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Regan Smith uses late surge to win 200 butterfly at the US swimming trials

Smith trailed 17-year-old Alex Shackell at the final turn but rallied to win in 2:05.70.
Credit: AP
Regan Smith swims during the Women's 200 butterfly finals Thursday, June 20, 2024, at the US Swimming Olympic Trials in Indianapolis.

INDIANAPOLIS — Regan Smith added another event to her Olympics schedule after wining the women's 200-meter butterfly at the U.S. Olympic swimming trials on Thursday night.

Fresh off her record-setting race Tuesday night in the 100 backstroke, the Lakeville native used a late surge to secure a spot in the 200 butterfly this summer in Paris.

Smith trailed 17-year-old Alex Shackell at the final turn but rallied to win in 2:05.70. Shackell, from suburban Carmel, thrilled the home crowd by claiming the expected second spot for the Olympics in 2:06.69.

Shackell is heading to the Olympics with her 19-year-old brother Aaron, who made the team by winning the 400 freestyle on the opening night of the trials. Their father, Nick Shackell, represented Britain at the 1996 and 2000 Olympics.

Ryan Murphy, Kate Douglass and Lilly King also claimed a second individual event in Paris with their performances

Murphy touched first in the men's 200 backstroke, adding to his triumph in the 100 back. Douglass followed up her win a night earlier in the 100 freestyle with a victory in the 200 breaststroke. And King rallied to finish behind Douglass, edging Alex Walsh for the second U.S. spot at the Olympics. King had previously won the 100 breaststroke.

RELATED: Regan Smith makes history at swim trials

Murphy used his stunning underwater technique to hold off Keaton Jones and Jack Akins, finishing in 1 minute, 54.33 seconds. He punched the water in triumph when he saw his name atop the scoreboard for the second time in the meet.

Jones claimed the projected second spot at the Olympics in 1:54.61, while it was another heartbreaking finish for Akins. He was third in 1:54.78, the same position he had in the 100 backstroke when he missed a Paris berth by two-hundredths of a second.

Douglass dominated the 200 breaststroke, going out under world-record pace over the first half of the race and finishing in 2:19.46.

King was third at the final turn, but turned up the pace on the final lap for a runner-up finish of 2:21.93.

RELATED: Lakeville native Regan Smith sets a world record in the 100 backstroke at the U.S. Olympic trials

Another big prize was awaiting King after she climbed from the pool. Her boyfriend pulled out a ring, dropped to a knee and asked her to marry him. King accepted with a big hug.

Walsh, a silver medalist in the 200 individual medley at Tokyo Olympics, failed to join her sister Gretchen on this Olympic team.

Alex Walsh still has a shot to make the squad in the 200 IM, which begins Friday.

Caeleb Dressel bounced back with the second-fastest time in the semifinals of the 50 freestyle, one night after a third-place finish in the 100 free cost him a chance to defend his Olympic title in that event.

Dressel will need to finish in the top two of the 50 free final Friday night to claim his first individual race of the Paris Games. The tattooed Floridian was one of the biggest stars in Tokyo, winning five gold medals, but he hasn't been as dominant since returning from a long layoff.

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