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2020 Swammy Awards: European Female Swimmer of the Year – Beryl Gastaldello

To see all of our 2020 Swammy Awards, click here.

2020 EUROPEAN FEMALE SWIMMER OF THE YEAR: BERYL GASTALDELLO, FRANCE

While France’s Beryl Gastaldello surprised many by proving to be one of the most valuable commodities in the inaugural season of the International Swimming League last year, finishing 10th in the season-long points race, it was nothing compared to what she had in store for 2020.

Gastaldello, a 25-year-old native of Miramas, made the jump from being her club’s top scorer in 2019 to becoming a top-three swimmer in the league overall in Season 2, earning her the 2020 Swammy Award for European Female Swimmer of the Year.

With the year’s major international competition — the Tokyo Olympic Games — postponed due to the coronavirus pandemic, 2020’s awards certainly skew towards a short course specialist like Gastaldello, who was able to put her abilities on display for five straight weeks in Budapest when not much else had happened in the sport for several months.

And while the short course emphasis of the year certainly favored her, the former Texas A&M Aggie left little doubt that she was the top European female of 2020.

Gastaldello was a revelation in her second ISL season with the LA Current, amassing a staggering 20 individual victories over six matches. This includes her freestyle skins win in Match 3, and the number might’ve been even higher if breaststroke wasn’t the selected skins stroke in all five of her other matches. The season’s third match also saw her win MVP honors with 78 points.

The 2016 Olympian finished the season ranked third overall in individual points with 340.5, trailing only Caeleb Dressel (463.5) and Lilly King (350.0). If Gastaldello had a bit stronger of a supporting cast and the Current women managed a few more medley relay wins, giving them the chance to pick a stroke other than breast for the skins, Gastaldello would be in position to surpass King and hold the distinction as the league’s most valuable female swimmer. Given that her 20 wins came across six different events — 50 free, 100 free, 50 back, 50 fly, 100 fly, 100 IM — there’s an argument she already is given her versatility.

In terms of times, Gastaldello reset the French National Record in the 100 free and 100 IM twice during the season, bringing her times down to 51.16 and 57.30, respectively, ranking her seventh and third all-time. At season’s end she was the league’s fastest swimmer in both the 100 IM and 100 fly (55.32).

In the long course pool, Gastaldello closed out the year by qualifying for her second Olympic team in the 100 free, hitting a personal best of 53.40 at the French Elite Championships in December to get under the country’s mandated standard of 53.53. She also swam to a best time in the 50 free (24.87), placing third, and was second in the 100 fly (58.09) in Saint-Raphaël, with another opportunity to qualify for the Games coming in June. The French Olympic standard in the 50 free is 24.53, while the 100 fly time stands at 57.51.

HONORABLE MENTIONS

  • Benedetta Pilato, Italy: The 15-year-old stud continued her upward trajectory in the 50 breaststroke, tying the European Record in the short course pool (28.81) while resetting the world junior and Italian marks in long course (29.61), but we also saw her improve leaps and bounds in the 100m event. Pilato earned herself an Olympic berth by clocking 1:06.02 in the 100 breast in December, over two seconds faster than her best time entering 2020, breaking the Italian Record in the process. Repping Energy Standard in the ISL, she also clocked 1:03.55 in the short course pool to make her the third-fastest European ever.
  • Sarah Sjostrom, Sweden: The inaugural ISL season MVP in 2019, Sjostrom fell to fifth overall in points in 2020, due in part to a back injury that saw her sit out of a full match. The Swede still ranked second to Caeleb Dressel in points-per-match with 59.4, walking away with 16 individual wins, including three in the skins. And while neither are official world records, Sjostrom also featured on Energy Standard’s women’s and mixed 400 free relays that were both the fastest of all-time.
  • Kira Toussaint, Netherlands: Toussaint was the first swimmer to break a world record inside the Budapest bubble, lowering Etiene Medeirossix-year-old mark in the women’s 50 backstroke in 25.60. The 26-year-old would go on to tie that record one month later in Amsterdam, and also set new Dutch Records in the long course 50 (27.37) and 100 back (58.91) in early December, qualifying for the 2021 Olympics in the latter. She also won seven individual races in the ISL and was an extremely valuable member on the London Roar medley relays, especially with the absence of Minna Atherton.

PAST WINNERS

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YaYeeter
3 years ago

Well deserved.

swimfin5
3 years ago

Should have been Kira. She broke a WR

Hswimmer
Reply to  swimfin5
3 years ago

Beryl did better overall..

swimfin5
Reply to  Hswimmer
3 years ago

Nah u wrong

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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