TritonWear Analysis: Men’s 400 Free at FINA World Championships

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TritonWear and Swimming World partner to bring you the best in swimming race analysis for the 2017 Fina World Championships. With the power of TritonWear, you can access 12+ metrics for all athletes simultaneously, display the results in real-time to unlimited screens on deck, and review later in an easy to use interface for monitoring progress and identifying trends over time.

The first day of any international championship is always exciting, especially when the first finals event is an anticipated showdown between rivals Sun Yang and Mack Horton. It became even more interesting with a twist from Felix Auboeck of Austria, surprising everyone in prelims as he secured the top seed position going into finals. Everyone was curious, wondering where he had come from, considering his less than top 20 finish in Rio just over a year prior, and his entry rank for this event not in the top 8 at all.

All eyes were on this race heading into finals this evening; would Auboeck hold the lead against his experienced competitors, would Sun relinquish his title allowing someone new to come out on top, and how will Horton perform, being seeded 5th going into the race.

In this first 50, Horton and Gabriele Detti had the same split time, speed, and walls, however Detti took 4 extra strokes, costing valuable energy in this first length. Park Tae Hwan had a great start, finishing first first at the 50m mark, with the third highest stroke index, he is poised for a successful race. Sun swam the technically most efficient first length, but his underwater time was the shortest, causing him to finish 2 100ths of a second behind Park. After the first 50 it seems Auboeck and Detti could benefit from stroke efficiency, while Sun could lengthen his break out.

At the 100m mark, Park is still in first, but Sun is very close behind. Horton is maintaining a lower stroke count than the rest, with the highest efficiency. If he could speed up his stroke count even slightly, while maintaining his stroke rate, he would be well positioned to lead this race. Detti has fallen behind, tied with Auboeck, he is taking the most strokes, but has the slowest speed. If he could increase his DPS and maintain the stroke count, it would be a very different race for him.

See all of the Fina World Championships race analysis from TritonWear here: http://www2.tritonwear.com/FinaWorldChamps2017

As we hit the 150m mark, Sun has taken the lead, with Park still very close on his heels. Both are swimming very similar races, with short underwaters and identical DPS. If Park can just slip one extra stroke in, without losing speed, he’d pull ahead at this point. Detti is showing signs of fatigue; his stroke count continues to rise, while his DPS and speed fall. He should work on lengthening his stroke to conserve his energy for the latter part of the race. Auboeck got through this length losing minimally on all metrics, if he is able to maintain this level of consistently through the balance he’ll could be ok, but if he continues to lose pace at this rate, he may be in trouble.

With half the race behind them, Sun continues to dominate on all fronts. Horton and Park swam basically identical lengths again here, but Park has the lower stroke rate, allowing him to come in slightly faster than Horton. Dettie and Auboeck are again tied for 4th place, and basically matching each other on stroke count, speed and walls. Auboeck is getting considerably more distance per stroke, which is allowing him to maintain pace with the pack.

After 250m, the gap widens between Sun and the rest of the field, even in the face of Horton showing a stronger length in terms of efficiency. Park is starting to lose pace at this point, his endurance not able to maintain through the duration of this race. He is still ahead of Detti here, but is slowing much faster previous lengths. Both Detti and Auboeck had better splits than the previous couple lengths. It is certainly interesting timing for a burst of energy, let’s see if they can maintain the faster pace for the last 150m of this race.

With 100m left to go, Sun is still out in front, but Detti actually registers the fastest split this length. While technically he is still the least efficient, his high stroke count is working in his favour, similar to ledecky’s style of racing. Auboeck is unable to maintain the burst of speed he showed in the last 50m, slightly losing ground on the field at this point again. Horton has remained very consistent throughout the entire race, his stroke count only climbing by 2 strokes in the first 2 lengths consecutively, then remaining while all other competitors rates rose. At this point showing the technically most efficient stroke, saving himself valuable energy for the last 100m.

Sun is reducing his reach per stroke, but is gaining speed as he rounds the corner toward the end of this race. He is pulling from the reserves of an efficient stroke to distance himself from the rest of the field as the race nears the end. Detti too is pulling from reserves, which didn’t appear to exist a few lengths ago. He is proving his endurance is stronger than it seem earlier in this race. Park and Auboeck continue to slow at the 350m mark, at this point Park is swimming the slowest split, offering room for Auboeck to potentially pull into 4th place. If he could lengthen his breakouts he wouldn’t lose as much speed each race.

In this final lap, Park comes in the strongest, showing his experience in the race, and pulling well ahead of Auboeck, who performed quite well through the entire race. Suns final lap is the second fastest of the race, with a much less efficient stroke. He has cleared conditioned himself for this type of race. Horton’s steady pace throughout has proven a good strategy for him, allowing him to finish 2nd. If he can increase his stroke count while maintaining the other metric, he will come much closer to Sun, who finished a solid 2.5 seconds ahead of the crowd.
similar to Sun, Detti swims his second faster length in this last 50m. His best shot at the gold would be to improve his speed through those middle lengths, likely while maintaining the high stroke count – this strategy seems to work for him.

All competitors swam relatively similar races, with Detti showing the biggest different with a much higher stroke rate than the rest. Sun and Park spend the least time underwater, which isn’t much of an issue for them, as they both have significant reserves to pull in their times come the end of the race. Auboeck swam a race similar to Detti’s high stroke rate, although not as high as Detti, his stroke was technically inefficient. Pair this with lower endurance, due to lack of experience, and it’s clear how he went from a 1st place seed to 5th against these experienced veterans of the championship circuit.

Overall, a very successful race, proving once again that strategy has to be very personal, and can be quite different through each portion of a race of this length.

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Mohsin Khan
6 years ago

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