Kaio Márcio Ferreira Costa de Almeida (born 19 October 1984) is a Brazilian swimmer who specializes in the
butterfly. He is also known by the reduced versions of his name: Kaio Márcio, Kaio Márcio de Almeida, Kaio Almeida, or Kaio de Almeida.
Almeida was nine years old when he began swimming in
Esporte Clube Cabo Branco in João Pessoa. He suffered from
asthma attacks and began swimming for medical reasons, and under the influence of his father, José Márcio. At the time, Almeida was nicknamed "Gordo" (fat), a nickname he lost at age 15 when he lost weight and began to train and compete regularly.[1]
As of February 2015, he competes for the swimming team of
Minas Tênis Clube.[2]
International career
2003
At the age of 18, Almeida competed in the 200-meter butterfly semifinal at the
2003 World Aquatics Championships in
Barcelona, where he ranked 13th.[3] He also swam the 100-meter butterfly, ranking 22nd.[4] In the 100-meter butterfly, he broke the Brazilian record with a time of 53.98 seconds. In the 200-meter butterfly, he broke a 20-year South American record set by
Ricardo Prado in 1983. Almeida's time was 1:58.83 and the record was 1:59.00.[5]
In August, Almeida competed at the
2003 Pan American Games in
Santo Domingo, where he won silver medals in the 200-meter butterfly and 4×100-meter medley, and a bronze in the 100-meter butterfly.[6][7] He broke his Brazilian records in the 100-meter butterfly with a time of 53.44 seconds,[8] and in the 200-meter butterfly with a time of 1:58.10,[9] both getting the Olympic index. In the 4×100-meter medley, he broke the South American record with a time of 3:40.02.[10]
2004
In June 2004, participating in the second stage of the Circuit
Mare Nostrum in
Canet, France, Almeida broke the long-course South American record in the 200-meter butterfly with a time of 1:57.38, which was set by the Venezuelan Rafael Vidal since 1984 (1:57.51).[11] Almeida participated in
2004 Summer Olympics in
Athens, where he finished 17th in the 100-meter butterfly, 19th in 200-meter butterfly and 15th in 4×100-meter medley.[12][13] On 10 September 2004, Almeida broke the South American record in the 50-meter butterfly with a time of 23.33 seconds. The previous record of 23.41 seconds was set in 2001 by
Nicholas Santos,.[14]
Almeida competed at the
2004 FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m) held in
Indianapolis in October. He finished fourth in the 4×100-meter medley,[15] breaking the South American record with a time of 3:33.02, along with
César Cielo,
Guilherme Guido and
Eduardo Fischer.[16] He also finished fourth in the 50-meter butterfly—only three hundredths of a second away from winning a bronze medal, and seven hundredths of a second away from winning a silver medal.[17] Almeida broke the South American record in the semifinals with a time of 23.22 seconds, and in the final with a time of 23.29 seconds. His semifinal time was the same as that of the silver medalist Mark Foster.[18][19] Almeida finished fifth in the 100-meter butterfly—only 12 hundredths of a second away from winning a bronze medal.[20] In this event, he broke the South American record twice with times of 52.18 seconds in the heats and 51.80 seconds in the final.[21]
2005
Almeida competed in the
2005 World Aquatics Championships in
Montreal, where he was a finalist in the 100-meter butterfly, finishing in seventh place.[22] He also ranked 14th in the 200-meter butterfly[23] and 17th in the 50-meter butterfly.[24]
In 2005, he twice broke the South American record in the 50-meter butterfly with times of 23.17 seconds on 9 September[25] and 22.92 seconds on 21 November.[26] In 17 December, he established a new world record in the short-course 50-meter butterfly with a time of 22.60 seconds. The former world record holder was
Ian Crocker of the US, with a time of 22.71 seconds in October 2004.[27] Almeida's record was beaten in 2008 by Australian
Matt Jaukovic, who improved the record to 22.50 seconds.[28] On December, Almeida also broke the short-course South American record in the 100-meter butterfly with a time of 50.62 seconds and in the 200-meter butterfly with a time of 1:53.27. He finished among the top three in the world rankings of the butterfly races, became the world record holder in the 50-meter, and finished second in the 100-meter and third in the 200-meter.[29]
At the
2007 Pan American Games in
Rio de Janeiro, Almeida won gold medals in the 100-meter butterfly with a time of 52.05 seconds—a Pan American Games record—[37] and the 200-meter butterfly in 1:55.45 seconds—a Pan record and South American record—and a silver in the 4×100-meter medley in 3:35.81 seconds—a South American record.[38]
2008
In 2008, Almeida reached the final of the 200-meter butterfly in the
2008 Summer Olympics in
Beijing, finishing in seventh place. He finished 15th in the 100-meter butterfly and 14th in the 4×100-meter medley.[12][13]
2009
On 8 May 2009, at
Maria Lenk Aquatic Center, Almeida swam the 200-meter butterfly in 1:53.92 seconds; the fifth-fastest time in the race's history and a South American record.[39] The day before, he broke the South American record for the 100-meter butterfly with a time of 51.64 seconds, but he did not swam the final, in which
Gabriel Mangabeira set a new record of 51.21 seconds.[40]
At the
2009 World Aquatics Championships in
Rome, Almeida finished in fourth place in the 200-meter butterfly with a time of 1:54.27.[41][42] He ranked 20th in the 50-meter butterfly[43] and 29th in the 100-meter butterfly.[44]
In the Stockholm stage of the
FINA World Cup in November 2009, Almeida broke his South American record in the heats of the 200-meter butterfly with a time of 1:51.46 seconds.[45] At the finals, he set a world record in the
short-course 200-meter butterfly in 1:49.11 seconds.[46] Almeida's record was beaten in 2013 by South African
Chad le Clos, who improved the record to 1:49.04.[47] A day later, he won another gold, beating the South American record for the 100-meter butterfly twice with times of 50.34 seconds in the heats and 49.44 seconds in the final.[48]
At the
2010 FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m) in
Dubai, Almeida won bronze in the 100-meter butterfly with a time of 50.33 seconds.[51] In the 200-meter butterfly, he won silver with a time of 1:51.56 seconds.[52] Along with teammates César Cielo,
Felipe França and Guilherme Guido, Almeida broke the South American record for the 4×100-meter medley with a time of 3:23.12 seconds, winning the bronze medal.[53]
^
abcEvans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen;
Mallon, Bill; et al.
"Kaio Almeida". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com.
Sports Reference LLC. Archived from
the original on 27 December 2013. Retrieved 19 January 2014. Full name: Kaio Márcio Ferreira Costa de Almeida