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Emily Seebohm

Emily Seebohm

Age

31

Place of Birth

SA

Olympic History

Beijing 2008

London 2012

Rio 2016

Tokyo 2020

Career Events

Swimming Womens 100m Backstroke

Swimming Womens 200m Backstroke

Swimming Womens 4 x 100m Freestyle Relay

Swimming Womens 4 x 100m Medley Relay

 

Emily's Story

Fast Facts

Sport: Swimming
Event: 
Olympic History: Beijing 2008 (gold), London 2012 (gold & x2 silver), Rio 2016 (silver), Tokyo 2020 (gold & bronze)
Coach: Michael Bohl
Year Born: 1992
State Born: SA

About Emily

It was a long time in coming but, in her fourth Olympics in Tokyo 2020, Emily Seebohm broke through for the first individual Olympic medal of her illustrious career when she placed third in the 200m backstroke behind fellow Australian Kaylee McKeown and Canadian Kylie Masse.

She shared one of the most touching moments of the Games, McKeown called her only the top step of the podium for the national anthem. It may well have been the culmination of a brilliant career which has seen her win no fewer than seven Olympic medals (3-3-1), with Tokyo also delivering a gold medal in the 4x100m medley relay.

As well, there have been 14 world long course championships medals (5-5-4), 12 Pan Pac medals (6-6-0) and 15 Commonwealth Games medals (7-4-4). Then again, perhaps it wasn’t the end, because Seebohm has spoken about the possibility of going to Paris and a fifth Olympic Games.

Emily burst onto the Australian swimming scene in 2007 after winning the 100m backstroke at the Australian Championships. This result earned her a spot at the 2007 World Aquatic Championships, and at just 14-years-old she won a gold medal in the 4x100m medley relay. 

Fast forward to today, and the decorated swimmer is now a five-time Olympic medallist, five-time world champion, seven-time Commonwealth Games gold medallist and has six Pan Pacific gold medal to her name. 

Emily made her Olympic debut at the 2008 Beijing Games, where she raced alongside Leisel Jones, Libby Trickett and Jessica Schipper in the 4x100m medley relay. 

With pressure on her shoulders to get the defending champions off to a good start, Seebohm swam a strong backstroke leg and from there the result was never in doubt after Leisel Jones surged to the lead in the second leg. Schipper in the butterfly and Trickett in the freestyle finished off the race in a winning time of 3:52:69, shattering the world recover by just over 3 seconds. 

At her second Olympic Games in London 2012, Seebohm was looking to make a name for herself in the individual 100m backstroke. Getting off to a perfect start, Emily broke the Olympic record in her heat and qualified fastest for the final. However, in the final she was narrowly beaten by Missy Franklin of the USA by 0.35 and took home the silver medal. 

She went onto compete in the 4x100m medley relay final, where she claimed her second silver medal of the Games when Australia finished second to the USA. 

Four years later in Rio, Seebohm took home silver in the 4x100m medley, Australia’s sixth consecutive Olympic medal in this event. The quartet of Seebohm, Taylor McKeown, Emma McKeon and Cate Campbell combined to clock a time of 3:55.00. In her individual events she finished 7th in the 100m backstroke and placed 6th in her 200m backstroke semi-final.  

After she missed selection for the FINA 2019 World Championships, she powered into the Tokyo selection trials in her hometown of Adelaide, finishing second in the 100m backstroke and booking her place on the Tokyo 2021 Team.

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