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International Swimming League 2019: A Season of Innovations

The International Swimming League’s inaugural 2019 season was innovative. Anybody who’s followed swimming for more than 10 minutes and who has watched an ISL meet can catch that with the naked eyeball. But, now that the season has concluded, we wanted to sit down and reflect upon what exactly the most significant of those innovations were.

A large majority of those innovations came, quite simply, from the significant level of resources available to the league. Other groups have tried team-based meets and leagues before, and other groups have tried to improve the show, but never with the $50 million + investment that has been made by the league’s organizer Konstantin Grigorishin in year 1.

Others have been made by creativity – in some cases, the creativity borne by bringing in outsiders to the sport, who maybe don’t fully understand swimming, but fully understand “the nature of the show” and quickly learned the sport.

Below, we’ve listed our favorite innovations to the league’s inaugural season, as well as a few challenges that will have to be addressed for the league to hold our interests:

Innovations:

  • The acrylic sidewalls at the Las Vegas finale were, easily, the most creative and coolest innovation. This in essence allowed us to watch the athletes above and below the water at the same time. This will take a little more jerryrigging and engineering to work at a full-time pool, but hopefully ISL figures out a way to continue this for the entire 2020-2021 season. It would also make on-deck officiating a real game changer – harder to hide those extra dolphin kicks on your pullout if the officials have a side-view.
  • The On-Deck DJ was a game-changer for the vibe of the meet. It probably wasn’t as obvious on TV, but this DJ (who is some kind of world scratching champion) kept the fans engaged between races. Other meets have had DJs before (including the most popular DJ Spotify Playlist), but never on deck, never front-and-center, never this qualified, and never as an integral part of the show. Combined with the lights, these effects, new to swimming but old tropes in the ‘party’ world, kept the fans engaged – and that engagement certainly translates the scene to TV indirectly.
  • SkyCams have been used in other sports (most prominently football) for years to give television viewers a smooth angle from directly above the action that we couldn’t get otherwise. This made for some great (and challenging, but more on that later) television shots.
  • Pace of the races – 2 to 3 minutes between races. Perfect. Self-explanatory, and perfect.
  • Same Lanes Throughout the Session – Some people hated this, some people loved it. Personally, we really enjoyed it, as it made the team race that ISL is pushing so hard much, much easier to follow. One improvement we’d love here: randomize the lanes on day 1, as they’re doing, and then put the top 2 teams from day 1 in the middle lanes on day 2. Maybe this is less relevant when the meets are more competitive (often in season 1, by day 2, the top 2 teams became clear), but seeing those teams side-by-side, center stage, would add even more intensity from a viewer experience.

Needs Improvement:

  • I could write a dissertation on this, but in short, the League Needs Better Balancing. The teams that were going to the finals were never in doubt, though we did get a thrilling final. Recruitment was, almost, a free-for-all in year 1, with some protections giving teams the first crack at home-country athletes. A balanced league wasn’t really a priority in year 1 – in year 1, the ISL needed to put on a great show to sell sponsorships for year 2, and by stacking teams, they wound up with a greater number of swimming superstars in the finale than they would have in a more balanced league. But, as the league moves into years 2 and 3 and 4, a more balanced league will result in a better product. This has been borne out in every major sports league in history – parity matters.
  • The Media Setup at meets left a lot to be desired. There were improvements as the season went on, but it was a struggle at times. That’s our problem, and not yours, though.
  • The league has emphasized team scoring as being infinitely more important than times, but they have not necessarily made it easy for the audience to follow the team battle. Showing the points-per-team-per-race after each event was helpful, but the scores should always be on the screen (watch any NBA, NFL, MLB, Premier League match, and you’ll see this). Even us, as SwimSwam, with 8 or more sets of eyes watching the event, were often in a scramble to figure out the team scores at any given moment during the meet. Along the same lines, camera angles often made it a challenge to follow team battles: in spite of the rhetoric, the cameras frequently zoned in on the race leader, without enough space around the leader for context.
  • The ‘Skins’ scoring is out of whack, which Energy Standard knew earlier in the season than everyone else, and took advantage of: coming back from deficits to win 3 of their 4 meets via skins racing. The scoring system is already heavily slanted toward sprinters, which I think everyone is generally ok with, and yes the skins are the big meet-ender and as such maybe should be worth more points, but the fact that a team could outscore an opponent 96-6 in the skins races alone is too big of a swing. That London was the better team all day long and then lost because their guys went 5-6 in the skins race instead of 4-8 they lost made for an exciting finish, but wasn’t really in the greatest interest of fairness and balance. That’s especially true given that the skins finals were almost never competitive, leaving the climax of the meets in prelims of the skins races, rather than finals of the skins races.
  • Horse Race Timing would be cool. What I mean by that is, sometimes it was a real challenge to know where each team was in each race. While we’re all going to have to accept to some degree that the ISL might never give us the full timing that we want, I’d love to see a ‘live placing’ system in races, similar to what is used at the Kentucky Derby. Figure out a way to track swimmers’ positions, and at the bottom of the screen, always show us the current order in a race. Not just at walls, but at every point in the pool. I think this would add a lot to the team battles when camera angles make it hard to know who is in which place.
  • The Finale should have been in Europe. One of our readers presented a good reason for it to be in Las Vegas, which is that gambling is probably crucial to the long-term financial success of the league, but to have the smallest crowd of the season in the championship match was hard to watch, especially given that a 12,000 seat arena was rented out for 10 days to do it. Europe has generally been more excited about this league than the US, selling out bigger pools than the Americans have, and Europe has bigger pools than the 3,800 capacity that Mandalay Bay was reduced to for the meet with a temporary pool. In the US, swimming is still very much a “youth fandom” sport. Parents weren’t ever likely to take their kids to Las Vegas the weekend before Christmas for a swim meet, even a really cool swim meet.

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Andrei Vorontsov
4 years ago

Swimming is about results. What did we see so far. A few top times and World records, many average times and many poor performances just to tick the boys. Team with stupid names (current, electric current???!). And final bill for athletes does not look very big. Smart swimmers like Morosov and Hosszy wisely performed at the World Cup events and did 6 numbers checks plus to ISL small change. But Mr. Grigorishin himself topped his own bill. He is not a good Samaritan who cares about swimmers and swimming. It is not about sport, it’s about money. I am romantic – still do believe in those who compete for country and glory first, and do less care about the money

FSt
Reply to  Andrei Vorontsov
4 years ago

Professional sports is always about money. How did you think this would work? This isn’t an outreach program for underappreciated swimmers. It’s a professional sports league. Obviously with a maximum of 4 meets for every team there isn’t going to be a ton of extra money to be made but if we get 10 meets per team next year, there is already the potential for more.
And we still have no idea how much every swimmer negotiated for their contracts.

Andrei Vorontsov
Reply to  FSt
4 years ago

The point is, if you call yourself professional, you must deliver Evey time you stand on the block. When more than a half of results are slower than results of first 2-3 swimmer, say, at the British students championships (BUCS), those times are rubbish. Swimming is the sport where the top time requires preparation. Look, some top swimmers appeared at ISL events only ones or twice, they know exactly what they have to do, especially in Olympic Year.

Ol' Longhorn
Reply to  Andrei Vorontsov
4 years ago

There’s not enough money in it for the stars to go out and perform. For the others, they’re either hanging on as pros, because they love the sport, and could use a little cash, or are holding out the faintest of hopes for Olympic glory. The only person who approached it like a true pro as you define it is Guido, who took every meet very seriously. Would agree that Grigorishin will quickly tire of financing it if they can’t sell out events and get a lucrative (relatively speaking) TV deal.

Roarer
4 years ago

I like the concept of a skins style finale on the first day of competition. As well as day two.

Camera angles etc needs addressing. The overhead with all 8 lanes worked very well and should be used more. Focusing on the leader was dreadful.

Honestly I was happy using / watching with a second or third screen for information. I’ve read a lot of the comments and many are sound but there just isn’t the time between races to have the commentators or producers bombard with too much data. As well as interviews and replays. And then pre race presentation and information.

Give me the pre race intros. Start. predominate overhead or traditional side angle shots.… Read more »

FSt
4 years ago

If you want betting and glamour, have the final in Monaco. Charlene Wittstock is the wife of the freaking reigning monarch there. How much more of a ‘friend’ in high places do you need to make that happen?

Wahooswimfan
4 years ago

Perhaps allow the top two men and women not on a final team in as wildcards – they would take points from somebody but would introduce a wildcatd factor – and having a swimmer like a Ledecky as a spoiler would help draw audience

Troyy
Reply to  Wahooswimfan
4 years ago

Not a fan of this idea and it’s unlikely Ledecky would be a wildcard in this format anyway.

Meehanyy
Reply to  Troyy
4 years ago

Great idea, and I think a team would want Ledecky as a “wildcard”. Her 400 Free time in October was much faster than Titmus just swam to win at the finale, and a rested Ledecky would throw down in the 200 Free, 400 IM, and relays as well. You could look at the ISL’s largely sprint format and say no one would want Phelps either, but you would be wrong.Both would put big points onto the scoreboard. And they would be wanted by teams just because they are Phelps and Ledecky.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/2019/12/19/decade-best-ranking-top-50-athletes-over-last-10-years/4399929002/

Samesame
Reply to  Meehanyy
4 years ago

Pretty sure teams want points . And who says Ledecky would be rested .? (Yes I know she’s incredible )

Troyy
Reply to  Meehanyy
4 years ago

I don’t think the commentator meant a pure unrestricted wildcard and Ledecky would have to win the spot being the highest ranked on the season MVP ladder not already going to the final. Or at least that’s what I took “the top two men and women not on a final team” to mean. Ledecky wasn’t even the highest female point earner on her team at the one meet she attended.

The spot would inevitably go to Hosszu.

Josh
4 years ago

Great points-here are my thoughts as an attendee/viewer:
(I hate to be saying this) FINA/Olympics/NBC does do a number of things right that ISL didn’t do:
-More introduction of sorts for relays: I had to have a separate window open on my phone for the relays so I could know who was swimming where. NBC at least displays the 4 swimmers in each of the 8 lane(country) for a few seconds. The ISL individual events had the name at the start so I knew. If one is to watch professional swimming, I would figure they are looking to watch at least specific 1 professional swimmer. In ISL debrief swimswam podcast episode, most people at this meet were not… Read more »

DrSwimPhil
4 years ago

The same team shouldn’t be in side-by-side lanes. Mix that up.

Thomas Selig
4 years ago

Good article.

I agree that skins gave too many points. I understand that it keeps the chances of the interest going all the way to the end, but triple points still feels way too much. Maybe have double, like the relays? I’d also quite like to see them switch around between strokes between meets to add some variety.

Teams do need to be better balanced, and there are plenty of ideas on how to do this, mostly revolving around some sort of drafting system (though I appreciate the difficulties this might create re Energy Standard).

Another suggestion re lane assignments could be to give the centre lanes in the final to the teams who topped their respective conferences (similarly to… Read more »

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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