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Coleman, Johansson Blocked From Competing With Swedish National Team

Swedish Olympians Michelle Coleman and Jennie Johansson have been blocked from competing with their country’s national team, though they have not been officially suspended.

Sweden’s DN (Dagens Nyheter) Sport reports that the two have been stopped from representing Sweden internationally by the nation’s swimming federation. The DN Sport story is in Swedish, but a rough translation says the two were “stopped” from the national team but not suspended.

The federation declined to comment in the story on the situation, with National Team Head Coach Ulrika Sandmark only saying “I do not want to comment on it. We handled this internally. It’s an ongoing process,” again in a translation of the original Swedish.

The difference between being blocked from competing and from being officially suspended or dropped from the national team appears to be that Coleman and Johansson are still allowed to practice at the NEC national training center in Stockholm. Sandmark said as much in the DN Sport piece, and also said the two would retain their funding.

Coleman and Johansson were equally tight-lipped about the situation. A quote from the pair is included in the report: “There have been various things that led to this… but now we want to put this behind us.”

The upshot of the decision is that neither swimmer will compete at the Short Course World Championships next month in Windsor, Canada. Coleman would have been pre-qualified based on her 200 free from the Rio Olympics, and Johansson would have had a very strong shot at making the team with a 100 breast swim at the Swedish Championships in Stockholm this week. Johansson says, though, that she had already made the decision to skip the coming short course season in order to get an early jump on long course season in the opes of defending her 2015 World Championships gold in the 50 breast.

Coleman, meanwhile, says she had planned to swim at the FINA World Cup, and that the federation’s decision was a blow to her plans. “That’s why the announcement is obviously tough, but as I said before, I’m choosing to look forward,” she said in the DN Sport piece. Coleman and Johansson are both two-time Swedish Olympians, competing in 2012 and 2016.

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Gabriel Chance
8 years ago

I could see how many would speculate that it has something to do with them being a lot in Australia. Especially since some other of the Swedish swimmers have just posted results at the short course championships in Australia.

Jessica Eriksson 106.04 and Erik Persson 59.26 in 100m Breast both should qualify them for World Short Course but I may be wrong?

The absence of their results anywhere on the Swedish Swimming Website, or their Facebook may suggest that the federation could have a coaching problem otherwise why would so many of their swimmers need to be outside Sweden?

Sweden need those swimmers on their team. They don’t have the numbers to replace them and maybe also not the coaching… Read more »

G.I.N.A
8 years ago

Swedish Girls Gone Bad. A dude’s dream .

Reply to  G.I.N.A
8 years ago

Hahaha. You win the comments section.

Joe
8 years ago

Probably have something to do with them being part of the national team and getting a salary, but at the same time spending a lot of training time in Australia, and therefore maybe not keeping their end of the deal for things such as promotion. Or some clash with sponsorships. Either way it can’t be a coincidence it’s them and not Sjostrom, who is always based in Stockholm.

Confused
8 years ago

What happened?

weirdo
8 years ago

strange!

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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