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UPDATE: Sjostrom & Dressel To Win FINA Swimmer of the Year Awards

An update to the scoring format suggests that Sarah Sjostrom and Caeleb Dressel will win FINA’s Swimmer of the Year awards, not Sjostrom and Adam Peaty as previously reported.

We took an early look at the presumptive winners this week, running through FINA’s stated points system with results from the past year. We noted at the time, however, that there were several areas of the scoring format that were unclear: most notably, the start and end dates for accruing points, but also the specifics of points given for World Championships finish.

The full FINA criteria are here, with very little supporting information given outside of point values. We asked FINA for clarification on several key pieces of the formula the week before posting our first look at frontrunners, but still have not received a response from the swimming federation. However, we have learned from a source with knowledge of the award system that the World Championship points will be counted differently than we anticipated and that Dressel will be earning the award over Peaty.

The main difference is that World Championship points will be doled out for every individual event, our source tells us. Our original read on the formula used FINA’s Swimmer of the Meet points system to rank out the top 12 swimmers of the meet, assigning each of them a points bonus toward Swimmer of the Year. But now we’re informed that those bonuses will actually go to the top 12 finishers in each individual event, making World Championships finish far and away the most impactful factor in the Swimmer of the Meet award.

For example, we had Dressel accruing 180 World Champs points for his Swimmer of the Meet honor, while Peaty (second in the Swimmer of the Meet tally) earned 140. But based on our new understanding of the system, Dressel will actually earn 180 points for every event win, plus points for any other event where he’s inside the top 12. That ultimately earns him 640 points instead of the 180 we had originally calculated. In contrast, Peaty goes from 140 points to 360.

Here’s the full points system. Note that the World Cup standings are still ongoing through mid-November and that it’s still unclear when the World Rankings points are assigned. The award will officially be announced on December 2, 2017.

SWIMMING Olympic Games & FINA World Championships (50m & 25m) (1) FINA Swimming World Cup (2) WR bonus
(3)
World Rankings (4)
1 180 120 75 25
2 140 90 20
3 130 80 15
4 100 60 10
5 90 50 5
6 80 40
7 70 35
8 60 30
9 40 25
10 35 20
11 30 15
12 25 10

Dressel should win the men’s award with an estimated 725 points, while Peaty should finish with 535, unless world rankings change drastically. Sun Yang will earn 450 plus world ranking points while Chase Kalisz rolls up 360 plus world ranking points.

On the women’s side, Sjostrom should earn more than 1300 – 680 from Worlds, 120 for the World Cup, 450 from world records and at least another 100 from world rankings in the 50 fly and 100 fly in both short and long course. The next-closest challengers are likely Katinka Hosszu (at least 865, plus a fair amount of world ranking points), Katie Ledecky (680 for Worlds, plus some world rankings points), Mireia Belmonte (675 plus world ranking points), Lilly King (610 plus world ranking points) and Ranomi Kromowidjojo (525 plus world ranking points).

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Sir Swimsalot
7 years ago

Well deserved to both athletes! I think the proximity of the points really speaks out to how much swimming has come and is progressing. I mean, Peaty had a PHENOMENAL year, and he gets 2nd! It’s really great to see so many athletes doing so well.

Aquajosh
7 years ago

That means the University of Florida has developed two different men to be versatile and dominant enough to be FINA World Swimmer of the Year since the award started in 2010. Lochte was FINA World Swimmer of the Year in 2011 and 2013, now Dressel for 2017. Pretty awesome feather in that coaching staff’s cap.

crooked donald
Reply to  Aquajosh
7 years ago

Now if they can only do it in an Olympic year.

Pvdh
Reply to  crooked donald
7 years ago

Caeleb will be ready

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  Pvdh
7 years ago

Sure he will

Tea rex
7 years ago

There is still one world cup leg left, no?
If peaty shows up and throws down a wr 50/100 be, would that change the standings?

E+Gamble
Reply to  Tea rex
7 years ago

Peaty is not throwing down a world record now. The holidays are right around the corner.

Thomas Selig
Reply to  E+Gamble
7 years ago

Peaty is competing in the European short course champs early December, so not on holiday yet ;). As Jared says, given we don’t know what the qualification period is (slow handclap), it’s not easy to answer the question. Certainly Peaty hasn’t competed short course for a few years, so WRs are a possibility. Then again, starts and turns are his weakest points, so he won’t have such a large margin over the rest of the world in SC.

cqcumber
Reply to  Jared Anderson
7 years ago

The eligible dates are quite essential. Short course championships in Windsor could make a huge difference. If it is considered to be in this season, Le Clos will get at least 680 more points.
I remember they announced the swimmer of the year before the Championships last year. I think the points from Windsor should be counted in at least one season, or there is no need to specify it in the points system table.

Brownish
Reply to  Jared Anderson
7 years ago

Jared, and that counts nowhere? It would be insane.

crooked donald
7 years ago

no-brainer

40 Flat
Reply to  crooked donald
7 years ago

U sure schooling doesn’t deserve it? 😉

crooked donald
Reply to  40 Flat
7 years ago

It only takes into account official competition.

Abnen
Reply to  crooked donald
7 years ago

I feel Dressel will not win his 50 free and 100 free for every LCM major meets. He is fortunate that Kyle Chalmers and Florent Manaudou are not participating in 2017 World Championships.

Pvdh
Reply to  Abnen
7 years ago

Have Kyle chalmers and florent Manaudou ever been 47.1 or 21.15?

DMacNCheez
Reply to  Pvdh
7 years ago

Chalmers has been on a consistent improvement curve and is still very young. Manaudou was 21.19 in Kazan. I’m sure the races would’ve been a lot closer

Pvdh
Reply to  DMacNCheez
7 years ago

So no

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  DMacNCheez
7 years ago

both were eating peanuts while Dressel did put on a performance both wont reach any time soon . Period . Period . Period .

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  Abnen
7 years ago

His start would have killed both any day …..and lets not talk about endurance and super efficiency .

Swimjon
7 years ago

Anything else would be… just plain stupid

Pvdh
7 years ago

As it should be

marklewis
7 years ago

Sjostrom had an awesome year. She set records in multiple meets. She broke the 52-second barrier in the 100 free with her WR.

Dressel is the Sprint King now on the men’s side. Interesting in that Dressel and Sjostrom swim similar events.

Westco
Reply to  marklewis
7 years ago

Not just the Sprint King anymore. He’s THE King. ?

Sir Swimsalot
Reply to  Westco
7 years ago

Eh…I won’t be too sure about that yet. Phenomenal, yes.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
7 years ago

Fully deserved to the 2 most incredible swimmers this year .

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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