As Leon Marchand pursued history, Carson Foster did his best to stay close to his French rival. Through the halfway point of the menâs 400 IM final, Foster was close to Marchand, although it was clear to everyone watching that Marchandâs superior breaststroke leg would soon leave Foster in the dust. He fell one second behind after one length of breaststroke, then by more than three seconds by the time then men turned to freestyle. Head-to-head, Foster is evenly matched or slightly better than Marchand on freestyle. But not three seconds better. And sitting a further three seconds ahead of the field, he had nowhere to go, up or down. Seemingly on pace to crush his best time of 4:06.56, he ended up matching the time from last yearâs Worlds to the hundredth as Marchand went on to annihilate Michael Phelpsâ 15-year-old world record of 4:03.84. Foster secured a silver medal in that race, as high a finish as he could have realistically hoped for, but his remaining two individual swims did not produce those same results. Seeded first heading into the 200 butterfly final, Foster turned second or third at each intermediate split. He was never going to catch Marchand, but silver or bronze looked well within his reach. Instead, his last 50 was a painful 31.06, by far the slowest in the field, as he faded to sixth, his time of 1:54.74 almost a full second off his semifinal time. |