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  Breaking

Steenbergen Smashes Sjostrom’s 100m Freestyle World Record

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A Nine-Year-Old Record Falls in Rome

Marrit Steenbergen has etched her name into swimming history, breaking the women’s 100m freestyle world record with a stunning 51.68 clocking at the Sette Colli meet in Rome. The Dutch star shaved three hundredths of a second off Sarah Sjostrom’s mark of 51.71, a time the Swedish great had set back in 2017 and which had stood unchallenged for nearly a decade.

Records in the blue-riband sprint events rarely tumble by accident, and Steenbergen’s swim was the product of years of steady progression. She had already climbed the all-time rankings in recent seasons, but breaking through the barrier held by one of the sport’s most decorated sprinters marks a defining moment in her career.

Ending a 17-Year Drought

The achievement carries particular significance for Dutch swimming. Steenbergen becomes the first Dutch female swimmer to set a world record in an individual Olympic event in 17 years. The last to do so was Marleen Veldhuis in 2009, and the intervening years had seen the Netherlands remain a force in the pool without quite reaching the summit of an individual world mark.

For Steenbergen, the record is validation of a versatility that has long marked her out. Comfortable across freestyle distances and a key figure in the Dutch relay set-up, she has now delivered the individual milestone that confirms her status among the world’s elite.

Chasing Down a Legend

Toppling Sjostrom’s record is no small feat. The Swede has been the benchmark in women’s sprint freestyle for more than a decade, an Olympic champion and serial medallist whose 51.71 had come to feel almost untouchable. That the margin was only three hundredths of a second underlines both how fine the elite margins are and how complete Steenbergen’s swim had to be to get there.

The performance immediately reshapes the picture heading toward the sport’s next major championships. A world record in an Olympic event, set with authority in a competitive field, sends a clear message to rivals about who now holds the fastest hands in the water over two lengths of the pool.

Momentum Toward the Olympic Cycle

With the next Olympic cycle firmly in view, Steenbergen’s Rome swim provides a springboard of confidence and a fresh target for everyone chasing her. World records tend to invite response, and Sjostrom’s longevity is proof that marks in this event can endure, but for now the 100m freestyle belongs to the Netherlands.

Steenbergen’s breakthrough is the kind of moment that lifts an entire national programme, offering inspiration to a new generation of Dutch swimmers. A record that survived nine years has finally fallen, and it has fallen to an athlete who looks ready to define the era that follows.

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Sports journalist at Medal and More.

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