Siobhan Haughey swam a career-best 50 free and the world’s #3 200 free of the season at the Hong Kong Festival of Sport Time Trial.
The meet took place on April 18 in Hong Kong. Haughey swam a trio of freestyle events in the long course meters meet, including the fastest 50 meter free of her career.
Full results (long course meters / LCM) available here
Haughey went 24.83 in the 50 free. That shaves .02 off her career-best, set back in 2019. Haughey was already the national record-holder there, and lowers her own Hong Kong mark.
The 23-year-old Haughey also won the 200 free, going 1:54.89. That’s only about four tenths of a second off her own national record. The time ranks #3 worldwide this season, behind only Katie Ledecky‘s 1:54.40 and Yang Junxuan‘s 1:54.70.
2020-2021 LCM Women 200 Free
Titmus
1:53.09
2 | Siobhan Haughey | HKG | 1:53.92 | 07/28 |
3 | Yang Junxuan | CHN | 1:54.37 | 07/29 |
4 | Katie Ledecky | USA | 1:54.40 | 04/09 |
5 | Penny Oleksiak | CAN | 1:54.70 | 07/28 |
Haughey also won the 100 free in 53.65 – only about three tenths of a second off her best time and national record.
The Hong Kong Festival of Sport had a fairly small swimming field, with only a handful of athletes per event. Ming Ho Cheuk went 3:50.53 to win the 400 free. That took two and a half seconds off his own national record. He won the 200 free in another national mark: 1:47.97.
The meet also featured Ian Ho, the national record-holder in the men’s 50 free. He won the 50 free in 22.48, about three-tenths off the Hong Kong national mark he set in the summer of 2019.
https://www.hkasa.org.hk/zh-hant/viewfile/?file=dXBsb2FkL3RlbXBsYXRlLzI5OTcvcGRmX2ZpbGVzXzIvNjA3ZDEwMmJlYjJjMi5wZGY=
says:
Ms. HAUGHEY, Siobhan Bernadette Women 200m Freestyle 1:54.89 OQT (A Time) and HK Record
it’s not “national record“.
Can it be counted as Chinese national record? What is actually a definition of national record? Is it defined by FINA’s membership?
The definition of a national record is the supreme governing body of a sport in that country declaring its rules and making it one.
You can create your own Chinese National Records if you want and use whatever criteria you like; whether they mean something or not is dependent on whether the public at large agrees with and respects your criteria.
Got it. So whatever majority of the public decides that will it be. Make sense. No bureaucratic rules.
Then we can congratulate Siobhan with the Chinese record. 😀
of course, if the following should be counted as American national records:
fina.org | Official FINA Website
This 1:54.89 is definitely a new national record, since her 1:54.44 from last year doesn’t count as it was obtained in a time trial – it doesn’t even appear on the records’ list on the Hong Kong’s Federation website.
Do you have information how this 1:54.44 was done?
Today’s splits
26.86 – 28.96 – 29.57 – 29.50
That is the fastest start of anybody who swam 200 at more or less decent level this season. And that is characterizing her as a sprinter who tries to hold for 100 more meters. Don’t see much of hidden reserves left with such approach to this race. Even such an outstanding sprinter like Sjostrom does this race differently.
She started faster at that time. 26.35-28.86-29.65-29.58
Thank you!
200 splits are like biological signature. So let’s keep eye out for her times in 100 races. If she breaks her personal best 53.30 or becomes 52 sprinter then I will consider her a real threat for the medal of any quality in 200 olympic race.
In Rio Ledecky’s first 100 was actually even faster 55.40
But she was at that time 53.0 sprinter (52.6 relay start).
Want we that or not but in reality it looks like 200 event is closer to sprint than to middle distances.
Hungary is becoming the country most hit by Covid (deaths per capita). Just wish you to be very careful these days.
Statistics. Anybody dies and positive for Covid is dying in Covid here.
Thanks, as a radiologist I have to perhaps even more.
Hungary is nearly the most vaccinated country in Europe today so hopefully everything will be better pretty soon.
Statistics can do whatever she is asked to do, especially if data sources are manipulated by politicians. My information is from https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/#countries
Nice to hear that things are getting better there.
I’m predicting the podium will go Ledecky, Titmus, Haughey (in that order). I can see Ledecky getting just under that American record as well. Her speed work has been improving like crazy for someone out of college and I don’t think a 1:53.5 is out of the question once she tapers.
Emma will get the third spot , lets wait for the American and Aussie trials before u start picking the winner
Obviously I’m just making this prediction trying to speculate on what the Aussie performances will be like. I think Haughey will have the slight edge. No way I’m waiting until June to start making my speculative predictions lol
Tell that to GMM.
Way too early to tell.
It’s looking like it would take a 1:53 swim in Tokyo to guarantee a medal ..
Perhaps the gold medal… Ledecky definitely needed a 1.53.73 to hold off Sjostrom for the Olympic gold in Rio…. 200free always a tactical race…. It will be fast in Tokyo…. Perhaps all medallists will be in the 1.54 range…. May take a 1.55high/1.56.0 to make the final though…. Will be a great race definitely
Why do you think so. All major 200 FR players besides Ledecky are around their usual end-of-training-season marks.
Pellegrini hasn’t forced herself in 200 yet but she swam 53 in 100 and that is prerequisite for her to be 1:54 swimmer.
Sjostorm and Rock have not shown yet what they are up to this season but there are also no indications of them to be under 1:54.
Sjorstrom won’t recover in time from her elbow break for a 200 distance event…
And even if she gets to her perfect form she may not race 200FR remembering how costly it’s happened to be in Rio. But she does have 1:54.08 and she has more than anybody else performances among first ten best (including Pellegrini’s suit results). So it would be irresponsible for any medal contenders in this event just ignore her as a potential competitor.
She can’t even do a pushup yet. I think you can ignore her for the 200 without disrespecting her. I doubt she could break 2:00 right now. She’s progressing, but she lost two inches of muscle mass on that arm.
Well, Sjostrom lost her muscles, Ruck was under 1:55 last time three years ago. The only sprinters left who can possibly go under 1:54.5 (if they got lucky) are Haughey and McKeon.
Not that exciting, I would say.
Longer distances swimmers like Pellegrini, Titmus and Ledecky are having similar second half. So the competition will be who of them swims faster first 100.
Kind of weird – middle/long distance swimmers will be competing basically in sprint. The podium at 200FR can become very predictable.
Only two female swimmers have gone sub 1:54.00 in the women’s 200 meter freestyle wearing a textile suit.
wasn’t Haughey also 1:54.4 this past year as well? It’s often missing in the rankings
I don’t think it counts because it was just a time trial. Also I think it was before the start of the 2020-2021 season?
That was in August 2020, so think it may not be included