
2022 FINA WORLD AQUATICS CHAMPIONSHIPS
- June 18-25, 2022 (pool swimming)
- Budapest, Hungary
- Duna Arena
- LCM (50-meter format)
- Meet Central
- Preview Index
- Full Aquatics Schedule
Click here to see all of our 2022 World Championship Previews.
By The Numbers:
- World Record: Ariarne Titmus– 3:56.40 (2022)
- Championship Record – Katie Ledecky– 3:58.34 (2017)
- 2021 Olympic Champion – Ariarne Titmus– 3:56.69
- 2019 World Champion – Ariarne Titmus– 3:58.76
- FINA ‘A’ Cut – 4:10.57
Even with the absence of Ariarne Titmus in the women’s 400 free, her presence can still be felt on the pool deck.

Katie Ledecky (photo: Jack Spitser)
This especially holds true for Katie Ledecky, the Terminator’s biggest rival. Even though we won’t see the same head-to-head showdown at Worlds between Ledecky and Titmus that we got in 2019 and 2021, Ledecky will still be racing Titmus in the form of the moving world record line shown on our TV screens.
Ledecky just got her eight-year streak as the world record holder in the event snapped by Titmus a few weeks ago at the 2022 Australian Swimming trials. The Aussie went a time of 3:56.40, taking 0.06 seconds off Ledecky’s old 3:56.46 mark from 2016. Titmus is now both the first to beat Ledecky in the 400 free at a major international meet (when she did so in 2019) and the first to break one of Ledecky’s world records.
As the greatest distance swimmer of all time, chasing someone else’s world record rather than just breaking her own is a rare position for Ledecky to be in. That’s why the upcoming World Championships will be her opportunity to respond to the warning shots that Titmus fired out at Australian trials.
Whether Ledecky breaks this world record or not has become a hot topic of debate, even resulting SwimSwam founder Gold Medal Mel Stewart asking this question in a previous article.
So….is it happening or not?
Sink: The Age Concern + Lack Of Competition
When you look at the history and facts, it is clear that they are not in Ledecky’s favor. It’s widely regarded that female distance swimmers peak in their late teens, and as a 25-year-old, the chances of Ledecky setting another best time are bleak. In fact, at 21, Titmus became the second-oldest world record holder in the 400 free, and only the third non-teenager to break the world record in the event. When a swimmer a whole four years younger than Ledecky is one of the oldest to break a world record, it makes the thought of Ledecky taking back the “fastest-ever” title seemingly impossible.
It’s been four years since Ledecky has set a best time in one of her primary events, and six years since she broke the record in the 400 free. So for her to suddenly drop a lifetime best beyond the peak stages of her career would be extremely unusual. In addition, the momentum is also in Titmus’ favor. She only broke Ledecky’s record by six one-hundredths, and could very well lower it by an even larger margin at the Commonwealth Games later this year. And while Titmus has been 3:56-point three times in the last two years, Ledecky has only done so once, and that was all the way back in 2016.
Ledecky’s season-best time of 3:59.52 this year is ranked second in the world, but she’s going to have to be a lot faster than that in Budapest if she wants this record back.
Finally, being a heavy favorite in this race has its consequences. Without Titmus, Ledecky remains the only swimmer in the field who has been under the four-minute mark. This means that unless a rising star like Summer McIntosh has a breakout swim and drops a massive amount of time, Ledecky isn’t really going to have anyone to race, which might be a disadvantage when it comes to maintaining a world record pace (though it’s something she’s gotten used to over the years).
Swim: Never Underestimate The Distance Queen
Before you doubt Ledecky’s chances for the reasons stated above, ask yourself, what are the moments that define her career?
Well, for starters, her rise to stardom was characterized by winning surprise Olympic gold as a 15-year-old in the 800 free and beating out the heavily favored world record holder, Rebecca Adlington. She split 1:53.76 anchoring a 4×200 free relay at the Tokyo Olympics just a day after going 1:55.21 in the individual 200 free and missing the podium. She went 52-point twice on the 4×100 free relays in Rio after finishing seventh at trials. She came back to win the 800 free at 2019 Worlds despite being ill all week. When we all thought she was done breaking world records, she went on to break the 1500 free world record by five seconds at a Pro Swim Series meet in 2018. And most recently, she swam a sub-8:10 800 free at the 2022 U.S. Trials, a threshold many thought she wouldn’t get under again in her career.
My point is, you don’t put Katie Ledecky and “can’t” in the same sentence. She’s been challenging our expectations of her race after race for many years now, even when she’s not at her peak.
When you put all that aside, Ledecky still looks the best that she’s been in a long time. Her season-best times in the 200 free (1:54.66) and 800 free (8:09.27) were faster than the times she went in Tokyo, and her 800 free time is her fastest since 2018. In addition, Ledecky’s recent move to the University of Florida could be a huge benefit to her. She trains with the best male mid-distance/distance group in America, which includes the perks of having a world-class 400 freestyler like Kieran Smith or Trey Freeman push her in practice. World Champs will be the first major international meet where we see the effects of Ledecky’s new training environment come into play, so she could be primed for something big. The 400 free is also Ledecky’s first race of the meet, allowing her to come into the event fresh and not drained from previous events.
So even when the odds are not on her side to re-break this 400 free record, do not doubt the queen of distance swimming.
The Challengers On The Frontier
This race isn’t all about Ledecky, though. Even if she’s the favorite to win the race, much of the spotlight will also be centered around a 15-year-old Canadian named Summer McIntosh.

Summer McIntosh (photo: Jack Spitser)
Last year in Tokyo, McIntosh quietly finished fourth in the 400 free with a time of 4:02.42. A year later, she’s dropped nearly a second off of her best time, clocking 4:01.59 at Canadian Trials. And while that time is only ranked third in the world behind Ledecky and Titmus, it’s faster than what either of them could go when they were 15. The improvement trajectory that she’s going on is scary, shown by the fact that she’s gone best times in three different events this year, including a 4:29.12 400 IM that ranks her third-fastest of all time.
Being so fast at such a young age, McIntosh is the future of the 400 free, and Budapest is her chance to turn that fourth-place finish from last year into something big.
A swimmer that’s the exact opposite of McIntosh is Leah Smith, a longtime veteran in mid-distance free. She’s qualified to swim individual events in the 200, 400, and 800 free this year, making it hard to believe that the same person failed to make the Olympic team just a year ago. Although many of her accomplishments hide behind the fact that we haven’t seen her race internationally since 2019, keep in mind that she’s an Olympic bronze medalist (2016) and a Worlds silver and bronze medalist (2017, 2019) in the 400 free, and remains one of the only women to have neared the four-minute mark with her best time of 4:00.65.
This year, Smith finished second at trials with a time of 4:03.15, the seventh-fastest time in the world and her fastest time in three years. A lot of her bounce-back from trials can be pointed towards her recent move to train at the University of Texas, which is slowly turning into a women’s distance hub with stars like Erica Sullivan and Evie Pfeifer also there. In a field that is relatively young where swimmers are prone to the pressure of a big meet, count on Smith’s longtime experience to pull her to success.

Li Bingjie 2017 World Championships Budapest, Hungary (photo: Mike Lewis)
Then there’s the defending Olympic bronze medalist, China’s Li Bingjie. She had an Asian record-worthy swim in Tokyo where she clocked a time of 4:01.08, but more recently, she threw down an incredible showing at the 2021 Short Course World Championships where she won both the 400 and 800 free, beating second-place McIntosh by over two seconds in the former event.
Li is right up there with the top this year with her 4:03.63 from the Chinese National Games, which ranks her ninth in the world. However, her fellow countrymate Tang Muhan was actually faster than her at the same meet. The 18-year-old put down a mark of 4:01.95 to rank her fourth in the world and take the national title. That time was over a two-second improvement from the 4:04.10 she swam in Tokyo to place fifth, and throws her into podium-contender position.
The problem with Li and Tang is that China’s status coming into Worlds is a big question mark. The country has been hit hard with COVID-19 pandemic, and although swimmers are cleared to go to Budapest, China has had numerous competitions such as their trials meet canceled due to the pandemic. In fact, their Worlds team was selected solely based on “internal tests” that were performed at a national team training camp. With a lack of real racing experience this year, will Li and Tang still be able to match their performances from last year?
In the midst of Titmus’s world record at Australian Trials, Lani Pallister was also swimming her way to becoming the second-fastest Australian of all time in the same pool. The 4:02.21 she swam ranks her fourth in the world, and is a stark improvement from her previous best time of 4:05.42. Much like many of the other aforementioned swimmers, Pallister is on a massive improvement surge, having qualified for Worlds in the 200/400/800 free a year after missing the Olympics. Budapest will be her first senior international meet, and it’s just a matter of whether the pressures of such a big competition will hinder her from repeating her trials performances or not.

Kiah Melverton (photo: Mike Lewis)
Because first-place Ariarne Titmus opted out of World Championships, Kiah Melverton, the third-place finisher in the 400 free at Australian Trials, will likely be able to swim the event individually at Worlds. In their Worlds qualification criteria, Swi