2024 U.S. Olympic Trials Previews: Huske Puts World Record On High Alert In 100 Fly (2024)

James Sutherland

by James Sutherland 89

May 24th, 2024 National, News, U.S. Olympic Trials

2024 U.S. OLYMPIC TRIALS

  • June 15-23, 2024
  • Lucas Oil Stadium — Indianapolis, IN
  • LCM (50 Meters)
  • Meet Central
  • SwimSwam Preview Index
  • Broadcast Info

WOMEN’S 100 BUTTERFLY – BY THE NUMBERS

  • World Record: 55.48, Sarah Sjostrom (SWE) – 2016 Olympic Games
  • American Record: 55.64, Torri Huske – 2022 World Championships
  • U.S. Open Record: 55.66, Torri Huske (USA) – 2021 U.S. Olympic Trials
  • World Junior Record: 56.20, Claire Curzan (USA) – 2021 TAC Titans Premier Invitational
  • 2021 Olympic Champion: Maggie MacNeil (CAN), 55.59
  • 2021 U.S. Olympic Trials Champion: Torri Huske, 55.66
  • U.S. Olympic Trials Cut: 1:00.19
  • 2024 Olympic Qualifying Time (‘A’ Cut): 57.92

The U.S. women are incredibly deep in a number of events, and the 100 butterfly is certainly one of them, with four swimmers ranked inside the top eight in the world this season. There’s a clear frontrunner as we head to Indianapolis, but the second spot is up for grabs with some of the country’s best female swimmers in contention.

HUSKE SEPARATES HERSELF

Torri Huskeemerged as the best female American 100 butterflier in history at the U.S. Olympic Trials three years ago, dropping over a second in Omaha to take outDana Vollmer‘s nine-year-old American Record and qualify for her first Olympic Games in 55.66.

In Tokyo, Huske was essentially right on her best time (and just a quarter of a second shy of the world record) in 55.73, but was locked out of the medals, placing 4th in a razor-thin race.

Coming off her freshman year at Stanford, Huske had a standout 2022 that included winning the world title in the 100 fly, resetting her American Record in 55.64.

She was relatively off by her lofty standards in 2023, claiming bronze at Worlds in 56.61, but has bounced back with a vengeance so far this year.

Opting to redshirt her junior year with the Cardinal, Huske has been on fire during the long course season, blasting a time of 55.68 at the Pro Swim in San Antonio to establish herself as the early favorite for gold in Paris.

The 21-year-old recently said she feels like she’s living life on “easy mode” during her redshirt year, and it’s certainly showing up in her performance. Although it remains to be seen if Huske will be the gold medal favorite at the Olympics, there’s little doubt she’ll earn her spot there in Indianapolis, withSarah Sjostrom‘s eight-year-old world record of 55.48 on high alert.

VIRGINIA DUO LEADS RACE FOR SECOND

Behind Huske, there are three other women who have broken 57 seconds this season, two of whom train at the University of Virginia.

Gretchen Walsh (photo: Jack Spitser)

That’sGretchen Walsh, who represented the U.S. alongside Huske at the 2023 Worlds, andClaire Curzan, who was 10th in Tokyo, 5th at the 2022 Worlds, and then won silver this past February at the 2024 Worlds in Doha.

Both Walsh and Curzan have other events to focus on, but they represent the next two swimmers (behind Huske) who will have the 100 fly extremely high on their priority list at the Trials.

Another Virginia-trained swimmer,Kate Douglass, has no shortage of events to choose from in Indianapolis, but will place all of her focus on the 200 IM, 200 breast and 100 free, recently saying those are the three events she’ll race (with the 50 free as a maybe) at Trials.

She was 3rd at the 2021 Olympic Trials, 4th at the 2022 Nationals and 3rd at the 2023 Nationals, but will sit out this year despite an elite best time of 56.43.

The non-UVA swimmer who has been 56 this season is Regan Smith, who likely places the 100 fly fourth on her list of priorities despite being elite in the event.

Smith also won’t have an event conflict, barring a surprising entry in the 200 free, so this race lines up to be a wild showdown for the second spot in Paris assuming Huske is firing on all cylinders.

2023-24 U.S. Rankings, Women’s 100 Butterfly (LCM)

  1. Torri Huske, 55.68 – 2024 PSS – San Antonio
  2. Gretchen Walsh, 56.14 – 2024 PSS – San Antonio
  3. Regan Smith, 56.36 – 2024 PSS – Westmpnt
  4. Claire Curzan, 56.61 – 2024 World Championships
  5. Alex Shackell, 57.22 – 2024 Indy May Cup
  6. Alex Walsh, 57.59 – 2024 PSS – Knoxville
  7. Kelly Pash, 57.85 – 2023 Pan Am Games
  8. Leah Shackley, 58.29 – 2023 World Junior Championships
  9. Olivia Bray, 58.36 – 2023 Pan Am Games
  10. Josephine Fuller, 58.37 – 2024 TNAQ April Invite

G. Walsh

The leading candidate to nab the remaining spot in Paris is Walsh, who is coming off arguably the greatest collegiate season in swimming history with her performance in the 100 fly at NCAAs being her banner moment. Walsh is more than a second faster than anyone else has ever been in the short course yards event, and has made significant strides in long course over the last 12 months.

The 21-year-old broke 57 for the first time in June 2023, qualified for the World Championships later that month in 56.34, and after making the final last year in f*ckuoka, set a new PB of 56.14 in April.

Curzan

Claire Curzan. Photo: Fabio Cetti

The 100 fly was previously the event in which Curzan was synonymous with, as she broke the World Junior Record and became the second-fastest American of all-time in 2021, going under the 17-18 NAG Record at the age of 16 in 56.20.

She followed up by qualifying for Tokyo under pressure at the U.S. Trials in Omaha, clocking 56.43 to edge out Douglass and veteranKelsi Dahlia.

Curzan went 56.35 at the 2022 U.S. Nationals, placed 5th at the World Championships in Budapest (56.74), but missed the 2023 World Championship team altogether, and after transitioning from Stanford to Virginia, has emerged as a better backstroker than she is in the 100 fly.

At the 2024 World Championships, Curzan swept the backstroke events and was the silver medalist in the 100 fly, matching her fastest time from 2023 in 56.61. The 19-year-old could have a very busy schedule at Trials, but the 100 fly will surely be in her lineup and if her recent trend of improvement continues since moving to Charlottesville, she’ll be in contention for a second straight Olympic berth in the event.

Smith

Regan Smith (photo: Jack Spitser)

Smith is very much like Douglass, being in the hunt for an Olympic spot despite the 100 fly likely nowhere near a top focus in training leading up to Trials.

The six fastest 100 fly swims of Smith’s career have in the last 14 months, including setting a new lifetime best of 56.36 in March.

Smith, who has been on fire ever since joiningBob Bowman at Arizona State (and now Texas), scratched the 100 fly final at the 2021 U.S. Trials and didn’t race it at either selection meet in 2022 and 2023, so it’s possibly we see her dial in on the 100 back, 200 back and 200 fly and forgo the event in Indianapolis.

Smith could race the prelims and make her decision from there, but something that shouldn’t be overlooked is the fact that her newly-minted PB set at an in-season meet in March would’ve won silver at the 2023 World Championships.

TEENAGE DISRUPTORS

There are always surprises at the U.S. Olympic Trials, and particularly in 2021, we saw young stars such as Huske and Curzan emerge after the one-year delay gave them extra time to develop while the established veterans had to try and maintain their form for 12 more months.

Alex Shackell (photo: Jack Spitser)

That’s not the case this time around, but nonetheless, there are a few burgeoning swimmers who could shake things up and challenge the big guns in Indianapolis.

Leading that charge isAlex Shackell, the 17-year-old who set a best time of 57.22 last week to become #3 all-time in the 17-18 age group behind Huske and Curzan (with Smith and Walsh ranked 4-5).

Shackell was 6th last summer at U.S. Nationals in 57.59, and given that she’s already faster than that in-season, we could easily see her in the 56s at Trials and in the fight with the others for a top two finish.

Shackell towers over the girls’ high school class of 2025 in the 100 fly, while the fastest swimmer in the event in the class one year ahead isLeah Shackley, the other teenager who could make some noise in Indy.

Shackley, 18, got some international experience under her belt last September at World Juniors, winning silver in Netanya in 58.29 after setting a PB of 57.98 in July.

The NC State commit wasn’t far off that at the Westmont Pro Swim in March, going 58.39, so another 57 seems imminent which should slot her into the ‘A’ final.

LONGHORNS LURKING

Along with the two qualifiers from Tokyo, Huske and Curzan, the only other returning ‘A’ finalists from the 2021 Olympic Trials are Kelly Pash and Olivia Bray, two of three University of Texas-based women in contention in Indianapolis.

Kelly Pash (photo: Jack Spitser)

Pash recorded a personal best time of 57.53 at the 2023 U.S. Nationals, placing 5th, and clocked 57.85 early this season at the Pan Am Games to claim the silver medal. The 23-year-old went 58.16 last weekend at the Longhorn Invite, right on where she was at this time last year.

Bray was 7th at the 2023 U.S. Nationals in a lifetime best of 57.64, and won bronze behind Pash at Pan Ams in 58.36. The 22-year-old was the slowest among the Texas trio last weekend at 59.08—she went 58.22 at the same time last year.

At the 2024 Women’s NCAA Championships, Bray and Pash placed 3-4 in the 100 fly, with teammate Emma Sticklen earning the runner-up spot while also repeating as champion in the 200 fly.

Sticklen went 58.57 at the Longhorn Invite, just four-tenths shy of her PB set last year, and is coming off hitting a lifetime best of 49.70 in the short course pool.

Among these three, Pash has the best chance to make the ‘A’ final based on her pedigree of churning out 57s, but Bray and Sticklen both promise to make things interesting in the semis.

OTHER CONTENDERS

The lone American sub-58 this season we’ve yet to touch on isAlex Walsh, who recently confirmed she won’t swim the 100 fly in Indianapolis.

Walsh has reeled off the four fastest swims of her career in 2024, setting her PB of 57.59 at the Knoxville Pro Swim.

Josephine Fuller has done the exact same thing this year, breaking 1:00 for the first time in April with a big best of 58.37.

Beata Nelson,Bailey Hartman,Lillie Nordmann,Caroline Larsen,Dakota Luther,Abby Arens andCharlotte Crush have all been under 59 seconds this season as well, andGabi Albiero (59.14 this season) made the ‘A’ final at the 2023 U.S. Nationals.

All of those names will be fighting it out during the first session of the meet to try and earn a berth in the semis, and if any of them can crack the 58-second barrier, they’ll be in championship final territory.

SWIMSWAM PICKS

PLACESWIMMERSEASON BEST

LIFETIME BEST

1Torri Huske55.6855.64
2Gretchen Walsh56.1456.14
3Claire Curzan56.6156.20
4Regan Smith56.3656.36
5Alex Shackell57.2257.22
6Leah Shackley58.2957.98
7Kelly Pash57.8557.53
8Emma Sticklen58.5758.17

Dark Horse: Mena BoardmanBoardman exploded for a massive best time at the Federal Way Sectionals in March, breaking 1:00 for the first time in 59.37 at the age of 15. It may be too early for the now 16-year-old to challenge the top names, but another drop will put her in the hunt for a second and possibly third swim in this stacked event.

In This Story

  • Alex Shackell
    Alex Shackell
  • Alex Walsh
    Alex Walsh
  • Beata Nelson
    Beata Nelson
  • Claire Curzan
    Claire Curzan
  • Dakota Luther
    Dakota Luther
  • Dana Vollmer
    Dana Vollmer
  • Emma Sticklen
    Emma Sticklen
  • Gretchen Walsh
    Gretchen Walsh
  • Kate Douglass
    Kate Douglass
  • Kelly Pash
    Kelly Pash
  • Kelsi Dahlia
    Kelsi Dahlia
  • Regan Smith
    Regan Smith
  • Sarah Sjöström
    Sarah Sjöström
  • Torri Huske
    Torri Huske

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Fraser Thorpe

1 day ago

Huske seems really dialled in, and REALLY fired up. She’s making the team and taking the gold in Paris. MM brings it on the big stage, but I think Huske is primed to take that next step.

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-7

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HOO love

1 day ago

Let’s go Gretchen and Claire!!

7

-11

Reply

Swimdad

1 day ago

Huske, KD, Walsh sisters, Ledecky, Regan Smith, Jacoby, King….US women have a chance of win every gold available in Paris. This must be the deepest team in recent memory.

7

-44

Reply

Tanner-Garapick-Oleksiak-McIntosh

I would put there chances at winning the 200 free and 400 IM very slim at best.

29

Reply

Swimdad

Reply to Tanner-Garapick-Oleksiak-McIntosh

1 day ago

True, but don’t underestimate KD 400IM.

-22

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JimSwim22

Reply to Tanner-Garapick-Oleksiak-McIntosh

1 day ago

50 Fr is a very tall order too

2

-1

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Beginner Swimmer at 25

Reply to Swimdad

1 day ago

Weyant is totally gonna smash summer

1

-20

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CanSwimFan

Reply to Beginner Swimmer at 25

1 day ago

lol

9

Reply

Crazycucumber93

Reply to Beginner Swimmer at 25

1 day ago

Are you also a beginner swim fan

2

Reply

Troyy

Reply to Swimdad

1 day ago

Didn’t Lilly King say something similar before Tokyo?

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-4

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Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims

Reply to Troyy

1 day ago

2024 U.S. Olympic Trials Previews: Huske Puts World Record On High Alert In 100 Fly (6)

-1

Reply

DustySA

Reply to Swimdad

1 day ago

You seem to have forgotten amazing World beater Aussies and Canadians will be there too!!

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KeithM

Reply to Swimdad

1 day ago

Now if you had just said they would have a chance to medal in every event…that would show you’re residing on the same plane of reality (even though a 200fr medal at this moment seems a stretch). But alas…

8

Reply

Yikes

Reply to Swimdad

1 day ago

I can’t tell if this is a post mocking Lilly King or if you’re truly that delusional…

7

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Dan tm

Reply to Swimdad

1 day ago

At this stage,right now, the only individual events that the US women can considered as favourites for Paris would be the,
100m Fly
800m Free
1500m Free

Thats it.
Maybe the US are not as deep as many like to think.

Obviously 2 massive selection trials to come (Aus/US) before then anyway.

4

-2

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KeithM

Reply to Dan tm

18 hours ago

That the US, possibly, may be favored in three events is not the best indicator of depth. That the US can potentially medal in almost all women’s events shows that the US is quite deep. The OPs preposterous assertion about contending for every gold notwithstanding the idea that the team is very deep is well supported. Although depth & dominance are not mutually exclusive they’re not quite the same thing.

-1

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Caveman

1 day ago

Walsh and Huske are both going to break the WR

6

-26

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Octavio Gupta

1 day ago

Torri Huske is a 100 fly specialist.

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-12

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Braden Keith

Admin

Reply to Octavio Gupta

1 day ago

100 fly specialist who goes 24.31/52.92 in frees and 2:08.47 in the 200 IM.

Last edited 1 day ago by Braden Keith

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-6

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Eli

Reply to Braden Keith

1 day ago

52.92

6

Reply

Sub13

Reply to Braden Keith

1 day ago

When did Huske become the second fastest 100 freestyler of all time? Clearly I missed that

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Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims

1 day ago

Food for thought:

Torri Huske swims the 50 FR or the 200 IM at the 2024 Olympic Team Trials.

2

-7

Reply

Martini

Reply to Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims

1 day ago

Why did you abbreviate the words freestyle and individual medley?

19

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Fast and Furious

Reply to Martini

1 day ago

He also didn’t mention if it’s the women’s event or the men’s, hard to tell

4

Reply

hin qaiyang

Reply to Fast and Furious

11 hours ago

Additionally, they never said whether its LCM or not 🤷

Reply

Swimz

1 day ago

Small correction: is not Vollmer went 55.99 in London to became WR holder..she is the second fastest American all time..the writer has mentioned that Huske bettered AR over one second, nooo..and has mentioned curzan became second fastest American all time 2021..

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-6

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Lotus

Reply to Swimz

1 day ago

Curzan swam that time before Huske swam her 55

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-1

Reply

John26

1 day ago

Was the last time a WR has fallen at a US Olympic or WC trials… Phelps in 08?

I think Baker and Ledecky did it at a pre-Panpacs national

18

-1

Reply

PFA

Reply to John26

1 day ago

If we’re talking about Olympic events then 2018. If any event then 2022 with Hunter Armstrong’s 50 back world record.

13

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Reply

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims

Reply to John26

1 day ago

Katie Ledecky broke the World Record in the W 1500 FR (16 May 2018) at the 2018 TYR Pro Swim Series – Indianapolis.

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dirtswimmer

Reply to John26

1 day ago

If we are including olympic trials only then it would actually be… Margaret Hoelzer in the 200m back at the 08′ trials. Several people broke WRs at those trials (Phelps, Peirsol, Hoff), but the womens 200m back was on the 2nd to last day so she was the last person break a WR at those trials and by extension any trials since.

15

Reply

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism.Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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