Women
Event | Long course (50 m) | Short course (25 m) |
---|---|---|
50 free | 25.24 Lize-Mari Retief |
24.72 Lize-Mari Retief |
100 free | 55.19 Helene Muller |
53.96 Lize-Mari Retief |
200 free | 1:59.76 Melissa Corfe |
1:56.78 Helene Muller |
400 free | 4:08.70 Melissa Corfe |
4:03.50 Melissa Corfe |
800 free | 8:26.88 Wendy Trott |
8:25.53 Kathryn Meaklim |
1500 free | 16:08.96 Wendy Trott |
16:16.56 Melissa Corfe |
50 back | 29.18 Charlene Wittstock |
26.89 Chanelle Van Wyk |
100 back | 1:01.14 Melissa Corfe |
56.56 Chanelle Van Wyk |
200 back | 2:10.03 Melissa Corfe |
2:05.09 Mandy Loots |
50 breast | 30.83 Penny Heyns |
30.60 Penny Heyns |
100 breast | 1:06.52 Penny Heyns |
1:05.36 Suzaan van Biljon |
200 breast | 2:23.64 Penny Heyns |
2:18.73 Suzaan van Biljon |
50 fly | 26.48 Lize-Mari Retief |
25.90 Lize-Mari Retief |
100 fly | 58.68 Lize-Mari Retief |
56.52 Lize-Mari Retief |
200 fly | 2:09.98 Mandy Loots |
2:04.48 Mandy Loots |
100 IM | not swum | 1:00.86 Amanda Loots |
200 IM | 2:14.53 Katheryn Meaklim |
2:07.54 Katheryn Meaklim |
400 IM | 4:40.98 Katheryn Meaklim |
4:28.23 Katheryn Meaklim |
400 free relay | 3:47.99 South Africa |
3:45.27 South Africa |
800 free relay | 8:12.74 South Africa |
8:06.94 SSA |
400 medley relay | 4:03.62 South Africa |
4:00.73 South Africa |
Read more about this topic: List Of South African Records In Swimming
Famous quotes containing the word women:
“What is it men in women do require?
The lineaments of Gratified Desire.
What is it women do in men require?
The lineaments of Gratified Desire.”
—William Blake (17571827)
“It is certainly not new or startling to find that women feel the desire to take care of their children. What is new is the number of women who are startled by such feelings.”
—Elaine Heffner (20th century)
“What had really caused the womens movement was the additional years of human life. At the turn of the century womens life expectancy was forty-six; now it was nearly eighty. Our groping sense that we couldnt live all those years in terms of motherhood alone was the problem that had no name. Realizing that it was not some freakish personal fault but our common problem as women had enabled us to take the first steps to change our lives.”
—Betty Friedan (20th century)