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Le Clos back into World Cup series points lead after Dubai, but only by 4; Hosszu crushing competition

Chad le Clos is back in the driver’s seat, leading the World Cup points standings after the Dubai meet, but his lead is just four points after a great weekend for Hungary’s Daniel Gyurta.

Gyurta’s teammate Katinka Hosszu, on the other hand, hasn’t lost control of the wheel yet, and doesn’t appear to be relaxing her grip anytime soon. Hosszu outscored all swimmers by 100 at the Dubai stop and now leads by 229 over the Netherlands’ Inge Dekker.

The first two meets of the World Cup make up the first “cluster,” with bonus cash for the top 6 finishers in the cluster.

For the men, that includes Le Clos and Gyurta, plus third-place Thomas Fraser-Holmes of Australia. A ways back of him is American Tom Shields, plus Germany’s Marco Koch and Christian Diener.

On the women’s side, Alia Atkinson of Jamaica runs third, with Mireia Belmonte just three points back. Also in line for cluster bonuses are Marieke D’Cruz and Breeja Larson.

The World Cup series awards points in three ways. All medalists (top 3) in any individual event earn points, 12 for gold, 9 for silver and 6 for bronze. World records add a bonus of 20 points. Finally, the top 3 overall performances in FINA points earn “performance bonuses” in each gender. First gains 24, second 18 and third 12.

Of course, an athlete can only earn one performance bonus, so an athlete with the two highest-scoring performances can’t sweep the 24 and 18 point bonuses. That’s good for most of the women at this meet, as Hosszu didn’t just sweep the top two performances, she swept the top 8. She still earns the 24-point bonus, but Dekker and Atkinson are able to move up for the other two.

We had a rare tie for the third-best performance on the women’s side. Atkinson’s 50 breast and Belmonte’s 800 free both earned 967 FINA Points. World Cup rules state that the tie is broken by each athlete’s second-best performance, and that’s how Atkinson picked up the bonus. Her second best event was the 100 IM where she put up 958 FINA Points, while Belmonte’s next-best was just 925 from the 400 IM.

Here are the overall performance bonus winners from the Dubai World Cup:

Performance Bonuses:

Men:

  1. Daniel Gyurta, 200 breast: 1004 FINA Points
  2. Chad le Clos, 100 fly: 993 FINA Points
  3. Marco Koch, 200 breast: 984 FINA Points

Women:

  1. Katinka Hosszu, 100 IM: 1031 FINA Points
  2. Inge Dekker, 50 Fly: 971 FINA Points
  3. Alia Atkinson, 50 Breast: 967 FINA Points

 

Men’s Point Standings

Rank Athlete Country TOTAL POINTS TOTAL: Dubai
1 Chad le Clos South Africa 120 66
2 Daniel Gyurta Hungary 116 68
3 Thomas Fraser-Holmes Australia 93 45
4 Tom Shields USA 85.5 46.5
5 Marco Koch Germany 69 33
6 Christian Diener Germany 63 33
7 Velimir Stjepanovic Serbia 45 18
8 Eugene Godsoe USA 42 21
9 George Bovell Trinidad & Tobago 40.5 21
10 Roland Schoeman South Africa 37.5 19.5
11 Pawel Korzeniowski Poland 30 15
12 Konrad Czerniak Poland 28.5 6
13 David Verraszto Hungary 27 18
13 Fabio Scozzoli Italy 27 18
13 Cody Miller USA 27 12
16 Gergo Kis Hungary 24 12
16 Josh Schneider USA 24 12
18 Steffen Deibler Germany 21 15
18 Bobby Hurley Australia 21 6
20 Ahmed Mathlouthi Tunisia 18 12
20 Oussama Mellouli Tunisia 18 6
22 Hayate Matsubara Japan 12 6
22 Nikolay Skvortsov Russia 12 6
22 Yukihiro Takahashi Japan 12 6
25 Leith Shankland South Africa 9 0
26 Ari-Pekka Liukkonen Finland 6 6
26 Ashley Delaney Australia 6 6
26 Martin Schweitzer Switzerland 6 0
26 Martin Spitzer Austria 6 0

Women’s Point Standings

Rank Athlete Country TOTAL POINTS TOTAL: Dubai
1 Katinka Hosszu Hungary 355 166
2 Inge Dekker Netherlands 126 66
3 Alia Atkinson Jamaica 87 45
4 Mireia Belmonte Garcia Spain 84 39
5 Marieke D’Cruz Australia 69 36
6 Breeja Larson USA 60 30
7 Daryna Zevina Ukraine 57 27
8 Caitlin Leverenz USA 42 21
9 Aleksanrda Urbanczyk Poland 39 12
10 Julia Hassler Liechtenstein 36 18
11 Lisa Zaiser Austria 33 27
12 Evelyn Verraszto Hungary 24 15
12 Carolina Colorado Henao Colombia 24 12
14 Franziska Hentke Germany 21 15
14 Hrafnhildur Luthersdottir Iceland 21 0
16 Laura Sogar USA 18 12
17 Lena Kreundl Austria 12 6
17 Danielle Villars Switzerland 12 0
19 Michee Van Rooyen South Africa 6 6

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shieldsforthewin
10 years ago

Good start to the series. Cant wait for Chad to take Shields on in the 200m Fly. It should be THE RACE at the next stop

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 …

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