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Mark Spitz’s Records Challenged by Top Women Swimmers

2026-07-10 · Mark Spitz · Player Focus

**Mark Spitz’s 1972 world records are being chased by elite female swimmers**, with Dutch star Marrit Steenbergen and Australian champion Ariarne Titmus posting times that rival the legendary American’s final marks.

On 4 Sep 1972, Spitz finished his Olympic career with a 51.22 s 100 m freestyle world record. Today, Steenbergen holds the women’s world record at 51.68 s, just a half‑second shy of Spitz’s mark. In the 200 m freestyle, Spitz’s 1:52.78 was eclipsed by Titmus’s 1:52.23 at the 2024 Australian Olympic Trials in Brisbane, a clear sign that women are closing the historic gap.

Gretchen Walsh, an American sprinter, posted a 54.33 s 100 m butterfly at the Fort Lauderdale Open this year, nudging Spitz’s 54.27 s benchmark. Mollie O’Callaghan also swam 1:52.48 in the 200 m freestyle, underscoring a broader trend: female athletes are consistently targeting the standards set by Spitz half a century ago.

Spitz’s seven gold medals in Munich remain a cornerstone of Olympic history. Yet the fact that his records are now within striking distance of today’s top women adds a new layer to his impact. It shows the sport’s evolution and highlights how training, technique, and talent have progressed since 1972.

Steenbergen’s recent sub‑52 performances suggest she could soon dip below Spitz’s 100 m freestyle record, mirroring China’s Pan Zhanle who broke the men’s mark at the 2024 Paris Games with a 46.40 s sprint. If she succeeds, it would mark the first time a woman has outright bested a historic male world record in that event.

The narrowing margins mean upcoming championships will feature tighter races across genders. Coaches will likely study Spitz’s technique alongside modern training methods to fine‑tune athletes aiming for those legendary times. The ripple effect could see more women challenging long‑standing male benchmarks, redefining what’s possible in the pool.

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