.56) NR
Joel Greenshields (47.77)
Colin Russell (48.49)
Rick Say (48.44)
3:12.26 4.02
NR
7 7
 South Africa

Lyndon Ferns (48.15)
Darian Townsend (48.11)
Roland Mark Schoeman (48.32)
Ryk Neethling (48.08)
3:12.66 4.42
AF
8 8
 Great Britain

Simon Burnett (48.34)
Adam Brown (47.75)
Ben Hockin (48.50)
Ross Davenport (48.28)
3:12.87 4.63
NR


New records and feats




Standing (l to r):Jason Lezak, Garrett Weber-Gale, Cullen Jones behind Michael Phelps at September 3, 2008 taping of season-opening September 8, 2008 Oprah Winfrey Show.


In the heats, the United States team set a world record with a team missing some of America's major stars such as Michael Phelps. France and Australia also went faster than the old record even though they rested Alain Bernard and Eamon Sullivan respectively. During the heats, all five of the continental records were broken.


In the final, the United States, France, Australia, Italy, and Sweden teams all finished within the World Record time set by the American team in the heats, the Canada team finished within what was the World record prior to the 2008 Olympics, and all of the teams finished within what was the Olympic record prior to the 2008 Olympics. The world record time was reduced by over 2% during the course of the heats and the final. Italy and Sweden failed to medal despite besting the previous world record.


The faster times can also be seen in contrast to the 2004 Olympics in Athens, in which the South African squad took home the gold medal in world-record fashion. South Africa returned all four members of that 2004 relay team to these Olympics, and they even bettered their previous world-record time by 0.51 s, yet they finished a distant 7th place in Beijing. In fact, all 8 teams swimming in the 2008 finals swam faster than South Africa's gold medal swim of 2004.



























































































































Date
Round
NOC
Names
Record
Type
August 11, 2008
Final

 United States

Michael Phelps 47.51 AM
Garrett Weber-Gale 47.02
Cullen Jones 47.65
Jason Lezak 46.06
3:08.24

World Record
August 11, 2008
Final

 France

Amaury Leveaux 47.91
Fabien Gilot 47.05
Frédérick Bousquet 46.63
Alain Bernard 46.73
3:08.32

European Record
August 11, 2008
Final

 Australia

Eamon Sullivan 47.24 WR
Andrew Lauterstein 47.87
Ashley Callus 47.55
Matt Targett 47.25
3:09.91

Oceanian Record
Commonwealth Record
August 11, 2008
Final

 Italy

Alessandro Calvi 48.49
Christian Galenda 47.49
Marco Belotti 48.23
Filippo Magnini 47.27
3:11.48

Italian Record
August 11, 2008
Final

 Sweden

Petter Stymne 49.17
Lars Frölander 48.02
Stefan Nystrand 47.25
Jonas Persson 47.48
3:11.92

Swedish Record
August 11, 2008
Final

 Canada

Brent Hayden 47.56 NR
Joel Greenshields 47.77
Colin Russell 48.49
Rick Say 48.44
3:12.26

Canadian Record
August 11, 2008
Final

 South Africa

Lyndon Ferns 48.15
Darian Townsend 48.11
Roland Schoeman 48.32
Ryk Neethling 48.08
3:12.66

African Record
August 11, 2008
Final

 Great Britain

Simon Burnett 48.34
Adam Brown 47.75
Benjamin Hockin 48.50
Ross Davenport 48.28
3:12.87

British Record
August 10, 2008
Heat 1

 United States

Nathan Adrian 48.82
Cullen Jones 47.61
Ben Wildman-Tobriner 48.03
Matt Grevers 47.77
3:12.23

World Record
August 10, 2008
Heat 1

 Australia

Andrew Lauterstein 48.68
Leith Brodie 48.42
Patrick Murphy 48.09
Matt Targett 47.22
3:12.41

Oceanian Record
August 10, 2008
Heat 2

 France

Amaury Leveaux 47.76 OR
Grégory Mallet 48.14
Boris Steimetz 49.83
Frédérick Bousquet 46.6
3:12.36

European Record
August 10, 2008
Heat 2

 South Africa

Lyndon Ferns 48.20
Roland Schoeman 48.85
Ryk Neethling 48.51
Darian Townsend 47.50
3:13.06

African Record
August 10, 2008
Heat 2

 China

Zuo Chen 49.16
Shaohua Huang 48.83
Lü Zhiwu 48.72
Li Cai 49.45
3:16.16

Asian Record
August 10, 2008
Heat 2

 Great Britain

Simon Burnett 48.20 NR
Adam Brown 48.43
Benjamin Hockin 48.55
Ross Davenport 48.51
3:13.69

British Record

It is also possible for the swimmers in the first leg to break records for the 100 m freestyle. In the heats, Amaury Leveaux of France broke the Olympic record, while the world record fell to Australian Eamon Sullivan in the final. Split times for swimmers not swimming the first leg are ineligible because the incoming swimmer can lean over in front of the blocks and be diving as the preceding swimmer is coming in, whereas the leadoff swimmer is timed from a stationary start. Thus, the world record was Sullivan's, even though five swimmers in the finals alone had faster times, including Jason Lezak, whose 46.06 seconds is the fastest individual leg in a 100 m freestyle or medley relay in history. Two days later, Alain Bernard reclaimed the record for France, recording a 47.20 time in the first semifinal of the 100m freestyle, only to have Sullivan break the record again, winning the second semifinal in 47.05 seconds.


The final included a dramatic finish with American Jason Lezak swimming the final 50 meters 0.9 seconds faster than Frenchman Alain Bernard to win the race. He also swam the fastest relay split in history. Dan Hicks and Rowdy Gaines had the call on NBC:







-Dan Hicks and Rowdy Gaines calling the final lap of the 4x100m relay.







-Rowdy Gaines on Jason Lezak's record split of 46.06 seconds.



























































Date
Round
Name
NOC
Record
Type
August 11, 2008
Final

Eamon Sullivan

 Australia
47.24

World Record (100 m freestyle)
August 11, 2008
Final

Michael Phelps

 United States
47.51

Americas Record (100 m freestyle)
August 11, 2008
Final

Brent Hayden

 Canada
47.56
National Record (100 m freestyle)
August 10, 2008
Heat 2

Amaury Leveaux

 France
47.76

Olympic Record (100 m freestyle)
August 10, 2008
Heat 2

César Cielo

 Brazil
47.91

Americas Record (100 m freestyle)
August 10, 2008
Heat 2

Simon Burnett

 Great Britain
48.20

National Record (100 m freestyle)


References





  1. ^ "Olympic Swimming Schedule". USA Today. 9 August 2008. Retrieved 14 May 2013..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ Abrahamson, Alan (11 August 2008). "Lezak's classic finish delivers gold". Beijing 2008. NBC Olympics. Archived from the original on 5 January 2014. Retrieved 3 July 2013.


  3. ^ Longman, Jere (11 August 2008). "As Swimming Records Fall, Technology Muddies the Water". New York Times. Retrieved 3 July 2013.


  4. ^ ab "'Fab four' need world record". News24. 10 August 2008. Retrieved 3 July 2013.


  5. ^ "Record swim came 'quite easily': Sullivan". ABC News Australia. 11 August 2008. Retrieved 3 July 2013.


  6. ^ ab Lohn, John (10 August 2008). "Olympics, Swimming: United States Crushes World Record in 400 Free Relay, Eamon Sullivan Claims 100 Free Global Standard". Swimming World Magazine. Archived from the original on 28 July 2013. Retrieved 3 July 2013.


  7. ^ Lohn, John (10 August 2008). "Olympics, Swimming: United States Breaks World Record in 400 Free Relay Prelim". Swimming World Magazine. Archived from the original on 13 May 2013. Retrieved 3 July 2013.


  8. ^ "U.S. men set world record in 400 free relay". NBC News. 10 August 2008. Retrieved 3 July 2013.


  9. ^ Shipley, Amy (20 August 2006). "Peirsol sets backstroke record, Phelps fades". The Washington Post. Retrieved 6 August 2008.




External links


  • Official Olympic Report








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