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Schooling Takes 100 Fly In Singapore, But Has More To Give

50TH SINGAPORE NATIONAL AGE GROUP SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIPS (SNAGS)

Singapore’s Olympic champion Joseph Schooling was in the OCBC Aquatic Centre pool tonight, taking center stage in the men’s 100m butterfly final at the National Age Group Swimming Championships. Clocking a time of 52.70, Schooling took the gold in the only time under the 53-second threshold, with Teong Tzen Wei taking silver in 53.60. 17-year-old Jonathan Tan rounded out the top 3 overall finishers in a time of 54.31.

For Schooling, the 24-year-old Chinese Swimming Club athlete’s time tonight falls shy of the FINA A cut of 51.96 needed for this summer’s World Championships. But Schooling didn’t need it, as he had already qualified for the World Championships via gold medal-winning time of 51.04 at last year’s Asian Games.

Singapore’s National Head Coach and Performance Director Stephan Widmer said of Schooling’s race tonight, “Joseph had a go at it today, and he did many great things today and approached the race really well. He had a goal that he wanted to see today, which was not really the timing that was clocked. They are competitive athletes so you can see on their faces when things do not go their way. We wanted to see where we are right now and from there we can make judgement calls for the future.”

“In many areas he is in a good position, his strength, his body alignment and so from here on we have to keep on building the physiology side of swimming, the aerobic skills to speed and power development.”

Newly-minted 100m freestyle National Record holder Quah Ting Wen did more damage at these championships, winning the women’s 100m fly in a time of 59.28. That qualifies the 27-year-old for this year’s South East Asia Games.

Another highlight of the evening included Indonesian swimmer Alfah Fadlan Prawira taking the men’s 400m IM event to collect his 2nd gold of the meet. The National Record holder earned a winning time of 4:24.26, not a far cry from his national standard of 4:22.73 from 2017.

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SwimIsFun
5 years ago

Get back, get back, get back to where you once belonged, get back Jojo

PowerPlay
5 years ago

The guy won Olympic gold and is hero in Asian countries – – where swimming has a bright future. Why all the hate from comments in this site?

MR FLY
5 years ago

I wonder how tapered he was for this race. Has he gone sub 51 secs since 2017 Worlds? He needs to buck up… Dressel, Milak and Chad are creeping up on him.

Mr Piano
Reply to  MR FLY
5 years ago

I don’t want to be that guy, but he’s not the one being creeped up on. Milak beat Schooling in 2017, and Le Clos went much faster than Schooling last year. Dressel was a 50.5 last year, which doesn’t really put him in the category of “creeping up on Schooling”, who went a 51.0 last year. Schooling wasn’t even top 3 at NCAAs in the 100 fly.

Coach M
5 years ago

Schooling needs to be faster that a 52 high in order to take down the powerhouses of the 100 fly today

Bolles Mom
5 years ago

We love you, Joseph, and are so proud of the kind and compassionate man you’ve always been since we met you at 13 years old. You’re more than a swimmer to us. You are an exceptional young man, who happens to swim very, very well. Go Jojo!

Lpman
5 years ago

Of course he has more to give. He swam this 52.70 in his clothes while holding a 20 lb dumbbell with his feet during the entire race.

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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, …

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