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In Briefs: Japanese Swimming Federation Announces 2011 World Championships Roster

The Japanese Swimming Federation is in a bit of an odd position at the moment, with much of their swimming (and national) infrastructure undergoing great repair. However, they have done a near-heroic job of maintaining a course for the 2011 Shanghai World Championships, which included a shockingly fast, and wildly successful, modified National Championships/Charity meet 2 weeks ago.

Today, they announced their roster for the World Championships, which will include 22 swimmers. The most anticipated swim will be a re-match in the 200 breaststroke of Kosuke Kitajima and Naoya Tomia. The latter upset the former at the National Championships in setting a world-best time of 2:08.25. As expected, the 3rd-place swimmer in that event (who is also 3rd-best in the world this year) Otsuka Kazuki was disappointingly left off.

Full Trials Results (in English).

Japan’s selection for Shanghai (as of April 12, 2011)

Men:

Takuro Fujii
Yosuke Miyamoto
Junya Koga
Ryosuke Irie
Kazuki Watanabe
Kosuke Kitajima
Naoya Tomita
Ryo Tateishi
Takeshi Matsuda
Ryusuke Skata
Yuya Horihata

Women:
Yayoi Matsumoto
Haruka Ueda
Hanae Ito
Natsuki Hasegawa
Misaki Yamaguchi
Aya Terakawa
Shiho Sakai
Satomi Suzuki
Rie Kaneto
Yuka Kato
Natsumi Hoshi


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don
13 years ago

I too can see both sides and it does give college swimmers more opportunity but I don’t think you necessarily get the fastest swimmers. I like the idea of having to get an A cut as the first hurdle and moving on from there. If their is no A cut, maybe look at recent history to fill out the spot. The whole point is to get the fastest swimmers, especially for the relay spots.

don
13 years ago

I’m still amazed that the US decides its team the year before. Also, don’t some of the countries require the swim to meet the FINA time standards?

emily
13 years ago

Coming from a very casual swimfan’s perspective, if you’re bolding the big names that stand out here, I’ve definitely heard of these Japanese swimmers (whereas names like Yosuke Miyamoto doesn’t quite ring a bell for me):

Junya Koga
Takeshi Matsuda

Haruka Ueda
Hanae Ito
Rie Kaneto

John26
13 years ago

why are some names bolded?

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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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