2024 RUSSIAN SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIPS
- April 14-19, 2024
- Kazan, Russia
- LCM (50 meters)
- Meet Central
- Live Results
- Livestream
- Day 1 Recap
The second finals session of the 2024 Russian Championships included the men’s 100 backstroke, women’s 50 backstroke, men’s 400 freestyle, women’s 50 breaststroke, women’s 200 butterfly, men’s 100 breaststroke, men’s 200 IM, and women’s 800 freestyle. Semifinals of the men’s 100 butterfly and women’s 100 freestyle were also contested.
The men’s 100 back was a clear highlight, where 18-year-old Miron Lifintsev backed up his semifinal performance of 52.62 with a new World Junior record in the final. He roared to splits of 25.34/27.00 to log a new mark of 52.34 and re-write the record book. His speedy effort overtook the previous standard of 52.53, which Kliment Kolesnikov posted back at the 2018 European Championships.
Kolesnikov was 2nd in tonight’s race in a sub-53 second outing of 52.80. 21-year-old Dmitry Savenko made it 3 in the 52-second sector with his bronze medal-worthy 52.90. He demolished his previous career-best time of 53.42 from April of 2023. 2021 Olympic Champion Evgeny Rylov (53.13) settled for 5th place.
The 100 fly semifinals were dominated by Russian record holder Andrei Minakov, who recorded his fastest time in nearly three years. He hit the wall in 51.04, his 5th fastest time ever in the event and under his previous post-Tokyo Olympics best of 51.23. He opened in 23.33 through the front half tonight before finishing in 27.71 over the final 50. He will have the opportunity to improve upon his time in tomorrow’s final, where he could swim a sub-51 second time for the 4th time in his career. He also split 50.14 on the mixed 4×100 medley relay to end the session, helping Tatarstan to gold in 3:48.06.
Andrei Minakov, Top 5 Fastest 100 Butterfly Performances:
- 50.83 — July 2019, Gwangju World Championships
- 50.88 — July 2021, Tokyo Olympic Games
- 50.94 — July 2019, Gwangju World Championships
- 51.00 — July 2021, Tokyo Olympic Games
- 51.04 — April 2024, Russian Championships
In the women’s 50 back final, 24-year-old Maria Kameneva defended her top seed from Sunday’s semifinals with a winning time of 27.83. She was a tenth slower than her 27.73 clocking from yesterday, but did lead a 1-2 punch with her training partner, Alina Gayfutdinova (27.93). Kameneva has been as quick as 27.66 in the 50m sprint and holds the 50m free Russian record.
Martin Malyutin nearly doubled up on middle distance free wins in Kazan this week, as he posted a final time of 3:49.01 to place 2nd in the 400 free. In Sunday’s 200 free final, Malyutin threw down a swift 1:45.83 marker to rank 17th in the world. Alexander Stepanov won today’s 400 in 3:47.30 and showcased an impressive negative split approach: 1:54.82/1:52.48.
Three athletes broke 31-seconds in the women’s 50m breast event, with Tatiana Belonogoff (30.54) out-touching Evgeniia Chikunova (30.75) and Yuliya Efimova (30.78) at the wall. Belonogoff’s winning effort of 30.54 was just outside her best time of 30.33 from February. Chukinova was a little shy of her 30.54 lifetime best from this meet last year, where she completely obliterated the world record in the 200m breast (2:17.55).
The men’s 100 breast saw a major shakeup from last night’s semifinals, with Ivan Kozhakin (59.10) touching 1st ahead of Kirill Prigoda (59.37) and Danil Semyaninov (59.70). Kozhakin and Prigoda were tied through the first 50m at 27.61, but Kozhakin increased the pace on the backend to touch ahead by 0.27. In yesterday’s semifinals, it was Semyaninov who led the charge, but he clocked-in for 3rd tonight.
Longtime National Team member Prigoda has a personal best of 58.92 in this event. He stopped the clock in 58.98 at this meet a year ago. Kozhakin notched a bronze medal-winning time of 59.04 in 2023 which still stands as his career best, and even though he was marginally slower tonight, he still moved up to National Champion status.
Other Results:
- The men’s 200 IM saw a tight battle ensue between 2003-born athletes Ilya Borodin and Alexey Sudarev. Borodin, who holds the Russian record in this event at 1:57.30, snared gold by just 0.10. The pair touched in sub-1:58 performances of 1:57.86 and 1:57.96, respectively. They were both 25.6 on fly and 29.6 on back, but Sudarev took the lead by eight tenths on breast before Borodin rallied back on the final 50.
- Veteran Svetlana Chimrova was the sole competitor to swim under 2:10 in the women’s 200 fly. She punched a final time of 2:09.35 to clear the field by well over a second. The 28-year-old holds the Russian record, courtesy of her 2:07.33 from the 2018 European Championships.
- Daria Trofimova (54.06) swam to the fastest semifinal performance in the women’s 100 free, just off her best time of 54.02 from July. Daria Surushkina (54.50) sits in 2nd place as the final approaches in less than 24 hours.
- 15-year-old Ksenia Misharina touched in 8:29.05 to win the women’s 800 free title. She broke through in a big way last April with three Russian Youth records.
50.86 in the final
Yes, but Russian…
cool- Rose and Dressel gonna spank him
How? He’s not competing against them
time wise?
Who cares? Lots of swimmers are going to go faster than a 51.0 this year. You don’t need to point out every time a swimmer completes a swim that their time won’t be the fastest of the year, you troll
Peruse through the past few articles about Russia and the Paris 2024 Olympics
It’s almost like Minakov swims faster the more time he spends In Russia, and slower once he’s spent more time removed from Russia
The Meehan effect
Look at what just happened when Minakov left Meehan in the USA
– Relay Names Guy
Meehan isn’t the Stanford men’s coach, Dan Schemmel is.
I think that’s the joke lol.
Before you comment you should probably know the facts of what you’re talking about first
Andrei Minakov swam at the masters nationals last year. It would be awesome if he came back, maybe I could race him.
Obviously he would win.
Fast man!
Ok, I can now confirm that that pool is not 50 meters long. There’s no way the Minakov we saw at NCAA’s two weeks ago just went 51.04.
In case it wasn’t obvious, the whole stanford team missed their taper. Every big name from them added time or underperformed, which is indicative of a coaching mistake, not individual failure.
At least in Minakov’s case, I’m sure he just swam thru NCAAs.
Would swimming through NCs explain being significantly slower than dual meets in the 200 fly?
He got sick 3 weeks before NCs to the point he scratched out in the middle of conference meet after gling like a 46-point 100 fly in prelims
Bro swam thru
Cut him some slack
Its called tapering. New guy