Swimming at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Men's 4 × 100 metre medley relay

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Men's 4 × 100 metre medley relay
at the Games of the XXXI Olympiad
Venue Olympic Aquatics Stadium
Dates12 August 2016 (heats)
13 August 2016 (final)
Competitors74 from 16 nations
Teams16
Winning time3:27:95 OR
Medalists
Gold medal icon.svgFlag of the United States.svg  United States
Ryan Murphy, Cody Miller, Michael Phelps, Nathan Adrian, David Plummer*, Kevin Cordes*, Tom Shields*, Caeleb Dressel*
Silver medal icon.svgFlag of the United Kingdom.svg  Great Britain
Chris Walker-Hebborn, Adam Peaty, James Guy, Duncan Scott
Bronze medal icon.svgFlag of Australia.svg  Australia
Mitch Larkin, Jake Packard, David Morgan, Kyle Chalmers, Cameron McEvoy*
*Indicates the swimmer only competed in the preliminary heats.
  2012
2020  

The men's 4 × 100 metre medley relay event at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro took place on 12–13 August at the Olympic Aquatics Stadium. [1]

Summary

In his final race before retirement, Michael Phelps led the U.S. men's team to a record-breaking triumph in the medley relay at the Games, finishing an illustrious career as the most decorated Olympian of all-time with his twenty-third gold medal and twenty-eighth overall. [2] [3] The American foursome of Ryan Murphy (51.85), Cody Miller (59.03), Phelps (50.33), and Nathan Adrian (46.74) put together a historic ending with a gold-medal time and a new Olympic record of 3:27.95, shaving 1.39 seconds off the previous mark from Beijing 2008 on a since-banned, high-tech bodysuit. [4] [5] Moreover, Murphy erased the 2009 world backstroke record (51.94) from Aaron Peirsol by nine hundredths of a second on the lead-off leg. [6] [7]

Breaststroke world-record holder Adam Peaty threw down the fastest breaststroke split ever in 56.59 to deliver the British team of Chris Walker-Hebborn (53.68), James Guy (51.35), and Duncan Scott (47.62) a brief lead on the second leg, before the Americans edged them out to the front at the remaining laps of the race, leaving Great Britain with a silver medal and a national record in 3:29.24. [8] [9] Meanwhile, Kyle Chalmers produced a sterling freestyle anchor of 46.72 to give the Australian foursome of Mitch Larkin (53.19), Jake Packard (58.84), and David Morgan (51.18) the country's bronze-medal repeat from London 2012 with a final time of 3:29.93. [10] [11]

Outside the podium and the 3:30 club, the Russian quartet of Evgeny Rylov (52.90), Anton Chupkov (59.10), Aleksandr Sadovnikov (52.08), and Vladimir Morozov (47.22) picked up the fourth spot in 3:31.30, with Japan's Ryosuke Irie (53.46), Yasuhiro Koseki (58.65), Takuro Fujii (51.56), and Katsumi Nakamura (48.30) following them by 67-hundredths of a second to finish fifth in 3:31.97. [12] Brazil's Guilherme Guido (54.23), João Gomes Júnior (58.59), Henrique Martins (51.52), and Marcelo Chierighini (48.50) enjoyed racing in front of the home crowd to take the sixth spot with a 3:32.84, while Germany (3:33.50), highlighted by breaststroker and 2015 world champion Marco Koch, rounded out the championship field. China was disqualified from the race, because of an early relay takeover by butterfly swimmer Li Zhuhao. [11]

The medals for the competition were presented by Kirsty Coventry, IOC member, Zimbabwe, and the gifts were presented by Vladimir Salnikov, bureau member of the FINA.

Records

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

World recordFlag of the United States.svg  United States  (USA)
Aaron Peirsol (52.19)
Eric Shanteau (58.57)
Michael Phelps (49.72)
David Walters (46.80)
3:27.28 Rome, Italy 2 August 2009 [13] [14]
Olympic recordFlag of the United States.svg  United States  (USA)
Aaron Peirsol (53.16)
Brendan Hansen (59.27)
Michael Phelps (50.15)
Jason Lezak (46.76)
3:29.34 Beijing, China 17 August 2008 [15]

The following records were established during the competition:

DateEventNameNationalityTimeRecord
13 AugustFinal Ryan Murphy Flag of the United States.svg  United States 51.85 WR BK
13 AugustFinal Ryan Murphy (51.85)
Cody Miller (59.03)
Michael Phelps (50.33)
Nathan Adrian (46.74)
Flag of the United States.svg  United States 3:27.95 OR

BK – Backstroke lead-off leg

Competition format

The competition consisted of two rounds: heats and a final. The relay teams with the best 8 times in the heats advanced to the final. Swim-offs were used as necessary to break ties for advancement to the next round. [1]

Results

Heats

A total of sixteen countries qualified to participate. The best eight from two heats advanced to the final.

RankHeatLaneNationSwimmersTimeNotes
115Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  Great Britain Chris Walker-Hebborn (53.68)
Adam Peaty (57.49)
James Guy (51.48)
Duncan Scott (47.82)
3:30.47Q, NR
224Flag of the United States.svg  United States David Plummer (52.70)
Kevin Cordes (59.51)
Tom Shields (51.88)
Caeleb Dressel (47.74)
3:31.83Q
323Flag of Japan.svg  Japan Ryosuke Irie (53.57)
Yasuhiro Koseki (59.02)
Takuro Fujii (51.73)
Katsumi Nakamura (48.01)
3:32.33Q
414Flag of Australia.svg  Australia Mitch Larkin (53.53)
Jake Packard (59.80)
David Morgan (51.25)
Cameron McEvoy (47.99)
3:32.57Q
428Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China Xu Jiayu (53.45)
Li Xiang (59.17)
Li Zhuhao (51.81)
Ning Zetao (48.14)
3:32.57Q
612Flag of Russia.svg  Russia Grigory Tarasevich (53.54)
Anton Chupkov (59.39)
Evgeny Koptelov (51.98)
Alexander Sukhorukov (48.04)
3:32.95Q
726Flag of Brazil.svg  Brazil Guilherme Guido (53.96)
Felipe França Silva (59.64)
Henrique Martins (51.64)
Marcelo Chierighini (47.72)
3:32.96Q
813Flag of Germany.svg  Germany Jan-Philip Glania (53.86)
Christian vom Lehn (1:00.17)
Steffen Deibler (51.51)
Damian Wierling (48.13)
3:33.67Q
927Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary Gábor Balog (54.08)
Dániel Gyurta (59.91)
Bence Pulai (51.82)
Richárd Bohus (48.08)
3:33.89
1025Flag of France.svg  France Camille Lacourt (53.68)
Theo Bussiere (1:01.22)
Jérémy Stravius (51.70)
Clement Mignon (47.87)
3:34.47
1111Flag of Italy.svg  Italy Simone Sabbioni (54.71)
Andrea Toniato (1:00.62)
Piero Codia (51.78)
Luca Dotto (47.74)
3:34.85
1216Flag of Poland.svg  Poland Radosław Kawęcki (54.68)
Marcin Stolarski (1:00.32)
Konrad Czerniak (51.82)
Kacper Majchrzak (48.36)
3:35.18
1322Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa Christopher Reid (54.26)
Cameron van der Burgh (59.87)
Dylan Bosch (52.94)
Devon Brown (48.43)
3:35.50
1418Flag of Lithuania.svg  Lithuania Danas Rapšys (54.85)
Giedrius Titenis (59.68)
Deividas Margevicius (53.08)
Simonas Bilis (48.29)
3:35.90
1521Flag of Greece.svg  Greece Apostolos Christou (54.68)
Panagiotis Samilidis (1:00.87)
Andreas Vazaios (53.27)
Kristian Golomeev (47.93)
3:36.75
1617Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada Javier Acevedo (54.70)
Jason Block (1:00.80)
Mackenzie Darragh (53.53)
Yuri Kisil (47.89)
3:36.92

Final

RankLaneNationSwimmersTimeNotes
Gold medal icon.svg5Flag of the United States.svg  United States Ryan Murphy (51.85) WR
Cody Miller (59.03)
Michael Phelps (50.33)
Nathan Adrian (46.74)
3:27.95 OR
Silver medal icon.svg4Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  Great Britain Chris Walker-Hebborn (53.68)
Adam Peaty (56.59)
James Guy (51.35)
Duncan Scott (47.62)
3:29.24 NR
Bronze medal icon.svg6Flag of Australia.svg  Australia Mitch Larkin (53.19)
Jake Packard (58.84)
David Morgan (51.18)
Kyle Chalmers (46.72)
3:29.93
47Flag of Russia.svg  Russia Evgeny Rylov (52.90)
Anton Chupkov (59.10)
Aleksandr Sadovnikov (52.08)
Vladimir Morozov (47.22)
3:31.30
53Flag of Japan.svg  Japan Ryosuke Irie (53.46)
Yasuhiro Koseki (58.65)
Takuro Fujii (51.56)
Katsumi Nakamura (48.30)
3:31.97
61Flag of Brazil.svg  Brazil Guilherme Guido (54.23)
João Gomes Júnior (58.59)
Henrique Martins (51.52)
Marcelo Chierighini (48.50)
3:32.84
78Flag of Germany.svg  Germany Jan-Philip Glania (54.14)
Marco Koch (59.63)
Steffen Deibler (51.69)
Damian Wierling (48.04)
3:33.50
2Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China Xu Jiayu (53.21)
Li Xiang (58.59)
Li Zhuhao
Ning Zetao (47.95)
DSQ (3:30.70)

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