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Walshe Becomes European Champion in Lublin

ByEmma Porter |

Morning Report – Walshe Set for Butterfly and IM Double on Final Night in Poland

Ellen Walshe will compete in the finals of the 200m Butterfly and 400m Individual Medley on the last night of racing at the European Aquatics Championships (25m) in Lublin, Poland, as she qualified through the heats on the 400m Individual Medley on Sunday morning.

Walshe, who won 200m Individual Medley silver on Saturday night, has had a hectic few days of racing with the 200m IM final and 200m Butterfly semi-final on Saturday night, straight into the 200m Butterfly final and 400m Individual Medley heats and final on Sunday.

The Templeogue swimmer cruised through this morning’s heat of the 400m Individual Medley in 4:34.60 placing second and progresses to tonight’s final in third. There were three Spanish athletes ahead of Walshe but a two per nation in semi-finals/finals rule excluded the third fastest of the trio. Alba Azquez Ruiz is the top seed in 4:32.56.

Walshe owns a best time in the event of 4:22.97 from the World Aquatics World Cup in October.

The 24-year-old spoke after the race, “I just tried to control it a little bit, obviously a 400 IM is never easy, I just wanted to get myself back into a comfortable middle lane for tonight. I knew I had the 400 since I came into the meet, so I knew I was going to have to be ready on day six in the morning to perform, I think I did a decent job this morning to get myself in a decent place for tonight.”

Walshe’s 200 Butterfly Final will take place at 18.50 (IRL) followed by the 400m Individual Medley Final at 19.34 (IRL).

Ireland’s Men’s 4x50m Medley Relay closed out the final heats session in Poland with John Shortt leading out to break the Irish Junior 50m Backstroke Record.

The 200m Backstroke gold medallist was close in the heats earlier in the week touching in 23.88, just outside Conor Ferguson’s 2019 record of 23.84, but this morning, the Galway man lead out in 23.78 for his twelfth Irish Record of the week, he had already amassed an incredible 6 Irish Senior Records and 5 Irish Junior Records from the 100m Backstroke, 200m Backstroke and Mixed 4x50m Medley Relay.

The quartet of Shortt, Jack Cassin (Butterfly), Eoin Corby (Breaststroke) and 200m Freestyle bronze medallist Evan Bailey (Freestyle) combined for a time of 1:35.03.

Shortt said after the race, “I think it’s very, very positive. For me the 200 and 100 were two standouts, and the 50 probably wasn’t what I wanted. So, this morning was just a little bit better and obviously really nice standing with the boys on the last day. Now we head into Irish short course and build on what we did this week.”

Bailed added, “It was good fun to get in with all the lads, it was the same relay as worlds, it’s not our specialty the 4×50, but we got in and give it a good race. We can bring these relays on a whole lot in the next few years. It’s a great start to what could be possible in the future.”

At the US Open (50m) in Austin, Texas overnight, Mona McSharry closed out her first long course meet of the 2025/26 season with a third-place finish in the 200m Breaststroke. McSharry, who won 50m Breaststroke gold and 100m Breaststroke silver already, touched in 2:24.91 behind the USA’s Kate Douglass (2:20.86) and Alex Walsh (2:24.88).

Evening Report – Walshe Secures Stunning Gold Medal in Poland

Ireland’s Ellen Walshe has won a spectacular gold medal in the 200m Butterfly on the closing night of racing at the European Aquatics Championships in Poland bringing Ireland’s medal tally to seven, including three gold medals from Walshe (200m Butterfly) Daniel Wiffen (1500m Freestyle) and John Shortt (200m Backstroke), a silver medal from Walshe (200m IM) and three bronze medals from Daniel Wiffen (400m, 800m Freestyle) and Evan Bailey (200m Freestyle), Ireland finished fifth on the medal table.

Walshe stormed to 200m Butterfly gold in 2:03.24 and became the first Irish woman to be crowned a European Short Course Champion, it is the 24-year-old’s first senior international gold, a decade after her first international medal where she won silver at the European Youth Olympic Festival.

The Templeogue swimmer was controlled from the start of the race, turning seventh at 50 metres, she was sixth by 75 metres, it was at 150 metres she made her move to third and only in the last 25 metres she stormed home in first ahead of Denmark’s Helena Rosendahl Bach in 2:03.55 and Italy’s Anita Gastaldi in 2:04.07.

A delighted Walshe spoke after the race, saying, “I think it was going to be a big race with the girl’s tonight, it was a stacked field of fliers, so it was going to be about who had the better backend, you just have to hold on for the first 150m and then just try bring it home the last 50 and that’s just what I did, I just kicked like hell. 

“You have to stick to your own process, which is so important to not race anyone else’s race, I know the back end can be strong, the front end, it’s definitely a weakness that I have, I need to get out quicker. It’s something I’m trying to work on it. I probably need to be out a bit quicker with these girls and kind of help myself through the back end instead of like hurting so bad, but, it worked tonight, so it must work.”

 Despite winning two gold at the European U23 Championships in Dublin in 2023, it was the first time Walshe stood on top of a podium and heard the national anthem she said “You’ve got to enjoy these moments because they don’t come very often and I guess to stand on the top of the podium, it doesn’t come often. It’s my first gold medal on the international stage; I guess you have to enjoy the moment because it’s over now. It’s over very quick, but it was great to have the flag and see my parents in the stands.”

On the team’s performances this week Walshe said, “It was absolutely savage, each and every one of them played a massive part in everyone’s success this week, and I think we all got to drive off that and just use it into the next season. It’s extremely important to keep the energy really high in the team, obviously some results can be disappointing, but we’ve got to use each other and feed off each other through this meet. Even heading into next week, some people may be disappointed, but use the adrenaline that you are frustrated with and just bring it into next week and there’ll be some savage results on the board next week. The team is in a great place, so I’m super excited to see what we’ve got this summer.”

Just thirty minutes after her gold medal win, Walshe was back in the pool for the 400m Individual Medley Final, the gruelling double saw Walshe place seventh in 4:38.51.

As well as the seven podium finishes Irish swimmers have set nineteen Irish Records including twelve senior and seven junior and swam forty-three lifetime bests across the six days.

Speaking at the conclusion of the Championships Interim National Performance Director Andy Reid said, “This has been an outstanding European Aquatics Short Course Championships for Irish Swimming. The athletes have approached the meet with exceptional professionalism in their preparations and have demonstrated impressive maturity and composure in their race execution through the rounds. Their performances truly speak for themselves. This team has set a new benchmark for Irish swimming, and we are immensely proud of the way they represented Ireland on the European stage.”

Team Ireland will arrive back to T2 Dublin Airport at 1pm on Monday 8th December from Warsaw.

Attention now turns to the Irish Winter Championships at the Sport Ireland Campus Dublin from December 12th – 14th where many of the swimmers that represented Ireland this week will be competing.

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