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Glenmark 36th Sub Junior and 46th Junior NAC Day 1 – 4 New Meet Record Bne

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By Sanuj Srivastava on SwimSwam

Glenmark 36th Sub Junior and 46th Junior National Aquatic Championships

36th Glenmark Sub-Junior And 46th Junior National Aquatic Championships 2019 26 June Se 30 June Tak Rajkot, Gujrat Me Hone Jar Hi Hai. Championships Me FINA Rules Ke According Jo Age Groups Rakhe Gye Hai Wo Kuch Is Prakar Hai. Swimming Ke Sare Events Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel Swimming Pool, Kothariya Road, Rajkot Me Honge, Jisko Gujrat State Aquatic Association Host Karega.

Official Website: Swimming Federation Of India

Sub Junior Group

Group 3rd- 11 Years – Born In 2008

Group 4th- 9 And 10 Years – Born In 2009, 2010

Junior Group

Group 1st – 15 Se 17 Years Tak – Born In 2002, 2003, 2004

Group 2nd- 12se 14 Years Tak – Born In 2005, 2006, 2007

Day 1 Se Day 4 Tak Events Ke Sare Order Aap Niche Di Gyi Pdf Me Dekh Skte Hai.

Highlights

  • Maharashtra Ki Apeksha Fernandes Ne Morning Heat Me 200m IM Ko 02:28.86 Me Complete Karke Girls Group 2 Ka Record Toda Jo Akanksha Vora Ne 2012 Me 02:29.44 Ke Sath Bnaya Tha.
  • 1:56.48 Time Ke Sath Shoan Ganguly Neboygs Group 2 Ke 200m Freestyle Me New Meet Record Bnaya, Pichle Record Karnataka Ke Sanjay CJ Ke Name Tha Jo 2016 Me Bnaya Gya Tha And Timing Thi 1:58.21.
  • Girls Group 2 Ke 200m Freestyle Me 2:11.94 Ke Time Ko Jo Ki Rayna Saldanha Ne 2015 Me Bnaya Tha Usko Bhavya Sachdeva Ne Break Karke 2:!0.81 Ka New Meet Record Bnaya.
  • Girls Group 1 Ke Women 100m Breaststroke Me Sharon Shaju Ke 1:16.00 Ke Time Ko Break Karke Kareena Shankta Ne 1:16.00 Ka New Meet Record Banaya.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Glenmark 36th Sub Junior and 46th Junior NAC Day 1 – 4 New Meet Record Bne


Deutsche Meisterschaften im Freiwasser: Masters, Jugend, offene Klasse

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By Daniela Kapser on SwimSwam

Deutschen Jugend- und Junioren-Meisterschaften über 2,5 km, 5 km, 7,5 km und 3 x 1,25 km
Internationalen Deutschen Masters-Meisterschaften über 2,5 km, 5 km und 3 x 1,25 km
Internationalen Deutschen Meisterschaften über 5 km, 10 km und 4 x 1,25 km

Bei den DMF (Deutsche Meisterschaften Freiwasser) werden ab Donnerstag zahlreiche deutsche Meister gesucht. Je nach Strecke setzen sich die Wertungsklassen unterschiedlich zusammen (siehe unten).

Neben erfahrenen Freiwasserschwimmern wie Ruwen Straub, Sören Meißner, Leonie Beck, Lea Boy, Jeannette Spiwoks, Josephine Tesch, Elena Backhaus sind zahlreiche Athleten dabei, die im Beckenschwimmen erfolgreich sind wie Yara Hierath, Aaron Schmidt, Nikita Rodenko, Leonie Märtens, Sebastian Beck, Kellie Messel und Charlotte Blanke.

Leonie Beck, Lea Boy und Ruwen Straub sind für die Weltmeisterschaften im Beckenschwimmen nominiert.

 

Nachfolgend der Wettkampfplan: (Quelle Ausschreibung DSV)

Donnerstag, 27. Juni 2019 Einschwimmen: ab 8.00 Uhr Beschriftung der Teilnehmer: jeweils 1 Stunde vor Startbeginn Vorstellung der Teilnehmer: jeweils 15 Minuten vor Startbeginn
Wettkampf 01: 09:30 Uhr: 10 km Entscheidung Männer und Junioren männlich Wertungen: International, offene Klasse (Jahrgang 2003 und älter) International & national (Jahrgang 2000 – 2001 in gemeinsamer Wertung, JEM)
Wettkampf 02: 09:35 Uhr: 10 km Entscheidung Frauen und Junioren weiblich Wertungen: International, offene Klasse (Jahrgang 2003 und älter) International & national (Jahrgang 2000 – 2001 in gemeinsamer Wertung, JEM)
Wettkampf 03: 12:00 Uhr: 7,5 km Entscheidung Jugend männlich Wertungen: International & national (Jahrgang 2002 – 2003 in gemeinsamer Wertung, JEM)
Wettkampf 04: 12:05 Uhr: 7,5 km Entscheidung Jugend weiblich Wertungen: International & national (Jahrgang 2002 – 2003 in gemeinsamer Wertung, JEM)
Wettkampf 05: 15:00 Uhr: 3 x 1,25 km Staffel Jugend männlich Wertungen: National, die drei Sportler müssen aus den Jahrgängen 2000 – 2007 kommen.
Wettkampf 06: 15:05 Uhr: 3 x 1,25 km Staffel Jugend weiblich Wertungen: National, die drei Sportler müssen aus den Jahrgängen 2000 – 2007 kommen.

Wettkampf 07: 16:15 Uhr: 3 x 1,25 km Staffel Jugend mixed Wertungen: National, die drei Sportler müssen aus den Jahrgängen 2000 – 2007 kommen. Der Staffel muss aus jedem Geschlecht mindestens ein Teilnehmer angehören.
Wettkampf 08: 17:30 Uhr: 4 x 1,25 km Staffel mixed Wertungen: International, Offene Klasse (Jahrgang 2007 und älter). Der Staffel müssen aus jedem Geschlecht zwei Teilnehmer angehören. Die Laufeinteilung / der Zeitplan der einzelnen Läufe wird im Meldeergebnis veröffentlicht.

Freitag, 28. Juni 2019 Einschwimmen: ab 08:00 Uhr Beschriftung der Teilnehmer: jeweils 1 Stunde vor Startbeginn Vorstellung der Teilnehmer: jeweils 15 Minuten vor Startbeginn
Wettkampf 09: 09:30 Uhr: 2,5 km Entscheidung Jugend weiblich Wertungen: National (jahrgangsweise für die Jahrgänge 2003 – 2007) Wettkampf 10: 12:00 Uhr: 2,5 km Entscheidung Masters weiblich Wertungen: International, Masters (Altersklassen gemäß § 152 (2) WB-FT SW MS)
Wettkampf 11: 14:00 Uhr: 2,5 km Entscheidung Jugend männlich Wertungen: National (jahrgangsweise für die Jahrgänge 2003 – 2007) Wettkampf 12: 16:30 Uhr: 2,5 km Entscheidung Masters männlich Wertungen: International, Masters (Altersklassen gemäß § 152 (2) WB-FT SW MS) Die Laufeinteilung / der Zeitplan der einzelnen Läufe wird im Meldeergebnis veröffentlicht.

Sonnabend, 29. Juni 2019 Einschwimmen: ab 08:30 Uhr Beschriftung der Teilnehmer: jeweils 1 Stunde vor Startbeginn Vorstellung der Teilnehmer: jeweils 15 Minuten vor Startbeginn
Wettkampf 13: 10:00 Uhr: 5 km Entscheidung Frauen, Jugend weiblich Wertungen: International, Offene Klasse (Jahrgang 2005 und älter) National (jahrgangsweise für die Jahrgänge 2000 – 2005)
Wettkampf 14: 14:30 Uhr: 5 km Entscheidung Männer, Jugend männlich Wertungen: International, Offene Klasse (Jahrgang 2005 und älter) National (jahrgangsweise für die Jahrgänge 2000 – 2005) Die Laufeinteilung / der Zeitplan der einzelnen Läufe wird im Meldeergebnis veröffentlicht.

Sonntag, 30. Juni 2019 Einschwimmen: ab 08.00 Uhr Beschriftung der Teilnehmer: jeweils 1 Stunde vor Startbeginn Vorstellung der Teilnehmer: jeweils 15 Minuten vor Startbeginn
Wettkampf 15: 09:30 Uhr: 5 km Entscheidung Masters weiblichWertungen: International, Masters (Altersklassen gemäß § 152 (2) WB-FT SW MS)
Wettkampf 16: 11:00 Uhr: 5 km Entscheidung Masters männlichWertungen: International, Masters (Altersklassen gemäß § 152 (2) WB-FT SW MS)
Wettkampf 17: 13:30 Uhr: 3 x 1,25 km Staffel mixed (75 bis 119 Jahre)
Wettkampf 18: 13:30 Uhr: 3 x 1,25 km Staffel mixed (120 bis 164 Jahre)
Wettkampf 19: 13:30 Uhr: 3 x 1,25 km Staffel mixed (165 Jahre und älter) Wertungen WK 17 – 19: International, Masters. Das tatsächliche Alter der drei Staffelteilnehmer (Stichtag: 31.12.2019) wird addiert, und jeder Staffelteilnehmer muss Jahrgang 1999 oder älter sein. Der Staffel muss aus jedem Geschlecht mindestens ein Teilnehmer angehören. Jeder Schwimmer kann nur in einer Staffel in den Wettkämpfen 17 bis 19 starten.

 

 

 

 

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Deutsche Meisterschaften im Freiwasser: Masters, Jugend, offene Klasse

Gabriel Santos Positivo A Test Antidoping – Sospeso Anche Da ISL DC Trident

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By Giusy Cisale on SwimSwam

Il 23enne velocista brasiliano Gabriel Santosè risultato positivo ad un test antidoping alla sostanza “clostebol”.

Santos, che viene da San Paolo, è stato sottoposto ad un test antidoping fuori gara il 20 maggio nella sua città natale.

Il clostebol è considerato un debole steroide anabolizzante androgenico, utilizzato come ingrediente del turinabol orale, un punto fermo del programma antidoping sponsorizzato dallo stato della Germania orientale negli anni settanta e ottanta.

E ‘la stessa sostanza alla quale un altro velocista brasiliano, Henrique Rodrigues, risultò positivo nel 2017.

Rodrigues è stato sospeso per 1 anno a far data dal 20 Maggio 20019.

Santos ha nuotato nelle seguenti staffette:

  • 4×100 stile libero del Brasile alle Olimpiadi del 2016
  • 4 x 100 stile Campionati del Mondo 2017 (argento)
  • 4×100 stile Campionati Pan Pacific del 2018 (oro).

LA SOSPENSIONE DI DC TRIDENT – ISL

Gabriel Santos era stato annunciato come componente della squadra ISL DC Trident.

Il direttore Generale della squadra, Kaitlin Sandenoha rilasciato una dichiarazione a tal proposito:

Il nuotatore brasiliano Gabriel Da Silva Santos, l’Agenzia Mondiale Antidoping, e la Federazione Nazionale di Nuoto sono stati informati martedì del test antidoping positivo dell’atleta.

In risposta, l’International Swimming League (ISL) si è immediatamente attivata.

L’ISL e il DC Trident hanno temporaneamente sospeso Da Silva Santos. Si attende il “campione B” per confermare o annullare il risultato del test iniziale (il “campione A”).

Da Silva Santos è stato selezionato la scorsa settimana per competere come membro del DC Trident per le prossime competizioni ISL, che inizieranno ad ottobre.

“Nessuna violazione delle regole di controllo del doping sarà trascurata”

Questa la dichiarazione di Andrea Di Nino, direttore generale dell’International Swimming League.

Questo caso serve a ribadire la nostra posizione sulle sostanze vietate e sulla violazione delle regole di controllo del doping

“nessun comportamento di questo tipo sarà mai perdonato”.

Fin dall’inizio, l’ISL è stata un sostenitore della trasparenza e dello sport pulito.

Tutti gli atleti che violano le norme di controllo del doping o di violazioni etiche saranno considerati inammissibili senza alcun ricorso”.

Se Da Silva Santos procede con un controllo con un “campione B” nei prossimi 10 giorni, la decisione finale del campionato sarà basata sulla decisione finale dell’organo di governo competente.

“Siamo rimasti scioccati e delusi nel leggere questo titolo. Naturalmente sosteniamo pienamente una politica di tolleranza zero per il doping nella nostra squadra e nel campionato”. Queste le parole di Kaitlin Sandeno, direttore generale del DC Trident.

Riportato in inglese da Braden Keith e Loretta Race

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Gabriel Santos Positivo A Test Antidoping – Sospeso Anche Da ISL DC Trident

Lilly King Makes the Top 3 in CWSA Honda Cup Finals

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By Spencer Penland on SwimSwam

After winning the College Women’s Sports Award for women’s swimming back in December, Lilly King was named a finalist for the Honda Cup in April. The Honda Cup is awarded to the top female collegiate athlete of the year. At the CWSA Honda Cup Awards show in Los Angeles on Monday, King came in 3rd.

Fike Swim Signs Auburn Standout Aly Tetzloff

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By Gold Medal Mel Stewart on SwimSwam

Fike Swim is thrilled to announce the addition of Aly Tetzloff to its growing team of ambassadors. A recent Auburn graduate, Aly is continuing her training with War Eagle Swimming under Duncan Sherrard, Gideon Louw, and Allyson Sweeney.

Aly has been quietly working her way into the top of the rankings for the last couple years. She had a stellar senior year at Auburn, winning SECs in the 100 back and finaling at NCAAs in the 100 back and 100 fly and placing 16th in the 100 free. Last weekend, untapered and mid-season, Aly swam two Olympic Trials qualifying times at the Richard Quick Invite in the 100 fly and 100 back. Her 100 fly time from the meet currently ranks her 16th in the U.S. There is still plenty of room between 1st and 16th, but there is also one year to go, and with her newfound confidence, Aly could be making a big name for herself in the coming months.

“Aly is the perfect addition to our team. Her enthusiasm for swimming and for what we are doing at Fike Swim is infectious. You can tell she has a new level of confidence, so I can’t wait to see what she does over the next year!” said Fike Swim founder, James Fike.

Aly Tetzloff’s swimming accomplishments include:

  • 2019 SEC Champion 100 Back
  • Auburn School Record Holder
  • NCAA All-American
  • 2012, 2016, and 2020 Olympic Trials Qualifier
  • 2017 U.S. Nationals – 6th in the 50 fly and 11th in the 100 fly

“I’m so excited to partner with Fike Swim!  I was first introduced to The Brick my junior year in college and we started utilizing it for kick sets.  I believe the company has the athletes’ best interests at heart and is always looking for ways to improve the sport.  I’m looking forward to using more of their products and feel lucky to be a part of this growing brand!” added Aly.

Aly joins a loaded Fike Swim ambassador team that includes:

Ali DeLoof
Gabby DeLoof
Emily Escobedo
Sarah Gibson
Megan Kingsley
Hellen Moffitt
Ashley Neidigh
Lizzi Smith

You can support Aly on her journey to Tokyo by following her Instagram and Facebook pages, and you can get the latest Fike Swim news, product updates, and videos by liking them on Facebook and subscribing to their YouTube channel. And you can get a candid look at Fike Swim’s journey to help swimmers SWIM DIFFERENT by following them on Instagram.

About Aly Tetzloff
Here’s a short Q&A with Aly. The complete Q&A with post-workout meals, season and practice goals, and more can be found by visiting Fike Swim’s ambassador page.

Q: What is your favorite event?
A: “My favorite event is one I don’t really swim much anymore, but it is the 200 IM because it includes all the strokes.”

Q: How many yards per week do you usually swim?
A: “I range probably about 35,000-40,000 yards/meters a week.”

Q: What is one of your favorite sets?
A: A big set I do is on Monday mornings which consists of a threshold/heart rate.  It typically will add up to around 3,000 yards/meters. The basic one or most repeated form of this set which is all freestyle is: 10 x 100s @1:30 no equipment, 1 @ heart rate 150-160, 4 @ HR 200+, then 10 x 100s @ 1:30 with paddles, same as above, and finally…read more

Q: How did you get into swimming?
A: “I got into competitive swimming at the age of 6. I really wanted to be a gymnast, but my mom claimed I would be too tall. Then she asked if I wanted to try being on a club swim team instead, I’ve been swimming ever since!”

Q: What is something most people probably don’t know about you?
A: “I absolutely LOVE to cook and bake, specifically lasagna and chocolate chip banana bread are probably my two favorite things to make.”

About Fike Swim

“We design products exclusively for the toughest athletes in the world.  We unapologetically place swimmers on a pedestal.  The rigors they embrace on a daily basis can only be understood by another swimmer and they deserve a company focused 100% on helping them succeed.  Whether you’re just starting out or training for Tokyo, we stand behind you.”
-James Fike, Founder

Fike Swim Products was born when founder James Fike put a brick on top of a kickboard and transformed just another legs-only kick set into a total body workout felt into the next day. Since then it’s been our mission to create unique swim equipment with the single-minded goal of making you faster. We don’t sell toys. We create tools to help you reach your potential.

Courtesy of Fike Swim, a SwimSwam partner.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Fike Swim Signs Auburn Standout Aly Tetzloff

SwimSwam Pulse: Voters Overwhelmingly Pick Urlando’s 1:53.8 over Smith’s 58.4

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

SwimSwam Pulse is a recurring feature tracking and analyzing the results of our periodic A3 Performance Polls. You can cast your vote in our newest poll on the SwimSwam homepage, about halfway down the page on the right side, or you can find the poll embedded at the bottom of this post.

Our most recent poll asked SwimSwam readers which junior performance they found most exciting:

RESULTS

Question: Which Recent Junior Performance is Most Exciting?

Voters found Luca Urlando‘s 1:53.84 in the 200 fly to be the most exciting junior performance of the month by a wide margin: his swim topped Regan Smith‘s world junior record 100 back by almost 50 percentage points.

Urlando has fast become the new darling of the SwimSwam comment section after his breakout performances at last summer’s U.S. Nationals and his continual dropping of time this calendar year. He blitzed a 1:53.84 in the 200 fly earlier this month at the Clovis Pro Swim Series, becoming the third-fastest American of all-time and the fastest 17-18 in USA Swimming history. Maybe most notable is whose National Age Group record he broke: it formerly belonged to one Michael Phelps, then an age group phenom who won a World title and broke a world record with his 1:53.93 in prelims at the World Championships.

Though Urlando’s swim wasn’t a world junior record, he’s only 17 and still has about a year and a half to challenge the WJR.

Smith came second in our poll with 20.7% of the votes. She set the world junior record in the 100 back last summer, and has re-set the record three times in the last month and a half. Swimming at the Counsilman Classic in Indiana, Smith broke the record in prelims (58.55) and finals (58.45).

Australia’s Ariarne Titmus came third in our poll with about eight percent of the votes. Her 3:59.35 makes her the third-fastest performer ever in the 400 free and also sets her up as a challenger (though still an outside one) to the almost-unbeatable Katie Ledecky in women’s distance. Titmus, 18, is no longer eligible for the world junior record, but should be a favorite to win a medal of some color at Worlds this summer.

New Zealand 16-year-old Michael Pickett is a much less-known name than the other three, but that may not last for long. He made headlines this month for putting up a 22.34 in the 50 free – faster than 2017 World Champ Caeleb Dressel was at that age. Pickett only gained 1.7% of the votes.

 

Below, vote in our new A3 Performance Pollwhich asks voters for their thoughts on California’s new bill that would allow college student-athletes to make money off of their names and images– something the NCAA currently bans under amateurism rules:

Note: There is a poll embedded within this post, please visit the site to participate in this post's poll.

legend-long-2

ABOUT A3 PERFORMANCE

A3 Performance is an independently-owned, performance swimwear company built on a passion for swimming, athletes, and athletic performance. We encourage swimmers to swim better and faster at all ages and levels, from beginners to Olympians.  Driven by a genuine leader and devoted staff that are passionate about swimming and service, A3 Performance strives to inspire and enrich the sport of swimming with innovative and impactful products that motivate swimmers to be their very best – an A3 Performer.

The A3 Performance Poll is courtesy of A3 Performance, a SwimSwam partner

Read the full story on SwimSwam: SwimSwam Pulse: Voters Overwhelmingly Pick Urlando’s 1:53.8 over Smith’s 58.4

UK Age Groupers Have Chance To Race Peaty, Guy At Satellites Swimming Club Meet

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By Loretta Race on SwimSwam

Satellites Swimming Club based in Macclesfield, Cheshire, UK is slated to host a unique competition on September 21st, one which pits budding age groupers against some of the best aquatic athletes Great Britain has to offer.

The meet taking place at Macclesfield Leisure Centre is expected to gather an estimated 300 amateurs from each gender and age group (9/10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 16/Over), with swimmers racing 50m sprints of each stroke in the heats.

However, the top 7 athletes from each category will experience an extra bonus of making the night’s final, as the 8th swimmer to take the pool in each of the finals will be an accomplished elite athlete to the tune of  Adam Peaty, James Guy and Freya Anderson.

The amateur athletes will each get a head start to help even out the races, and the elite stars will be swimming back-to-back 50s.

Among the stars slated to race the respective events for women and men in the elite category are:

Butterfly – Harriet West
Backstroke – Jessica Fullalove
Breaststroke – Sarah Vasey
Freestyle – Freya Anderson

Butterfly – James Guy
Backstroke – Luke Greenbank
Breaststroke – Adam Peaty
Freestyle – Timothy Shuttleworth

Information about this once-in-a-lifetime racing opportunity will soon be available on the Satellites Swimming Club website, as well as via the Swimming Events site here.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: UK Age Groupers Have Chance To Race Peaty, Guy At Satellites Swimming Club Meet

2019 World Champs Preview: Sun Brings the Wins (& the Drama) In Men’s 400 Free

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

2019 FINA World Aquatics Championships

  • All sports: Friday, July 12 – Sunday, July 28, 2019
  • Pool swimming: Sunday, July 21 – Sunday, July 28, 2019
  • The Nambu University Municipal Aquatics Center, Gwangju, Korea
  • Meet site
  • FinaTV Live Stream
  • Live results

MEN’S 400M FREESTYLE

  • World Record: 3:40.07, Paul Biedermann (GER), 2009
  • World Championship Record: 3:40.07, Paul Biedermann (GER), 2009
  • World Junior Record: 3:44.60, Mack Horton (AUS), 2014
  • Defending World Champion: Sun Yang (CHN), 3:41.38

We’ll kick off our 2019 World Championships previews with the event that will hand out the first pool swimming medals of this year’s World Championships: the men’s 400 free.

This one doesn’t come without controversy. If China’s Sun Yang is the king of two things, it’s winning the 400 free and creating international drama… and only maybe in that order.

The latest example of the latter: Britain’s The Sunday Times reported in January that Sun had ‘abused’ drug testers in a kerfluffle over their doping control credentials and paperwork. The paper reported that Sun’s mother ultimately ordered the drug testers to destroy a vial of Sun’s blood. A FINA panel said it could never know what happened that night and refused to ban Sun, though WADA is still reportedly working to get the freestyler punished.

Long story short, Sun, 27, is still likely to be competing this summer, barring a major shakeup from the powers that be. That leads us to his historic 400 free prowess, which suggests he’s the heavy favorite to make it four-straight World titles in this event.

Sun won World Champs gold in 2013, 2015 and 2017. In between, he won Asian Games gold in 2014 and 2018. He started that whole streak with a 2012 Olympic gold in the 400. He’s got the fastest time in the world this season (3:42.75 on the FINA Champions Series) and also led the world ranks last year (3:41.94; no one else in the world was better than 3:43.7) and the year before (3:41.38; no one else was better than 3:43.3). The lone blemish on his record is a 2016 Olympic silver medal, and in that race, he was just .13 seconds from gold.

The only man to topple Sun in major competition over the past eight years was Australia’s Mack Hortonwho won that Rio Olympic gold in 3:41.55. The leadup to that race produced some fireworks, with Horton publicly calling Sun a “drug cheat” (the smashed vial was far from Sun’s first brush with anti-doping rules).

But the renewal of that rivalry is a little bit overshadowed by Horton’s 2019 struggles. The 23-year-old Horton had a rough go of it at Australia’s World Championship Trials, technically missing the team before being added to the roster anyway as a discretionary pick. (Specific events aren’t listed on Swimming Australia’s release, but Horton seems like a good bet for the 400 free, where he was second at Australian Trials).

That could be a dire omen for Horton, a signal of injury, illness or a dropoff in training. He’s only been 3:46.4 this season. On the other hand, it could be as simple as a badly-misjudged drop taper from an athlete not wanting to break training a month out of Worlds. Horton did go 3:43.76 last year (good for #2 in the world for the season), won Commonwealths and was second at Pan Pacs, so he’s still a strong medal contender, provided June was an aberration and not a trend.

The Sun/Horton battle raged at both the 2016 Olympics and 2017 World Championship, and Italy’s Gabriele Detti slid in for bronze at both meets. Detti lost most of his 2017-2018 season to a shoulder injury, but he looked to be back near 100% with a lifetime-best 3:43.36 at Italian Nationals in April. Detti is only 24 and looked like one of the faster-rising distance men in the world before his injury.

But if it’s momentum you’re talking about, the man to watch is Lithuania’s Danas RapsysThe 24-year-old was a youth standout in backstroke and more known for the 200 free early in his senior international career. But since early 2018, he’s cut his 400 free best from 3:53 to 3:43.36, hitting that time at the FINA Champions Series in Budapest. He sits tied with Detti for #2 in the world ranks and only appears to be getting better with each swim. With the retirement of Olympic champ Ruta Meilutyte, Lithuania needs a new face for its national swimming program; Rapsys is on the cusp of taking that mantle, especially if he can come up with a big medal in the first event of the 2019 World Championships.

Australia’s other likely contender is Jack McLoughlinwho won Pan Pacs gold last summer (3:44.20) and beat Horton at Australian Trials (3:44.34) this year. (19-year-old Elijah Winnington has also been 3:44 this year, but didn’t make the Worlds roster).

Last year was an odd down season in this event worldwide, with just three men going under 3:45 at any point in the season. (That was probably exacerbated by Detti’s absence). By contrast, five men have already broken 3:45 this season, with all of the major international meets still to come. That’s going to mean a lot of last year’s major medal-winners will need much-improved seasons to contend for a medal at Worlds. Mykhailo Romanchuk was the European champ for Ukraine last year, going 3:45.18. He’s had a good season, particularly in the 800 free, and could be a factor, though he’ll probably need a better drop than the four tenths he dropped from his lifetime-best last summer.

There was some talk of James Guy moving away from this event, but that doesn’t seem to be happening. The Brit was a finalist at the 2016 Olympics and 2017 Worlds, and also won bronze at Commonwealths last year in 3:45.3. On the other hand, he didn’t swim it at British Nationals and thus shouldn’t be eligible for entry there, though most countries can usually make exceptions to their selection rules wherever they want to.

Russia’s Aleksandr Krasnykh is a strong contender: he was 3:45 both this year and last. Austria’s Felix Auboeck was a Worlds finalist in 2017, but had a rough 2018 and wasn’t very good in the 500 yard freestyle this college season. The American men may have to scrape for a medal here: Zane Grothe was a 2017 Worlds finalist and a Pan Pacs bronze medalist last summer, but was off his best last summer, as were a lot of the top Americans. Some of that may have been the jet lag of a round-the-world trip to their main international meet – but Team USA will have to face that again this year, trading Tokyo (Pan Pacs last summer) for Gwangju (Worlds this summer). A return to his 3:44-low form from 2017 would make Grothe a true medal contender, though. Meanwhile Grant Shoults has only competed twice since last summer and has been far off his bests. Any potential roster replacements probably won’t be major medal threats, either.

There will be a few notable absences. The home crowd won’t get to see national icon Park Tae-hwan, who isn’t retired, but isn’t competing at Worlds this summer, either. He was 4th at Worlds in 2017. Australia’s David McKeon was a finalist in both 2016 and 2017, but bowed out of last summer’s major competitions with a shoulder injury.

TOP 8 PICKS:

PlaceSwimmerCountrySeason-BestLifetime-Best
1Sun YangChina3:42.753:40.14
2Gabriele DettiItaly3:43.363:43.36
3Danas RapsysLithuania3:43.363:43.36
4Mack HortonAustralia3:46.473:41.55
5Jack McLoughlinAustralia3:44.343:44.20
6Zane GrotheUSA3:48.273:44.43
7Mykhailo RomanchukUkraine3:47.083:45.18
8Aleksandr KrasnykhRussia3:45.553:45.55

Darkhorse: 21-year-old Florian Wellbrock is a rising distance star for Germany. He broke through for his first major international medals last summer taking European Champs gold in the 1500 and bronze in the 800. Wellbrock didn’t get to swim the 400 at that meet, but smashed his lifetime-best from a 3:47.1 to a 3:45.5 back in April. He’s listed on Germany’s roster in the 400, 800 and 1500 this year, and it wouldn’t be a surprise to see his rise continue across all three events, though he’s certainly a bigger factor in the distances.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: 2019 World Champs Preview: Sun Brings the Wins (& the Drama) In Men’s 400 Free


Glenmark 36th Sub Junior and 46th Junior NAC Day 2 Ke Results

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By Sanuj Srivastava on SwimSwam

Glenmark 36th Sub Junior and 46th Junior National Aquatic Championships

36th Glenmark Sub-Junior And 46th Junior National Aquatic Championships 2019 26 June Se 30 June Tak Rajkot, Gujrat Me Hone Jar Hi Hai. Championships Me FINA Rules Ke According Jo Age Groups Rakhe Gye Hai Wo Kuch Is Prakar Hai. Swimming Ke Sare Events Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel Swimming Pool, Kothariya Road, Rajkot Me Honge, Jisko Gujrat State Aquatic Association Host Karega.

Official Website: Swimming Federation Of India

Sub Junior Group

Group 3rd- 11 Years – Born In 2008

Group 4th- 9 And 10 Years – Born In 2009, 2010

Junior Group

Group 1st – 15 Se 17 Years Tak – Born In 2002, 2003, 2004

Group 2nd- 12se 14 Years Tak – Born In 2005, 2006, 2007

Day 1 Se Day 4 Tak Events Ke Sare Order Aap Niche Di Gyi Pdf Me Dekh Skte Hai.

36th Glenmark Sub-Junior And 46th Junior National Aquatic Championships 2019 Results –

Swimming

Day 1Day 2
Heat Start-listHeat Start-list
Heat ResultsHeat Results
Final Start-listFinal Start-list
Final ResultsFinal Results

Diving And Waterpolo

EventsResults
DivingDay 1Day 2
Water PoloDay 1Day 2

Medal Tally

Day 1
Day 2

Highlights

  • Day 2 Ka Phla Record Boys Group 1 Me Aryan Nehra Ne Break Kiya, Unhone 400m Freestyle Me Advait Page Ka 4:02.09 Ka Record Todte Hue 4:00.91 Ka New Meet Record Bnaya.
  • Shoan Ganguly Ne Aaj Fir Apna 2 Record Kayam Kiya, Boys Group 2 Ke 200m Butterfly Bikram Changmai Ka 2018 Ke 2:10.14 Ka Record Break Karte Hue 2:09.34 Ka New Meet Record Bnaya.
  • Apeksha Fernandes Ne Bhi Aaj Apna Dusra Record Bnaya. Unhone Girls Group 2 Ke 200m Butterfly Me Arhatha Maghavi Ke 2:24.22 Ka Record Todte Hue 2:23.67 Ka New Meet Record Bnaya.
  • Bengal Ke Sahil Laskar Ne Aaj Apna Hi Purana Record Todte Hue 100m Backstroke Me 1:01.45 Ka New Meet Record Bnaya. Sahil Ka Purana Record 1:01.52 Ka Tha.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Glenmark 36th Sub Junior and 46th Junior NAC Day 2 Ke Results

Ryan Murphy World Championships Predictions: GMM presented by SwimOutlet.com

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By Gold Medal Mel Stewart on SwimSwam

Gold Medal Minute presented by SwimOutlet.com

Three-time 2016 Olympic Champion Ryan Murphy says he’s training better than ever, including the lead up to the 2016 Olympic Games.  In season, he rarely drops into the 52 second range in the 100m back unless he’s within 4 weeks of taper-time.  That makes sense. Ryan is pushing a lot of muscle mass, requiring more rest to rip fast swims.  He swam a 52.99 100m back at the FINA Champions Series in Indy and 1:55.7 in the 200m back at the recent Cal-Stanford Long Course Duel.

LOOKING AHEAD TO 2019 FINA WORD CHAMPIONSHIPS

I predicted Ryan’s Worlds performance earlier this year at:

  • 100m back – 51.6-7
  • 200m back – 1:53.0

I’m adjusting my predictions to 51.78 in 100m back and 1:52.9 in the 200m back.  Both performances net him gold. I think Ryan edges Evgeny Rylov in the 2-back, winning by a fingernail.

What are your predictions? What do you think? 

Ryan 2016-2018 Performances

Ryan – 2016 Olympics:

  • 100m back – 51.85 (PB)
  • 200m back – 1:53.62

Ryan – 2017 World Champs:

  • 100m back – 52.59
  • 200m back -1:54.21

Ryan – 2018 Pan Pacs:

  • 100m back – 51.94
  • 200m back – 1:53.57 (PB)

Follow Ryan Murphy on Instagram here.

FOLLOW GOLD MEDAL MEL ON INSTAGRAM HERE

RECENT EPISODES

This is a Gold Medal Media production presented by SwimOutlet.com. Host Gold Medal Mel Stewart is a 3-time Olympic medalist and the co-founder of SwimSwam.com, a Swimming News website.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Ryan Murphy World Championships Predictions: GMM presented by SwimOutlet.com

Practice + Pancakes: Texas Men Taper Practice for WUGs

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By Coleman Hodges on SwimSwam

SwimSwam wants to give you an inside look at what a normal day-in-the-life looks like for any given swimmer, and how that differs from team to team or city to city. We send our head of production, Coleman Hodges, to be a fly on the wall at practice, then relay what he discovered back to you over pancakes. Or at least breakfast.

2019 is going to be an exciting summer for swimming fans. With so many major meets on the horizon, there will be no shortage of fast swimming around the world. The first of those major international meets is the World University Games in Naples, Italy, which starts on July 5. That means for Americans, taper is now. Luckily, the Texas men were kind enough to let us sit in on one of their taper workouts, where they were doing a little pace work.

In the main WUG group there was John Shebat (200 IM), Austin Katz (200 back), Dean Farris (400 free relay), Tate Jackson (100 free), and Jeff Newkirk (800 free relay), as well as Townley Haas who is prepping for World Champs (200 free, 400 free relay). Everyone did about the same thing for their morning work after warm up: somewhere between 2-3×50 @ 1:30, pacing for your event. Among the highlights:

A. Katz, 26.8-27.2 50 backstroke

J. Shebat, 28 low 50 back, 34.5 50 breast

Dean Farris, 24 low 50 free

Tate Jackson, 24.4-24.6 50 free

Townley Haas, 25 high 50 free

A surprise WUG competitor in Austin was Zach Yeadon, who trained at UT over the summer so he could race many of his WUG teammates as well as the UT distance stars such as Clark Smith and Chris Yeager. Yeadon had a set of 8×100 @ 1:20 strong with 2×50 EZ in between, holding 1:00-1:01 on the 100’s.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Practice + Pancakes: Texas Men Taper Practice for WUGs

UCLA Names Ohio State’s Jordan Wolfrum Head Coach

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By Torrey Hart on SwimSwam

The University of California, Los Angeles, has named Ohio State associate head coach Jordan Wolfrum its next head swimming and diving coach, the school announced Thursday.

“I am incredibly honored and excited for the opportunity to lead the UCLA women’s swimming and diving program,” Wolfrum said. “I am sincerely grateful to Director of Athletics Dan Guerrero and Associate Athletic Director Gavin Crew for entrusting me with this great responsibility and for bringing me into the Bruin family.”

Wolfrum takes over the women-only program after five years (three as associate head) for the Buckeyes. Prior to that, she was a volunteer assistant at Stanford and assistant for three years and head coach for one at the College of Saint Benedict. Wolfrum swam collegiately at St. Cloud State, graduating in 2009.

Her hire comes after former UCLA head coach of 31 years Cyndi Gallagherannounced her retirement in May.

The UCLA women have not cracked the top-10 at NCAAs since the 2003-2004 season. Gallagher’s tenure saw the unveiling of the school’s $14 million Spieker Aquatics Center in 2009, which many thought would draw more national talent to the program, but the Bruins have not capitalized on the situation.

The team’s highest national finish under Gallagher came in her second and third seasons, when the team was fifth, and its highest finish in the past decade is 17th in 2013 and 2016, and 2019. Last season, the team scored 75 points in total at NCAAs, with 20 coming from Diver of the Meet Maria Polyakova, who notched first- and second-place finishes on the 3-meter and 1-meter boards, respectively.

Replacing Gallagher, Wolfrum is now one of the three female head coaches of Division I top-25 schools nationwide, the others being Cal’s Teri McKeever and Texas’ Carol Capitani. The UCLA position was the biggest opening remaining this NCAA offseason, which has seen heavy turnover in the Division I coaching ranks.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: UCLA Names Ohio State’s Jordan Wolfrum Head Coach

Alec Hayden Announced as Another Associate Head Coach at Missouri

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

New Missouri head coach Andy Grevers has announced another addition to his coaching staff for the 2019 season. Alec Hayden has been announced as an associate head coach, joining Tracy Martin, who was given the same title on Wednesday.

Hayden spent last year coaching with Alligator Aquatics in Arlington Heights, Illinois. He spent 9 months as associate head coach and in March was promoted to head coach of the 150-member program. In his time there, the program set 11 team records.

Prior to Alligator Aquatics, Hayden was an assistant at Northwestern in the 2017-2018 season and spent a brief period as an associate head coach. There, he was the team’s primary sprint coach and recruiting coordinator. He also has 4 years as an assistant at Illinois and 1 year as an assistant at William & Mary on his collegiate resume.

Other club jobs include as the head senior coach at NASA Wildcat Aquatics in Evanston, Illinois, while coaching as a volunteer with Northwestern.

His career path very much overlaps with that of his new boss Grevers, who like Hayden spent time as a volunteer assistant at Northwestern. Grevers was also the head coach at Wildcat Aquatics form 2005-2010, including about 2 years of overlap with Hayden there.

Among Missouri’s paid assistants from last season:

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Alec Hayden Announced as Another Associate Head Coach at Missouri

Brooklyn-area Residents Learn Water Safety Basics at Swim 1922 Clinic

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NEW YORK– Nearly 50 area youth and adults learned the basics of water safe...

Dolfin Swim(s) of the Week: 13-Year-Old U.S. Olympic Trials Qualifiers

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

Disclaimer: Dolfin Swim of the Week is not meant to be a conclusive selection of the best overall swim of the week, but rather one Featured Swim to be explored in deeper detail. The  Dolfin Swim is an opportunity to take a closer look at the context of one of the many fast swims this week, perhaps a swim that slipped through the cracks as others grabbed the headlines, or a race we didn’t get to examine as closely in the flood of weekly meets.

With all due respect to Caeleb Dressel‘s 50.3 100 fly, we’re going to highlight some less-publicized swims with this week’s spotlight. (We’re sure Dressel won’t mind too terribly, as he’s already won enough of these “of the week/month” awards to fill many mantlepieces).

13-year-olds Leah Hayes and Jillian Cox became two of the three youngest U.S. Olympic Trials qualifiers of the 2020 cycle– and recent history suggests the youngest qualifiers are worth more than a passing footnote.

First, the specifics for Hayes and Cox. Hayes competes for the Fox Valley Park District Riptides of Illinois. She went 4:50.99 in the 400 IM, getting under the Olympic Trials cut of 4:51.79 and is the youngest of the three 13-year-olds currently qualified. Cox swims for Austin Trinity Aquatic Club of Texas. She went 4:16.27 in the 400 free, sneaking under the Olympic Trial cut of 4:16.89.

Sure, a 14-year-old actually making the U.S. Olympic team is pretty rare. But the 2016 U.S. Olympic Trials featured 7 girls who qualified as 13-year-olds. (5 of them aged up to 14 by the time Trials actually happened, which will be the case for Hayes and Cox). Of those seven, three have already found their way onto top U.S. travel teams just three years later.

Youngest Female Qualifiers, 2016 U.S. Olympic Trials

SwimmerAge at 2016 Trials2016 Trials finishes
2019 Travel Team?
Tristen Ulett1380th (100 back), 115th (100 fly)
Phoebe Bacon1383rd (100 back)Pan Ams
Ella Nelson1455th (400 IM), 61st (200 breast), 75th (200 IM), 102nd (100 breast)
Alex Walsh1411th (200 back), 12th (100 back), 46th (200 IM)Pan Ams
Regan Smith1413th (100 back), 33rd (200 back), 81st (100 fly)
World Championships
Isabel Gormley1484th (400 IM)
Abby Arens1454th (200 breast), 61st (100 breast)

This time around, Hayes is the youngest current qualifier. Maggie Wanezek of Elmbrook Swim Club in Wisconsin comes next, holding a 1:02.32 in the 100 back from earlier this year that is below the 1:02.69 Olympic Trial cut. Then it’s Cox.

As of right now, Hayes is ranked roughly 39th in the 400 IM among Americans over the Olympic Trials qualifying period (from last December through today). Wanezek is ranked about 40th, and Cox ranked about 50th.

 

About Dolfin Swimwear

Dolfin Swimwear represents quality and value. We are committed to supplying our customers with a durable swim suit and an affordable price. We also will continue to be the innovaters for fun and unique practice/training suits which gives swimmers something to smile about…even during grueling workouts.

About Dolfin’s Tech Suit LightStrike

LightStrikeTM was developed after years of research in biomechanics, active drag analysis, fabric innovation, and compression analysis. This new FINA approved suit is supported by Dr. Genadijus Sokolovas, PhD in Biomechanics and former Performance Director with USA Swimming and Styku® 3D Biomapping Engineering.

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Read the full story on SwimSwam: Dolfin Swim(s) of the Week: 13-Year-Old U.S. Olympic Trials Qualifiers


USA Triathlon Partners with USA Swimming, U.S. Masters Swimming to Host Open Water Swim Events

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USA Triathlon today announced a three-way partnership with USA Swimming and U.S. Masters Swimming to host open water swim races as part of two USA Triathlon-owned events this year, the inaugural Legacy Triathlon and the Toyota USA Triathlon Age Group National Championships.

Washington Silver Medal Sprinter Hailey Grotte Commits to WSU For 2020

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By Lucas Hetzel on SwimSwam

Fitter and Faster Swim Clinics is the proud sponsor of SwimSwam’s College Recruiting Channel and all commitment news. For many, swimming in college is a lifelong dream that is pursued with dedication and determination. Fitter and Faster is proud to honor these athletes and those who supported them on their journey.

Hailey Grotte, a junior at La Center High School in Washington and Northwest Blue Crush Aquatic Club in Portland, Oregon, has announced her verbal commitment to swim for Washington State in the fall of 2020. A sprint specialist, Grotte has career fastest times in the 50 and 100-yard freestyles that are just outside what it took to qualify for the ‘C’ final at the 2019 Pac-12 Championship meet.

At the Washington 2A High School State Championship meet in November, Grotte was the runner up in both the 50-yard freestyle (24.07) and the 100-yard freestyle (52.59). In March at the 2019 Speedo Champions Series meet in Federal Way, she finished 20th place in the 50-yard freestyle (23.64).

Best Times in Yards:

  • 50 free – 23.64
  • 100 free – 51.87
  • 200 free – 1:53.16

Grotte will be joining fellow sprinter Ula McPherson and butterflier Lauren Lewis as members of the class of 2024 for Washington State.

If you have a commitment to report, please send an email with a photo (landscape, or horizontal, looks best) and a quote to Recruits@swimswam.com.

About the Fitter and Faster Swim Tour

The Fitter & Faster Swim Tour produces swim clinics featuring elite stars of the sport and the most innovative teaching platforms. FFT Swim Clinics can be customized to meet age and skill level of every team and community. Call 786-837-6880 or visit http://www.fitterandfaster.com/ to learn more.

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Read the full story on SwimSwam: Washington Silver Medal Sprinter Hailey Grotte Commits to WSU For 2020

William Christenson Set to Swim for Minnesota Beginning in Fall 2020

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By Wendy Mayer on SwimSwam

Fitter and Faster Swim Clinics is the proud sponsor of SwimSwam’s College Recruiting Channel and all commitment news. For many, swimming in college is a lifelong dream that is pursued with dedication and determination. Fitter and Faster is proud to honor these athletes and those who supported them on their journey.

Olympia, Washington’s William Christenson is taking his skills across the country to the University of Minnesota, verbally committing to swim for the Gophers beginning in the fall of 2020.

Most recently, Christenson won gold in the long course 1500 free (16:59.74) and 50 back (30.15) at the PN IST Spring Open A-3 Me in May. He also was second in the 200 back (2:15.03), third in the 100 fly (59.57) and seventh in the 100 breast (1:12.80).

The USA Swimming Scholastic All-American posted five top six finishes at the 2018 Pacific Northwest Senior Long Course Championships, placing second in the 200 fly and 400 IM, fourth in the 100 fly and 200 IM and sixth in the 200 free.

In 2017, Christenson finished third in the 1650 free and fourth in the 200 fly and 500 free at the Washington State Senior Short Course Championships.

“I am incredibly excited and honored to announce my verbal commitment to swim and study at the University of Minnesota,” Christenson said. “Right from the start, I felt that this would be a place I could be successful in the classroom and in the pool. Both the coaching staff and the swimmers made me feel at home and I am ready to be apart of this incredible team.”

Christenson swims for Evergreen Swim Club out of Olympia, Washington. He did not swim for his high school.

Christenson has achieved the 2019 Winter Juniors standard in the 200 fly (1:50.15). He also boasts 2019 Futures times in the 1000 free (9:30.56), 100 fly (51.00), 200 IM (1:54.92) and 400 IM (4:01.17). In long course events, Christenson has achieved Winter Juniors times in the 200 fly, 200 IM and 400 IM and 2019 Futures standards in the 400 free and 800 free.

Top Times (SCY)

  • 500 free – 4:32.74
  • 1000 free – 9:30.56
  • 1650 free – 15:47.64
  • 100 fly – 51.00
  • 200 fly – 1:50.15
  • 200 IM – 1:54.92
  • 400 IM – 4:01.17

Christenson’s 200 fly time would rank third on the current Minnesota team behind juniors Matt Thomas (1:44.68) and Tuomas Pokkinen (1:46.19).

His 400 IM time would be fourth among current Minnesota swimmers: senior Michael Messner (3:50.80), junior Justin Torres (3:58.99) and sophomore Evan Yoder (4:00.06).

If you have a commitment to report, please send an email with a photo (landscape, or horizontal, looks best) and a quote to Recruits@swimswam.com.

About the Fitter and Faster Swim Tour 

The Fitter & Faster Swim Tour produces swim clinics featuring elite stars of the sport and the most innovative teaching platforms. FFT Swim Clinics can be customized to meet age and skill level of every team and community. Call 786-837-6880 or visit http://www.fitterandfaster.com/ to learn more.

FFT SOCIAL

Instagram – @fitterandfasterswimtour

Facebook – @fitterandfastertour

Twitter – @fitterandfaster

FFT is a SwimSwam partner.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: William Christenson Set to Swim for Minnesota Beginning in Fall 2020

España solo enviará 9 nadadores la Universiada de Nápoles

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By Adrian Mancebo on SwimSwam

XXX Universiada de verano

  • 4-11 julio 2019
  • Piscina Scandone Napoli, Nápoles (Italia)
  • Piscina larga (50m)
  • Página web oficial

La Real Federación Española de natación (RFEN) ha convocado oficialmente a 9 nadadores para participar en la XXX Universiada de verano (World University Games). La Universiada se celebrará en Nápoles (Italia) del 4 al 11 de julio de 2019.

España enviará equipo de natación a la Universiada por primera vez desde 2013, cuando llevaron a 7 nadadores. En las ediciones de 2015 y 2017, España no envió equipo.

Los 9 nadadores que representarán a España en Universiada son:

Nadador/aClubPruebas
Catalina CorróCN Sabadell200/400 estilos, 400 libre
Judit IgnacioCN Sabadell50/100 mariposa
Joan BallesterCE Mediterrani100/200 braza
Alex CastejónCN Sabadell200 braza, 400 estilos
Miguel DuránCN Terrassa200/400/800 libre
Albert EscritsCN Sant Andreu800/1500 libre
Alberto LozanoCN Sant Andreu50/100 mariposa
Manuel MartosCD H2O El Ejido100/200 espalda
Marcos RodríguezCN Santa Olaya400 libre

Además, España tirará en Nápoles los relevos 4×200 libre y 4×100 estilos masculino.

Los criterios de selección establecían que la convocatoria se basaría en los resultados del Open de Sabadell, celebrado en abril. Se iban a seleccionar un máximo de 12 nadadores (6 hombres y 6 mujeres), aunque finalmente la RFEN ha decidido incumplir el criterio llevando a 7 hombres y tan solo dos mujeres. Los nadadores tenían de rebajar las marcas mínimas establecidas para acceder al Equipo Nacional Absoluto (E.N.A.).

Read the full story on SwimSwam: España solo enviará 9 nadadores la Universiada de Nápoles

2019 World Champs Preview: Sun Brings the Wins (& the Drama) In Men’s 400 Free

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

2019 FINA World Aquatics Championships

  • All sports: Friday, July 12 – Sunday, July 28, 2019
  • Pool swimming: Sunday, July 21 – Sunday, July 28, 2019
  • The Nambu University Municipal Aquatics Center, Gwangju, Korea
  • Meet site
  • FinaTV Live Stream
  • Live results

MEN’S 400M FREESTYLE

  • World Record: 3:40.07, Paul Biedermann (GER), 2009
  • World Championship Record: 3:40.07, Paul Biedermann (GER), 2009
  • World Junior Record: 3:44.60, Mack Horton (AUS), 2014
  • Defending World Champion: Sun Yang (CHN), 3:41.38

We’ll kick off our 2019 World Championships previews with the event that will hand out the first pool swimming medals of this year’s World Championships: the men’s 400 free.

This one doesn’t come without controversy. If China’s Sun Yang is the king of two things, it’s winning the 400 free and creating international drama… and only maybe in that order.

The latest example of the latter: Britain’s The Sunday Times reported in January that Sun had ‘abused’ drug testers in a kerfluffle over their doping control credentials and paperwork. The paper reported that Sun’s mother ultimately ordered the drug testers to destroy a vial of Sun’s blood. A FINA panel said it could never know what happened that night and refused to ban Sun, though WADA is still reportedly working to get the freestyler punished.

Long story short, Sun, 27, is still likely to be competing this summer, barring a major shakeup from the powers that be. That leads us to his historic 400 free prowess, which suggests he’s the heavy favorite to make it four-straight World titles in this event.

Sun won World Champs gold in 2013, 2015 and 2017. In between, he won Asian Games gold in 2014 and 2018. He started that whole streak with a 2012 Olympic gold in the 400. He’s got the fastest time in the world this season (3:42.75 on the FINA Champions Series) and also led the world ranks last year (3:41.94; no one else in the world was better than 3:43.7) and the year before (3:41.38; no one else was better than 3:43.3). The lone blemish on his record is a 2016 Olympic silver medal, and in that race, he was just .13 seconds from gold.

The only man to topple Sun in major competition over the past eight years was Australia’s Mack Hortonwho won that Rio Olympic gold in 3:41.55. The leadup to that race produced some fireworks, with Horton publicly calling Sun a “drug cheat” (the smashed vial was far from Sun’s first brush with anti-doping rules).

But the renewal of that rivalry is a little bit overshadowed by Horton’s 2019 struggles. The 23-year-old Horton had a rough go of it at Australia’s World Championship Trials, technically missing the team before being added to the roster anyway as a discretionary pick. (Specific events aren’t listed on Swimming Australia’s release, but Horton seems like a good bet for the 400 free, where he was second at Australian Trials).

That could be a dire omen for Horton, a signal of injury, illness or a dropoff in training. He’s only been 3:46.4 this season. On the other hand, it could be as simple as a badly-misjudged drop taper from an athlete not wanting to break training a month out of Worlds. Horton did go 3:43.76 last year (good for #2 in the world for the season), won Commonwealths and was second at Pan Pacs, so he’s still a strong medal contender, provided June was an aberration and not a trend.

The Sun/Horton battle raged at both the 2016 Olympics and 2017 World Championship, and Italy’s Gabriele Detti slid in for bronze at both meets. Detti lost most of his 2017-2018 season to a shoulder injury, but he looked to be back near 100% with a lifetime-best 3:43.36 at Italian Nationals in April. Detti is only 24 and looked like one of the faster-rising distance men in the world before his injury.

But if it’s momentum you’re talking about, the man to watch is Lithuania’s Danas RapsysThe 24-year-old was a youth standout in backstroke and more known for the 200 free early in his senior international career. But since early 2018, he’s cut his 400 free best from 3:53 to 3:43.36, hitting that time at the FINA Champions Series in Budapest. He sits tied with Detti for #2 in the world ranks and only appears to be getting better with each swim. With the retirement of Olympic champ Ruta Meilutyte, Lithuania needs a new face for its national swimming program; Rapsys is on the cusp of taking that mantle, especially if he can come up with a big medal in the first event of the 2019 World Championships.

Australia’s other likely contender is Jack McLoughlinwho won Pan Pacs gold last summer (3:44.20) and beat Horton at Australian Trials (3:44.34) this year. (19-year-old Elijah Winnington has also been 3:44 this year, but didn’t make the Worlds roster).

Last year was an odd down season in this event worldwide, with just three men going under 3:45 at any point in the season. (That was probably exacerbated by Detti’s absence). By contrast, five men have already broken 3:45 this season, with all of the major international meets still to come. That’s going to mean a lot of last year’s major medal-winners will need much-improved seasons to contend for a medal at Worlds. Mykhailo Romanchuk was the European champ for Ukraine last year, going 3:45.18. He’s had a good season, particularly in the 800 free, and could be a factor, though he’ll probably need a better drop than the four tenths he dropped from his lifetime-best last summer.

There was some talk of James Guy moving away from this event, but that doesn’t seem to be happening. The Brit was a finalist at the 2016 Olympics and 2017 Worlds, and also won bronze at Commonwealths last year in 3:45.3. On the other hand, he didn’t swim it at British Nationals and thus shouldn’t be eligible for entry there, though most countries can usually make exceptions to their selection rules wherever they want to.

Russia’s Aleksandr Krasnykh is a strong contender: he was 3:45 both this year and last. Austria’s Felix Auboeck was a Worlds finalist in 2017, but had a rough 2018 and wasn’t very good in the 500 yard freestyle this college season. The American men may have to scrape for a medal here: Zane Grothe was a 2017 Worlds finalist and a Pan Pacs bronze medalist last summer, but was off his best last summer, as were a lot of the top Americans. Some of that may have been the jet lag of a round-the-world trip to their main international meet – but Team USA will have to face that again this year, trading Tokyo (Pan Pacs last summer) for Gwangju (Worlds this summer). A return to his 3:44-low form from 2017 would make Grothe a true medal contender, though. Meanwhile Grant Shoults has only competed twice since last summer and has been far off his bests. Any potential roster replacements probably won’t be major medal threats, either.

There will be a few notable absences. The home crowd won’t get to see national icon Park Tae-hwan, who isn’t retired, but isn’t competing at Worlds this summer, either. He was 4th at Worlds in 2017. Australia’s David McKeon was a finalist in both 2016 and 2017, but bowed out of last summer’s major competitions with a shoulder injury.

TOP 8 PICKS:

PlaceSwimmerCountrySeason-BestLifetime-Best
1Sun YangChina3:42.753:40.14
2Gabriele DettiItaly3:43.363:43.36
3Danas RapsysLithuania3:43.363:43.36
4Mack HortonAustralia3:46.473:41.55
5Jack McLoughlinAustralia3:44.343:44.20
6Zane GrotheUSA3:48.273:44.43
7Mykhailo RomanchukUkraine3:47.083:45.18
8Aleksandr KrasnykhRussia3:45.553:45.55

Darkhorse: 21-year-old Florian Wellbrock is a rising distance star for Germany. He broke through for his first major international medals last summer taking European Champs gold in the 1500 and bronze in the 800. Wellbrock didn’t get to swim the 400 at that meet, but smashed his lifetime-best from a 3:47.1 to a 3:45.5 back in April. He’s listed on Germany’s roster in the 400, 800 and 1500 this year, and it wouldn’t be a surprise to see his rise continue across all three events, though he’s certainly a bigger factor in the distances.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: 2019 World Champs Preview: Sun Brings the Wins (& the Drama) In Men’s 400 Free

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