You are working on Staging1

2019 ISL Finale: Start Lists Released; Dressel Enters 50 Breast

2019 INTERNATIONAL SWIMMING LEAGUE – FINALE

  • Friday, December 20 – Saturday, December 21, 2019
  • 1:00 – 3:00 PM Local Time (U.S. Pacific Time)
  • Madalay Bay Resort and Casino – Las Vegas, NV
  • Short Course Meters (SCM) format
  • Top 4 qualifying franchises: Energy Standard, London Roar, LA Current, Cali Condors
  • Live Stream (ESPN3)
  • Day 1 start lists

The International Swimming League has released its start lists for day 1 of the 2019 season finale.

You can view full start lists here.

We covered the meet extensively, team-by-team, in our meet preview. You can find that here. From our team predictions:

London still feels like the heavy favorites, as long as the jet lag doesn’t knock them down big-time. The two European franchises are very likely dueling for the win, with the American teams rematching their derby clash for third. If we’re generalizing, the main differences in those two battles will probably come down to (1) relay DQs and (2) gaming relay lineups for max points. In the deepest ISL field we’ve seen this season, it’ll be that much harder to split relays – but a team that can get its B relay up to 4th or 5th overall is going to see a huge point boost.

We’ll take LA to once again beat Cali. The Current have some veterans who may subscribe to the Matt Grevers shave-and-taper philosophy, and they’ve generally shown up very well in the big moments. If Beryl Gastaldello makes the skins second round, this should break LA’s way, but if one of the Condors can sneak into the spot instead (or if all four LA and Cali entrants miss the second round – a real possibility), then things even up much more between the two American teams.

We’ll start poring over them and collecting any interesting tidbits below.

  • Cali Condors star Caeleb Dressel will take on the 50 breaststroke. That helps cover an extreme Cali weakness on the men’s side, but does leave Dressel in five events over today’s three sessions.
  • Japanese standout Daiya Seto is one of the top new additions to the league this meet. He’ll swim for Energy Standard, and is entered in his traditional 400 IM, as well as on a medley relay as a butterflyer.
  • The London Roar have Kyle Chalmers entered in the 50 free – he’s not a major surprise there, but Alex Graham probably is. London has mostly used others in the 50, and it remains to be seen if Graham will maintain the spot for the skin race tomorrow.
  • London also has both Campbell sisters – Cate and Bronte – in the women’s 50, in lieu of Emma McKeonthough they could swap back to McKeon for the skins race.
  • Duncan Scott is in the 400 IM for London – that’s on the higher end of his range. He has a pretty light lineup otherwise, though, swimming just the IM and two relays.
  • Same story for Kliment Kolesnikov of Energy Standard – he’s in only the 50 back and two relays, once again passing up the 200 back, probably in an Energy Standard attempt to keep him rested for the men’s medley relay shortly thereafter.

In This Story

38
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

38 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Swimmer
4 years ago

10 min before it starts and there are maybe 200 fans here.

Admin
Reply to  Swimmer
4 years ago

My count was closer to 300. But yeah, smallest crowd of the season so far, I’d say.

Swimmer
Reply to  Swimmer
4 years ago

Meet starting. Maybe 300 fans. Maybe

Pvdh
Reply to  Swimmer
4 years ago

Yea next time don’t hold the final during Christmas…

leisurely1:29
Reply to  Pvdh
4 years ago

Or in Vegas of all places…

spectatorn
Reply to  Pvdh
4 years ago

or not on Friday 😛

Gen D
Reply to  Swimmer
4 years ago

Or at 1 PM on a work day…

Dbswims
4 years ago

The amount of faith the condor coaches lost in wilson lmao

Aquajosh
4 years ago

If London is smart, they will swap back to McKeon for the Skins – she was posting personal best 50s all season and she is money when the big lights are on.

Sir Swimsalot
4 years ago

Really want Grevers to throw down. Show he still got it!

Sccoach
4 years ago

Why does this have to be on when I’m at work!

spectatorn
Reply to  Sccoach
4 years ago

I was hoping to push lunch to 1pm so I can watch part of it…boss has different idea…sigh

BairnOwl
4 years ago

I’d guess that they’ll still be using Scott in the skins tomorrow but put Graham in the 50 free instead because Scott did a poor relay split after doing the 400 IM then 50 free then the relay last time in London.

SwimFan01
4 years ago

Dressel with that 100 fly 50 breast back to back…MA couldn’t do it. Can CD?

Rafael
Reply to  SwimFan01
4 years ago

Can he swim? Yes.. will he be able to go against Lima Peaty Ilya? Would be a surprise.

Pvdh
Reply to  Rafael
4 years ago

I mean the 50 breast is like 70% starts and pullout which nobody can go with Dressel on. They’ll swamp him on the stroke but he’s not absolutely lacking their either. I think it’ll be very close

BairnOwl
Reply to  Pvdh
4 years ago

Yeah, Morozov proved that competing with Peaty et al. in a short course 50 is very possible if you’re a great short course swimmer.

AuggieBuschFan
Reply to  Rafael
4 years ago

2nd fastest 100 breaststroke of all time yards untapered and not shaved. He will manage…..

Pvdh
Reply to  SwimFan01
4 years ago

Well…Dressel’s actually got the training background to do it.

Pvdh
4 years ago

Wow ES gets Seto? He’s plug and play in literally every event and at the top of his game. Maybe they can beat out Roar

Rafael
Reply to  Pvdh
4 years ago

London spread their relays.. probably trying to maximize points.. probably trying to get the B team on 5th at least on all relays..

BairnOwl
Reply to  Rafael
4 years ago

Um, how did London spread their relays? As far as I can tell, they stacked their fastest swimmers for all the day 1 relays.

Rafael
Reply to  BairnOwl
4 years ago

Check the women free

BairnOwl
Reply to  Rafael
4 years ago

They’ve got McKeon and both Campbells on the same relay… Besides them, Wattel and Barratt are arguably the fastest and have done similar splits. Looks stacked to me.

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

Read More »