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Paltrinieri Says World’s #1 14:38.34 1500 Free “Pretty Good”

2019 ITALIAN CHAMPIONSHIPS

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Olympic champion Gregorio Paltrinieri sealed up his spot on the Italian roster for this summer’s World Championships, making the squad in the men’s 1500m free. While competing on the final night in Riccione, the 24-year-old freestyle ace clocked a gold medal worth time of 14:38.34 to hit a mark within striking distance of the 14:34.57 he notched in Rio.

Paltrinieri’s time also checks-in as the fastest in the world.

Of his performance, Paltrinieri tells us in the video that, “it’s a good result for this point in time. The 800m wasn’t so good, so this 1500m was better. We’ll see what happens in Gwangju.”

In the 800m at these championships, Paltrinieri finished 2nd behind Gabriele Detti, also qualifying for Gwangju in a solid 7:45.35.

As originally reported:

MEN’S 1500M FREE

  • time limit 14:53.9
  1. GOLD Gregorio Paltrinieri  1438.34
  2. SILVER  Domenico Acerenza 15: 12.96
  3. BRONZE Alessio Occhipinti  15: ]15.49

24-year-old Olympic gold medalist Gregorio Paltrinieri simply manhandled the 1500m freestyle field tonight, clocking 14:38.34 to dominate the field by over 30 seconds.

Paltrinieri’s gold medal-winning time from Rio was 14:34.57, so tonight’s effort in Riccione was within 4 seconds of that outing. The Italian’s time easily overtake the top spot in the world’s rankings, beating out what German Florian Wellbrock produced last night in Bergen of 14:44.80, as well as what Sun Yang of China hit at his Nationals (14:55.00).

2018-2019 LCM MEN 1500 FREE

FlorianGER
WELLBROCK
07/28
14.36.54
2Myhailo
ROMANCHUK
UKR14.37.6307/28
3Gregorio
PALTRINIERI
ITA14.38.3404/06
4David
AUBRY
FRA14.44.7207/28
5Henrik
CHRISTIANSEN
NOR14.45.3507/28
View Top 26»

Paltrinieri’s time tonight checks-in as the 14th fastest performance of all-time, according ot the USA Swimming global database.

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Mikeh
5 years ago

It is quite confusing. Palintieri has the craziest technique I have ever encountered at the elite level. I thought Stefan Nystrand was unorthodox, but Palitieri may have him beat. Legs crossing over with each stroke to such a degree that he has almost no meaningful kick at all. Swinging his left arm around in a wide arc, picking his head up on each breath.

Yet he is so fast….how on earth does he do it?

Superfan
Reply to  Mikeh
5 years ago

He has a HUGE engine!

FLSwimmer
Reply to  Mikeh
5 years ago

Because of his high tempo mainly. Obviously he doesn’t pull as much water as someone like Romanchuk, but his tempo makes up for it. Quite amazing he can maintain that for a 1500 honestly. Testament to his aerobic capacity and training.

Gunky
Reply to  Mikeh
5 years ago

Balance is everything. If you put all the wrong motions in the right order you achieve balance and he has.

Philip Johnson
Reply to  Mikeh
5 years ago

It’s not pretty to watch, but it sure as heck works.

Reid
Reply to  Philip Johnson
5 years ago

Have to disagree there, I could watch it all day. I much prefer Paltrinieri’s high energy yet smooth stroke to watching Romanchuk lazily glide through a 1500 without ever looking like he’s trying.

Dudeman
Reply to  Reid
5 years ago

From an entertainment perspective he might be more enjoyable to watch but any swimmer will have massive respect for the way Romanchuk swims the 1500. Making it look that “easy” while swimming in the 14:30’s is an amazing feat and has to be very difficult to maintain

Luigi
Reply to  Mikeh
5 years ago

Several answers. One: what happens below the water is equally if not more important, and he has a great catch. Two: look at how high he stays on top of the water, his back is almost dry. Three: as someone else said, he has the heart of a horse.

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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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