SwimSwam Facebook
SwimSwam Youtube
SwimSwam RSS Feed
SwimSwam Pinterest
SwimSwam Instagram
SwimSwam X
SwimSwam LinkedIn
Isaac Cooper is back focused on 50s after the Olympic Games, and that paid off on Saturday with a new World Cup Record in the 50 backstroke. Archive photo via Emma Newton, @newton.nrg
Follow along with all the action from day 2 finals in Shanghai, featuring Olympic multi-gold medalist Leon Marchand of France.
Dopo i risultati visti nel primo giorno alla World Cup di Shanghai, l’attesa per le finali è altissima. Resta con noi con il live recap delle Finali Day2
Isaac Cooper is back focused on 50s after the Olympic Games, and that paid off on Saturday with a new World Cup Record in the 50 backstroke.
October 18th, 2024 Australia, International, News, Swimming World Cup Series
Australian swimmer Isaac Cooper broke the Swimming World Cup Record in the 50 meter backstroke on Saturday morning in Shanghai, swimming 22.58 in the heats of the event.
The old record of 22.61 was set by American Peter Marshall in Singapore during the 2009 series almost 15 years ago as part of the record-bonanza that was the 2009 supersuited World Cup Series. At the time, that swim was the World Record as well: the third time Marshall broke that record in five weeks.
His World Record stood until 2014 when France’s Florent Manaudou swam 22.22. The current record belongs to Russian Kliment Kolesnikov, who swam 22.11 in 2022.
There are now only 10 records left from the 2009 World Cup series.
Marshall was a 50 backstroke specialist, especially in short course meters, though he did also break the short course World Record in the 100 back three times – including in 2004, before the supersuit era.
Cooper envisions himself as a 50 meter specialist as well. In fact, at the pre-Olympic, under-attended, 2024 World Championships, Cooper swam the 50 free (5th), 50 back (gold), and 50 fly (4th) – the latter two of which are not on the Olympic schedule.
Training less than 10,000 meters a week, Cooper would struggle in the 100 meter distance later in the year. He finished 21st in the 100 back at the Paris Olympic Games in 54.21, about seven-tenths shy of his personal best from the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games when he was only 17-years old.
Cooper is now back into the 50 meter races, having finished 5th in the 50 free (21.15) on Friday to kick off the meet. His only other entry in the meet is the 50 fly on Sunday.




Cooper is following Michael Andrew old path.
I wonder when he will realize that Michael Andrew has now abandoned it.
His best time for the 50 back stands at 22.52 from the previous edition of the World Championships in Melbourne December 2022

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers’ Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …
More from Braden Keith
See All
Subscribe to our newsletter and receive our latest updates!


Subscribe to SwimSwam Magazine!

© 2024 Swim Swam Partners, LLC. All rights reserved.
FTC Disclaimer | Terms of Use & Privacy Policy

source