The article doesn't say, but did the medley relay/IM become a 4 stroke event around the same time in 1952 when FINA recognized it as a new stroke? Funny to see a 150 yard event mentioned since it seems like such an odd distance nowadays.
to that end, i'm not sure why it exists, except that it's truly a unique style.
* i also still hold my high school's butterfly record, 20 years on.
Like, why is being good at a deliberately-inefficent form of movement worth a medal in only this one case?
Many people swim as a form of exercise. Fly is exercising different muscles and allows me to get heart rate up higher than freestyle
Fly is useful to train for other strokes
Perhaps more importantly, I think that having a different stroke to do makes swimming more interesting. Whether doing sets as part of a swim team or on your own, it's more interesting when you can vary things. The more swimming is interesting, the easier it is to enjoy and keep doing it
If that's how we judge things, there should only be races on bicycles.
> Swimmers and coaches began to realise that breaststroke was quicker when a swimmer recovered their arms forward above the water and the arm technique – as well as the swimming term ‘butterfly’ – was born.
From the Wikipedia article on Fosbury:
"The technique gained the name the "Fosbury Flop" when in 1964 the Medford Mail-Tribune ran a photo captioned "Fosbury Flops Over Bar," while in an accompanying article a reporter wrote that he looked like "a fish flopping in a boat." Others were even less kind, with one newspaper captioning Fosbury's photograph, "World's Laziest High Jumper""
There's no real way to compare the butterfly and the forward crawl that doesn't make the butterfly look like a ridiculous farce.
I would prefer that shoes be restricted to designs that don't allow for higher efficiency than barefoot running, but sport rules tend to lag technology advances.
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abebe_Bikila
2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nike_Vaporfly_and_Tokyo_2020_O...
March 11, 2016
The history of butterfly stroke started in the 1930s when it developed as a style of swimming breaststroke.
Swimmers and coaches began to realise that breaststroke was quicker when a swimmer recovered their arms forward above the water and the arm technique – as well as the swimming term ‘butterfly’ – was born.
While an overarm recovery was not unusual as a finishing stroke in breaststroke, American Henry Myers is said to be the first person to have used butterfly arms for a full length of breaststroke, unveiling it to the confusion of officials and competitors in a 150 yard medley race in 1933.
Shortly after, American swimming coach David Armbruster is credited with developing the recognisable butterfly dolphin kick to accompany the overarm recovery with one of his swimmers, Jack Sieg, using it to devestating effect in 1935.
While the dolphin kick was against world governing body FINA’s breaststroke rules, the butterfly arm technique continued to be used in breaststroke races until butterfly was established as an individual stroke by FINA in 1952.
Butterfly was contested at the Olympic Games for the first time in 1956, with a men’s 200m Butterfly event and women’s 100m Butterfly event in Melbourne.
The men’s 200m Butterfly and women’s 100m Butterfly have been held at every Olympics since then while the men’s 100m Butterfly and women’s 200m Butterfly were added to the Olympic schedule at the Mexico City Games in 1968.

While only the 100m and 200m Butterfly are contested at the Olympic Games, a 50m Butterfly event is held at World and continental levels.
England’s five-time world gold medallist James Hickman was a groundbreaking butterfly swimmer, holding the world short course record for 200m Butterfly for the best part of four years between March 1998 and January 2001.
Hickman also held the world short course 100m Butterfly record between December 1998 and September 1999.
Just three English swimmers have won butterfly medals at the Olympic Games with Phil Hubble the first man to achieve the feat with 200m Butterfly silver in 1980.
Andy Jameson landed 100m Butterfly bronze in Seoul eight years later while Steve Parry was the last English swimmer to claim an Olympic butterfly medal with his 200m Butterfly bronze at the Athens 2004 Games.