Kristian Gkolomeev produced one of the most talked-about swims of 2025 when he swam 20.89 seconds in the men’s 50m freestyle at an Enhanced Games showcase.
The performance was announced by the Enhanced Games on May 21, 2025, and immediately drew attention because it was quicker than César Cielo’s 20.91 from 2009.
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But this should not be framed as a clean world record story. It was a disputed Enhanced Games time trial, not a World Aquatics record.
That distinction matters. The swim did not rewrite the official record book, but it did prove the Enhanced Games can create a number dramatic enough to shake the sport.
Kristian Gkolomeev’s 20.89 was spectacular, but it was not official
Photo by Marcel ter Bals/BSR Agency/Getty ImagesGkolomeev is not a gimmick athlete. He is a four-time Olympian for Greece and an elite sprint freestyler with a serious record in recognised competition.
That is what made the 20.89 so powerful as a promotional moment. The Enhanced Games did not attach its showcase to an unknown swimmer, it put its model behind a proven international finalist.
The actual swim took place on February 25, 2025, at the Greensboro Aquatic Center in North Carolina, before being released publicly in May.
Numerically, it was faster than Cielo’s old 20.91 mark. Factually, it was not recognised by World Aquatics because it happened outside the conditions required for official record ratification.
That is the cleanest way to describe it. It was a spectacular swim, but it was not an official world record.
The banned suit and PED context change everything
The problem is not only that the swim happened outside a standard event. It is that the conditions were designed to be outside the traditional rulebook.
Gkolomeev’s 20.89 was recorded in a full-length polyurethane Jaked suit, the kind of equipment that World Aquatics rules no longer permit.
That matters because full-body non-textile suits have been banned since 2010, after the supersuit era distorted swimming’s record landscape.
The Enhanced Games model adds another layer. Its own description says it does not ban performance-enhancing substances, instead presenting enhancement as medically supervised, transparent and legal.
That is the whole point of the project. It is also why the comparison with regulated swimming breaks down.
A time produced with banned equipment and in a PED-permissive framework cannot sit beside a time produced under World Aquatics conditions. The numbers may share a stopwatch, but they do not share a rulebook.
Enhanced Games still got exactly what it wanted
None of that means the swim failed. In fact, the controversy is why it worked.
Gkolomeev was awarded a $1 million prize, giving the Enhanced Games the kind of headline traditional swimming rarely produces around a single time trial.
Dr Aron D’Souza called the Enhanced Games “not just a competition” but “a movement”. Gkolomeev said the performance was about “breaking limits”.
Those quotes explain the strategy. Enhanced Games is not trying to win approval from traditional sport, it is trying to build a rival spectacle with different incentives.
That is why the 20.89 matters even without official recognition. It gave the project a clean, viral proof point.
The swim was not legitimate in World Aquatics terms. It was still effective in Enhanced Games terms.
Cameron McEvoy’s 20.88 makes the record debate even clearer
The current record context makes loose wording even more dangerous.
In March 2026, Cameron McEvoy swam 20.88 at the China Swimming Open, with Olympics.com reporting it as the new men’s 50m freestyle world record.
That means Gkolomeev’s 20.89 is now neither recognised by World Aquatics nor faster than the current official mark.
This does not make the Enhanced Games swim irrelevant. It makes the correct framing more important.
The headline should not be that Gkolomeev broke the world record. The headline should be that one disputed swim showed how the Enhanced Games intends to fight for attention.
That is the warning shot. Traditional sport can reject the record, and it should. But it cannot pretend the spectacle did not land.
Gkolomeev’s swim belongs outside the official record book. It also belongs inside the wider debate about where elite sport is going next.
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