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What’s Next for Brazil After Winning the 2014 World Short Course Championships Medals Table?

Since the inception of the FINA Short Course World Championships in 1993 there have only been two countries other than the United States and Australia that have finished first in the medal standings. The Chinese did it at the inaugural championships, and last week the Brazilians took the top spot in Doha.

This is the first time that Brazil has been in the top three in the medal standings since 1995 where they won three gold, two silver and one bronze.

In Doha they collected seven gold, one silver and two bronze.

They did all of this with missing many of their top swimmers such as Pan Pac gold medalist Bruno Fratus, Pan Pac silver medalist Leonardo de Deus, Olympic silver medalist Thiago Pereira and junior world record holder Matheus Sanatana.

The Brazilians came away with two new world records the first coming when Guilherme Guido, Felipe Silva, Nicholas Santos and Cesar Cielo combined their efforts posting a 1:30.51 in the men’s 4 x 50 medley relay.

The second was set by Etiene Medeiros who took the women’s 50 backstroke in a time of 25.67 breaking Sanja Jovanovic‘s 2009 world record of 25.70. Medeiros becomes the first Brazilian women to win a medal at a world championships.

She also becomes the only Brazilian woman to break a short course world record and only the second to break a world record. Maria Lenk set new world records in both the 200 and 400 breaststroke in 1939.

Cielo looks to be back at close to his best winning the 100 freestyle in a time of 45.75, one one-hundredth of a second off his Brazilian record and finishing third in the 50 freestyle in a time of 20.88. His most impressive moments came in the relay events as he split a 20.08 anchoring the men’s 4 x 50 medley relay and a 44.67 anchoring the men’s 4 x 100 medley relay, event where the Brazilians took gold.

Silva also had an outstanding competition winning the 50 and 100 breaststroke, setting new championship records in both. He also set a new South American record in the 50.

Nicholas Santos took the silver and set a new South American record in the men’s 50 butterfly.

The Brazilians also picked up hardware in the mixed relays, winning gold in the 4 x 50 medley and bronze in the 4 x 50 freestyle.

The country’s latest success in at the 2014 World Short Course Championships is impressive, but it will be interesting to see how they can carry this momentum into the upcoming major international competitions such as the 2015 World Championships in Kazan and the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio.

Short course swimming is much different than long course swimming and out of the 10 medals Brazil won at the games five (three gold, one silver and one bronze) were in non-Olympic events.

So what does this success mean? It means that the Brazilians are making some great strides forward and continue to build a strong winning culture. For a team that is looking to perform well on home soil in 2016 it is a step in the right direction, but there is still a lot of work to be done before they will see the same type results in the long course pool.

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AUSswim
9 years ago

The Brazilians are sus…just like the Russians

for33
9 years ago

I think they have very serious chances of winning the 4 x 100 freestyle and medley relay for men. At times I am under the impression that all of them train very specifically for sprint races. Thiago Pereira, Leonardo de Deus, and another 200 m butterfly swimmer whose name I can’t remember (he was in the final of 200 m butterfly in Beijing) appear not to be sprinters. If they keep progressing with their performances, they will be formidable in the relays.

Reply to  for33
9 years ago

I dont think Brazil have a chance in Medley relay(besides the gold in WSC).Long Course is a diferent animal.Brazil has some dificult to produce sub-54(in 100back) and sub-52(in 100fly).Without that, we can not talk about medal.AUS,USA and FRA are a step ahead(right now) of Brazil.
In 4x100free relay is another talk.Three legs are improving and the one is not improving is very reliable(Cielo).

lane 0
9 years ago

Brazil has to be the favorite for the 4x100m free relay in Rio, Russia, USA and France will be good but not as good as Brazil at home.

M Palota
Reply to  lane 0
9 years ago

I wouldn’t bet the mortgage on Brazil winning. Brazil will be in the mix, for sure, but so will the Russians, the French, the Americans and the Australians. There’s next to nothing between all of those teams. Even the Italians have an outside shot.

Whoever wins, the one near guarantee is that it will be exciting!

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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