Aimee Canny touched the wall in Indianapolis on Wednesday morning and looked up at a time she already knew by heart. 1:56.59. Her own African record in the 200m freestyle, broken for the third time, the second time in two months alone.
It barely registered as news anymore. What she did with it that evening did.
Hours later, with that brand new record still hers to defend in the final, Canny scratched the race. She walked away from an event she had just claimed the right to dominate, choosing instead to chase a different kind of history in the 200m individual medley.
It was a calculated gamble. Aimee Canny had gone second-fastest into that morning’s IM prelims too, sitting behind her Virginia training partner Kate Douglass with a 2:10.92, agonisingly close to the lifetime best of 2:10.90 she had set back in April. Rather than defend one record she already owned, she bet on breaking another she didn’t.
The gamble paid off in spectacular fashion.

Douglass ran away with the final in 2:07.04, the second-fastest time in the world this season. Torri Huske claimed second in a season-best 2:09.59. Then came Aimee Canny, touching third in 2:09.99 to shatter Rebecca Meder’s South African national record of 2:10.39, a mark that had stood since April 2025.
Two national records, two different events, on the same night, the second of which she hadn’t even owned when the day began.
JAY | JPS SAYS: “There’s a difference between a swimmer chasing times and a swimmer chasing ceilings. Canny had the safer option sitting right there in the morning paper. She tore it up and went looking for something bigger instead. That’s not luck. That’s a competitor who already knows what she’s capable of.”
This was always building towards something. Back in April, at the South African Championships in Gqeberha, a meet doubling as Commonwealth Games selection for Glasgow, Aimee Canny lowered the African 200m freestyle record to 1:56.64, winning gold by daylight. Hannah Robertson touched second in 1:59.99, with Dune Coetzee rounding out the podium in 2:00.05. Canny’s margin that night wasn’t close. It was a statement.
She arrived in Indianapolis fresh off completing her senior season at the University of Virginia, where she finished her collegiate career as an NCAA champion for the Cavaliers. Training daily alongside Douglass, one of the most dominant swimmers in the world right now, has clearly sharpened more than just her stroke technique. It has shaped how she reads a race and when to take a risk.
The world rankings tell their own story about the level Canny is now competing at. Despite trimming her 200 free time down to 1:56.59, she actually slipped a spot to 18th globally this season, with Erin Gemmell touching in 1:56.38 in that same Indianapolis session and China’s Fan Yaqi clocking 1:56.57 at her own national championships on the same day. The depth at the top of women’s freestyle has never been deeper, and Aimee Canny is now firmly inside that conversation.
There is more still to come from this meet. Canny finished fourth in the 400 IM on day two, clocking 4:44.66, seven seconds outside the national record but yet another marker of the range she now carries across the medley and freestyle events.
Glasgow looms on the horizon, and on the evidence of one night in Indianapolis, Canny isn’t interested in simply qualifying for it. She’s interested in arriving as a genuine threat, one record at a time, on her own terms.
📸 Images via Swimming South Africa






































