You are working on Staging1

Brazil Wins 2nd-Straight Raia Rapida Meet; Ervin Repeats as 50 Free Winner

The 2016 Raia Rapida took place in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, today.  Hosted at the same pool as the recent Summer Olympic Games, today’s competition was an opportunity to let Brazilian swimmers of all ages swim in the same water that Michael Phelps, Katie Ledecky, and Katinka Hosszu, among many others, made history in during the Games in August.

The competition featured athletes from the host nation Brazil, the United States, South Africa, and Italy.  Team USA returned Rio double gold medalist Anthony Ervin who competed in the 50 free, defending his title in the same pool that he became the oldest individual Olympic gold medalist in swimming.  While Ervin’s time today in the 50 would not have even made the Olympic final, it was nonetheless fast enough to beat his three competitors: Bruno Fratus (BRA), Douglas Erasmus (RSA), and Mirco di Tora (ITA).

The meet, which only featured men for the knock-out style competition that we are reporting on in this article, followed a three-round process of elimination to crown the winners of the individual races (the 50 fly, 50 breast, 50 back, and 50 free).  The competition culminated in a race between all four participant nations in the 200 medley relay, which went to Brazil in a new South American record time.  The results from each round are as follows:

Men’s 50 Back:

Men’s 50m Back – Round 1 Round 2 “Final”
1 Gerhard Zandberg, RSA, 25.49 1 Simoni Sabbioni, ITA, 25.63 1 Gerhard Zandberg, RSA, 25.54
2 Henrique Rodrigues, BRA, 25.64 2 Gerhard Zandberg, RSA, 25.75 2 Simoni Sabbioni, ITA, 25.63
3 Simoni Sabbioni, ITA, 25.71 3 Henrique Rodrigues, BRA, 25.99
4 Eugene Godsoe, USA, 26.05

Men’s 50 Breast:

Men’s 50m Breast – Round 1 Round 2 “Final”
1 Joao Gomes, BRA, 27.55 1 Joao Gomes, BRA, 27.35 1 Joao Gomes, BRA, 27.09
2 Giulio Zorzi, RSA, 27.95 2 Giulio Zorzi, RSA, 27.80 2 Giulio Zorzi, RSA, 27.52
3 Fabio Scozzoli, ITA, 28.80 3 Fabio Scozzoli, ITA, 28.36
4 Mike Alexandrov, USA, 29.62

Men’s 50 Fly:

Men’s 50m Fly – Round 1 Round 2 “Final”
1 Henrique de Souza Martins, BRA, 23.64 1 Henrique de Souza Martins, BRA, 23.55 1 Henrique de Souza Martins, BRA, 23.34
2 Tim Phillips, USA, 23.95 2 Tim Phillips, USA, 23.71 2 Tim Phillips, USA, 23.66
3 Roland Schoeman, RSA, 24.03 3 Roland Schoeman, RSA, 24.13
4 Daniele D’Agelo, ITA, 24.55

Men’s 50 Free:

Men’s 50m Free – Round 1 Round 2 “Final”
1 Douglas Erasmus, RSA, 22.69 1 Anthony Ervin, USA, 22.66 1 Anthony Ervin, USA, 22.32
2 Bruno Fratus, BRA, 23.07 2 Bruno Fratus, BRA, 22.81 2 Bruno Fratus, BRA, 22.63
3 Anthony Ervin, USA, 23.56 3 Douglas Erasmus, RSA, 23.04
4 Mirco Di Tora, ITA, 23.85

Men’s 200M Medley Relay:

  1. Brazil, 1:38.43
  2. South Africa, 1:39.88
  3. USA, 1:40.49
  4. Italy, 1:41.22

One point was awarded to each swimmer if they advanced to the next round, and then one final point to the overall event winner, meaning Ervin’s 50 free crown also garnered 3 points for Team USA.  In the end Brazil came out on top in the team standings with a total of 15 points.  South Africa placed 2nd overall with 11 points, followed by the USA with 7 points and Italy with 3 points.

In the masters competition, Brazil’s Gustavo Borges swam a very fast 24.91 in the men’s 50 meter freestyle.  At age 44 the former Michigan Wolverine takes a commanding lead in the masters swimming world rankings in the 50 for his age group.  In total, more than 300 swimmers from the very young to the much more senior competed in the 2016 Raia Rapida.

Find further results and race videos here, or check out the meet website.

In This Story

4
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

4 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
OAC
8 years ago

Just curious – who pays for teams to attend this meet?

moo goo gai pal
8 years ago

its actually the 3rd year in a row that Brazil has won, not 2nd!

Uberfan
8 years ago

Wow 26 from godsoe

Mike
Reply to  Uberfan
8 years ago

I thought he retired!

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

Read More »