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Eindhoven Swim Cup, day 2, finals recap

2016 EINDHOVEN SWIM CUP (DUTCH CHAMPIONSHIPS)

The 2016 edition of the Swim Cup Eindhoven, Netherlands, is an Olympic qualification event and also the competition schedule has been set follwing the Rio timetable for the swimmers this summer: Heats start at 12.00 pm, B-finals at 7 pm and A-finals at 9 pm. In Rio, heats will start at 12.00 pm, finals at 10 pm. The Swim Cup Eindhoven offers with a great facility and atmosphere a possibility to compete under the unusual Olympic schedule – and tonight was the second finals session with many of  the top athletes from the Netherlands, Belgium, Serbia, Germany, and Denmark, among other nations.

Finals and semi-finals started at 9 pm in this order:

  • 200 m IM, men IPC Final
  • 100 m backstroke, women IPC final
  • 100 m butterfly, women A-final
  • 100 m breaststroke, men semi final
  • 200 m backstroke, men A-final
  • 400 m IM, women A-final
  • 100 m freestyle, men semi final
  • 200 m freestyle, women, semi final

The first victory of the evening went to para-swimmer Olivier van de Voort with a new Netherland’s IPC record in 2:14,69 in the 200 m IM – he gained one more IPC point (899) than second place finisher Marc Evers. Marlou van der Kulk took the win in the women’s 100 m backstroke IPC final in 1:07.18.

Hungary’s Evelyn Verraszto who was the top seed in the women’s 100 fly after clocking 59,77 in semifinals, scratched the final as well as Germany’s Paulina Schmiedel. So we saw 16-year-old Julia Mrozinski, Germany, on lane 4 next to Germany’s Lisa Höpink, 17 – two of the fastest and most versatile German youngsters. In the final, Netherland’s Elinore de Jong touched the wall first in 59,92 (FINA A cut: 58,71), Belgium’s Kimberly Buys took the silver in 1:00,03 and Kinge Zandringa (NED) clocked third in 1:00,09. The German youngsters finished on the fourth and fifth place, Mrozinski in 1:00,41 and Höping in 1:0055.

Arno Kamminga was the fastest into the men’s 100 m breaststroke semi final after morning heats with a new dutch championships record of 1:01,30. In the semi finals Caba Siladji of Serbia took the top spot for tomorrows final in 1:00,74, followed by Nicholas Quinn (Edinburgh University, GB) 1:01,00 and Arno Kamminga took third in 1:01,64. Henning Feldwehr, Sébas van Lith, Bram Dekker, Timon Evenhuis and Max Pilger will join tomorrow’s 100 m breaststroke final.

Kira Toussaint broke a meet record twice at the first and second session, she went 1:00,51 in the 100 m backstroke in wednesday’s morning heats and 1:00,50 in the evening’s semi final. Toussaint, still representing her American collegiate team, the University of Tennessee, was just about half a second off the Dutch national record in the event. Kira took the big win in the final with another meet record in 1:00,25 – 0,04 second over the FINA A cut, this swim places her 18th in the actual world ranking. Second went to Maaike de Waard (NED), followed by Tessa Vermeulen (NED) in 1:02.09.

The 200 m men’s backstroke seemed to be an easy game for some of Germany’s fastest backstrokers: They clocked 1-2-3-4 in prelims in this order: Christian Diener 2:00.14, Carl-Louis Schwarz 2:05.47, Felix Wolf 2:06.00, 7, Jacob Heidtmann 2:06.67. Diener, Schwarz and Wolf are training partners at the Potsdamer SV – their coach is Jörg Hoffmann, former world class swimmer in the 400 m and 1500 m freestyle. Potsdam is the German backstroke power house – even if their chief coach Hoffmann was a mid and long distance freestyler. Christian Diener is the 2014 silver medalist in the 200 m backstroke at the European LC Championships. Jacob Heidtmann, who trains with Germany’s fastest short distance butterflyer Steffen Deibler in Hamburg, made his first huge international final at the World Championships last year and touched fifth in Kazan in the 400 m IM. Heidtmann grabbed second in the 400 m freestyle yesterday – under FINA A cut.

In the men’s 200 m backstroke final, Christian Diener obviously wasn’t satisfied with his winning time of 2:01,53 – off the FINA A Standard (1:58,18) and the required German nomination time at German National Championships in about 4 weeks – a 1:58,02, his personal best time is a 1.57,16.

1. Christian Diener GER Potsdamer SV  2:01.53
2. Carl-Louis Schwarz GER Potsdamer SV 2:03.55
3. Felix Wolf GER Potsdamer SV 100595 2:04.19
4. Jacob Heidtmann GER STS Elsmhorn 2:04.64
5. Jelle Betten NED C-DZ&PC  2:07.27
6. Olivier van de Voort NED NTC PARA-DZ&PC 2:08.05
7. Floyd van Hoof NED ZPC AMERSFOORT 2:08.40
8. Ensger Kotterink NED Albion  2:08.74

Serbia’s Anja Crevar, just 15 years old, touched first in 4:52.49 in the women’s 400 IM to set herself up as the #1 seed for finals. Crevar earned 5th place at last summer’s World Junior Championships, clocking a lifetime best of 4:43.36. Anja Crevar improved her prelim’s time, clocked 4:46,04 in the final for the win, ahead of Wendy van der Zanden (NED, 4:51,27) and third place finisher Lisa Dreesens (NED, 5:01.92). FINA A cut in the 400 IM is: 4:43,46.

Today’s morning highlight for the men came in the form of the 100m freestyle race, where Dutch native Sebastiaan Verschuren touched in 48.65 for the fastest time. His personal best is a 47.88 from the London Olympic games. Verschuren managed to swim his semi final at about 10 pm in a time of 48,77 and he is the top seed for tomorrow’s final.

Results and finalists:

1. Sebastiaan Verschuren NTC-De Dolfijn NED  48.77
2. Renzo Tjon A Joe Suriname SUR 49.29
3. Glenn Surgeloose Vlaamse Zwemfederatie BEL  49.36
4. Pieter Timmers Vlaamse Zwemfederatie BEL
5. Velimir Stjepanovic Serbia 49.62
6. Damian Wierling SG Essen GER  49.78
7. Kyle Stolk NTC-PSV 49.79
8. Ben Schwietert RTC-ZPC AMERSFOORT NED 49.82

Only Netherland’s Robin Neumann managed to swim under the 2-minute threshold in the 200 m Freestyle in prelims with a time of  1:58.51. Her Dutch teammate Andrea Kneppers, who swims for the University of Louisville, earned the 3rd seed after today’s prelims, finishing in a time of 2:00.43. Teen phenomenon Marrit Steenbergen touched fourth in 2:01,42 this morning after she set a new Dutch youth record yesterday in the 4 x 200 m freestyle relay in  1:57.91, a personal best by over a second. Femke Heemskerk whose perfomances in April 2015 at the Swim Cup placed her as the sixth fastest 100m freestyle swimmer of all time, and the fourth fastest 200m freestyle swimmer of all time, got a kind of “wild card” for the 200 m Freestyle semi final – because she competed in yesterday’s 4 x 200 Freestyle relay – the press agent of the Eindhoven Swim Cup Niels Cannegieter told us that “She swam the 4 x 200m yesterday. Therefore they spared her for the prelims. As she will be one of the fastest of the world nobody doubted her qualification for the finals.” Netherland’s Esmée Bos, who was on the 11th place after the 200 m freestyle prelims, sratched her semi finals participation.

Femke Heemskerk lived up to her reputation as the favourite and claimed the win and top seed for the final in 1:56,61 – fast enough to stay under the FINA A cut (1:58,86) and  her fastest time in the 2016 season, she now sits 13th in the world ranking.
Women’s 200 m freestyle finalists:

1. Femke Heemskerk MUC Nat. Montpellier  NED 1:56.61
2. Esmee Vermeulen NTC-De Dolfijn NED 1:58.43
3. Robin Neumann NTC-De Dolfijn NED 1:58.63
4. Marrit Steenbergen RTC-DZ&PC NED 1:59.01
5. Evelyn Verraszto Jovo SC Veolia HUN 1:59.58
6. Andrea Kneppers University of Louisville NED 1:59.77
7. Marjolein Delno NTC-VZC-E&P NED 2:00.31
8. Paulina Schmiedel AMTV-FTV Hamburg GER 2:01.39
The competition ends after the victory ceremonies about 10.30 pm local time and will continue with prelims at 12.00 pm tomorrow.

 

 

 

 

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About Braden Keith

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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