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Kayla Van Der Merwe Lowers 100 Breast British Age Group Record to 1:07.06

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By Anne Lepesant on SwimSwam

7th FINA World Junior Swimming Championships 2019

  • 50-Meter Course
  • Duna Arena, Budapest (Hungary)
  • Pool swimming: Tuesday, August 20 – Sunday, August 25, 2019
  • Heats 9:30am GMT+2 (3:30 am EDT / 12:30 am PDT)/ Semifinals and Finals 5:30pm GMT+2 (11:30am EDT / 8:30am PDT)
  • Meet site
  • Entries book
  • FinaTV Live Stream (subscription required)
  • Live results

Friday, 23 August 2019

16-year-old Kayla Van Der Merwe lowered her own British Age Group Record for 16-year-old girls with 1:07.06 in the 100m breaststroke final at FINA World Junior Swimming Championships in Budapest. That swim earned her a bronze medal behind Russia’s Evgenia Chikunova (1:06.93) and USA’s Kaitlyn Dobler (1:06.97) and took .06 off her previous British Age Group Record of 1:07.12.

Van Der Merwe had gone 1:07.12 in her gold-medal performance at the 2019 LEN European Junior Championships in Kazan Russia in July. There, she broke the 1:08 barrier for the first time in semi-finals with 1:07.96 before going 1:07.12 to win gold in finals. The latter swim erased Olympian Siobhan-Marie O’Connor from the British Age Group Records for 16-year-olds in the 100 breast. O’Connor had owned the record since 2012.

Van Der Merwe split 31.30-35.76 in Budapest on Friday night to go 1:07.06; in Kazan she had been 31.76-35.36. She won a silver medal in the 50m breast at World Junior Championships on Wednesday night, going 30.91 for another British Age Group Record.

Van Der Merwe remains the sixth-fastest British 100 breaststroker in history:

RankNameTimeDate
1Siobhan-Marie O’Connor1:06.3401/07/16
2Sophie Taylor1:06.3528/07/14
3Molly Renshaw1:06.7322/07/19
4Sarah Vasey1:06.7823/04/17
5Chloe Tutton1:06.8807/08/16
6Kayla Van Der Merwe1:07.0623/08/19

 

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Kayla Van Der Merwe Lowers 100 Breast British Age Group Record to 1:07.06


Srihari Nataraj Ne Kiya Ek Or Indian Best Time, 0.15sec Se Miss Hua Medal

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By Sanuj Srivastava on SwimSwam

7th FINA World Junior Swimming Championships 2019

  • Duna Arena, Budapest (Hungary)
  • Pool Swimming: Tuesday, August 20 – Sunday, August 25, 2019
  • Heats 9:30am Gmt+2 (3:30 Am Edt / 12:30 Am Pdt)/ Semifinals And Finals 5:30pm Gmt+2 (11:30am Edt / 8:30am Pdt)
  • 50-Meter (Lcm) Course
  • Meet Site
  • Entries Book
  • Finatv Live Stream (Subscription Jruri Hai)
  • Live Results

India Ke Liye 7th FINA Budapest Swimming Championships 2019 Kafi Achi Rhi Kyuki Abhi Tak India Ko 2 New National Records Mil Chuke Hai And Sath Hi Sath Srihari Ne Apne Liye Olympic B Qualification Bhi Hasil Kar Liya Hai.

  • Sirhari Ne 100m Backstroke Ke Heats Me 55.18 Karke Olympic Ke B Qualification Ho Hasil Kiya, Semifinals Me 54.69 Ka Time Krte Hue Apni Jagah Finals Me Bnayi Or Isi Time Ke Sath Unhone India Ke Liye New Best Time Bhi Kiya, Halaki Finals Me Unhone Apne Semifinals Se Thoda Fraction Jyada Time Liya And 54.85 Ka Time Krke 7th Place Hasil Kari.
  • Uske Baad 22 August Ko 50m Backstroke Ke Heats Me 25.63 Ka Time Kiya Jo Ki India Ka Best Time Hua Fir Semifinals Me 25.52 Sec Ka Time Karke New Indian Best Time Kiya, Finals Me Srihari Ki Performance Kafi Achi Rhi Or Uhone 25.50 Ka Time Dete Hue Ek Baar Firse Indian Best Time Kiya And 6th Place Hasil Kari,Srihari Gold Medal Se Sirf 0.41sec Hi Piche Rhe.

Ab Srihari 200m Backstroke Me Compete Krenge Jo Ki 25th August Ko Hogi.

Srihari Ke Alawa Jin Swimmers Ne Is Championships Me Participate Kiya Unki Performance Table Niche Di Gyi Hai.

NameEventHeatSemifinalFinal Time & Rank
Srihari Nataraj100m backstroke55.1854.69 (IBT)54.85(7th)
Srihari Nataraj50m Backstroke25.6325.5225.50(6th) IBT
Neel Roy100m Backstroke57.76– (38th)
Kenisha Gupta100m Freestyle58.14– (47th)
Aryan Nehra400m Freestyle04:05.07– (43rd)
Advait Page800m Freestyle08:05.94– (12th)
Aryan Nehra200m Freestyle01:57.72– (53rd)
Kenisha Gupta50m Butterfly29.72– (52nd)
Neel Roy200m Freestyle01:53.07– (30th)
Neel Roy50m Freestyle23.66– (34th)
Tanish George Mathew100m Butterfly56.01– (41st)
Kushi Dinesh800m Freestyle09:24.98– (26th)
Kushi Dinesh400m Freestyle04:31.74– (38th)
Tanish George Mathew50m Butterfly25.55– (41st)

*IBT (INDIAN BEST TIME)

Indian Swimming Or International Swimming Ke News Janne Ke Liye Facebook Par Swimswam Hindi Ko Like Karna Na Bhule:- Swimswamhindi

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Srihari Nataraj Ne Kiya Ek Or Indian Best Time, 0.15sec Se Miss Hua Medal

Pomona-Pitzer Earns Top Spot in CWPA Division III Preseason Poll

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By Wendy Mayer on SwimSwam

With the first USA Water Polo Division III National Championship set for December, Pomona-Pitzer begins the year as the top team in the Collegiate Water Polo Association Preseason Top 10.

Pomona-Pitzer, which made the NCAA Championships men’s field in 2016, 2017 and 2018, posted a 22-7 record and 14-0 mark in the Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference last year. The Sagehens return first team Division III All-American goalkeeper James Kelbert and attacker Sam Sasaki and second teamers Dylan Elliott and Joseph Schafer, but must replace Association of Collegiate Water Polo Coaches’ Division III Player of the Year Adam Ward. Elliott scored 45 goals in 2018, while Sasaki and Schafer found the back of the net 44 and 42 times respectively. Kelbert made 204 saves and boasted a 50.6 save percentage and an 8.85 goals against average.

Whittier College checks in at No. 2 after going 15-14 in 2018, including a second place effort in SCIAC play. The Poets return the SCIAC Newcomer of the Year in Eric Borunda and All-Americans in Borunda (second team), Hans Zdolsek (first team) and goalie Murat Ersoz (honorable mention). Borunda put in 49 goals in 2018, while Zdolsek chipped in 48 scores and Ersoz registered 173 saves.

Claremont-Mudd-Scripps was picked third in the poll after going 16-11 in 2018, including a runnerup finish at the SCIAC Tournament. The Stags bring back first team All-American Zach Rossman, second teamer Will Clark and honorable mention selection Ethan Lewis. Rossman scored a team-high 44 goals, while Clark netted 38 and Lewis put in 34.

Cal Lutheran and MIT round out the Top 5. MIT is one of two non-SCIAC in the Top 10 alongside Johns Hopkins (#8).

CLU was 16-12 in 2018, including an 8-6 mark in conference play. First team All-American Ben Brown and Honorable Mention selections George Lundgren and Dillon Goldsmith headline the Kingsmen’s returning roster. Lundgren scored a team-best 50 goals, while Brown and Goldsmith each found the back of the net 49 times.

MIT went 10-13 in 2018 and registered the program’s first ever Northeast Water Polo Conference Tournament victory. First team All-American Miller Geschke and Honorable Mention selection Evan Kim headline the 2019 roster. Geschke led the Engineers in goals (58), assists (28) and points (86), while Kim chipped in 31 goals, 26 assists and 57 points.

Currently 16 teams are eligible for the Division III National Championship: Austin College, Caltech, Cal Lutheran, Chapman, Claremont-Mudd-Scripps (CMS), Connecticut College, Johns Hopkins, La Verne, MIT, Monmouth College, Occidental, Penn. State Behrend, Pomona-Pitzer, Redlands, Washington & Jefferson and Whittier.

The top two teams from the SCIAC and the CWPA Division III ranks are set to square off in the Division III Championship.

2019 Men’s Varsity Division III Top 10 (Preseason)
RankTeamFinal 2018 PollPoints
1Pomona-Pitzer Colleges1100
2Whittier College589
3Claremont-Mudd-Scripps Colleges2 (T)87
4California Lutheran University482
5Massachusetts Institute of Technology2 (T)81
6Chapman University677
7University of Redlands772
8Johns Hopkins University869
9Occidental College946
10University of La Verne1038
RVAustin CollegeNR23
RVPen State BehrendNR11

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Pomona-Pitzer Earns Top Spot in CWPA Division III Preseason Poll

Lima 2019 Parapan American Games To Be The Largest To Date

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By Tomas Rodriguez on SwimSwam

LIMA 2019 PARAPAN AM GAMES

  • Villa Deportiva Nacional – Videna, Lima, Peru
  • Para-Swimming: August 25th – August 29th
  • Prelims 11 AM / Finals 8:30 PM (local time/US Central Time)
  • Official Website
  • Live results

A total of 1,850 athletes from 33 countries will be in action across 17 sports in the Peruvian capital from Friday 23 August to 1 September, making it the largest Parapan American Games to date. Para-swimming competition starts August 25th and stretches until August 29th.

The Lima 2019 Parapan American Games will be the largest edition the event has seen thus far. A total of 17 sports will compete at the Games, with 3 of them making their debut at the Parapan American Games.

Para-Badminton, Shooting Para Sport, and Paralympic Taekwondo will make their Parapan Am debut in Lima. Further, for the first time, five sports will be streamed live. These sports are Para-Athletics, Para-Badminton, Para-Swimming, Wheelchair Basketball, and Wheelchair Rugby. The live stream service can be accessed here.

As a refresher, Brazil topped the medals table in the last edition at Toronto 2015 and has the biggest delegation this year with 337 athletes.

When it comes to the Para-Swimming portion of the Games, a total of 237 athletes from 24 different countries will be making a splash.

Brazil’s 14-Paralympic champion Daniel Dias is the number one star in the swimming pool. Dias has won 27 medals at Parapan American Games, all of them gold.

The Opening Ceremony will take place tonight at the Estadio Nacional with 500 artists and volunteers, out of which 55 have a disability. The Opening Ceremony will showcase Peru’s rich and ancient history.

The creative concept was developed by Hansel Cereza, the man behind the iconic Opening Ceremony of the Barcelona 1992 Olympic Games.

Per the International Paralympic Committee (IPC), the 2019 Parapan American Games will also offer pathways to the Tokyo 2020 Paralympics in 12 sports.

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Lima 2019 Parapan American Games To Be The Largest To Date

Artur Barseghyan Lowers Own Armenian Record in 100m Free at World Juniors

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By Madeleine Lepesant on SwimSwam

7th FINA World Junior Swimming Championships 2019

  • 50-Meter Course
  • Duna Arena, Budapest (Hungary)
  • Pool swimming: Tuesday, August 20 – Sunday, August 25, 2019
  • Heats 9:30am GMT+2 (3:30 am EDT / 12:30 am PDT)/ Semifinals and Finals 5:30pm GMT+2 (11:30am EDT / 8:30am PDT)
  • Meet site
  • Entries book
  • FinaTV Live Stream(subscription required)
  • Live results

Artur Barseghyan broke his own Armenian national record in the 100m freestyle at the World Junior Championships in Budapest on Saturday. He lowered his previous benchmark time of 50.26 with a time of 49.96 in the semi-finals. He went out in his first 50 in 23.92 and came home in 26.04 for his first sub-50 swim.

Barseghyan touched sixth, qualifying for the finals which will take place on Sunday, giving him one more chance to lower his record. Below is a comparison of his previous record time, and his semi-final swim.

Barseghyan in Gwangju, South KoreaBarseghyan in Budapest, Hungary
50m24.6123.92
100m25.6526.04
50.2649.96

Barseghyan also holds the Armenian national record in the 50m (22.69) and the 50m fly (24.42), both of which he achieved at Youth Olympic Games in Buenos Aires, Argentina last October.

The 17-year-old ranks 57th in the world among 18-and-under boys in the 100m freestyle.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Artur Barseghyan Lowers Own Armenian Record in 100m Free at World Juniors

Budapest 2019 Day 5: Staffetta Veloce Femminile Di Bronzo

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By Aglaia Pezzato on SwimSwam

BUDAPEST 2019 – CAMPIONATI MONDIALI JUNIOR

Quinto pomeriggio di finali a Budapest per l’edizione del mondiale giovanile del 2019

1500 METRI STILE LIBERO FEMMINE

  • WR 15:20.48  LEDECKY Katie Indianapolis 2018
  • CR 15:59.51 PIGNATIELLO Delfina Indianapolis 2017
  • WJ 15:28.36 LEDECKY Katie Gold Coast 2014

PODIO

  1. PALLISTER Lani 15:58.86 Record dei Campionati

  2. SALIN Giulia 16:14.00

  3. TRAVIS Chase 16:18.04

Argento per Giulia Salin. Apre così l’italnuoto la penultima giornata di gare, con la seconda posizione dell’atleta veneziana nei millecinquecento metri nuotando un tempo di pochi decimi superiore il suo personal best segnato agli eurojunior di Kazan. Vince per distacco l’australiana Pallister che conclude così la tripletta del mezzofondo a questi campionati vincendo con il record della manifestazione i 400 gli 800 e i 1500 stile libero.

100 METRI STILE LIBERO MASCHI-SEMIFINALE

  • WR 46.91 CIELO FILHO Cesar, BRA Rome (ITA), 30 JUL 2009
  • CR 48.33 GIREV Ivan RUS Indianapolis, IN (USA), 28 AUG 2017
  • WJ 47.58 CHALMERS Kyle AUS Rio de Janeiro (BRA), 10 AUG 2016

FINALE

  1. MINAKOV Andrei 49.19
  2. HANSON Robin 49.65
  3. LIENDO EDWARDS Joshua 49.73
  4. CHANEY Adam 49.77
  5. NICETTO Stefano 49.92
  6. BARSEGHYAN Artur 49.96
  7. BUKHOV Vladyslav 50.00

? STEIN SARTORI Murilo 50.01
? MAGAHEY Jake 50.01

Conquista la finale Stefano Nicetto che strappa un crono sub 50″ e si prende la 5 posizione per la gara di domani pomeriggio. Per definire la start lista completa dovremo aspettare lo spareggio tra Stein Sartori e Magahey che hanno entrambi fermato la piastra a 50:01 in ottava posizione

100 METRI FARFALLA FEMMINE-SEMIFINALE

  • WR 55.48 SJOESTROEM Sarah SWE, Rio de Janeiro (BRA), 7 AUG 2016
  • CR 57.25 IKEE Rikako JPN,  Indianapolis, IN (USA), 28 AUG 2017
  • WJ 56.46 OLEKSIAK Penny CAN,  Rio de Janeiro (BRA),  7 AUG 2016

FINALE

  1. SHKURDAI Anastasiya 57.82
  2. HUSKE Torri 57.86
  3. CURZAN Claire 58.51
  4. QIAN Xinan 59.00
  5. HENDERSON Hanna 59.28
  6. BIASIBETTI Helena 59.62

  7. SABITOVA Aleksandra 59.73
  8. SASSEVILLE Genevieve 59.76

Si prospetta una lotta a due per la finale dei 100 farfalla donne, Shkurdai e Huske nuotano sotto i 58 secondi e affilano le unghie per la sfida di domani. Ci sarà anche Helena Basibetti che migliora il suo personale e con 59.62 nuota il sesto tempo d’ingresso.

50 METRI FARFALLA MASCHI-FINALE

  • WR: 22.27  GOVOROV Andrii  (UKR), 1 JUL 2018
  • CR: 23.22 ANDREW Michael (USA), 27 AUG 2017
  • WJ: 23.22 ANDREW Michael (USA), 27 AUG 2017

PODIO

  1. CECCON Thomas 23.37

  2. MINAKOV Andrei 23.39
  3. MILADINOV Josif 23.48

Un altro titolo mondiale giovanile a Budapest 2019 per Thomas Ceccon che dalla corsia 2 si aggiudica i 50 farfalla sfiorando di un solo centesimo il suo record italiano di categoria.

50 METRI STILE LIBERO FEMMINE-SEMIFINALE

  • WR 23.67 SJOESTROEM Sarah SWE Budapest (HUN) 29 JUL 2017
  • CR 24.59 IKEE Rikako JPN Indianapolis, IN (USA) 28 AUG 2017
  • WJ 24.33, IKEE Rikako JPN Tokyo (JPN)  15 SEP 2017

FINALE

  1. PARKER Maxine 24.96
  2. HARRIS Meg 25.02
  3. WALSH Gretchen 25.10
  4. CANNY Aimee 25.29
  5. GANGL Nina 29.36
  6. COCCONCELLI Costanza 25.49

  7. NOWACZYK Lison 25.50
  8. HENDERSON Hanna 25.52

Passa il turno Costanza Cocconcelli nei 50 stile. La velocista dell’azzurra91 nuota 25.49 e segna il sesto tempo delle semifinali. Parker nuota già sotto i 25 secondi prenotando la corsia centrale.

50 METRI RANA MASCHI-SEMIFINALE

  • WR 25.95 PEATY Adam GBR Budapest (HUN) 25 JUL 2017
  • CR 27.02 MARTINENGHI Nicolo ITA Indianapolis, IN (USA)  27 AUG 2017
  • WJ 26.97 MARTINENGHI Nicolo ITA  Riccione (ITA)  4 APR 2017

FINALE

  1. GERASIMENKO Vladislav 27.89
  2. GOODBURN Archie 27.91
  3. ASPOUGALIS Arkadios 27.98
  4. MASTROMATTEO Gabe 28.03
  5. MATHENY Josh 28.16
  6. SATO Shoma 28.20
  7. HOUSEMAN Kevin 28.32
  8. BOOTH Kyle 28.34

50 METRI DORSO FEMMINE-FINALE

  • WR: 26.98 LIU Xiang (CHN), 21 AUG 2018
  • CR: 27.81 FA’AMAUSILI Gabrielle (NZL),  29 AUG 2015
  • WJ: 27.49 ATHERTON Minna (AUS) ,  29 JAN 2016

PODIO

  1. JOB Bronte 27.87
  2. HANNAH Jade 27.91

2.VASKINA Daria 27.91

5. COCCONCELLI Costanza 28.44

Nonostante il doppio impegno odierno e la vicinanza delle gare disputate Costanza Cocconcelli nuota i 50 dorso in linea con quanto fatto nei turni precedenti. Ferma il cronometro a 28.44 che le vale la quinta posizione della gara vinta da Job Bronte e con due medaglie d’argento alle sue spalle.

400 METRI MISTI MASCHI-FINALE

  • WR 4:03.84 PHELPS Michael USA Beijing (CHN), 10 AUG 2008
  • CR 4:14.65 GONZALEZ Hugo ESP Indianapolis, IN (USA),  27 AUG 2017
  • WJ 4:13.39 FOSTER Carson,  USA Palo Alto (USA),  2 AUG 2019

PODIO

  1. PAPASTAMOS Apostolos 4:11.93 Record del Mondo Junior/ Record dei Campionati
  2. BORODIN Ilia 4:12.95
  3. MARCHAND Leon 4:16.37

Super preestazione nei 400 misti uomini da parte del greco Papastamos che smantella il precedente Record del Mondo giovanile davanti al russo Borodin che nuota a sua volta sotto il precedente record che era stato registrato da Foster, americano a sorpresa molto lontano dal podio in questa gara.

STAFFETTA 4×100 M STILE LIBERO FEMMINE

  • WR 3:30.05 AUS – Gold Coast (AUS) 5 APR 2018
  • CR 3:36.19 CAN –  Indianapolis, IN (USA) 27 AUG 2017
  • WJ 3:36.19 CAN – Indianapolis (USA)27 AUG 2017

PODIO

  1. USA 3:37.41
  2. AUS 3:40.85
  3. ITA 3:42.04

TARANTINO Chiara 55.47

MASCIOPINTO Maria Ginevra 55.39

MENICUCCI Emma 55.37

PESENTI Gaia 55.81

Bronzo per la staffetta veloce al femminile. Le azzurrine nuotano 4 frazioni molto equilibrate e resistono all’attacco della Russia che rimane ai piedi del podio.

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Josif Miladinov Breaks 50 FL Buglarian National Record at 2019 World Juniors

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By Nick Pecoraro on SwimSwam

7TH FINA WORLD JUNIOR SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIPS 2019

  • 50-Meter Course
  • Duna Arena, Budapest (Hungary)
  • Pool swimming: Tuesday, August 20 – Sunday, August 25, 2019
  • Heats 9:30am GMT+2 (3:30 am EDT / 12:30 am PDT)/ Semifinals and Finals 5:30pm GMT+2 (11:30am EDT / 8:30am PDT)
  • Meet site
  • Entries book
  • FinaTV Live Stream (subscription required)
  • Live results

During the final of the men’s 50 fly at the 2019 World Junior championships, 16-year-old Josif Miladinov swam his way to a bronze medal and Buglarian national record.

In the semifinals, Miladinov first set the national record with a 23.60 to tie for third into the top 8. In the final, Miladinov dropped down to a 23.48 to secure bronze and re-break his day-old national record. This bronze is now Bulgaria’s first medal of these championships.

Earlier in the meet, Miladinov lead the prelims of the men’s 100 fly with a 51.91, also setting a Bulgarian national record. In the final, however, Miladinov got touched out by 0.06s to finish fourth and off the podium.

Miladinov also is a member of the 4×100 medley relay and 4×100 free relay national record teams to bring his national records count to four.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Josif Miladinov Breaks 50 FL Buglarian National Record at 2019 World Juniors

2019 World Junior Championships: Day 5 Live Finals Recap

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By Nick Pecoraro on SwimSwam

7TH FINA WORLD JUNIOR SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIPS 2019

  • 50-Meter Course
  • Duna Arena, Budapest (Hungary)
  • Pool swimming: Tuesday, August 20 – Sunday, August 25, 2019
  • Heats 9:30am GMT+2 (3:30 am EDT / 12:30 am PDT)/ Semifinals and Finals 5:30pm GMT+2 (11:30am EDT / 8:30am PDT)
  • Meet site
  • Entries book
  • FinaTV Live Stream (subscription required)
  • Live results

Tonight, five more world junior champions will be newly crowned while four events will filter down to an elite top 8 to contest for the top 3 medals.

The woman to watch tonight is 17-year-old Aussie Lani Pallister, who comes in as the top seed in the women’s 1500 free timed final. With her seed time 7 seconds ahead of her nearest foe, Italy’s Giulia Salin, Pallister has a shot at sweeping the distance events after already winning the 400 and 800 free finals.

Repping the green and gold as well is 16-year-old Aussie Bronte Job, who leads the women’s 50 back final. Her semifinals top time of 27.83 frightened the 2015 championship record of 27.81 and will be on record watch tonight.

More of tonight’s top finals seeds are Russians Aleksandr Shchegolev (50 fly) and Ilia Borodin (400 IM), alongside the American women in the 4×100 free relay.

Women’s 1500 Freestyle – FASTEST HEAT

  • WR— 15:20.48, LEDECKY Katie (USA), 2018
  • CR— 15:59.51, PIGNATIELLO Delfina (ARG), 2017
  • WJR— 15:28.36, LEDECKY Katie (USA), 2014

Top 3:

17-year-old Aussie Lani Pallister continued to show her dominance with her record-breaking 1500 free performance. Her efforts allowed her to win the event by 16 seconds and just nip the 2017 championships record by less than a second. Pallister now ranks 11th in the world this year and is the 4th-fastest Aussie performer in history while remaining the fastest 17-year-old in Australian age history.

Taking the silver was Italian Giulia Salin while American Chase Travis took the bronze. Travis’ time of 16:18.04 now puts her as the 9th-fastest 15-16 performer in US age group history.

MEN’S 100 FREESTYLE – SEMIFINALS

  • WR— 46.91, CIELO FILHO Cesar (BRA), 2009
  • CR— 48.33, GIREV Ivan (RUS), 2017
  • WJR— 47.58, CHALMERS Kyle (AUS), 2016

Top 8 Qualifiers:

  1. MINAKOV Andrei RUS- 49.19
  2. HANSON Robin SWE- 49.65
  3. LIENDO Joshua CAN- 49.73
  4. CHANEY Adam USA- 49.77
  5. NICETTO Stefano ITA- 49.92
  6. BARSEGHYAN Artur ARM- 49.96
  7. BUKHOV Vladyslav UKR- 50.00
  8. STEIN SARTORI Murilo BRA/MAGAHEY Jake USA- 50.01 *swim-off required

Andrei Minakov leads the men’s 100 free semifinals with a half-second advantage over Swede Robin Hanson. Canadian Joshua Edwards Liendo and American Adam Chaney will sandwich the top 2 into tomorrow’s final in lane 3 and lane 6.

Italian Stefano Nicetto just clipped the 50-second barrier along with Artur Barseghyan, who re-set his Armenian national record in the event. Ukraine’s Vladyslav Bukhov is locked in for the top 8 while Brazil’s Murilo Sartori and USA’s Jake Magahey will need to swim-off for the eighth spot.

WOMEN’S 100 BUTTERFLY – SEMIFINALS

  • WR— 55.48, SJOESTROEM Sarah (SWE), 2016
  • CR— 57.25, IKEE Rikako (JPN), 2017
  • WJR— 56.46, OLEKSIAK Penny (CAN), 2016

Top 8 Qualifiers:

  1. SHKURDAI Anastasiya BLR- 57.82
  2. HUSKE Torri USA- 57.86
  3. CURZAN Claire USA- 58.51
  4. QIAN Xinan CHN- 59.00
  5. HENDERSON Hanna CAN- 59.28
  6. BIASIBETTI Helena ITA- 59.62
  7. SABITOVA Aleksandra RUS- 59.73
  8. SASSEVILLE Genevieve CAN- 59.76

Belarusian Anastasiya Shkurdai had a thrilling race with 50 fly champ Torri Huske of the USA. Shkurdai won the second semifinal with a 57.82, Huske was 0.06s off her US 15-16 NAG. Fellow American Claire Curzan domiated the first semifinal to qualify third with a 58.51.

The rest of the remaining top 8 qualifiers were all in the 59-second range.

MEN’S 50 BUTTERFLY – FINAL

  • WR– 22.27, GOVOROV Andrii (UKR), 2018
  • CR– 23.22, ANDREW Michael (USA), 2017
  • WJR– 23.22, ANDREW Michael (USA), 2017

Top 3:

Italian Thomas Ceccon, after winning a backstroke world title already, flipped onto his stomach and flew to his second world title in the men’s 50 fly. Following closely behind him was Russian Andrei Minakov, who finished 0.02s behind Ceccon.

Bronze medalist Josif Miladinov finished with a new Bulgarian national record time of 23.48.

WOMEN’S 50 FREESTYLE – SEMIFINALS

  • WR– 23.67, SJOESTROEM Sarah (SWE), 2017
  • CR– 24.59, IKEE Rikako (JPN), 2017
  • WJR– 24.33, IKEE Rikako (JPN), 2017

Top 8 Qualifiers:

  1. PARKER Maxine USA- 24.96
  2. HARRIS Meg AUS- 25.02
  3. WALSH Gretchen USA- 25.10
  4. CANNY Aimee RSA- 25.29
  5. GANGL Nina AUT- 25.36
  6. COCCONCELLI Costanza ITA- 25.49
  7. NOWACZYK Lison FRA- 25.50
  8. HENDERSON Hanna CAN- 25.52

Team USA captain Maxine Parker leads the women’s 50 free with her first sub-25 swim time of 24.96. Parker is now the 6th-fastest US 17-18 performer in age group history. Taking second place was Aussie Meg Harris, whose lifetime best of 25.02 keeps her as the 5th-fastest 17-year-old Aussie performer all-time.

100 free champion USA’s Gretchen Walsh confirmed her place in the 50 free with her 25.10 semifinals swim. South Africa’s Aimee Canny and Austria’s Nina Gangl, who is just two-tenths off the national record, have cruised into the final along with Italian Costanza Cocconcelli.

MEN’S 50 BREASTSTROKE – SEMIFINALS

  • WR– 25.95, PEATY Adam (GBR), 2017
  • CR– 27.02, MARTINENGHI Nicolo (ITA), 2017
  • WJR– 26.97, MARTINENGHI Nicolo (ITA), 2017

Top 8 Qualifiers:

  1. GERASIMENKO Vladislav RUS- 27.89
  2. GOODBURN Archie GBR- 27.91
  3. ASPOUGALIS Arkadios GRE- 27.98
  4. MASTROMATTEO Gabe CAN- 28.03
  5. MATHENY Josh USA- 28.16
  6. SATO Shoma JPN- 28.20
  7. HOUSEMAN Kevin USA- 28.32
  8. BOOTH Kyle GBR- 28.34

Russian Vladislav Gerasimenko leads the men’s 50 breast final along with fellow sub-28 performers Britain’s Archie Goodburn and Greece’s Arkadios Aspougalis. Goodburn was just hundredths off his lifetime best from the 2019 European Juniors, which puts him as the second fastest 18-year-old British performer all-time.

Joining Goodburn for Team Britain is Kyle Booth while Americans Josh Matheny and Kevin Houseman will represent the stars and stripes in tomorrow’s final.

WOMEN’S 50 BACKSTROKE – FINAL

  • WR– 26.98, LIU Xiang (CHN), 2018
  • CR– 27.81, FA’AMAUSILI Gabrielle (NZL), 2015
  • WJR– 27.49, ATHERTON Minna (AUS), 2016

Top 3:

Although not reaching the championship record, Aussie Bronte Job stayed ahead over Canadian Jade Hannah and Russian Daria Vaskina to secure a world junior title. Hannah and Vaskina tied for second place with a 27.91.

Job still remains the second fastest 16-year-old Aussie event performer with her 27.83 semifinals time. Hannah, after winning the 100/200 back, remains the second-fastest Canadian all-time and as the fastest Canadian time this season.

MEN’S 400 IM – FINAL

  • WR– 4:03.84, PHELPS Michael (USA), 2008
  • CR– 4:14.65, GONZALEZ Hugo (ESP), 2017
  • WJR– 4:13.39, FOSTER Carson (USA), 2019

Top 3:

Apostolos Papastamos came out on top in a surprising finish to dominate the month-old world junior record and 2017 championship record. Papastamos came into the final with a prelims seed of 4:19.42 and dropped 8 seconds to clock in his winning time of 4:11.93. He also took down the 2012 Greek national record of 4:14.41.

Russian Ilia Borodin took the silver with a 4:12.95 while France’s Leon Marchand took a surprise bronze medal finish out of lane one.

WOMEN’S 4×100 FREESTYLE RELAY – FINAL

  • WR– 3:30.05, Australia, 2018
  • CR– 3:36.19, Canada, 2017
  • WJR– 3:36.19, Canada, 2017

Top 3:

  • GOLD: USA- 3:37.61
  • SILVER: Australia- 3:40.85
  • BRONZE: Italy- 3:42.04

The American women dominated the 4×100 free relay event with a final time of 3:37.61, just a second and a half off the 2017 championship and world junior record. Here’s a look at the American splits.

  • WALSH Gretchen- 54.13
  • HUSKE Torri- 54.50
  • COOPER Grace- 55.04
  • TANG Amy- 53.94
  • Final Time- 3:37.61

Taking the silver were the Aussies at 3:40.85 while the Italians took the bronze at 3:42.04. The French team would have finished third place, but had an early start on the last exchange and received a DQ.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: 2019 World Junior Championships: Day 5 Live Finals Recap


Apostolos Papastamos Torches World Junior, Greek Records in 400 IM with 4:11.93

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By Anne Lepesant on SwimSwam

7th FINA World Junior Swimming Championships 2019

  • 50-Meter Course
  • Duna Arena, Budapest (Hungary)
  • Pool swimming: Tuesday, August 20 – Sunday, August 25, 2019
  • Heats 9:30am GMT+2 (3:30 am EDT / 12:30 am PDT)/ Semifinals and Finals 5:30pm GMT+2 (11:30am EDT / 8:30am PDT)
  • Meet site
  • Entries book
  • FinaTV Live Stream (subscription required)
  • Live results

MEN’S 400 IM – FINAL

Greece’s Apostolos Papastamos torched the World Junior Record and Championships Record in the final of the men’s 400 IM in Budapest on Saturday night. He also took down the Greek national record of 4:14.41, set in 2012 by Ioannis Drymonakos at the European Championships. The previous World Junior Record of 4:13.39 had been set by USA’s Carson Foster at the 2019 U.S. National Championships. Foster was in the final of the 400 IM on Saturday night at World Juniors but he placed sixth with 4:17.39.

Hugo Gonzalez of Spain had set the Championships Record in this event at 2017 World Juniors in Indianapolis. He went 4:14.65 to win gold to beat Gunnar Bentz’s meet record of 4:14.97 from 2013.

Papastamos had a monster second half of the race. He was in fourth place after the butterfly, going out in 57.49. By the end of the backstroke he had moved into second place behind Foster, who at that point was 2/10 under his WJR pace with 2:00.89. With a split of 1:10.58 on the breaststroke, though, Papastamos moved into first place and was a full body length under the WJR record line. Russia’s Ilia Borodin, who split 1:10.69 on the breast, had moved to second place. Papastamos led Borodin by 6/10, while Foster had fallen back to third place by three seconds. Papastamos brought it home in 59.81

Below is a side-by-side comparison of Papastamos’s World Junior Record with that of Foster from July and Gonzalez’s from 2017:

Apostolos Papastamos, World Juniors1st 502nd 50100Running Carson Foster, US Nationals1st 502nd 50100Running Hugo Gonzalez 20171st 502nd 50100Running
Fly 27.0130.4857.4957.49 Fly 26.5030.2056.6056.60 Fly 26.2130.9557.1657.16
Back32.2031.851:04.052:01.54 Back32.8331.601:04.432:01.03 Back32.9831.691:04.672:01.83
Breast34.8835.701:10.583:12.12 Breast36.2936.651:12.943:13.97 Breast35.6136.511:12.123:13.95
Free30.0029.8159.814:11.93 Free30.1829.2459.424:13.39 Free30.8029.901:00.704:14.65

Borodin took the silver medal in the World Junior Championships final with 4:12.95, also finishing under the previous World Junior Record. France’s Léon Marchand surged past USA’s Jason Louser over the final 50 meters to snatch the bronze medal with 4:16.37.

Maxine Parker Jumps to #6 on 50 Free All-time List for 17-18 Girls with 24.96

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By Anne Lepesant on SwimSwam

7th FINA World Junior Swimming Championships 2019

  • 50-Meter Course
  • Duna Arena, Budapest (Hungary)
  • Pool swimming: Tuesday, August 20 – Sunday, August 25, 2019
  • Heats 9:30am GMT+2 (3:30 am EDT / 12:30 am PDT)/ Semifinals and Finals 5:30pm GMT+2 (11:30am EDT / 8:30am PDT)
  • Meet site
  • Entries book
  • FinaTV Live Stream (subscription required)
  • Live results

USA’s Maxine Parker jumped to number six in history for 17-18 girls in the 50-meter freestyle with her 24.96 semi-final performance in Budapest. Parker entered the meet with a seed time of 25.21 which placed her twelfth on the all-time list for the age group. She had gone 25.21 at 2019 U.S. Nationals, placing seventh in the championship final.

Parker came into the meet seeded third in the 50 free behind her teammate Gretchen Walsh (24.85) and Australia’s Meg Harris (25.09). Harris was fastest in heats on Saturday morning, qualifying for semis with 25.12. Walsh put up a 25.28 in heats to qualify second, while Russia’s Ekaterina Nikonova (25.46) and South Africa’s Aimee Canny (25.48) qualified third and fourth. Parker went 25.51 and was fifth overall out of the morning heats.

Swimming in lane 3 of the second semi-final, Parker surged over the second half of the race to overtake Harris. It looked like Harris might get back in front at the end but Parker put her hand to the wall first and stopped the clock at 24.96 for her first-ever sub-25 in the event. Italy’s Costanza Cocconcelli was third in the heat with 25.49.

Parker is now one of only six 17-18 girls in the United States to have broken the 25-second barrier in the 50 free. She joins good company in the club, including Olympians Simone Manuel and Abbey Weitzeil, Grace Ariola, Rachel Hand, and Erica King.

RankTimeSwimmerDate
124.56Simone Manuel8/5/2014
224.80Abbey Weitzeil8/5/2014
324.82Grace Ariola8/27/2017
424.93Rachel Hand7/27/2018
524.95Erica King3/1/2017
624.96Maxine Parker8/24/2019
725.00Kara Lynn Joyce8/13/2004
825.03Amy Bilquist7/15/2015
925.10Faith Johnson7/17/2013
1025.12Katrina Konopka8/2/2015

Parker will line up in lane 4 for the final tomorrow night in Budapest with Harris to her right and Walsh to her left.

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Maxine Parker Jumps to #6 on 50 Free All-time List for 17-18 Girls with 24.96

Leon Marchand Takes World Juniors 4IM Bronze In New French National Record

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By Retta Race on SwimSwam

7th FINA World Junior Swimming Championships 2019

  • 50-Meter Course
  • Duna Arena, Budapest (Hungary)
  • Pool swimming: Tuesday, August 20 – Sunday, August 25, 2019
  • Heats 9:30am GMT+2 (3:30 am EDT / 12:30 am PDT)/ Semifinals and Finals 5:30pm GMT+2 (11:30am EDT / 8:30am PDT)
  • Meet site
  • Entries book
  • FinaTV Live Stream (subscription required)
  • Live results

17-year-old Leon Marchand earned bronze in the men’s 400m IM while competing at the 2019 World Junior Championships, hitting a new senior French National Record in the process.

Tonight in Budapest, Marchand fired off a speedy time of 4:16.37 to finish 3rd behind winner Apostolos Papastamos of Greece and Ilia Borodin of Russia, who finished in times of 4:11.93 and 4:12.95, respectively.

For Papastamos, the 2019 European Junior Champion in both the 200m IM and 400m IM clocked a new World Junior Record with his sub-4:12 mark tonight, overtaking American Carson Foster‘s former WJR of 4:13.39 set at U.S. Nationals. Foster wound up 6th tonight in 4:17.39.

Marchand chipped away at this men’s 400m IM swim tonight, showing his breaststroke prowess with how it unfolded. The French teen was 3rd out of the fly and was busted down to 6th after the backstroke leg. But, Marchand made up ground over the back half to get the edge for bronze over American Jacon Louser, who touched just .29 behind in 4:19.66.

Entering these Championships, Marchand’s previous personal best and French Age Record for 17-year-olds rested at the 4:17.22 he clocked en route to bronze in Kazan at this year’s European Junior Championships. As such, Marchand dropped almost a full second between that swim and tonight’s, landing him on the podium on the penultimate night of these World Junior Championships.

His time not only overtakes his own previous Age Record, but it also now makes Marchand the senior French Record holder, knocking down a supersuited mark of 4:16.97 set by Anthony Pannier way back at the 2009 French Championships.

Splits from Marchand’s previous PB/Age Record:

Splits from Marchand’s new PB/French National Record:

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Leon Marchand Takes World Juniors 4IM Bronze In New French National Record

Gallagher Becomes First-Ever Sub-25 Second South African Female 50 Freestyler

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By Retta Race on SwimSwam

2019 AFRICAN GAMES

  • Wednesday, August 21 – Saturday, August 24th (pool swimming)
  • Casablanca, Morocco
  • LCM
  • Schedule/Results

While competing on the final night of action in Morocco, South Africa’s Erin Gallagher accomplished a historic feat en route to gold in the women’s 50m freestyle.

After registering a time of 25.55 to ease herself into the 2019 African Games final, the 20-year-old busted out the fastest time of her career, hitting the wall in 24.95. That was enough to nab the gold, but also clock the first sub-25 second time ever for a South African female.

Gallagher had previously held the South African National Record in this women’s 50m free in the time of 25.03 she produced at last year’s Commonwealth Games. There on the Gold Coast, Gallagher finished in 5th place.

Gallagher followed up with an appearance at this year’s World Championships in Gwangju, although the national champion found herself in 27th place after having notched a morning swim of 25.48.

Tonight in Casablanca, however, Gallagher was on a mission, firing off the first sub-25 second time of her career to hit 24.95. This performance comes after she already hit a new 50m fly South African National Record just 2 days ago in 26.24.

Gallagher owns South African National Records across the LCM 50m/100m free and 50m/100m fly.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Gallagher Becomes First-Ever Sub-25 Second South African Female 50 Freestyler

Khalafalla Takes Men’s 50 Free For Egypt On Final Night Of African Games

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By Retta Race on SwimSwam

2019 AFRICAN GAMES

  • Wednesday, August 21 – Saturday, August 24th (pool swimming)
  • Casablanca, Morocco
  • LCM
  • Schedule/Results

The pool swimming competition of the 2019 African Games wrapped up today in Morocco, but not before several new meet records bit the dust.

Action kicked off in electrifying fashion in both the men’s and women’s 50m freestyle events, with Ali Khalafallaof Egypt taking the former in a time of 22.17. He owns the Egyptian National Record in a time of 21.97 from last year’s Mediterranean Games, but his 22.17 tonight was enough to hold off the 100m freestyle champion here, Oussama Sahnoune of Algeria, who hit the wall just .02 later in 22.19 for silver.

South African Olympic finalist Brad Tandy registered a time of 22.21 tonight to give his nation bronze in this men’s splash n’ dash event.

The women’s 50m free saw Erin Gallagher get to the wall first in a mark of 24.95, the only sub-25 second outing of the field. It also represents the 20-year-old’s first-ever outing under 25 seconds, giving her a shiny new South African Record. You can read more about her historic feat here.

Behind Gallagher was Farida Osman, the Egyptian who already collected 50m fly and 100m fly gold medals here, in addition to a 100m free silver. Osman touched in 25.06 to finish .11 after Gallagher. She owns Egypt’s National Record in 24.62 from the 2017 World Championships.

Gallagher’s teammate, Emma Chelius, touched in 25.25 to round out the top 3 in the women’s 50m free.

Additional Winners:

  • Felicity Passon of Seychelles earned her 2nd backstroke gold in Morocco, doubling up on her 200m back victory from last night with a 100m back win this evening. She took the victory tonight in 1:02.42, just .20 ahead of runner-up Naomi Ruele of Botswana who touched in 1:02.62.
  • Algeria’s Abdellah Ardjoune took the men’s edition of the 100m back, producing a new African Games Record of 55.02.
  • Another Algerian, Jaouad Syoud took the men’s 200m IM event, clocking the quickest mark of 2:02.49 to land atop the podium.
  • Jessica Whelan of South Africa won the women’s 200m IM in 2:19.44, the only woman under 2:20.
  • The men’s 1500m free saw Ahmed Mahmoud of Egypt get to the all first in a time of 15:19.49.
  • His teammate, Hania Moro, swept the women’s free events from the 200m to now this 800m free, collecting another gold here in a time of 8:54.01.

Final Swimming Medal Table From 2019 African Games:

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1South Africa (RSA)20131245
2Egypt (EGY)14171041
3Algeria (ALG)57921
4Seychelles (SEY)2114
5Tunisia (TUN)1326
6Botswana (BOT)0112
7Morocco (MAR)*0044
8Angola (ANG)0011
Zambia (ZAM)0011
Zimbabwe (ZIM)0011
Totals (10 nations)424242126

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Khalafalla Takes Men’s 50 Free For Egypt On Final Night Of African Games

France, Bulgaria Join Medal Table; USA Lead Grows on Day 5 at 2019 World Jrs

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By Anne Lepesant on SwimSwam

7th FINA World Junior Swimming Championships 2019

  • 50-Meter Course
  • Duna Arena, Budapest (Hungary)
  • Pool swimming: Tuesday, August 20 – Sunday, August 25, 2019
  • Heats 9:30am GMT+2 (3:30 am EDT / 12:30 am PDT)/ Semifinals and Finals 5:30pm GMT+2 (11:30am EDT / 8:30am PDT)
  • Meet site
  • Entries book
  • FinaTV Live Stream (subscription required)
  • Live results

Saturday, 24 August 2019

FINA awarded medals for five more events on Day Five: women’s 1500 free, men’s 50 fly, women’s 50 back, men’s 400 IM, and women’s 4×100 free. Two new countries made their appearance on the medals table as both Bulgaria and France earned bronze medals on Saturday. Josif Miladinov gave Bulgaria its first medal with a third-place finish in the 50 butterfly, going 23.48 for a new Bulgarian senior national record. France’s Léon Marchard also broke his country’s senior national record with 4:16.37 in a bronze-medal performance in the 400 IM.

Lani Pallister of Australia won the first gold medal of the night with a Championships Record in the 1500 free. Her teammate Bronte Job added a gold with her 27.87 win in the women’s 50 back final. The two performances Australia ahead of Russia on the medals table. The Aussies now rank second behind the United States.

Italy moved up a spot too, as Thomas Ceccon won gold in the 50 fly with 23.37 and helped Italy overtake Canada in the fourth position.

The biggest surprise of the name came in the men’s 400 IM, when Greece’s Apostolos Papastamoscrushed the Championship Record, World Junior Record, and Greek National Record with 4:11.93. That vaulted Greece to number 8 on the table.

The Unites States took home only one gold medal on Day Five, and that was in the women’s 4×100 free. Gretchen Walsh (54.13), Torri Huske (54.50), Grace Cooper (55.05), and Amy Tang (53.94) combined for 3:37.61 to win gold by 3.3 seconds over Australia.

FINA World Junior Championships Medal Table Through Day 5:

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotals
1USA137828
2Australia43310
3Russia39315
4Italy32611
5Canada2327
=6Spain1102
=6Hungary1102
8Greece1012
=9Croatia1001
=9Czech Republid1001
=9Ukraine1001
12Japan0224
13Great Britain0123
=14Austria0101
=14Belarus0101
=14Sweden0101
=17Brazil0011
=17Bulgaria0011
=17France0011
 
Totals 31323093

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: France, Bulgaria Join Medal Table; USA Lead Grows on Day 5 at 2019 World Jrs

Gretchen Walsh Chomps Simone Manuel’s 15-16 NAG Record in 50 Free at 24.71

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By Karl Ortegon on SwimSwam

7TH FINA WORLD JUNIOR SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIPS 2019

  • 50-Meter Course
  • Duna Arena, Budapest (Hungary)
  • Pool swimming: Tuesday, August 20 – Sunday, August 25, 2019
  • Heats 9:30am GMT+2 (3:30 am EDT / 12:30 am PDT)/ Semifinals and Finals 5:30pm GMT+2 (11:30am EDT / 8:30am PDT)
  • Meet site
  • Entries book
  • FinaTV Live Stream (subscription required)
  • Live results

Winning the World Junior title in the 50 free tonight out of lane 3 was 16-year-old Gretchen Walsh in a new best time of 24.71. That is a .14 improvement upon her old best, a 24.85 from the 2019 U.S. Nationals which had her tied in the 15-16 all-time rankings for #2 with Anya Goeders. Her time tonight breaks free of that tie and goes right past American record-holder Simone Manuel‘s 15-16 NAG record of 24.80 from the 2013 World Championships.

Despite a .73 reaction time off of the blocks, the third-slowest of the final tonight, Walsh held off her teammate, Maxine Parker, who went a best of her own at 24.75 to move to #2 in the 17-18 age group rankings. This record comes not long after Torri Huske broke a different 15-16 NAG record in the 100 fly.

Walsh has been electric this week, nearly taking down Missy Franklin‘s 100 free NAG record earlier in the meet and being a very dependable relay leg.

Breaking a Manuel NAG record is an impressive accomplishment. Four years after Manuel set her 15-16 NAG at 24.80, she clocked a 23.97 to claim the bronze medal at the 2017 World Championships and set the American record. Walsh continues to make her case as one of the most dangerous sprinters on the rise to watch out for with the Olympic Trials just about ten months away.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Gretchen Walsh Chomps Simone Manuel’s 15-16 NAG Record in 50 Free at 24.71


World Junior: Federico Burdisso Bronzo Nei 200 M Farfalla

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By Giusy Cisale on SwimSwam

World Championship

WORLD JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIP FINA 2019

Federico Burdissoin questa edizione dei Mondiali Junior ha già conquistato la medaglia d’argento individuale nei 100 metri farfalla.

Con un passaggio ai 50 metri di 24.12, chiudeva secondo. Primo il russo Andrei Minakov.

Burdisso conquistò la medaglia d’argento con il tempo di 51.83.

Il personal best di Federico Burdisso nei 100 metri farfalla è di 51.73, nuotato al Trofeo Settecolli di Roma del 2018.

Vince insieme a Thomas Ceccon, Mario Nicotra Stefano Nicetto la medaglia di bronzo nella staffetta 4×100 metri stile libero maschile.

Nell’ultima giornata dei Campionati Mondiali Jr, è alle prese con la gara che ai Campionati Europei di Glasgow del 2018 gli fece conquistare la sua prima medaglia internazionale.

A Glasgow Burdisso partì dalla corsia n. 8 e riuscì a toccare terzo, conquistando il bronzo con il tempo di 1:55.97.

Ai Campionati del Mondo 2019 di Gwangju, finiva quarto nella finale, ma il tempo di 1:54.39 è il nuovo Record Italiano.

Al suo attivo ci sono anche con tre medaglie di bronzo, due individuali ed una con la staffetta 4×100 stile libero maschile ai Giochi Olimpici Giovanili del 2018.

200 METRI FARFALLA MASCHI – FINALE

  • WR 1:50.73 MILAK Kristof HUN Gwangju (KOR) 24 JUL 2019
  • WJ 1:53.79 MILAK Kristof HUN Netanya (ISR) 30 JUN 2017
  • CR 1:53.87 MILAK Kristof HUN Indianapolis, IN (USA) 28 AUG 2017

PODIO

  1. ORO Luca Urlando 1:55.02
  2. ARGENTO Tomoru Honda 1:55.31
  3. BRONZO Federico Burdisso 1:55.39

Federico Burdisso conduce la gara per tre vasche.

Il primo passaggio ai 50 metri lo vede in vantaggio con 24.82, mentre Luca Urlando Tomoru Honda sono rispettivamente quarto ed ottavo. Dalla terza vasca inizia il recupero dell’americano, che è secondo all’ultima virata.

E’ nell’ultima vasca che si decide il podio. Luca Urlando accelera e si porta negli ultimissimi metri avanti, toccando per primo la piastra in 1:55.02. Otto centesimi di secondo dividono l’argento Tomoru Honda ed il bronzo di Federico Burdissoche chiude terzo in 1:55.39.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: World Junior: Federico Burdisso Bronzo Nei 200 M Farfalla

Maxine Parker Becomes 2nd Fastest 17-18 50 Freestyler in US History in Budapest

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By Madeleine Lepesant on SwimSwam

7th FINA World Junior Swimming Championships 2019

 

USA’s Maxine Parker moved up two more spots in the 17-18 50m free rankings with her finals swim in Budapest. Her time of 24.75 was a 0.21 second drop from her semi-final swim on Saturday, and now puts her behind only Simone Manuel’s time of 24.56 on the all-time list.

Parker came into the meet with a seed time of 25.21, which she went at the 2019 U.S. Nationals, meaning she has dropped almost a half second throughout the course of this meet.

Parker finished 0.04 seconds behind teammate Gretchen Walsh and 0.18 ahead of Australia’s Meg Harris. All three of the top finishers went sub-25.

RankTimeSwimmerDate
124.56Simone Manuel8/5/2014
224.75Maxine Parker8/25/2019
324.80Abbey Weitzeil8/5/2014
424.82Grace Ariola8/27/2017
524.96Maxine Parker8/24/2019
625.00Kara Lynn Joyce8/13/2004

She is ranked third in the world for the 50m free for 18-and-under women this year.

  1. Mariia Kameneva RUS – 24.31
  2. Gretchen Walsh USA – 24.71
  3. Maxine Parker USA – 24.75
  4. Quingfeng Wu CHN – 24.77
  5. Menghui Zhu CHN – 24.80
  6. Julie Jensen DEN/Meg Harris AUS – 24.89
  7. Freya Anderson GBR/ Neza Klancar SLO – 25.12
  8. Grace Cooper USA – 25.16

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Maxine Parker Becomes 2nd Fastest 17-18 50 Freestyler in US History in Budapest

Lani Pallister Finishes 2019 World Junior Champs With Silver in 200 Freestyle

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By Reid Carlson on SwimSwam

7TH FINA WORLD JUNIOR SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIPS 2019

  • 50-Meter Course
  • Duna Arena, Budapest (Hungary)
  • Pool swimming: Tuesday, August 20 – Sunday, August 25, 2019
  • Heats 9:30am GMT+2 (3:30 am EDT / 12:30 am PDT)/ Semifinals and Finals 5:30pm GMT+2 (11:30am EDT / 8:30am PDT)
  • Meet site
  • Entries book
  • FinaTV Live Stream (subscription required)
  • Live results

Day 6 Finals heat sheets

Australian Lani Pallister nearly pulled off a Ledecky-esque sweep of the women’s distance and middle-distance freestyle races at the 2019 FINA World Junior Championships. With her silver-medal performance in the women’s 200 freestyle today, Pallister will leave Budapest with 4 individual medals total, including three golds in the 400, 800, and 1500 meter freestyles, as well as a silver as part of Australia’s 4 x 200 freestyle relay, where she led off in 1:58.61.

Erika Fairweather of New Zealand won the women’s 200 freestyle tonight in 1:57.96, just .13 ahead of Pallister. Canada’s Emma O’Croinin rounded out the podium with a 1:58.64 for bronze.

Pallister’s time in this evening’s finals was markedly faster than her relay lead-off, hitting the wall for silver in 1:58.09.

Pallister’s splits 8/25/2019:

1st 5027.99
2nd 5030.29
3rd 5030.32
4th 5029.49
Total Time1:58.09

17-year-old Pallister has had a record-setting week in Budapest, recording new Championship Records in each of her previous individual events. In the 800, Pallister took nearly 3 seconds off the previous mark, set by Argentina’s Delfina Pignatiello in 2017, winning gold in 8:25.22. Pallister later became the 8th-fastest Australian woman ever in the 400 freestyle, throwing down a new Championships Record time of 4:05.42.

The 1500 was perhaps Pallister’s most impressive race, where her time of 15:58.86 not only skated past Pignatiello’s 2017 record, but also made Pallister one of only 11 women to break the 16-minute barrier in the 1500 in 2019.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Lani Pallister Finishes 2019 World Junior Champs With Silver in 200 Freestyle

Finali Mondiali Giovanili: Staffette Miste Stregate, Maschi DSQ Femmine 4

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By Aglaia Pezzato on SwimSwam

Campionati Mondiali Junior 2019

FINALI MONDIALI GIOVANILI BUDAPEST 2019

Ultima parte di spettacolo prima di calare il sipario sulle finali dei mondiali giovanili di Budapest 2019.

100 METRI STILE LIBERO UOMINI-FINALE

  • WR 46.91 CIELO FILHO Cesar, BRA Rome (ITA), 30 JUL 2009
  • CR 48.33 GIREV Ivan RUS Indianapolis, IN (USA), 28 AUG 2017
  • WJ 47.58 CHALMERS Kyle AUS Rio de Janeiro (BRA), 10 AUG 2016

PODIO

  1. MINAKOV Andrei 48.73
  2. LIENDO EDWARDS Joshua 49.17
  3. HANSON Robin 49.25

6. NICETTO Stefano 49.84

Prima finale tra quelle in programma nella serata ungherese vinta dal russo Minakov che nuota i 100 stile libero in 48.73 ed è l’unico ad abbattere il muro dei 49 secondi. Stefano Nicetto conclude la gara al sesto posto con 49.84

200 METRI RANA DONNE-FINALE

  • WR 2:19.11 PEDERSEN Rikke Barcellona 2013
  • CR 2:19.64 GUNES Viktoria Zeynep Singapore 2015
  • WJ 2:19.64 GUNES Viktoria Zeynep Singapore 2015

PODIO

  1. CHIKUNOVA Evgeniia 2:24.03
  2. MAKAROVA Anastasia 2:24.39
  3. ISHIHARA Mei 2:24.99

Altra gara ed è ancora l’inno russo a risuonare alla Duna Arena. Doppietta russa nei 200 rana al femminile con Chikunova e Marakova.

200 METRI DORSO UOMINI-FINALE

  • WR 1:51.92 PEIRSOL Aaron Roma 2009
  • CR 1:56.69 GONZALEZ Hugo Indianapolis 2017
  • WJ 1:55.14 KOLESNIKOV Kliment Budapest 2017

PODIO

  1. DAVIS Wyatt 1:58.18
  2. FOSTER Carson 1:58.47
  3. TOMAC Mewen 1:58.71

200 dorso maschili che vedono i due americani imporsi sul francese Tomac. Vince Davis con una chiusura arrembante ( ultimo 50 in 29.54) che lo porta dalla quarta posizione all’ultima virata fino alla testa della gara.

100 METRI FARFALLA DONNE-FINALE

  • WR 55.48 SJOESTROEM Sarah SWE, Rio de Janeiro (BRA), 7 AUG 2016
  • CR 57.25 IKEE Rikako JPN,  Indianapolis, IN (USA), 28 AUG 2017
  • WJ 56.46 OLEKSIAK Penny CAN,  Rio de Janeiro (BRA),  7 AUG 2016

PODIO

  1. HUSKE Torri 57.71
  2. SHKURDAI Anastasiya 57.98
  3. CURZAN Claire 58.37

8. BIASIBETTI Helena 1:00.38

Podio fotocopia per i 50 e 100 farfalla donne. Si ripete infatti lo stesso ordine d’arrivo nella doppia distanza con l’americana davanti alla bulgara e alla seconda statunitense. Paga un passaggio lento Helena Biasibetti ( 28.61) che conclude la finale in ottava posizione.

1500 METRI STILE LIBERO UOMINI

  • WR 14:31.02 SUN Yang Londra 2012
  • WJ 14:51.55 HORTON Mack Brisbane 2014
  • CR 14:56.60 HORTON Mack Dubai 2013

PODIO

  1. GRGIC Franko 14:46.09
  2. NEILL Thomas 14:59.19
  3. SIBIRTSEV Ilia 15:05.17

Si conclude la batteria con i migliori tempi d’iscrizione dei 1500 stile libero e vince il croato Grcic già vincitore degli 800 metri. Chiude quindi all’11esimo posto Ivan Giovannoni che ha gareggiato nelle batterie del mattino 15:31.50

50 METRI STILE LIBERO DONNE-FINALE

  • WR 23.67 SJOESTROEM Sarah SWE Budapest (HUN) 29 JUL 2017
  • CR 24.59 IKEE Rikako JPN Indianapolis, IN (USA) 28 AUG 2017
  • WJ 24.33, IKEE Rikako JPN Tokyo (JPN)  15 SEP 2017

PODIO

  1. WALSH Gretchen 24.71
  2. PARKER Maxine 24.75
  3. HARRIS Meg 24.89

7. COCCONCELLI Costanza 25.45

Tutte e tre le atlete che salgono sul podio dei 50 stile nuotano al di sotto dei 25 secondi. Gara di alto livello che vede le due statunitensi avere la meglio sull’australiana. Settima Costanza Cocconcelli in 25.45, campionessa europea giovanili in carica.

200 METRI FARFALLA UOMINI-FINALE

  • WR 1:50.73 MILAK Kristof Gwangju 2019
  • CR 1:53.87 MILAK Kristof Indianapolis 2017
  • WJ 1:53.79 MILAK Kristof Netanya 2017

PODIO

  1. URLANDO Luca 1:55.02
  2. HONDA Tomoru 1:55.31
  3. BURDISSO Federico 1:55.39

Per 150 metri tiene la testa della finale Federico Burdisso che passa coraggiosamente in 53.12 a metà gara e subisce poi la rimonta di Urlando e Honda. Il tempo complessivo dell’azzurro è 1 :55.39 e vale un bronzo da mettere al collo.

50 METRI RANA UOMINI-FINALE

  • WR 25.95 PEATY Adam GBR Budapest (HUN) 25 JUL 2017
  • CR 27.02 MARTINENGHI Nicolo ITA Indianapolis, IN (USA)  27 AUG 2017
  • WJ 26.97 MARTINENGHI Nicolo ITA  Riccione (ITA)  4 APR 2017

PODIO

  1. GERASIMENKO Vladislav 27.58
  2. MASTROMATTEO Gabe 27.73
  3. GOODBURN Archie 27.83

200 METRI STILE LIBERO DONNE-FINALE

  • WR 1:52.98 PELLEGRINI Federica Roma 2009
  • CR 1:57.08 RUCK Taylor Indianapolis 2017
  • WJ 1:55.43 YANG Junxuan Gwangju 2019

PODIO

  1. FAIRWEATHER Erika 1:57.96
  2. PALLISTER Lani 1:58.09
  3. O’CROININ Emma 1:58.64

A sorpresa la neozelandese Fairweather abbassa di circa 2 secondi il crono segnato nelle batterie e vince i 200 stile libero al femminile.

STAFFETTA 4X100 MISTA UOMINI-FINALE

  • WR 3:27.28 USA Roma 2009
  • WJ 3:35.17 RUS Buenos Aires 2018
  • CR 3:36.15 USA Indianapolis 2017

PODIO

  1. RUS 3:33.19 Record del Mondo Junior/ Record dei Campionati
  2. USA 3:33.66
  3. CAN 3:36.35

ITA DSQ

La Russia vince con il record mondiale junior l’ultima gara maschile di questa edizione ( Minakov 50.93 nella farfalla) davanti a Stati Uniti e Canada. Subisce la squalifica la staffetta italiana causata dal cambio del terzo frazionista a -0.11. Il tabellone li aveva segnati al terzo posto della classifica non ufficiale prima di segnalare l’infrazione che li ha esclusi. Aveva nuotato un ottimo 53.37 Thomas Ceccon in apertura che gli sarebbe valso come nuovo personal best.

STAFFETTA 4X100 MISTA DONNE-FINALE

  • WR 3:50.40 USA Gwangju 2019
  • WJ 3:58.38 CAN Indianapolis 2017
  • CR 3:58.38 CAN Indianapolis 2017

PODIO

  1. USA 3:59.13
  2. RUS 4:00.30
  3. CAN 4:03.17
  4. ITA 4:05.29

GAETANI Erika 1:01.26

PILATO Benedetta 1:08.41

BIASIBETTI Helena 59.53

TARANTINO Chiara 56.09

Si fermano ai piedi del podio le speranze delle ragazze della staffetta mista. Le giovani azzurre nuotano un 4:05.29 che non può nulla contro le tre super potenze USA-RUS-CAN.

Si conclude cosi un Campionato Mondiale Giovanile pieno di soddisfazioni per gli azzurrini che pone il punto fermo sulla stagione agonistica 2018/19 delle competizioni internazionali del nuoto.

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Finali Mondiali Giovanili: Staffette Miste Stregate, Maschi DSQ Femmine 4

2019 World Junior Championships: Day 6 Finals Live Recap

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By Anne Lepesant on SwimSwam

7th FINA World Junior Swimming Championships 2019

  • 50-Meter Course
  • Duna Arena, Budapest (Hungary)
  • Pool swimming: Tuesday, August 20 – Sunday, August 25, 2019
  • Heats 9:30am GMT+2 (3:30 am EDT / 12:30 am PDT)/ Semifinals and Finals 5:30pm GMT+2 (11:30am EDT / 8:30am PDT)
  • Meet site
  • Entries book
  • FinaTV Live Stream (subscription required)
  • Live results

Sunday, 25 August 2019

Day 6 Finals heat sheets

Men’s 100m Freestyle – Final

  • WR 46.91 CIELO FILHO Cesar BRA Rome (ITA) 30 JUL 2009
  • WJ 47.58 CHALMERS Kyle AUS Rio de Janeiro (BRA) 10 AUG 2016
  • CR 48.33 GIREV Ivan RUS Indianapolis, IN (USA) 28 AUG 2017

Podium:

  1. Andrei MINAKOV RUS 48.73
  2. Joshua LIENDO EDWARDS CAN 49.17
  3. Robin HANSON SWE 49.25

It was Andrei Minakov‘s race from start to finish as the Russian took it out in 23.33 to lead the field by 3/10 at the 50. He came home in 25.40 for a total time of 48.73. Canada picked up a silver medal as Joshua Liendo Edwards came back on the second half to pass Vladyslav Bukhov of Ukraine, who had been second at the 50, and Sweden’s Robin Hanson. Lindo Edwards finished with 49.17 while Hanson scored the bronze medal in 49.25.

USA’s Adam Chaney just missed the podium, finishing fourth with 49.27.

Fifth through eighth went to UKR’s Vladyslav Vukhov (49.81), Stegano Nicetto of ITA (49.84), Artur Barseghyan of ARM (50.03), and Murilo Stein Sartori of BRA (50.30).

Women’s 200m Breaststroke – Final

  • WR 2:19.11 PEDERSEN Rikke DEN Barcelona (ESP) 1 AUG 2013
  • WJ 2:19.64 GUNES Viktoria TUR Singapore (SGP) 30 AUG 2015
  • CR 2:19.64 GUNES Viktoria Zeynep TUR Singapore (SGP) 30 AUG 2015

Podium:

  1. Evgeniia CHIKUNOVA RUS 2:24.03
  2. Anastasia MAKAROVA RUS 2:24.39
  3. Mei ISHIHARA JPN 2:24.99

GBR’s Kayla van der Merwe took it out quickly from lane 1 and led the field through the 100. She was first at the 50 with 33.22, and first at the 100 with 1:09.97. Evgeniia Chikunovaof Russia dominated the second half of the race, though, and earned the gold with 2:24.03. She was 1:10.10 at the 100 and 1:13.93. The 14-year-old also won the 100 breast earlier in the week.

Russia’s Anastasia Makarova had a strong back half as well, moving from fifth at the 100 to third at the 150 to second at the finish. She went 2:24.39, beating Japan’s Mei Ishihara for the silver by .63.

Van der Merwe ended up in fourth place with 2:25.27. Behind her were HUN’s Eszter Bekesi (2:25.49), CHN’s Zheng Muyan (2:25.50), SVK’s Nikoleta Trnikova (2:27.96), and USA’s Abby Arens (2:28.06).

Men’s 200m Backstroke – Final

  • WR 1:51.92 PEIRSOL Aaron USA Rome (ITA) 31 JUL 2009
  • WJ 1:55.14 KOLESNIKOV Kliment RUS Budapest (HUN) 28 JUL 2017
  • CR 1:56.69 GONZALEZ Hugo ESP Indianapolis, IN (USA) 28 AUG 2017

Podium:

  1. Wyatt DAVIS USA 1:58.18
  2. Carson FOSTER USA 1:58.47
  3. Mewen TOMAC FRA 1:58.71

The entire 200 backstroke came down to the final fifteen meters. In a thrilling finish, USA’s Wyatt Davis powered past teammate Carson Foster for the win, going 1:58.18. Davis had been in fourth place on the first three 50s but surged over the final 25 meters to pass Foster, France’s Mewen Tomac, and LTU’s Arijus Pavlidi. Pavlidi had been first at the 50 and the 100 but ended up fading to sixth by the end.

Canada’s Cole Pratt moved from seventh at the 50 to sixth at the 100 to fifth at the 150 and finally to fourth at the finish with 1:58.93. He was followed by Great Britain’s Charlie Brown (1:59.57), Pavlidi (1:59.69), Russia’s Egor Dolomanov (2:00.05), and Portugal’s Joao Costa (2:00.32).

Women’s 100m Butterfly – Final

  • WR 55.48 SJOESTROEM Sarah SWE Rio de Janeiro (BRA) 7 AUG 2016
  • WJ 56.46 OLEKSIAK Penny CAN Rio de Janeiro (BRA) 7 AUG 2016
  • CR 57.25 IKEE Rikako JPN Indianapolis, IN (USA) 28 AUG 2017

Podium:

  1. Torri HUSKE USA 57.71
  2. Anastasiya SHKURDAI BLR 57.98
  3. Claire CURZAN USA 58.37

Torri Huske of USA won the women’s 100 fly with the best start (.63 reaction time), best first 50 (26.49) and best second 50 (31.22) in the field. Anastasiya Shkurdai of Belarus was second from wire-to-wire and picked up another silver medal with 57.98. Claire Curzan of USA finished third with 59.06. It was the same podium as in the 50 fly.

Canada’s Hanna Henderson and Qian Xinan of China moved past Russia’s Aleksandra Sabitova over the final 50 meters to finish fourth and fifth with 59.06 and 59.13. Sabitova was sixth with 59.64, followed by Genevieve Sasseville of Canada (1:00.06) and Helena Biasibetti of Italy (1:00.38).

Men’s 1500m Freestyle – fastest heat

  • WR 14:31.02 SUN Yang CHN London (GBR) 4 AUG 2012
  • CR 14:56.60 HORTON Mack AUS Dubai (UAE) 31 AUG 2013
  • WJ 14:51.55 HORTON Mack AUS Brisbane (AUS) 1 APR 2014

Podium:

  1. Franko GRGIC CRO 14:46.09
  2. Thomas NEILL AUS 14:59.19
  3. Ilia SIBIRTSEV RUS 15:05.17

16-year-old Franko Grgic of Croatia destroyed the Championships Record and World Junior Record in the 1500 free, going 14:46.09 to notch the sixth-fastest time in the world for 2019. Grgic looked smooth and confident from his first strokes. He was up by half a body length over the field at the 100 wall, under CR and WJR pace with 56.52. For a while it seemed he might be just a tick under record pace, but he picked up his pace about halfway through and began to put several meters’ worth of clean water between himself and the yellow record line. With each 50 he increased his lead over the record line and wound up smashing both marks. He was 10.51 seconds faster than Mack Horton’s Championships Record of 14:56.60 from 2013 and 6.46 seconds under Horton’s World Junior Record of 14:51.55 from 2014.

 

Women’s 50m Freestyle – Final

  • WR 23.67 SJOESTROEM Sarah SWE Budapest (HUN) 29 JUL 2017
  • WJ 24.33 IKEE Rikako JPN Tokyo (JPN) 15 SEP 2017
  • CR 24.59 IKEE Rikako JPN Indianapolis, IN (USA) 28 AUG 2017

Podium:

  1. Gretchen WALSH USA 24.71
  2. Maxine PARKER USA 24.75
  3. Meg HARRIS AUS 24.89

Maxine Parker of USA, who had led the semi-finals qualifiers with 24.96, exploded off the blocks in the final. It was a battle down the stretch between Parker and her teammate Gretchen Walsh, but Walsh prevailed at the end, 24.71 to 24.75 for a USA 1-2 finish. Meg Harris of Australia claimed the bronze with 24.89.

South Africa’s Aimee Canny led the rest of the finishers with 25.29. Austria’s Nina Gangl was next in 25.30, followed by Canada’s Hanna Henderson (25.33), Italy’s Costanza Cocconcelli (25.45), and France’s Lison Nowaczyk (25.53).

Men’s 200m Butterfly – Final

  • WR 1:50.73 MILAK Kristof HUN Gwangju (KOR) 24 JUL 2019
  • WJ 1:53.79 MILAK Kristof HUN Netanya (ISR) 30 JUN 2017
  • CR 1:53.87 MILAK Kristof HUN Indianapolis, IN (USA) 28 AUG 2017

Podium:

  1. Luca URLANDO USA 1:55.02
  2. Tomoru HONDA JPN 1:55.31
  3. Federico BURDISSO ITA 1:55.39

Italy’s Federico Burdisso went for the fly and die strategy in the 200 butterfly final. He blasted off with 24.82 on the first 50. France’s Léon Marchand was in second place with 25.63. Burdisso continued to storm ahead on the next 50, turning with 53.12 at the 100 wall. USA’s Luca Urlando had moved from fourth place to runner-up on the second 50, passing Marchand and Ethan du Preez of South Africa.

Burdisso still held the lead at the 150 with 1:23.45 but Urlando was closing. He out-split the Italian by .65 on the third 50. Meanwhile, Tomoru Honda of Japan was creeping up on the leaders. He came from eighth at the 50 to turn sixth at the 100 and third at the 150. He came home even faster than Urlando with 29.68-29.54 on the last two 50s. Urlando went 29.68-30.60 and wound up with the gold medal with an overall time of 1:55.02. Honda earned silver with 1:55.31. Burdisso held on, improbably given his exuberant front half, with 1:55.39.

The rest of the final was made up of Wang Juan-Hung from Taipei (1:56.48), Russia’s Egor Pavlov (1:58.01), Sebastian Lunak from Czech Republic (1:58.20), Marchand (1:58.73), and du Preez (1:58.83).

Men’s 50m Breaststroke – Final

  • WR 25.95 PEATY Adam GBR Budapest (HUN) 25 JUL 2017
  • WJ 26.97 MARTINENGHI Nicolo ITA Riccione (ITA) 4 APR 2017
  • CR 27.02 MARTINENGHI Nicolo ITA Indianapolis, IN (USA) 27 AUG 2017

Podium:

  1. Vladislav GERASIMENKO RUS 27.58
  2. Gabe MASTROMATTEO CAN 27.73
  3. Archie GOODBURN GBR 27.83

It was all about the finish in the 50 breast final. Vladislav Gerasimenko of Russia had the right timing to get to the wall first, earning gold with 27.58. Behind him in tight formation were Canada’s Gabe Mastromatteo (27.73) and Archie Goodburn of Great Britain (27.83).

USA’s Josh Matheny finished .13 off the podium in fourth with 27.96. Next came Greece’s Arkadios Aspougalis (27.98), Japan’s Shoma Sato (28.04), Germany’s Kyle Booth (28.24), and USA’s Kevin Houseman (28.28).

Women’s 200m Freestyle – Final

  • WR 1:52.98 PELLEGRINI Federica ITA Rome (ITA) 29 JUL 2009
  • WJ 1:55.43 YANG Junxuan CHN Gwangju (KOR) 24 JUL 2019
  • CR 1:57.08 RUCK Taylor CAN Indianapolis, IN (USA) 28 AUG 2017

Podium:

  1. Erika FAIRWEATHER NZL 1:57.96
  2. Lani PALLISTER AUS 1:58.09
  3. Emma O’CROININ CAN 1:58.64

 

 

Men’s 4x 100m Medley – Final

  • WR 3:27.28 USA – United States Of America Rome (ITA) 2 AUG 2009
  • WJ 3:35.17 RUS – Russian Federation Buenos Aires (ARG) 10 OCT 2018
  • CR 3:36.15 USA – United States Of America Indianapolis, IN (USA) 28 AUG 2017

Podium:

  1. Russia 3:33.19
  2. United States 3:33.66
  3. Canada 3:36.35

Russia lowered their own World Junior Record in the 400 medley relay by a full 1.98 seconds. They took nearly 3 seconds off the Championships Record, set by the United States in 2017. Russia was in second place behind Italy at the back-to-breast turn, but soon made up the difference and surged to the lead on breaststroke. They never let up and ended up .47 ahead of the charging United States. Nikolay Zuev led off for Russia in 53.84. Gerasimenko went 59.53 in breast. Minakov was 50.93 in the butterfly, and Aleksandr Shchegolev was 48.89 on the end.

Italy’s Thomas Ceccon lowered the Championships Record in the 100 back leading off on the first leg of the relay, going 53.37. He had broken it in the final of the 100 back individual event with 53.46 earlier in the week. Italy was DQd, though, for the fly-to-breast exchange.

RUS – Russian Federation 3:33.19 WJ, CR

USA – United States of America 3:33.66

  • Will GRANT 54.45
  • Josh MATHENY 59.55
  • Blake MANOFF 51.72
  • Adam CHANEY 47.94

CAN – Canada 3:36.35

Women’s 4x 100m Medley – Final

  • WR 3:50.40 USA – United States Of America Gwangju (KOR) 28 JUL 2019
  • WJ 3:58.38 CAN – Canada Indianapolis (USA) 28 AUG 2017
  • CR 3:58.38 CAN – Canada Indianapolis, IN (USA) 28 AUG 2017

Podium:

  1. United States 3:59.13
  2. Russia 4:00.30
  3. Canada 4:093.17

Russia blasted off to a strong start with Daria Vaskina’s 59.90 in the 100 backstroke lead-off, and stayed in front nearly to the end. Jade Hannah had Canada in second place with 1:00.42, while Claire Curzan handed over to Kaitlyn Dobler in third place with 1:00.75. Dobler mov

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