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EUROPE: A Tired Sjostrom Misses the 50 Freestyle Final

2016 RIO OLYMPIC GAMES

 

European Swimming Medal Table As of Rio Day 7:

COUNTRY GOLD SILVER BRONZE TOTAL
Hungary 3 1 3 6
Great Britain 1 4 0 5
Sweden 1 1 1 3
Spain 1 0 1 2
Russia 0 2 2 4
France 0 2 0 2
Belgium 0 1 0 1
Italy 0 0 1 1
Total 6 11 8 25

European Swimming Records Broken on Rio Day 7:

Swimmer Event Time Record
Damien Joly M 1500 Free 14:48.90 French Record
Susan Bjornsen W 50 Free 25.05 Norwegian Record
ITA (Zofkova, Castiglioni, Bianchi, Pellegrini) W 4×100 Medley 3:59.09 Italian Record
GBR (Walker-Hebborn, Peaty, Guy, Scott) M 4×100 Medley 3:30.47 British Record
Pernille Blume W 50 Free 24.23 Danish record
Julie Meynen W 50 Free 25.12 Luxembourgish Record
Henrik Christiansen M 1500 Free 14:55.40 Norwegian Record
Boglarka Kapas W 800 Free 8:16.37 Hungarian Record
Mireia Belmonte W 800 Free 8:18.55 Spanish Record

 

On the second night of competition we outlined Swedish star Sarah Sjostrom’s long road to Olympic gold, on Friday evening she was looking to overcome another challenge. At the 2012 Olympics in London Sjostrom took on an ambitious schedule of individual events swimming the 50, 100 and 200 freestyle as well as the 100 butterfly as well as the 4 x 100 freestyle relay. In Rio she took on a similar schedule with the addition of the 4 x 100 and 4 x 200 freestyle relay.

Although her overall results were much better in Rio it appears she ran out of steam tonight as she missed the final in the 50 freestyle finishing 13th.

In London Sjostrom placed:

  • 50 freestyle – 14th
  • 100 freestyle – 9th
  • 200 freestyle – 12th
  • 100 butterfly – 4th

Going into the final day of competition in Rio she has placed:

  • 50 freestyle – 13th
  • 100 freestyle – 3rd
  • 200 freestyle – 2nd
  • 100 butterfly 1st

After making her breakthrough in the 100 butterfly on Monday evening Sjostrom seemed to be swimming relaxed and enjoying the every moment. In fact after she took bronze in the 100 freestyle she wished she had been in the stands watching the race, “That’s the most exciting finish I have been involved in,” said Sjostrom. “So now I wish I had been watching it from the stands. I was very surprised to have taken a medal with that time I did. I have swum faster this year but I am still very happy.”

Although the Swede is swimming with a more care free attitude she expressed the toll her schedule was taking on her, “I feel very tired after six days,” Sjostrom said after her 100 freestyle. “It felt great for the first three days, but after six days I got really tired. I didn’t feel very great today before the race. I was sleeping the whole day. I didn’t feel 100%.”

Although Sjostrom has been building towards doing this schedule for the last four years, swimming similar events at both the 2013 and 2015 World Championships it appears that she does not have a lot left in the tank.

 

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friu
8 years ago

This was the first time (I think) that she swam both 200 free (3 rounds) and 4*200 (2 rounds). It was sad to see her waste her energy in the relay prelims with two in the team out of shape. I hope in the future she will concentrate on her own races until Sweden have five decent freestylers so she can skip the prelims.

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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