Ledecky leaves Tokyo with gold, Skinner replaces Biles; men’s 100m dash final Sunday

On Saturday, Simone Biles withdrew from more events and Novak Djokovic lost again. Olympic swimming wraps up on Sunday.

On Saturday, Simone Biles withdrew from more events and Novak Djokovic lost again. Olympic swimming wraps up on Sunday.

Katie Ledecky confirms she’s not even close to retiring after winning final gold of Tokyo Olympics

“That was *not* my last swim,” Katie Ledecky said after winning gold in the 800-meter free.

After her final race of the Tokyo Olympics, Katie Ledecky answered the question no one — except, apparently, NBC — was asking. She has no intention of calling it a career after these Games and confirmed she’s eyeing Paris in 2024 and maybe beyond.

Ledecky completed her three-peat victory in the women’s 800-meter freestyle Saturday morning in Japan (Friday night in the U.S.), winning gold in the event at the 2012 London Olympics, 2016 Rio Olympics and, now, the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

With a time of 8:12.57, Ledecky swam to victory with little competition, as her Australian rival Ariarne Titmus won silver after finishing more than a second behind Ledecky at 8:13.83. Italy’s Simona Quadarella won bronze.

This was her seventh Olympic gold medal in total and 10th Olympic medal overall. At the Tokyo Games, she also won gold in the 1,500-meter freestyle, silver in the 400-meter freestyle, silver in the 4×200-meter freestyle relay and finished 5th in the 200-meter freestyle. She raced for 6,200 meters — or about 3.7 miles — this week.

“It’s awesome,” 24-year-old Ledecky told NBC in her on-deck, post-800 interview while panting. “I just wanted to finish on a really good note, and I’m so happy. In a lot of pain too.”

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And then she was asked about retiring. Specifically, NBC’s Michele Tafoya asked Ledecky: “How will you decide if this is the last swim for Katie Ledecky?”

Ledecky seemed as taken aback by the question as so many others in the swimming world and immediately shut down any discussion of retirement.

“Oh, that was not my last swim,” Ledecky responded. “I’m at least going to ’24, maybe ’28. We’ll see.”

The 2024 Olympics are in Paris, while the 2028 Games are in Los Angeles. Ledecky continued:

“I just knew it was going to be my last swim here. You never take anything for granted. You don’t know if you’re going to be back at the next Olympics, so just try to soak it all in.”

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6 questions with Team USA swimmers, including what event they’d want to add to the Olympics

We asked some Team USA swimmers these roundtable questions about the Olympics.

The Tokyo Olympics’ swimming lineup this week has some new events added to the mix with the women’s 1,500-meter freestyle, the men’s 800-meter freestyle and the 4×100-meter mixed medley relay. But what events would some of Team USA’s top swimmers like to see added next? We found out.

Ahead of the Summer Games, For The Win asked several swimmers a variety of questions to help fans get to know them a little better. We asked about how they train, other Olympic events they think it’d be cool to compete in, what they think about while staring at the bottom of a pool for hours every day and more.

Here are the Team USA swimmers included in this roundtable, along with the (mostly) individual events they’re competing in at the Tokyo Olympics and the results if the event final has already taken place:

  • Katie Ledecky — 200 free (5th), 400 free (silver), 800 free, 1,500 free (gold)
  • Caeleb Dressel — 50 free, 100 free (gold), 100 butterfly
  • Simone Manuel — 50 free
  • Ryan Murphy — 100 backstroke (bronze), 200 backstroke
  • Allison Schmitt — 200 free (11th)
  • Lilly King — 100 breaststroke (bronze), 200 breaststroke
  • Torri Huske — 100 butterfly (4th)
  • Natalie Hinds — 4×100 free relay (bronze)
  • Michael Andrew — 50 free, 100 breaststroke (4th), 200 IM

These answers have been condensed and edited for clarity.

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Simone Biles out of all-around, Katie Ledecky gets gold, Thursday features Caeleb Dressel

Katie Ledecky makes history winning gold in women’s 1500m free. BMX racing and golf start on Thursday. Caeleb Dressel will swim in 100m free final.

Katie Ledecky makes history winning gold in women’s 1500m free. BMX racing and golf start on Thursday. Caeleb Dressel will swim in 100m free final.

Katie Ledecky’s 1,500 free victory is a win for all distance swimmers of the past and present

After winning the first-ever women’s 1,500 free Olympic gold, Katie Ledecky thought of the swimmers who never had the opportunity she did.

If there was one race Katie Ledecky was destined to win at the Tokyo Olympics, it was the 1,500-meter freestyle. And she crushed it.

The 24-year-old distance swimmer dominated the final Wednesday morning in Tokyo and won the first-ever women’s 1,500 free Olympic gold medal by a comfortable 4.07 seconds ahead of silver medalist and fellow American Erica Sullivan, while Germany’s Sarah Kohler won bronze. Ledecky’s gold medal-winning time was 15:37.34.

Ledecky’s win is not just her eighth Olympic medal and sixth gold, nor is it just another tally on Team USA’s medal count. Her victory is one for all the distance swimmers of the past and present — from Debbie Meyer to Janet Evans to Ledecky herself — who previously were denied the opportunity to swim the same events as the men.

The longest event in the pool is also Ledecky’s best, but garbage, sexist thinking kept the mile out of the women’s Olympic lineup until now — despite the event being offered at a slew of other international meets.

“I just think of all the great female swimmers the U.S. has had that haven’t had that opportunity to swim that event,” Ledecky said after the race while being interviewed with Sullivan. “I think of Debbie Meyer, Janet Evans, Chris von Saltza, Kate Ziegler, Katie Hoff. So many people that I looked up to — I still look up to. They’re great friends of mine, and I’m so glad we could do it in the best possible way.”

The most dominant female swimmer in history, Ledecky owns the top-13 fastest times in the world in the mile and six of the top-7 times in 2021. She also set the Olympic record for it in prelims Monday at 15:35.35. She’d been waiting for this opportunity her whole career and got it, unlike so many of her peers and swimmers who have long been retired.

Women were first able to swim at the Olympics in 1912, but it was only in two events: the 100-meter freestyle and the 4×100-meter freestyle relay. And it wasn’t until the 1968 Mexico City Olympics that the women’s 200-meter and 800-meter freestyle events were added, with the latter being the longest distance in the women’s lineup.

But the 1,500 free was absent.

As Swimming World magazine previously noted, women were thought to be too “delicate” for longer distances. Three-time Olympic gold medalist Debbie Meyer put it more bluntly when I spoke with her in 2016 for Vice Sports and said women were considered “second-class” athletes who weren’t tough or strong enough to compete in distance races.

Meyer — who won Olympic gold in the 200, 400, and 800 during the 1968 Mexico City Games at 16 years old — elaborated Tuesday in an interview with For The Win and said that “old-school thinking” was “a bunch of BS.” Along with the fact that swimmers practice for far more than 1,500 meters daily, that reasoning was even more asinine when you consider Meyer first broke the 1,500 world record in 1967 — and three more times through 1969.

Decades later, women were still waiting for the inclusion of the 1,500 at the Olympics, as the IOC’s reluctance to add the event robbed countless athletes of the chance to swim it at the Games. And equity aside, not having the women’s 1,500 at the Olympics limited athletes who excel at it because their options were the 800 free in the pool or the open-water 10K — a “rough” jump, as now-three-time Olympic marathon swimmer Haley Anderson put it in 2016.

Now, the 1,500 finally made the Olympic program, and Ledecky was able to race in her best event on the sport’s largest stage.

“I’m jealous of Katie and Erica getting to swim it — and everybody else that made the finals because that was my favorite race,” Meyer said. “And it’s a totally different race to train for than the 400 or the 200 or even the 800. So I wish I had been able to swim it, but I’m really happy that they finally put it into the competition, into the Olympics. It’s taken them a long time, that’s for sure.”

Regardless of how Ledecky swam (or will swim) in her other events in Tokyo, there was little doubt the first-ever gold medal in the women’s 1,500 would go to her. And the heats and final should be celebrated for simply existing — no thanks to the IOC and FINA dragging their feet for literally decades.

“I love it,” Evans said at U.S. trials in June, via The Washington Post. “It’s a little bittersweet for me because it was my best race. But I just love it. It’s so great that women finally have this opportunity.”

Gender equity in swimming has come a long way in the last 100+ years, but the fight for it is also far from over.

Along with the 1,500, Ledecky swam the 200-meter freestyle final and finished fifth. That’s a ridiculously difficult double to do — and do twice with prelims and finals — and Ledecky pulled it off in about 90 minutes. But, as we’ve previously noted, the men’s lineup forces no such double because their 1,500 free is paired on the same day as the 50-meter free. The logic checks out because it’s unimaginable that an elite-level swimmer could be so exceptionally versatile to swim both the shortest and longest races in the pool.

While Ledecky’s ability to compete in the 200 and 1,500 is also quite rare, the women’s events and schedule should be identical to the men’s, so they’re offered every advantage in an already grueling sport.

Part of the (at least) 6,000 meters she’ll race this week, Ledecky deserves all the praise she’s getting for accomplishing such a feat. But it’s ridiculous that she even had to, and the IOC and FINA unquestionably need to address this for future Games — in addition to the international governing body’s blatant discrimination against swimmers of color, particularly Black women.

Still, Ledecky’s dominant victory swim was truly a spectacle to watch, as she cruised body lengths ahead of her competitors. At the end of the event, all 33 athletes who swam in the women’s 1,500 free at the Tokyo Olympics — and those who came before them — finally won.

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Katie Ledecky absolutely dominated the Olympics’ first-ever women’s 1,500-meter freestyle to win gold

Katie Ledecky is the first Olympic champ in the women’s 1,500 freestyle.

Katie Ledecky is officially the first-ever women’s 1,500-meter freestyle Olympic champion, and even though it was a feat the swimming world could have easily predicted based on her previous performances, it was still an exciting and historic moment.

Ledecky controlled the entire race and won with a time of 15:37.34 on Wednesday morning at the Tokyo Olympics (Tuesday night in the U.S.).

The 1,500 free, also known as the mile, is Ledecky’s best event, and she’s dominated it for years in international meets. Until these Olympics, the mile wasn’t offered to women, but in a massively overdue update, it was added to the Olympic lineup in 2017, and it debuted in prelims earlier this week.

And now Ledecky is the first Olympic gold medalist in the women’s 1,500, earning her eighth Olympic medal and her sixth gold.

Fellow American Erica Sullivan won silver with a time of 15:41.41 — about four seconds behind Ledecky — and Germany’s Sarah Kohler won bronze at 15:42.91. After the race, Ledecky jumped over the lane marker to hug Sullivan, who competed one lane above her.

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Ledecky had a slim .19-second lead after the first 50 meters and never looked back. At the 750-meter halfway point, she stretched her lead to 2.87 seconds, and NBC began measuring her lead by meters instead of seconds. That’s dominance.

Amazingly, Ledecky began swimming to this incredible victory about 70 minutes after racing in the 200-meter freestyle final and taking fifth.

Her 1,500 free world record of 15:20.48 from 2018 still stands.

In prelims of the new event, the Olympic record was set first by Canada’s Katrina Bellio at 16:24.37 in the opening heat, and after repeatedly being lowered through the heats, Ledecky set it at 15:35.35 ahead of the final.

Ledecky entered this final with four of the top-5 fastest times in the world this year and 16 of the top-20 times ever in the 1,500 free. That level of dominance is unparalleled, and Ledecky reminded the world why she’s the absolute best in this event with her final in Tokyo.

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Katie Ledecky gets silver, two US golds in skeet shooting, Simone Biles is back on Tuesday

Katie Ledecky earned her first medal of the Tokyo Games, but it wasn’t gold. On Tuesday, don’t miss women’s gymnastics, beach volleyball and swimming.

Katie Ledecky earned her first medal of the Tokyo Games, but it wasn’t gold. On Tuesday, don’t miss women’s gymnastics, beach volleyball and swimming.

Katie Ledecky reflects on first individual Olympic loss of career in the 400m freestyle

Katie Ledecky lost to her Australian rival Ariarne Titmus by .67 of a second in the women’s 400-meter freestyle.

Katie Ledecky lost to her Australian rival Ariarne Titmus by .67 of a second in the women’s 400-meter freestyle.