Katie Ledecky posts third-fastest time in history to open swimming nationals

Katie Ledecky posts third-fastest time in history to open swimming nationals Katie Ledecky posts third-fastest time in history to open swimming nationals

Katie Ledecky opened the Toyota U.S. Swimming Championships by winning the 800m freestyle in the third-best time in history, extending a 15-year win streak in her trademark event.

Ledecky was under her own world record pace through 650 meters and ultimately clocked 8 minutes, 5.76 seconds in Indianapolis to qualify for the World Championships in Singapore in July and August.

The only faster times are Ledecky’s — 8:04.12 from earlier this spring and 8:04.79 from the 2016 Olympics.

She is in line to become the first U.S. swimmer to compete at a seventh World Championships, according to Olympic historian Bill Mallon.

SWIMMING: Broadcast Schedule | Results

Nationals continue Wednesday with finals at 7 p.m. ET, live on Peacock.

In other events Tuesday, Torri Huske took the women’s 100m free in 52.43, the fastest time ever in an American pool and the world’s best time this year. Huske earned silver at the Olympics in 52.29, her personal best.

Olympic champion and world record holder Bobby Finke won the 1500m free by 9.18 seconds. Finke hasn’t lost to an American in this event since the start of 2020.

In the men’s 100m free, Jack Alexy swam the second-fastest time in American history and world’s best time for 2025 in the prelims (46.99), then won the final in 47.17.

Luca Urlando captured the men’s 200m butterfly in 1:53.42, a time bettered by only one man globally in 2025: Urlando.

Back in April, Urlando swam 1:52.37 to become the second-fastest American all-time in the event behind Michael Phelps. He’s the world’s fastest man this year by 1.33 seconds.

Rising Stanford junior Caroline Bricker upset Olympic silver medalist Regan Smith in the women’s 200m fly, overtaking her 2:05.80 to 2:05.85.

Bricker lowered her personal best by 3.32 seconds over the prelims and final to supplant 2000 Olympic gold medalist Misty Hyman as the fifth-fastest American in history.

Katie Ledecky had one of the best meets of her career at her last meet before the U.S. Championships.