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By SwimSwam Partner Content on SwimSwam

Courtesy: Swim Smart, a Swim Swam partner. 

Here at Swim Smart, we want to share our tools with everyone we can… but we need your help (and we will pay you for it!). You can sign up to be a Swim Smart partner today for FREE and start earning commission while offering the newest, coolest and smartest swimming products on deck. Details below!

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Why this works

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Old video… Here are some updates:

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Read the full story on SwimSwam: Become a Swim Smart Partner Today!


CBC Sports Will Live-Stream ISL Meets in Canada

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By Nick Pecoraro on SwimSwam

CBC Sports, owned by the Canadian national public broadcaster, has picked up coverage for the upcoming debut meet season for the International Swim League (ISL).

CBC Sports is a free-to-air network that will provide live stream coverage of the newly-established ISL via cbcsports.ca and CBC Sports app on iOS and Android devices. Meets for the ISL have been scheduled in the afternoon US/Canada time to best coincide with prime time television in Europe.

Chris Wilson, CBC executive director of sports and Olympics, highlights that, “Team Canada has amazing depth in the pool, and CBC Sports is thrilled to offer Canadians the opportunity to watch our country’s elite swimmers compete against the best on the planet, offering a preview of what to look forward to at the Olympic Games in Tokyo next year.” 

“We are delighted to secure broadcast and streaming coverage with CBC Sports – the sports
branch of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Canada’s national public broadcaster,” ISL
President Konstantin Grigorishin says about the deal. “This agreement is another great step for this new professional league, and we are delighted that millions of sports fans in Canada will be able to watch the first edition of the ISL.”

Along with Canada, Australia and Europe also have signed deals with the ISL to include live-streaming services for the upcoming season.

So far, there have been no deals announced with broadcasting coverage in the U.S.

Outside Canada, CBC Sports can also be available to viewers along the U.S-Canada border, including surrounding U.S. cities in Maine, Vermont, New York, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota, and Washington state. Likewise, CBC Television can be reached from Caribbean areas such as the Bahamas, Barbados, Bermuda, Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica, and the Turks and Caicos Islands.

Below is the list of the 13 Canadian swimmers who will represent their home country in the ISL’s opening season.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: CBC Sports Will Live-Stream ISL Meets in Canada

Tarasevich Joins NY Breakers, But Adds To Gray Area On ISL ‘Zero Tolerance’

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By Retta Race on SwimSwam

On the heels of British IM specialist Abbie Wood joining the New York Breakers International Swimming League (ISL) squad, the US-based team has announced another addition to its lineup. Former University of Louisville Cardinal Grigory Tarasevich of Russia has been revealed as the newest member of the roster, one that includes a trio of DeLoof sisters in Ali, Catie, and Gabbie, Olympic gold meadlist Pernille Blumeb, and part-owner Michael Andrew.

Tarasevich is coming off of a successful Summer Universiade (World University Games) where the 24-year-old collected backstroke medals across the 50m (bronze), 200m (silver) and 100m (gold) in Naples, Italy. Prior to that, he won mixed medley relay silver at the 2018 European Championships.

An Olympian, Tarasevich competed in Rio where he placed 9th in the 100m backstroke. With the rise of Kliment Kolesnikov, who is currently battling injuries, as well as Evgeny Rylove, Tarasevich this summer was the odd-man-out for Russia’s World Championship team.

There are few key points about Tarasevich’s addition to the NY Breakers squad. First, the Russian becomes the team’s fourth male backstroker. South African Chris Reid, American Jacob Pebley and Canadian Markus Thormeyer already focus on that discipline, so Tarasevich’s addition could perhaps be overkill in that area or may suggest one or more may not be on the traveling roster.

Additionally, Tarasevich becomes the 17th male member of the NY Breakers. The ISL urges squads to have 16 men and 16 women on their rosters, which they then narrow down to 14 of each gender for active meet rosters.

Of special significance to Tarasevich is the fact that he tested positive for banned substance Meldonium immediately before those 2016 Olympic Games.

As we reported in 2016, Tarasevich tested positive via an in-competition urine sample he provided on March 4th of 2016, as well as via an out-of-competition urine sample taken on March 29th. The former sample was collected at the Arena Pro Swim Series in Orlando, where Tarasevich claimed 2nd in the men’s 100m backstroke (53.84) and 3rd in the 200m backstroke (1:58.04). Those medals were forfeited, per the USADA.

The USADA learned in its investigation that a physician in Russia had given Tarasevich a meldonium prescription in June 2015, telling the athlete the drug was to be used during periods of ‘intensive training.’ Tarasevich told the USADA that he used the substance during three separate two-week training periods in 2015, but the last time he reportedly used meldonium was in early October 2015. That is the time frame in which Tarasevich, along with the rest of the sporting world, learned that meldonium would be added to the World Anti-Doping Agency’s (WADA) list of prohibited substances effective January 1, 2016.

Tarasevich, an Onsk, Russia native, reportedly had an ‘extremely low meldonium concentration’ in his urine samples, which the USADA says is consistent with ingestion prior to the January 1 prohibited substance listing date. That, paired with the fact that WADA has extended its no-fault grace period for testing positive for meldonium in concentrations of less than 1mcg to September 20th, Tarasevich did not face any bans or suspensions and was cleared to compete in Rio.

Despite the fact that Tarasevich did not face any bans, his case is one of a gray area within the ISL’s zero-tolerance policy. We specifically asked about Tarasevich at the time the ISL deemed American Will Licon eligible to compete, but did not receive a response.

As for Licon, a member of LA Current, the ISL stated at the time,no previously disqualified athlete for breaking anti-doping rules will be allowed to compete in any ISL competition. Thus, Licon has no problem to compete in ISL, since he has not been disqualified by the appropriate body.”

NY Breakers Roster as of October 1st

NEW YORK BREAKERS
Michael AndrewHaley Black
Marcelo ChierighiniPernille Blume
Mack DarraghAli DeLoof
Joao de LuccaCatie DeLoof
Jonathan GomezGabby DeLoof
Marco KochEmily Escobedo
Marius KuschReva Foos
Clyde LewisBreeja Larson
Justin LynchLia Neal
Jack McLoughlinTayla Lovemore
Jacob PebleyEmily Overholt
Tomas PeribonioAlys Thomas
Chris ReidMadi Wilson
Pedro SpajariAbbie Wood
Brad Tandy
Grigory Tarasevich
Markus Thormeyer

 

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Tarasevich Joins NY Breakers, But Adds To Gray Area On ISL ‘Zero Tolerance’

Swimming Canada Announces TritonWear as Official Training Technology

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By SwimSwam Partner Content on SwimSwam

Courtesy: TritonWear, a SwimSwam partner. 

Swimming Canada is pleased to announce that TritonWear, the world’s most comprehensive swimming analytics platform, is partnering with the organization as the Official Training Technology of Swimming Canada.

TritonWear is revolutionizing swimming training, with data-driven insights for more efficient coaching, and better performing athletes. The Ontario-based company delivers elite-level training tools to swimmers and coaches.

“Swimming Canada has been working closely with TritonWear over the past few years. This technology allows us to gain insights into daily training, and to develop unique training tools that allow our experts to look at details of swimming skill performance that are otherwise extremely difficult to measure and understand,” said Dr. Allan Wrigley, Swimming Canada’s Integrated Support Team Director.

“In particular, national team swimmers in Ontario, British Columbia, and on event tour teams have benefited from custom skill analysis using the TritonWear platform. This has allowed those swimmers, their coaches, and their support staff to get detailed insights on how to further enhance and fine-tune their world-class performances,” Wrigley added.

“We’ve already seen great results from our work with Swimming Canada and their high performance athletes; this partnership allows us to take that to the next level together – which is incredible,” said Tristan Lehari, co-founder and CEO of TritonWear and former captain of the University of Waterloo Warriors swim team.

“I am really looking forward to our teams being able to work shoulder to shoulder right here at home, not only to perfect our offering but also to have an even deeper impact on how our nation performs on the international stage,” Lehari said. “Our new hardware is so much more sophisticated, our new apps offer brand new world-class AI to help coaches and athletes alike become better in the sport, and produce faster swimming.”

Olympic medalists such as Brent Hayden and Kylie Masse have used the system, which consists of a sleek wearable device tucked comfortably into a swimmer’s cap, and a mobile application. It displays more than a dozen data points in real-time on deck. The AI-based tools analyze swimmer data and highlight opportunities to set goals and track them. This offers an even deeper understanding of each swimmer, and how to get them to swim faster. Finally, the Motion Analysis feature uses video coupled with data for deep skill assessments, to pinpoint movements that have led to breakthrough performance.

The partnership will include product demo booths at Swimming Canada competitions, and partnering on content such as video interviews that will appear on social media. TritonWear will also collaborate with Swimming Canada’s High Performance Centre network to further develop the technology and partnership on the road to the Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games and beyond.

“In any competitive sport, finding an edge is always a benefit,” said Swimming Canada High Performance Director and National Coach John Atkinson. “With TritonWear, coaches can collect information that can be used to make a change and then help the athlete improve, which is one of our key objectives with all swimmers we work with. I am delighted to partner with TritonWear and know many clubs, coaches and athletes can also gain from using this technology.”

Follow TritonWear on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram or LinkedIn.

VISIT THE TRITONWEAR HQ

FOLLOW US ON INSTAGRAM

LIKE US ON FACEBOOK

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Courtesy: TritonWear, a SwimSwam partner. 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Swimming Canada Announces TritonWear as Official Training Technology

Harvard NCAA Qualifier Raphael Marcoux Takes Olympic Redshirt Season

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

Harvard’s Raphael Marcoux will sit out the coming NCAA season in preparation for Canadian Olympic Trials in the spring. Marcoux would have been a senior.

Harvard has already been hit by the flood of NCAA redshirts and gap years in the Olympic year. In fact, they were the first to lose a member, with 53-point scorer Dean Farris announcing back in May that he’d be taking an Olympic redshirt season. With Farris gone and Brennan Novak graduated, Harvard was already out all 64 of its individual points from 2019 NCAAs. Marcoux was one of just three returners who had competed at NCAAs individually.

Marcoux finished 36th in the 50 free (19.58) last season and held down four relay legs for the Crimson. He also led off Harvard’s 8th-place 200 free relay (going 19.66), anchored their 400 medley relay (going 42.90, though the relay didn’t score) and 200 medley relay (19.07 as the team took 13th) and swam a leg of the 10th-place 400 free relay (42.13).

With Marcoux gone, Harvard only returns Umitcan Gures and Michael Zarian from its individual NCAA team.

Marcoux had an excellent summer, hitting personal bests in the long course 50 free, 100 free and 100 fly at the Canadian Championships in August. He won both the 50 free and 100 fly at that meet.

He finished the season ranked #5 among Canadians in the 50 free, #9 in the 100 free, and #5 in the 100 fly.

Marcoux’s Top Times

  • 50m free: 22.58
  • 100m free: 50.46
  • 100m fly: 53.48
  • 50y free: 19.22
  • 100y free: 42.95
  • 100y fly: 46.44

Our list of recently-announced redshirts and deferrals continues to grow:

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Harvard NCAA Qualifier Raphael Marcoux Takes Olympic Redshirt Season

#17 Arsenio Bustos Sends Verbal to NC State Class of 2025

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By Karl Ortegon 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.

Arsenio Bustos of Woodbridge Aquatic Club and Amity High School in Connecticut has verbally committed to NC State for fall of 2021. Bustos came in at #17 on our way-too-early rankings for the high school boys’ class of 2021. Not only is he the first publicly announced verbal from our top 20 for that class, but he appears to be the first U.S.-based verbal commit for the class of 2025 (shortly after Australia’s Tyson Upton announced his verbal to Florida).

I’m so proud to announce my verbal commitment to swim at NC State University! I can’t wait to be a part of such an amazing team and program! Thank you to all of my family, friends and coaches who have made this whole thing possible! Go Pack! ♦</body> </html>

Grigory Tarasevich Nei NY Breakers E La Zona Grigia Della Zero Tolleranza

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By Giusy Cisale on SwimSwam

 Grigory Tarasevich è l’ultimo membro della squadra ISL NY Breakers.

Tarasevich questa estate ha conquistato l’oro alle Universiadi di Napoli nei 100 metri dorso, l’argento nei 200 ed il bronzo nei 50.

Ha anche gareggiato alle Olimpiadi di Rio del 2016, chiudendo nono nei 100m dorso.

Con l’ascesa di Kliment Kolesnikov e di Evgeny Rylov, Tarasevich è rimasto fuori dalla squadra russa ai Mondiali di Gwangju.

Tarasevich è il quarto dorsista dei NY Breakers, dopo Chris Reid, Jacob Pebley e Markus Thormeyer.

IL PRECEDENTE DI GRIGORY TARASEVICH

Di particolare importanza appare la circostanza che  Tarasevichè risultato positivo nel 2016 al Meldonium. La sostanza venne vietata immediatamente prima delle Olimpiadi di Rio de Janeiro.

Come riportò la collega Retta Race nel 2016, Tarasevich risultò positivo ad un test su un campione di urina prelevato durante una competizione, il 4 marzo 2016. Successivamente lo stesso risultato pervenne da un campione prelevato fuori gara il 29 Marzo 2016.

Il primo campione è stato raccolto all’Arena Pro Swim Series di Orlando, dove Tarasevich si è piazzato secondo nei 100m dorso maschile (53.84) e terzo nei 200m dorso (1:58.04). Queste medaglie gli vennero successivamente revocate.

L’USADA in quella circostanza stabilì che un medico in Russia aveva fornito a Tarasevich una prescrizione di meldonio nel giugno 2015.

Il farmaco doveva essere usato durante i periodi di “allenamento intensivo”.

Tarasevich dichiarò all’USADA che aveva fatto uso della sostanza durante tre distinti periodi di allenamento di due settimane nel 2015. L’ultima volta che avrebbe usato il meldonio fu secondo l’atleta  all’inizio del mese di ottobre 2015.

Questo è il lasso di tempo in cui Tarasevich, insieme al resto del mondo sportivo, apprese che il meldonium sarebbe stato aggiunto all’elenco delle sostanze proibite della World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) a partire dal 1 gennaio 2016.

Tarasevich, avrebbe avuto una “bassissima concentrazione di meldonio” nei suoi campioni di urina. Secondo l’USADA era coerente con l’ingestione prima della data di inserimento nell’elenco delle sostanze proibite.

Questa circostanza, unita al fatto che la WADAha esteso il suo periodo di grazia fino al 20 settembre, ha fatto si che  Tarasevich non venne sospeso e fu autorizzato a gareggiare alle Olimpiadi del 2016.

Tarasevich dunque non è stato mai sospeso. Il suo caso però, rientra in una zona grigia della politica “tolleranza zero” caposaldo della ISL.

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Grigory Tarasevich Nei NY Breakers E La Zona Grigia Della Zero Tolleranza

Abrahm DeVine Accuses Stanford Team of Homophobia; School Denies Allegations

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

Two-time United States world championships team member Abrahm DeVine posted on Instagram Sunday night alleging he was “kicked off” the Stanford swim team for being gay.

DeVine, who graduated from the school last spring, had been training there as a professional. He joined Team Elite in San Diego at the end of August but did not provide a reason for the change at the time.

“Plain and simple: there are surface level reasons I was kicked off the Stanford swim team, but I can tell you with certainty that it comes down to the fact that I am gay,” DeVine wrote.

Click here to view his full post.

Stanford head women’s and men’s team coaches Greg Meehan and Dan Schemmel deny that DeVine was asked to leave over being gay, but confirmed he was “not invited” to remain on the team. They gave SwimSwam the following joint statement:

“It is truly unfortunate Abe feels this way. That said, Abe wasn’t invited back to train with us this fall, as a postgraduate, for reasons entirely unrelated to his sexuality. We take pride in the inclusivity and supportiveness that exists on both our men’s and women’s teams, but we will continue to strive, as always, to improve those aspects of our culture.”

SwimSwam is also expecting a statement from DeVine on the situation.

Schemmel took over the men’s program in May after longtime coach Tedd Knapp retired. He brought in Neil Caskey as an assistant, and DeVine’s primary coach as an undergraduate, former assistant Jeff Kostoff, was named associate head coach at the University of Minnesota in August.

Meehan has headed the women’s program since 2012, and currently coaches a professional group that includes Katie Ledecky, Simone Manuel and Ella Eastin.

“Everyone says they support me, and yet, for the millionth time, I am the only one speaking up,” DeVine wrote. “To my coaches who sport the pride flag on their desk, to the athletes who liked my pride photo on Instagram, I need you to wake up to what’s happening around you.” DeVine also wrote that Stanford “used” him.

DeVine, 23, was a member of the United States’ 2017 and 2019 FINA World Championships teams, finishing 10th in the 200 IM in 2017 and eighth in 2019. He also finished second to Chase Kalisz in the 200 IM at U.S. Summer Nationals in 2018, qualifying for Pan Pacs later that summer, where he finished fifth in the event.

He came out publicly as gay in September 2018.

A Seattle native, DeVine was also announced as a member of the ISL’s DC Trident in June and signed with swimwear brand arena in July, and became a two-time individual NCAA champion int he 400 IM his junior and senior seasons in Palo Alto.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Abrahm DeVine Accuses Stanford Team of Homophobia; School Denies Allegations


Athletes in the Community: August & September 2019

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The start of the 2019-2020 season featured many community appearances by National Team members. Whether it was in the water, at a convention or with a classroom full of kids, these swimmers brought smiles and joy with them wherever they went.

2020 Grant Applications Available to Make a Splash Swim Lesson Providers

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colorado – The 2020 USA Swimming Foundati...

Iowa Central Brings High Expectations to the Pool in 2019-20

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By SwimSwam on SwimSwam

Courtesy: Iowa Central Athletics

The Iowa Central swim program is ready to take that next step.

A year after securing the first national champion and placing in the Top-3 on both the men’s and women’s side of the NJCAA team standings, Joe Plane and the Tritons are anxious to get the 2019-20 season going.

“We return 340 points from nationals from the men and 328 from the women, and that doesn’t include relays,” Plane said. “We have very high expectations for this coming season.”

The roster boasts 32 total swimmers, including 22 for the men and 10 for the women. The Tritons open the year by hosting Iowa Lakes this Friday at the Dodger pool.

“We’ve been working hard early this season,” Plane said. “Iowa Lakes will be a good test to see where we are. We have so many swimmers that I needed to give them all a chance to swim primary events to see what kind of times they can put up. This will be a good marker of how training is going and what we need to continue to focus on in order for us to improve.”

It all starts with defending national champion Emile Lutzeler, as he captured the 50 breaststroke last season at nationals to help Iowa Central to a program-best second place finish overall. The sophomore from South Africa is one of a handful of returning swimmers to the team that competed on the big stage.

At nationals last season, Lutzeler, Marcelo Busch Ataide Vinicius Molz and Mariano Sosa all scored over 50 points each for the Tritons. Molz was a runner-up in the 1000 freestyle and four Iowa Central relays claimed silver.

Emilie Andrin and Paula Ronda collected three silvers last year at nationals, with Plane being named the women’s national coach of the year after guiding the Tritons to their third consecutive third place showing.

Andrin, Ronda, Eve Berg and Mary Marshall all collected at least 50 points each at the NJCAA meet last season.

“We have many key returning scorers, but also added some important newcomers,” Plane said. “Billy Cruz, Drew Giles, Tjeerd Van Stein and Dalton Hammel on the men’s side, with Shannon Murphy and Magali Mouton on the women’s side are just a few of those we expect a lot out of.”

Plane has found some pieces to the puzzle close to home, as Berg (Bettendorf) and Murphy (Cedar Falls) were Iowa high school standouts. Seven members of the women’s team are in-state with nine on the men’s roster.

The NJCAA National Championships are scheduled for March 4-7 in Fort Pierce, Fla.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Iowa Central Brings High Expectations to the Pool in 2019-20

Local Swimmer Jonathan Affeld Verbally Commits to Stanford

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By Braden Keith 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.

High school senior Jonathan Affeld, one of the best remaining male recruits in the high school class of 2020, has verbally committed to Stanford University. The trip will be a short one for him: he attends Henry Gunn High School, just a few miles from campus, and trains with the Alto Swim Club, which trains at among other places Stanford’s Avery Aquatics Center.

“I am extremely honored and excited to announce my verbal commitment to swim and study at Stanford University. I want to thank my teammates, my parents, and Coaches Joey, Alec, Dan, and Neil for helping me along the way. I can’t wait to start life on the farm. Sko Card!”

Affeld had a huge junior season of high school that includes winning the CIF Central Coast Section (high school) title in the 500 free and placing 2nd in the 200 IM. He was also 2nd at the Santa Clarita (USA Swimming) Sectionals meet in the 200 fly in long course. His drops came fast and across the board, but as a representation of a few events:

  • 200 IM – dropped from 1:54.99 as a sophomore to 1:45.94 as a junior
  • 500 free – dropped from 4:30.49 as a sophomore to 4:25.64 as a junior
  • 200 back – dropped from 1:54.42 as a sophomore to 1:48.10 as a junior

Affeld has immense versatility that could wind up contributing for Stanford in almost every event, though backstroke, mid-distance free, and IM races have been his focus at big club and high school meets.

Best Times in Yards:

  • 50 free – 20.91
  • 100 free – 45.62
  • 200 free – 1:37.65
  • 500 free – 4:25.64
  • 1000 free – 9:24.34
  • 1650 free – 15:36.94
  • 100 back – 49.32
  • 200 back – 1:48.10
  • 100 breast – 59.37
  • 200 breast – 2:07.43
  • 100 fly – 48.21
  • 200 fly – 1:47.55
  • 200 IM – 1:46.94
  • 400 IM – 3:52.29

This is a crucial recruit for first year head coach Dan Schemmel. The Cardinal have had a few down recruiting classes, and with the graduation of Abrahm Devine (who was both an NCAA Champion in the 400 IM and the team’s best 50 freestyler), they lost a lot of their relay flexibility and depth. Between this addition for next fall, along with some versatile swimmers (and crucially speed) this fall in Shane Blinkman, Will Tarvestad, and Andrew Matejka, the Cardinal are rebuilding the depth that once had them as a perennial top 4 team in the NCAA.

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.

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Read the full story on SwimSwam: Local Swimmer Jonathan Affeld Verbally Commits to Stanford

Class of 2021 #10 Recruit Ellie Waldrep Gives Verbal to Auburn Tigers

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By Spencer Penland 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.

Ellie Waldrep, a current high school junior representing Baylor Swim Club in Chattanooga, TN, has given her verbal commitment to the Auburn Tigers for fall of 2021. Waldrep is SwimSwam’s 10th-ranked recruit from the ‘way too early recruit ranks’ for the class of 2021, published in May of this year. She becomes just the 3rd commitment from our top 20. #3 Grace Sheble has committed to NC State, and #17 Micayla Cronk has committed to Florida.

Representing Baylor School in the 2018-2019 high school season, Waldrep broke 2 SCM national high school records. She swam a 1:00.34 to break a 10-year-old 100 back record, and split 26.93 to help the Baylor 200 free relay to a record as well. She also placed 4th in the 100 back, 11th in the 100 fly, and 5th in prelims in the 200 back (scratched finals) at the 2018 East Speedo Winter Juniors meet last December. This summer, Waldrep made the 18 & under D final in both the 100 back and 200 back at US Nationals.

I have absolutely DREAMED of this day since I was a little girl, so without further ado… It is with a FULL heart and EXTREME excitement that I announce my verbal commitment to continue my academic and athletic career at Auburn University!! I want to take a moment to thank each and every one of my family members, coaches, teachers, teammates, and friends for constantly pushing me to be the best I can be, both in and out of the pool. Each and everyone one of you mean the ABSOLUTE WORLD to me. So excited to finally take my place on the Plains!! #WAR EAGLE!!!!</body> </html>

Opinion: Two Schools of Thought On NCAA Amateurism & One Is Bad For Swimming

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

California’s new law allowing NCAA student-athletes to earn money from their names and images puts me in a tough position. On the one side is fairness, and on the other is swimming.

The one thing everyone agrees on is that the current student-athlete model in the NCAA is not sustainable. Even the NCAA admits it. Their statement yesterday said that “changes are needed,” even while criticizing the California bill designed to catalyze those changes.

The Problem

First off, it’s worth clarifying again that this particular bill isn’t about schools paying college athletes – that’s a separate issue. The California bill doesn’t allow schools to pay athletes salaries or bonuses – it allows athletes to earn their own money from outside sources.

That’s an important distinction, because the issue with the current NCAA setup is that far from being paid, student-athletes are actually limited even more than non-athlete students in their ability to make money. NCAA student-athletes cannot use their status as athletes – or even their names, in many cases – to make money. The most egregious example has been the Iowa swimmers who started a T-Shirt business. In the NCAA’s eyes, the swimmers merely mentioning on their GoFundMe site that they’d met while swimming at the University of Iowa was running afoul of the sacrosanct concept of amateurism and could not be allowed to continue.

A story from my own experience: when I competed in college, I was a recruited walk-on as a freshman. Knowing I wasn’t fast enough to qualify for an athletic scholarship at the schools I wanted to compete for, I worked hard on applying for academic scholarship. One scholarship I earned was a Triple-A scholarship, given for achievement in academics, athletics and the arts. But all of my outside scholarships had to be run through NCAA compliance, and that scholarship was flagged. Because it took into account athletic achievements, if I accepted it, it would count against my school’s 9.9 NCAA-limited scholarships. I was forced to give up the scholarship.

The dream is achieving enough in the pool to earn financial help towards a college education. I wound up achieving just enough in the pool to actually lose money.

Things worked out in the end, as I ultimately earned athletic money later on in my career. But that’s certainly not the case for most collegiate athletes.

College costs are higher than they’ve ever been. Student debt is a painful reality for the vast majority of folks who have graduated college sometime in the past decade. The traditional formula has been work: find a job, use your skills to make money and use that money to pay for your education. A good writer might work as an English tutor. A bright business student might start a side business.

But a student-athlete with marketable skills is unable to use those skills to pay for their education. A Division I swimmer could pay down a good chunk of their college debt giving private swim lessons or running swim camps. Except that they can’t, because while they are in the NCAA, the NCAA owns their name, their student-athlete status, and their athletic skills. That’s not a just setup.

I had to wait until I had graduated to run charity swim camps raising money for a freshwater well in Central America, because using my skills to make money – even money for a good cause – would have destroyed my sacred amateurism.

Now, the swimming-specific cases are a small piece of this puzzle. More egregious is how current rules treat the athletes actually making money for their schools, their coaches, and the media. College football players are making truckloads of money for their coaches, the media who broadcast their games and cover them, and officials in both the NCAA and their own athletic departments. Meanwhile the athletes are making nothing – and are one injury away from simultaneously losing all potential NFL earnings and incurring lasting medical bills and health conditions for life.

Two Paths: What Are College Athletics?

Here’s the problem: we all understand that the current setup is unjust. When even the NCAA is implying in statements that change is needed, that’s as close to consensus as you’ll ever see. But the issue really comes down to what we ultimately see as the purpose of college athletics.

Philosophy #1: the educational model

On the surface, this is still the model the NCAA and universities claim to uphold. College athletics are part of the educational process. It’s the same way we treat sports at the high school level. Students learn through athletics – they learn valuable life skills, they develop the ability to work hard and see payoffs from hard work. They learn teamwork, they learn how to take coaching and criticism, they learn to manage multiple responsibilities.

In that model, the current setup is roughly fair, especially if the amateurism concept goes by the wayside. Revenue sports like football and basketball bring in money that athletic departments use to sponsor non-revenue sports. The educational model of sports would say that revenue sports aren’t more valuable than non-revenue sports, and if the entire athletic department can break even, that’s a healthy way to further the educational system.

But if we’re treating sports as part of the educational process, it needs to be consistent. Athletes are there to learn. Coaches are there to teach. No one is there to get rich. The NCAA talks out of both sides of its mouth when it extols the educational value of sports while making coaches and administrators rich on marketing and broadcasting deals. Holding strictly to the educational model means the money earned through college athletics should be going back to educational advancements – not to extravagant salaries, massive bonuses, or arms races of multi-million dollar luxury facilities.

Philosophy #2: the market model

That leads us to the way NCAA sports really work, for everyone but the athletes. College sports have become a big-money enterprise. Television, apparel, ticket sales – money flows, and there’s no way to stop it. Maybe it shouldn’t be stopped. If the general public cares enough about college athletics to put their wallets behind their fandom, why fight that?

That’s the idea of the market model. But the problem is obvious: the more jobs and livelihoods depend on the success of a college athletic program, the less the educational side the sport is going to matter. The educational aspect doesn’t make anyone money. No one, that is, except the athletes, who are increasingly having their own educational development pushed aside so they can bring in more and more money for everyone but themselves.

The NCAA is increasingly moving towards the market model. But if we accept this philosophy, we have to accept a few logical conclusions of it:

  • If college sports are about the money they earn, then college sports that don’t earn money don’t have a place. This is the fear of many: that embracing the big-money side of college athletics will ultimately be the demise of college sports that cost more money than they make – chief among them, swimming & diving. But if we accept this philosophy, then maybe swimming & diving don’t actually belong at the college level unless they can find a way to bring value to athletic departments. It’s a bummer for the sport of swimming, but it’s also the fairest solution, financially speaking.
  • If college sports are about the money they earn, then there is zero justification for the athletes to be denied their piece of the pie. Lifting amateurism restrictions is one way to do that – allowing athletes to use their own skills, their own names, their own statuses as student-athletes to make money.

That’s the personal issue I run into: which philosophy is best when one isn’t just and the other is the death of swimming?

The Next Problem

Not many people have issues with lifting the amateurism restrictions, per se. The real concern is enforcement. How do we determine when athletes are proactively making money for themselves, or when a school or booster club is using the newfound freedom to set athletes up with cushy payments or endorsement deals, skirting NCAA scholarship limits and destroying parity within the league?

There’s definitely a Pandora’s Box element to this. Lifting the amateurism restrictions seems like the fair path for athletes. But it creates a very tricky situation for the NCAA in ensuring a level playing field across universities. Money would become an even bigger driver of athletic success.

If the California law were eventually extended across the country, the first thing smart college coaches would be doing is setting up swim clinics for their athletes with local clubs. The club pays a fee to the athlete, who spends a few hours coaching the club swimmers. The coach gets to tout those money-making opportunities to recruits, effectively promising money outside of the NCAA’s scholarship limits. That’s not even mentioning booster clubs who could effectively “buy” autographs or something similarly low-effort from athletes, raising money to pay those athletes what would amount to endowed scholarships above and beyond NCAA limits.

Now, this is all under the assumption that egregious violations like that couldn’t be caught. Maybe there are better ways of policing and regulating the money involved in college sports. There could be further rules in place, maybe limits on how much athletes could earn, or specific checks on booster clubs. But that’s absolutely central to the California model working without the NCAA effectively becoming a professional league with no enforceable salary cap.

Forcing the Issue

Ultimately, California’s law will force some level of change. It’s hard to see the NCAA banning all California schools, including a number of its more marketable programs. It’s hard to see other schools continuing to compete against California schools if the playing field isn’t level. The California law doesn’t take effect until 2023 – that strategically leaves a little more than three years for all parties to come to a conclusion.

That window could be shortening fast, though, especially with Florida’s new bill that would make similar changes by next July. A change is coming – it’s not clear yet how drastic, or how soon it’ll need to happen. After that, swimming will have to find its new fit in changing college sports landscape. And swimming fans may have to just hope that a fit exists at all.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Opinion: Two Schools of Thought On NCAA Amateurism & One Is Bad For Swimming

David Foldhazi, Liliana Szilagyi to Join Shane Tusup’s Training Group

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By Karl Ortegon on SwimSwam

Two swimmers will join Shane Tusup‘s training group in the lead-up to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics: Hungarians David Foldhazi and Liliana Szilagyi.

Foldhazi is a backstroker/IMer who holds Hungarian records in SCM in the 100 IM and as the backstroke leg of the 4×50 medley and 4×100 medley relays.

Foldhazi’s announcement was posted to Shane Tusup‘s YouTube channel, where he has been documenting the training of Italian record-holder Ilaria Cusinato and Hungarian 15-year-old Zsombor Bujdoso since they came together in August. Foldhazi, 24, has trained with Tusup (and Katinka Hosszu) for two separate stints.

Szilagyi, meanwhile, is one of the best 200 flyers in Hungarian history. Her best LCM time of 2:06.59, the time she hit in her gold medal swim at the 2014 Youth Olympics, ranks third all-time amongst Hungarians. She’s a two-time Olympian (2012 and 2016) and was a semifinalist in the 100 fly and 200 fly in 2016.

Despite joining the University of Florida roster in 2017 and training in Gainesville for some time, Szilagyi never raced for the Gators and eventually moved back to Europe. Reports from Hungarian media over the last day or so have purported that Szilagyi, too, will join Team Darkhorse.

DAVID FOLDHAZI‘S ANNOUNCEMENT

Read the full story on SwimSwam: David Foldhazi, Liliana Szilagyi to Join Shane Tusup’s Training Group


2020 Tokyo Paralympic Tickets Go On Sale Today

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

Tickets for the 2020 Paralympic Games are on sale today, with some categories of swimming tickets already listed as “sold out” within a few hours.

Tickets for the Paralympic Games went on sale at 9:00 AM (U.S. Eastern Time). As of about noon Eastern time, multiple sessions are already listed as “sold out” of category A tickets. The tickets are divided into three price ranges, category A being the highest-priced, with category B and C tickets also available.

In fact, every prelims session is listed as “sold out” of category A tickets, though it’s not clear if those tickets have actually sold out, or whether there are no category A tickets for prelims sessions. The only finals session with a “sold out” category listed are the Monday (August 31) finals, which list category A as “sold out.”

You can see the available tickets and prices for Paralympic swimming sessions by following this link.

The 2020 Paralympic Games are set to take place from Tuesday, August 25 to Sunday, September 6, 2020 in Tokyo, Japan. The swimming events are slated for Wednesday, August 26 to Friday, September 4, running almost every day of the Paralympic Games. This year’s Summer Paralympics will include 146 swimming events – that’s actually six less than were included in 2016.

Here are the prices for each session and category:

Prelims:

  • Category A: —
  • Category B: $36
  • Category C: $26

Finals:

  • Category A: $91
  • Category B: $65
  • Category C: $36

Read the full story on SwimSwam: 2020 Tokyo Paralympic Tickets Go On Sale Today

ISL Indianapolis La Guida Completa E Link Per Seguirla

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By Giusy Cisale on SwimSwam

Caeleb Dresseli courtesy of Rafael Domeyko

INTERNATIONAL SWIMMING LEAGUE – INDIANAPOLIS

La prima gara della nuova International Swimming League (ISL) inizierà sabato al leggendario Natatorium dell’Università dell’Indiana (IUPUI) di Indianapolis. L’evento si svolgerà in due sessioni di due ore.

In Italia, le gare inizieranno all’una della notte tra sabato e domenica, e termineranno alle 3:00.

Sebbene ogni squadra ISL contenga circa 28 atleti, solo 14 per squadra saranno utilizzati in gara.

Oltre a non sapere chi gareggerà questo fine settimana, non sapremo quali atleti nuoteranno fino a 90 minuti prima dell’inizio dell’evento.

SQUADRE

Questo fine settimana ci saranno i team del “Gruppo A”:

Ogni squadra vanta detentori di record del mondo e medaglie d’oro olimpiche: i Cali Condors hanno Caeleb Dressel e Lilly King. La DC Trident ha Katie Ledecky, Cody Miller e Natalie Coughlin Energy Standard contiene una collezione di stelle internazionali tra cui Sarah Sjostrom, Chad le Clos, Penny Oleksiak e Anton Chupkov. Gli Aqua Centurions sono guidati da Federica Pellegrini, detentrice del record mondiale, e dal veterano ungherese Laszlo Cseh.

Anche se non dovremmo necessariamente aspettarci di vedere tutte queste mega-star in piscina questo fine settimana, il fatto che potremmo vederle competere l’una contro l’altra in squadre che trascendono la nazionalità e l’affiliazione olimpica è sufficiente a rendere partecipe qualsiasi fan del nuoto dislocato nel mondo.

PROGRAMMA GARE

Il programma si preannuncia molto veloce.

Otto gare individuali e tre staffette per sessione, per un totale di 19 manche nel primo giorno e 23 manche nel secondo giorno. A conclusione ci sarà la “Skin race” dei 50 metri stile libero.

Si inizia con 8 nuotatori e si procede ad eliminazione diretta fino ad arrivare alla sfida finale tra due atleti.

La staffetta mista 4 x 50 metri misti si terrà in caso di pareggio tra due squadre.

Il Programma gare è il seguente:

GARE FEMMINILIDAY 1GARE  MASCHILI
1100 farfalla2
350 rana4
5400 misti6
7
4×100 stile libero
—Break—
9200 dorso8
1150 stile10
4×100 misti12
—Break—
13200 stile libero14
1550 dorso16
17200 rana18
4×100 stile libero19
GARE FEMMINILI

DAY 2

GARE MASCHILI
20100 Stile libero21
22100 rana23
24400 stile libero25
26
4×100 misti
—Break—
28200 misti27
3050 Farfalla29
32100 dorso31
334×100 stile libero m/f33
—Break—
34200 Fly35
3650 Free Skins37
384×50 mista (eventuale spareggio38

DIRETTA TV

L’International Swimming League (ISL) ha stipulato un accordo esclusivo e biennale con Eurosport.

Le prime due stagioni della ISL saranno messe a disposizione degli abbonati Eurosport in Europa e in Asia.

Eurosport è disponibile anche sulla piattaforma DAZN ed in streaming su Eurosport ed Eurosport Player

Read the full story on SwimSwam: ISL Indianapolis La Guida Completa E Link Per Seguirla

Para-Swimmers Griswold, Smith Named Finalists for USOPC Best of September

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By SwimSwam on SwimSwam

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.– The United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee today announced the finalists for the Team USA Awards presented by Dow, Best of September, which recognize the outstanding achievements of Team USA athletes from last month. Fans are invited to vote for their favorite athletes and teams at TeamUSA.org/Awards through midnight Monday, Oct. 7.

Eight sports – including cycling, Para-cycling, Para swimming, skateboarding, track and field, volleyball, weightlifting and wrestling – are represented among the 13 finalists across men’s, women’s and team categories. The finalists’ collective accomplishments tell the inspiring story of U.S. Olympic and Paralympic athletes year-round.

SEPTEMBER FINALISTS

Male Athlete of the Month

J’den Cox (Columbia, Missouri), Wrestling
Seeded No. 1, Cox won his second straight world title, with a gold-medal performance in the 92 kg. at the World Wrestling Championships in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan.

Robert Griswold (Freehold, N.J.), Para swimming
Took home four medals – including two golds and two silvers – at the 2019 World Para Swimming Championships, highlighted by Pan American records in the 200-meter individual medley SM8 (2:22.72) and the 400 freestyle S8 (4:32.77).

Aaron Keith (Woodinville, Washington), Para-cycling
Won two medals at the 2019 UCI Para-cycling Road World Championships, including gold in the men’s C1 time trial and bronze in the men’s C1 road race.

Heimana Reynolds (Honolulu, Hawaii), Skateboarding
Won the men’ park skateboarding world championship title in Sao Paulo, Brazil, recording a score of 88.00 points in his final run.

Christian Taylor (Fayetteville, Georgia), Track and field
Captured his fourth world title – and third consecutive – in the men’s triple jump with a score of 17.92 meters at the World Athletics Championships in Doha, Qatar. His win marked the 100th world title by an American man in track and field history dating back to 1983.

Female Athlete of the Month

Chloé Dygert Owen (Brownsburg, Indiana), Cycling
Won the individual time trial title by the largest margin ever (1:32.35) at the UCI Road World Championships, qualifying for the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 and becoming the youngest winner in event history.

Adeline Gray (Denver, Colorado), Wrestling
Became the first American wrestler to earn five senior world championship gold medals, winning the 76 kg. division title at the World Wrestling Championships to improve to seven career world medals overall.

Kate Nye (Oakland Township, Michigan), Weightlifting
Making her debut at the senior world championships at age 20, became the youngest U.S. women’s world weightlifting champion with a gold-medal sweep in the snatch (junior world record and Pan American record – 112 kg.), clean & jerk (136 kg.) and total (American record – 248 kg.).

DeAnna Price (Moscow Mills, Missouri), Track and field
Became the first American to win a world title in the hammer throw, recording three of the four best throws on the day, including the winning toss of 77.54 meters.

Leanne Smith, (Salem, Massachusetts), Para swimming
Claimed four medals – including three golds and one silver – at the 2019 World Para Swimming Championships, competing up a class and setting a world championship record time of 2:56.49 in the women’s 150-meter individual medley SM4.

Team of the Month

U.S. Men’s Handcycle Relay, Para-cycling
The trio of Will Groulx (Portland, Oregon), Brandon Lyons (Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania) and Tom Davis (Fremont, Indiana) secured the relay silver medal at the 2019 UCI Para-cycling Road World Championships.

U.S. Mixed 4×400-meter Team, Track and field
Competing in the inaugural mixed gender 4×400-meter at the World Athletics Championships, the U.S. relay team of Michael Cherry (Chesapeake, Virginia), Allyson Felix (Los Angeles, California), Wil London (Waco, Texas) and Courtney Okolo (Carrollton, Texas) set a winning world-record pace of 3:09.34 ahead of the event’s Olympic debut in 2020. With the win, Felix became the winningest athlete in world championship history.

U.S. Women’s World Cup Team, Indoor Volleyball
Captured the silver medal at the FIVB World Cup with a 10-1 record, defeating top-ranked Serbia, No. 4 Brazil and No. 5 Russia to become the only country to earn a medal in each of the last five world cup events preceding the Olympic Games.

SELECTION PROCESS
Each National Governing Body may nominate one female, one male and one team per sport discipline. An internal nominating committee selects finalists to advance to the voting round. Votes received from NGB representatives and select members of the media account for 50 percent of the final tally, with the other half determined by online fan voting via TeamUSA.org/Awards.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Para-Swimmers Griswold, Smith Named Finalists for USOPC Best of September

FINIS Set of the Week: Pulls, Turns and Kicks, Oh My!

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By SwimSwam Partner Content on SwimSwam

Set of the Week is courtesy of FINIS, a SwimSwam partner.

This week’s Set of the Week comes from Bryn Lewis, FINIS, Inc.

Warm-up:

300 swim

Main Set:

300 pull w/buoy– Rest 20 seconds
300 pull w/buoy fist drill – Rest 20 seconds
300 fist drill – Rest 20 seconds
300 swim – Rest 20 seconds
300 swim w/fins – Rest 20 seconds

Turns
12×25 on :30 mid pool

Kick Set
300 kick
8 rounds of vertical kick, :30 on :45 off
30×25 on :30 w/fins
4×25 underwater on :45 w/fins

For more tips and inspiration, visit the FINIS Community page today!

About FINIS, Inc.

John Mix and Olympic Gold Medal swimmer Pablo Morales founded FINIS in Northern California in 1993 with a mission to simplify swimming for athletes, coaches, beginners and lifelong swimmers around the world. Today, FINIS fulfills that mission through innovation, high-quality products and a commitment to education. FINIS products are currently available in over 80 countries. With a focus on innovation and the fine details of swimming, FINIS will continue to develop products that help more people enjoy the water.

Set of the Week is courtesy of FINIS, Inc., a SwimSwam partner.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: FINIS Set of the Week: Pulls, Turns and Kicks, Oh My!

FINA World Cup Budapest Brings First Hosszu Versus Cusinato IM Battle

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By Retta Race on SwimSwam

FINA WORLD CUP – BUDAPEST

Cluster #2 of the 2019 FINA World Cup Series is slated to kick-off in Budapest, Hungary on Friday, October 4th, with the 3-day meet taking place at the storied Duna Arena, site of the 2017 FINA World Aquatic Championships. Just 2 stops compose the 2nd cluster of the Series, with Berlin, Germany up next on October 11th.

Entering this Budapest stop, we see Katinka Hosszu of host nation Hungary in the lead for the women’s World Cup standings, holding a total of 156 points. That carries a 6 point advantage over Australia’s Cate Campbell and a 51 point edge over Emily Seebohm, although Seebohm does not appear on the entry lists due to her being a member of the Energy Standard team competing this weekend (see below).

As for the men’s points standings, it’s Russia’s Vladimir Morozov who is getting it done in dominating fashion. He also carries a total of 156 points into this Budapest stop, with the next closest competitor represented by American Andrew Wilson, who holds 129 points after cluster #1. Wilson is also missing from the entry lists due to the Cali Condors, leaving just Michael Andrew and World Cup newcomer Kaersten Meitz as the only Americans.

Andrew ranks 5th among the men’s point standings, while Meitz is competing for the first time. She was a World University Games medalist this summer, with the Purdue Boilermaker taking gold in the 400m free.

You can find the points standings at the bottom of this post.

Of special significance for this weekend’s World Cup event, however, is the fact that the first meet of the inaugural International Swimming League (ISL) is taking place simultaneously. The teams of Cali Condors, DC Trident, Energy Standard, Aqua Centurions will be competing in Indianapolis, Indiana, which means a huge host of stars such as Caeleb Dressel, Sarah Sjostrom, Katie Ledecky and Chad Le Clos will be there instead.

Also of significance is the fact that Hosszu and Italy’s Ilaria Cusinato will both be in the pool first time since the latter has paired up with the former’s ex-husband and previous coach,Shane Tusup. Cusinato is among a small training group that also includes David Foldhazi and Liliana Szilagyi.

Hosszu and Cusinato are both IMers, which means we should see them go head-to-head in the 400m IM on day 2 and the 200m IM on day 3, among other potential events.

Hosszu is the reigning World Record holder and Olympic champion in both the 200m IM and 400m IM, holding the fastest times ever of 2:06.12 and 4:26.36, respectively. Cusinato’s personal bests in the events were both produced last year, represented by 2:10.25 and 4:34.65.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: FINA World Cup Budapest Brings First Hosszu Versus Cusinato IM Battle

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