Swimming at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Women's 100 metre breaststroke


The women's 100 metre breaststroke event at the 2016 Summer Olympics took place on 7–8 August at the Olympic Aquatics Stadium.

Summary

U.S. swimmer Lilly King stormed home on the final lap in a match against Russia's Yuliya Yefimova to capture the sprint breaststroke title for the first time since Megan Quann topped the podium in 2000. With 15 metres to go, King launched a mighty surge to pass Yefimova by more than half a second for the gold medal with a time of 1:04.93. King's time also shaved 0.24 seconds off the Olympic record set by Australia's four-time Olympian Leisel Jones in Beijing in 2008. Yefimova finished with a silver in 1:05.50. King's teammate Katie Meili snared the final podium spot with a 1:05.69 for the bronze.
China's Shi Jinglin delivered a time of 1:06.37 to pick up the fourth spot, just ahead of Canada's Rachel Nicol by about three tenths of a second. Iceland's Hrafnhildur Lúthersdóttir placed sixth in 1:07.18, while Lithuania's world-record holder and defending champion Rūta Meilutytė could not reproduce her effort from London 2012 with a seventh-place time in 1:07.32. Jamaica's Alia Atkinson, fourth-place finalist at the previous Games, rounded out the top eight with a 1:08.10.
The medals for the competition were presented by Richard Peterkin, IOC member from St. Lucia, and the gifts were presented by Donald Rukare, FINA bureau member.

Records

Prior to this competition, the existing world and Olympic records were as follows.
The following records were established during the competition:
DateRoundNameNationTimeRecord
8 AugustFinalLilly King1:04.93

Competition format

The competition consisted of three rounds: heats, semifinals, and a final. The swimmers with the best 16 times in the heats advanced to the semifinals. The swimmers with the best 8 times in the semifinals advanced to the final. Swim-offs were used as necessary to break ties for advancement to the next round.

Results

Heats

RankHeatLaneNameNationalityTimeNotes
164Lilly King1:05.78Q
254Yuliya Yefimova1:05.79Q
344Katie Meili1:06.00Q
465Rūta Meilutytė1:06.35Q
563Shi Jinglin1:06.55Q
647Rikke Møller Pedersen1:06.58Q
755Alia Atkinson1:06.72Q
846Taylor McKeown1:06.73Q
966Hrafnhildur Lúthersdóttir1:06.81Q
1056Jennie Johansson1:06.84Q
1142Rachel Nicol1:06.85Q
1258Chloe Tutton1:06.88Q
1362Satomi Suzuki1:06.99Q
1461Jessica Vall1:07.07Q
1552Viktoriya Zeynep Güneş1:07.14Q
1643Kanako Watanabe1:07.22Q
1757Arianna Castiglioni1:07.32
1834Jenna Laukkanen1:07.35NR
1967Kierra Smith1:07.41
2053Martina Carraro1:07.56
2151Fiona Doyle1:07.58
2268Zhang Xinyu1:07.59
2332Molly Renshaw1:07.92
2445Georgia Bohl1:07.96
2531Anna Sztankovics1:08.06
2638Martina Moravčíková1:08.50
2735Sophie Hansson1:08.67
2841Fanny Lecluyse1:08.80
2948Daria Chikunova1:09.12
3036Amit Ivry1:09.42
3125Maria Romanjuk1:09.49
3233Yvette Kong1:09.56
3324Phee Jinq En1:10.22
3426Dariya Talanova1:10.94
3537Tjaša Vozel1:11.15
3623Tatiana Chișca1:11.37
3722Evita Leter1:14.96
3821Pilar Shimizu1:16.65
3928Izzy Joachim1:17.37
4027Jamila Lunkuse1:19.64
4113Darya Semyonova1:19.84
4215Rechael Tonjor1:21.43
4314Teona Bostashvili1:22.91
4416Daniah Hagul1:25.47

Semifinals

Semifinal 1

Semifinal 2

Final