2020 INTERNATIONAL SWIMMING LEAGUE – FINAL
- Saturday, November 21: 2:00 PM – 4:00 PM CET (8 AM – 10 AM U.S. Eastern, 10 PM – 12 AM Japan)
- Sunday, November 22: 6:00 PM-8:00 PM CET (12 PM-2 PM U.S. Eastern, 2 AM-4 AM Monday J+1 Japan)
- Duna Arena – Budapest, Hungary
- Short Course Meters (SCM) format
- ISL Technical Handbook
- 2020 ISL Scoring Format
- 2020 ISL Prize Money and Bonuses
- How To Watch
- Teams: Energy Standard / Cali Condors / London Roar / LA Current
- Day 1 Start Lists
- Omega Results
London Roar captain Sydney Pickrem became the third-fastest swimmer in the history of the women’s 200 individual medley (SCM) during Day 1 of the ISL Grand Final, winning the event by over two seconds in a time of 2:04.00.
The swim earns Pickrem a new Canadian and Commonwealth Record, lowering her previous mark of 2:04.34 set almost a year ago to the day during the ISL’s European Derby last season.
The 23-year-old had narrowly missed lowering the record a week ago during the semi-finals, where she clocked 2:04.40.
Split Comparison
Pickrem, 2019 | Pickrem, 2020 |
27.99 | 27.54 |
31.65 (59.64) | 31.44 (58.98) |
35.43 (1:35.07) | 35.35 (1:34.33) |
29.27 (2:04.34) | 29.67 (2:04.00) |
Pickrem’s swim marks the fourth major record to fall in the event inside the ISL bubble. Cali Condor Melanie Margalis reset the American Record in 2:04.06 back in Match 1, New York Breaker Abbie Wood lowered the British Record during Match 6 in 2:04.77, and then Tokyo Frog King Yui Ohashi set a new Asian Record in 2:03.93 during the semi-finals.
All-Time Performers, Women’s 200 IM (SCM)
Rank | Swimmer | Time | Year |
1 | Katinka Hosszu (HUN) | 2:01.86 | 2014 |
2 | Yui Ohashi (JPN) | 2:03.93 | 2020 |
3 | Sydney Pickrem (CAN) | 2:04.00 | 2020 |
4 | Melanie Margalis (USA) | 2:04.06 | 2020 |
T-5 | Evelyn Verraszto (HUN) | 2:04.64 | 2009 |
T-5 | Ye Shiwen (CHN) | 2:04.64 | 2012 |
T-5 | Kayla Sanchez (CAN) | 2:04.64 | 2018 |
Both Ohashi and Wood’s clubs were eliminated in the semi-finals, along with world record holder Katinka Hosszu‘s Iron squad, while Margalis left Budapest late in the regular season.
This left a wide open field for Pickrem in the final, where she picked up an easy win by 2.3 seconds.
A graduate of Texas A&M University, this swim marked Pickrem’s third Canadian Record during the ISL season, having taken out the 400 IM mark twice, including a massive 4:23.68 in the semi-finals which took more than two seconds off the old record.
Congratulations Sydney, great swim! You smoked the race.
Awesome swim! And 🇨🇦 #2 Harvey with a very strong 206…