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Swimming at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Women's 800 metre freestyle

Women's 800 metre freestyle
at the Games of the XXXI Olympiad
Venue Olympic Aquatics Stadium
Dates 11 August 2016 (heats)
12 August 2016 (final)
Competitors 30 from 21 nations
Winning time 8:04.79 WR
Medalists
1st, gold medalist(s) Katie Ledecky  United States
2nd, silver medalist(s) Jazmin Carlin  Great Britain
3rd, bronze medalist(s) Boglárka Kapás  Hungary
← 2012
2020 →
1st, gold medalist(s) Katie Ledecky  United States
2nd, silver medalist(s) Jazmin Carlin  Great Britain
3rd, bronze medalist(s) Boglárka Kapás  Hungary

The women's 800 metre freestyle event at the 2016 Summer Olympics took place between 11–12 August at the Olympic Aquatics Stadium.

U.S. swimmer Katie Ledecky smashed a new world record to defend her Olympic title in this event and to successfully complete a distance freestyle treble at a single edition for the first time, since Debbie Meyer did so in 1968. Dominating the race from the start, Ledecky quickly dropped two seconds under a world-record pace, as she pulled further away from the field to overturn her own existing standard with a gold-medal time in 8:04.79. Separated the leader by 11.38 seconds, Great Britain's Jazmin Carlin edged out the Hungarian challenger Boglárka Kapás at the final lap for her second silver of the meet in 8:16.17. Meanwhile, Kapás faded down the stretch to earn a bronze in 8:16.37, two tenths of a second short of Carlin's time.

London 2012 runner-up Mireia Belmonte slipped off the podium to fourth in a Spanish record of 8:18.55. Outside the 8:20 club, Australia's Jessica Ashwood (8:20.32) and Ledecky's teammate Leah Smith (8:20.95), bronze medalist in the 400 m freestyle, picked up the fifth and sixth spots respectively, finishing 63-hundredths of a second apart from each other. Denmark's Lotte Friis (8:24.50) and Germany's Sarah Köhler (8:27.75) rounded out the championship field.

Ledecky also threw down the existing Olympic record in 8:12.86 to top the field of twenty-seven swimmers in the prelims, slashing 1.14 seconds off the standard set by Great Britain's Rebecca Adlington on a since-banned high-tech bodysuit in Beijing eight years earlier.

Prior to this competition, the existing world and Olympic records were as follows.

The following records were broken during the competition:


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