I don’t have live tool access right now, but I can share the latest well-sourced highlights up to my last update.
Direct answer
- As of the most recent widely reported events, the current world record in the women’s 200-meter breaststroke is 2:18.95, set by Tatjana Schoenmaker at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics (held in 2021 due to the pandemic). In the men’s 200-meter breaststroke, the world record is 2:06.12, set by Anton Chupkov in 2019 at the World Championships. Note that records in swimming are frequently updated at major championships and short-course (25m) formats have separate records.
Key points and context
- Women’s 200m breaststroke: Schoenmaker’s Olympic record 2:18.95 marked a historic first in Tokyo for a woman to break the 2:19 barrier in a long-course 200m breaststroke final. It surpassed the previous standard held by Denamrk’s Pedersen and remains a historic benchmark for the event.[5]
- Men’s 200m breaststroke: Anton Chupkov’s 2:06.12 at Gwangju (2019) stands as the long-course world record for men, significantly faster than the prior marks. This record was part of a night that saw multiple world records during the session.[3]
Recent developments to watch
- Short-course (25m) records are different from long-course times and have seen separate record progressions, with recent performances by Kate Douglass and others challenging older short-course marks in 200m breaststroke events.[4][7]
- Tokyo 2020 Olympics remains a landmark reference point for long-course times, and current serial world-record progressions often occur at World Championships (long course) or World Cup/short-course events.
Would you like me to pull the very latest live updates from reliable outlets and give you a concise, timestamped list of any new records as of today? If yes, I can search for the newest results and include citations.