We spent all of last month chronicling the year 2017 in our Swammy Awards, but now it’s time to look forward to the coming year. Here are the 10 biggest storylines to keep an eye on heading into 2018:
Russia’s Ongoing Doping Scandal
With the Russian team officially banned from the 2018 Winter Olympics, the next big swimming development to watch will be whether Russia faces any similar sanctions for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. The doping scandal surrounding Russia has continued to grow, spurred on by the McLaren Reports and culminating in a blanket ban on Winter Olympians, though cleared Russian athletes can still compete under the Olympic banner. Russia has a lot of swimmers who are swimming really fast right now, which won’t do anything to quiet the questions.
Chalmers vs Dressel in sprint freestyle
With breakout Olympic champ Kyle Chalmers sitting out last summer with surgery, the pathway was cleared for American Caeleb Dressel to ascend to the top of the world Sprint throne. Now in 2018, the two young sprint stars from proud swimming nations are primed to go head-to-head at the Pan Pacific Championships. Both swimmers are likely only getting better, and the race for Pan Pacs gold could be a preview for 2019 Worlds and the 2020 Olympics.
New Pro Swim Series Format
A year after FINA’s tweaks to the World Cup, USA Swimming is expanding its format for the domestic Pro Swim Series. The new series will feature stroke 50 shootouts, a mystery 200 IM and a points battle between 4 teams drafted by former US National Teamers. If successful, the new format could offer a blueprint for making swimming into a more inviting sport for spectators.
Paralympic Classification Reform?
Paralympic sports have become embroiled in controversy. In the swimming realm, that controversy has mostly surrounded the classification of athletes, with some competitors accused of underplaying their abilities in classification tests to compete in classes where wins and world records are more attainable. The onus is now on the IPC to respond, either by cracking down on questionable classifications or by restructuring the system entirely to close the offending loopholes.
New Lineup For Tokyo 2020
With the IOC adding three swimming events for the 2020 Olympics, the coming year will be the first true chance to see how swimmers and federations adjust. Will we start to see an increased focus from national teams on mixed relays, or will those events remain fairly low-priority? With the addition of the women’s 1500, will we see Katie Ledecky skew more toward higher-distance races after she clearly focused her training down towards the 200 in the leadup to Rio? And how will the Olympic event order change with the addition of the men’s 800 free, women’s 1500 free and mixed 4×100 medley relay? Many fans hope for an additional day of racing, though that seems unlikely – the World Championships match the Olympics 8-day schedule while packing in even more events, with the stroke 50s and mixed freestyle relay.
NCAA Reform
The NCAA landscape continues to evolve year-by-year, particularly within the Power 5 conferences, which are now allowed some level of self-governance. Schools and conferences continue to discuss the idea of paying student-athletes or relaxing amateurism rules to allow student-athletes self-marketing opportunities to make money for themselves. While those ideas most directly impact revenue sports like football and basketball, the trickle-down effects to swimming could be both negative and positive. Relaxing amateurism rules could mean a swimmer like Missy Franklin could in the future be allowed to compete at the NCAA for four years, instead of turning pro after two. On the other hand, many argue that allowing schools to pay athletes would cause athletic departments to funnel even more money into revenue sports, leading to more cut swimming & diving program. The state of college sports is highly unsettled and uncertain at present, but 2018 should offer more insight as to how swimming will look at the college level moving forward – if it continues to exist at all.
A Year of Cross-Meet Rivalries
The second year of each Olympic cycle is typically the oddest in swimming. With no long course World Championships or Olympics, the top swimmers worldwide are usually split between a handful of regional meets, creating some exciting head-to-head showdowns, but also a lot of comparisons of times from halfway across the world in anticipation of a 2019 meeting at Worlds. Here’s a look at a few of the major meets and the top nations involved:
- Commonwealth Games (April 4-15; Gold Coast, Australia): Australia, England, Canada, South Africa
- European Championships (August 3-12; Glasgow, Scotland): Hungary, Great Britain, Italy, Netherlands, France, Sweden, Denmark, Russia
- Pan Pacific Championships (August 9-13; Tokyo): U.S., Australia, Japan, China, Canada, South Africa, Brazil, Korea
- Asian Games (August 18-September 2; Jakarta, Indonesia): Japan, China, Korea
Bounce-Back For Ledecky?
Though there’s absolutely no basis to call a 5-gold, 1-silver haul at Worlds a disappointment, Katie Ledecky 2017 wasn’t as explosive as her previous outings. In fact, 2017 was the first calendar year since her international debut (2012) in which Ledecky didn’t set a long course world record of any kind. She still had historic swims in short course yards and even improved her event range to include a world-class 100 free and an elite 400-yard IM. But in her signature events, Ledecky’s times stalled out. In 2018, we’ll see how Ledecky responds to a year where two of the top ten races earned that status by virtue of beating or tying her, while none of her swims made the cut.
Ledecky has clearly put a premium on expanding her wheelhouse over the past two years, growing from the best pure distance freestyler of all-time to an Olympic champ in the 200 free, an American relay contributor in the 100 free and a dark-horse threat in the 400 IM. In 2018, she could either continue to improve the far ends of her range, or turn her focus back to smashing historical barriers in her primary events. Or she could do both. It’s Katie Ledecky, you can never count out anything. In any case, 2018 will be a fascinating case study in how Ledecky chooses to continue her storied career.
Go Katie!
Will USA Swimming continue their stupid process of selecting 2019 world championship roster based on July 2018 nationals performance?
Personally, I’d like to see Missy Franklin in 2018. Also, Lochte’s efforts.
The Russia Doping Scandal coinciding with the new crop of Russian juniors that are setting records and winning big meets.
It could create a big problem for the sport if the Russians are taking down the records and winning the medals, and their performances are looked at with suspicion. We’ve seen this scenario before.
Thoughts on some of your “storylines”
Dressel v Chalmers ? Far from certain to play out. At this point, we aren’t even certain that he can/will return to his Rio level although this next month (with the 2 primary lead in meets to AUS Trials) may tell us more. Whilst it IS a fairly reasonable scenario that an Australian may prove the nearest competition to Dressel in the 100free at PP; the identity of said challenger may be uncertain. Not sure that this touted rivalry will stack up as 100free (at this point) looks the only point on convergance with Chalmers (to date) looking more a 100/200 rather than 50/100.
Pro Series: may be interesting to see if the level… Read more »
Don’t be too harsh on Katie Ledecky judging just by one season. I remember you predicting sunset of Manuel’s career after not very successful 2015 season when she averaged above 53.6 having personal best 53.24.
Current personal bests of Ledecky are too exceptional even by her standards. The distribution of her very many results at 800 is mostly in 8:10 – 8:13 area and only three times she was faster than 8:10. Under this angle the world record of 8:04 looks like extremely lucky race when everything was right and in place. If she has difficulties to break it then it doesn’t necessarily mean that her swimming abilities are declining.
Based on how she improves at 500y and… Read more »
I think Singapore should be included as a top nation for the Asian Games given their recent rise in swimming. (On the men’s side, their relays are mostly faster than South Korea’s)
I do hope Singapore has a breakthrough in Asian Games especially with the relay. I believe they can do better than 2014 Asian games. Hope Schooling can participate in Commonwealth games too though the schedule is very close to NCAA.
I think its dressel vs the rest of the world. Or him vs 17.99 or 39.99 or 46.99 lcm or the fly record take your pick
or vs. David Nolan’s SCY 2IM record. We could go on for days…
Or all of the above ??
A 2018 “bounce-back” storyline regarding Ledecky is ludicrous. She had the fastest times in the world in four individual LCM events in 2017 as a college freshman while, as you note, expanding her repertoire. She won more medals than any female swimmer at 2017 Worlds (5 gold-1 silver), broke the World Champs meet record in the 400 M Free, won the 1500 M Free by 19 seconds, as usual anchored Team USA’s 4×200 M Free relay to victory, and three-peated in an unprecedented three LCM individual events across three World Championships. In 2017, she broke SCY records 6 times across three different individual events including the 400 IM, was part of at least four relay ARs, 12 NCAA records, 4… Read more »
BOUNCE-BACK FOR LEDECKY? What a silly headline!.
Katie won ever award that exists for best female athlete/ swimmer of the year and you are wondering if she can bounce back from not breaking any of her own world records? Duh!
Besides the physical demands of breaking a world record what about the mental stress? I’m glad that Katie took a world record break this year. I’m confident that Katie has a well thought out plan to prepare for the 2020 olympics, and will break her own world records when her Plan has them scheduled.
Katie appears to have short range plans that fit into her long range goals.
I’m enjoying watching katie’s journey. It’s also a… Read more »
How can you down-vote this? Some people are crazy
Yes, it is pretty stupid. It’s called reaching.