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Michael Andrew again fastest into IM final at FINA World Cup Berlin

FINA World Cup – Berlin

The second and last day of the FINA World Cup again promises good races in the fast Berlin pool. Vladimir Morozov set a new world record yesterday in the 100m IM in 50,30.

Madeline Groves (AUS) touched in 53,37 in the 100m freeystyle for  the #1 seed for finals. Jeanette Ottesen will be in the second seed tonight in 54,88.

James Guy (GBR) set himself up as the #1 seed for the men’s 200m freestyle final, he clocked a 1:46,81. Jack Gerrard (AUS) will be in the second seed tonight (1:46,85).

Top seed in the 50m breaststroke is Yuliya Efimova (RUS) in 30,26 ahead of Katie Meili (USA) in 30,33.

Top-seeded in the men’s 100m breast is Kirill Prigoda (RUS), he finished in 58,22, second fastest into the final is Germany’s Marco Koch in 58,84. Michael Andrew (USA) came in with the 3rd fastest time in 59,07.

The top seed in the men’s 100m butterfly is Chad le Clos who hit the wall in a time of 51,66. The next-fastest swim in the morning heats came from USA’s Tim Philips in 51,92.

Daryna Zevina (UKR) set the fastest time in the women’s 100m backstroke in 57,92, followed by Emily Seebohm (AUS) in 58,45.

Mitch Larkin (AUS) took the top spot for the men’s 50m backstroke final with a 23,84 ahead of Stanislav Donets (RUS) in 23,88.

Franziska Hentke touched in 2:08,85 in the 200m butterfly the #1 seed for finals. Madeline Groves (AUS) will be in the second seed tonight in 2:10,31.

Michael Andrew (USA)  finished with the top time this morning in the 200m IM in 1:58,23. Sebastian Steffan (AUT) took the second spot for the final in 1:59,83.

In tonight’s women’s 400m freestyle final, Yiwen Shao (CHN)  is the top seed (4:20,37).  Katinka Hosszu (HUN) came in with the second fastest time in 4:23,19.

Vladimir Morozov (RUS) set himself up as the #1 seed for the men’s 50m freestyle final, he clocked a 21,13. Benjamin Proud will be in the second seed in 21,39. Michael Andrew (USA) took the sixth spot for tonight’s final in 21,86.

Top-seeded in the women’s 100m IM is Katinka Hosszu (HUN) she finished in 58,73 ahead of USA’s Katie Meili in 59,42.

Mitch Larkin (AUS) touched in 1:55,18  in the 200m backstroke for  the #1 seed for finals. Bobby Hurley (AUS) will be in the second seed tonight in 1::58,83 .

Jeanette Ottesen (DEN) took the top spot for the women’s 50m butterfly final with a 26,00 ahead of  Alia Atkinson (JAM) in 26,39.

 

 

 

FINA World Cup Schedule 2016

August 26-27Chartres (FRA)Doha (QAT)
August 30-31 – Berlin (GER) -September 1Dubai (UAE)
September 03-04 – Moscow (RUS)
September 30 – October 1 – Beijing (CHN)
October 4-5– Dubai (UAE)
October 8-9 – Doha (QAT)
October 21-22 – Singapore (SIN)
October 25-26 – Tokyo (JPN)
October 29-30 – Hong Kong (HKG)

 

 

 

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Track
8 years ago

Looks like larkin is starting to return to form, 1:48 200m back ,not insane, but better

Swimmer1
8 years ago

Ugh. I think I speak for many when I say the frustration at the mismanagement of Michael Andrew is heartbreaking. He should’ve been at Jr. Pan Pacs. He should be the top recruit for the class of 2017, about to start a promising collegiate career where a talented knowledgable diverse staff can help him reach his potential. Ugh. It’s just honestly difficult to watch this all unfold. And for those of you who may still be impressed with his results… All I can say is research the last couple of years of times. He needs a new coach! What worked for him as a 12-U may just not be enough anymore.

Uberfan
Reply to  Swimmer1
8 years ago

Did we watch the same Olympic Trials?

Swimmer1
Reply to  Uberfan
8 years ago

you have to look at improvement. A 0.86 drop in his best even ( 100 Breast ) is hardy impressive. He also swam slower at this year’s Jr nationals in that same even than he did a year ago! He actually was slower in MOST of his events at this year’s Jr nationals compared to last year’s. Take it a step further and go back 2 years…. You will find for the exception of if a couple events, the time improvement is minuscule in events he used to hold the NAG ( 100 fly, 100 back, 100 free). Compare that with some of the other rising talent whose improvement is several seconds over the last couple of years…I watched him… Read more »

HulkSwim
Reply to  Swimmer1
8 years ago

first of all a .86 drop is ridiculously good, so save that nonsense…

secondly- are you trying to tell us that someone who’s no longer 14 has stopped going best times every meet??? what?!?!?! that’s unheard of!!!

seriously everything you just wrote is laughable. so some random kid you chose who is having his breakout season at 17/18 dropped more than MA this year. cool. MA had his breakout at 16. what’s the difference?

I mean- Phelps was SO much faster than Lochte at 15… were you making similar comparisons when Lochte ‘caught’ up to Phelps at 19/20?

you’ve got to do better than this.

Swimmer1
Reply to  HulkSwim
8 years ago

I’m pretty sure I didn’t say dropping every meet was expected or the norm. What I DID say is while others in the 16-18 age range are making huge improvements and CLOSING the gap, MA is at a stand still in most of his events. This is a fact. This is not a good thing. And certainly not what you would expect for his age…

HulkSwim
Reply to  Swimmer1
8 years ago

were you thinking he would ALWAYS be 4 seconds ahead of kids his age? in every event? that’s crazy unrealistic… he was always going to drop events (200s of stroke were the obvious choices)…

EVERY age group stud gets caught by the field at some point. i cannot understand the point you are trying to make here.

he was light years ahead of his peers at 14. but even then you see he was not 14 physically. he had coordination and power none of his peers had. and he has continued to get better, just not at the same rates as he did from 12-16… but nobody does. they all have 2-3 years of crazy drops and then… Read more »

Swimmer1
Reply to  HulkSwim
8 years ago

I’m actually not saying .86 isn’t a nice drop… I’m pointing out that he hasn’t dropped significant time in the 100 free 100 back and 100 fly. Look at the past 2 years of those events. And for claiming 100 breast as best stroke… 200 breast should be stronger. It is simply my opinion that in if you look at times from The last couple of years, there is a lot of room for improvement that isn’t really happening. They’ll either figure it out or they won’t.

HulkSwim
Reply to  Uberfan
8 years ago

no matter what he does, people will move the goalposts…

if you had told these folks two years ago he’d be under 2min in the IM and under 1min in the 1BR by OT 2016, they’d have said that’s crazy talk and he’d crash and burn well before that.

so whatever.

HulkSwim
Reply to  Swimmer1
8 years ago

2 thoughts…

1) He is a pro swimmer. He’s been to Jr National Team trips. What purpose does going to Jr Pan Pacs serve? He isn’t going to college (as much as that bothers you and others- it’s a fact) so the WC Circuit is his ‘future’…

He is basically a ‘freshman’ this year, taking his licks and learning. Why does he instantly need to be winning to be successful? He’s racing some big names and specialists who are in their 20’s.

2) I’ve said this before and I’ll say it again- this is an amazing experiment… why push for change? We have nothing invensted in this kid- we don’t coach him, he isn’t on our squad, etc.… Read more »

Porkchop2244
Reply to  HulkSwim
8 years ago

A college degree while not fool proof is definiteky a better investment with a higher rate of return than his odds of financial success in pro swimming. Not to mention a college degree from any top university in the US for free.

Sven
Reply to  Porkchop2244
8 years ago

He can get a degree without swimming for a college. He doesn’t need to go to Stanford or Texas to be successful.

Porkchop2244
Reply to  Sven
8 years ago

Wow really. Id love to see one, just one financial argument of how his going pro makes sense. How much money has he earned so far, this meet, etc. who is paying for his travel. What has he made. I’ve never read that. How much has he made? What is he going to make?I just can’t believe it’s very much considering he has done nothing at the world championship or Olympic level yet. If that changes that’s a different story but so far it hasn’t.

A degree from Stanford: $200,000 just in cost.

The experience of going to college: priceless

The potential connections from a school like Stanford or Cal: priceless and worth millions long term

HulkSwim
Reply to  Porkchop2244
8 years ago

he was never- NEVER- going to go the traditional college route. he didn’t even go to regular elementary or high school. what makes you think the family was gonna all of a sudden say- gee, lets ship him off to swim at Texas?

this family is different. however you feel about their choices, they are THEIR choices to make. whether MA was a great swimmer or not, he probably wasn’t gonna go the traditional college route.

Porkchop2244
Reply to  HulkSwim
8 years ago

Not when he’s 18. It’s his choice to make and just his. If the NBA and NFL have rules for going pro for physical maturity/decision making in males….why shouldn’t swimming

Sven
Reply to  Porkchop2244
8 years ago

He wouldn’t have gone to any of those. Peter and Tina have said before that traditional colleges are too liberal for them to send their children there. Regardless of the monetary value, he was never going to go there. You seem hung up on the financials of it all when that isn’t the deciding factor at all.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  Sven
8 years ago

Exactly – there are many high level quality trainings out there in any domain possible … college or University is not for everybody . this is called diversity of the human kind

Swimmerr
Reply to  HulkSwim
8 years ago

Yeah this 100%, also by turn pro MA will make his name in lcm and not scy. People remember phelps, ledecky legacy in the olympics , wc and lcm, not in scy.

Hatt
Reply to  HulkSwim
8 years ago

Some people are probably afraid that a century talent is going to be wasted.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  Hatt
8 years ago

Not your problem at all – not even a second

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  HulkSwim
8 years ago

Well said Hulk – i totally agree with this honest perspective !!! Let’s let him experience what he needs to learn and have fun with .

Alex Simmonds
Reply to  Swimmer1
8 years ago

Why every swimmer in usa have to swim in ncaa ?
It is not work for everyone. Some people get the benefit some people dont, its easy. He turns pro and that is the path that he choose. We should just support it. His times last year and this year is still good. He still have a great future in 100 breast and of course in 200 im with no phelps and lochte. Also you say that he needs a new coach that is just plain stupid.

PVSFree
Reply to  Swimmer1
8 years ago

Michael Taylor placed 5th at Olympic trials as a 17 year old yet he is being praised for his performance. Michael Andrew gets 4th and everyone criticizes him. He’s doing very well for his age

Swimmer1
Reply to  PVSFree
8 years ago

Well, Michael Taylor didn’t go pro at 14. Therein lies the difference. Of course MA’s times are “good” for his age! But not for a pro. You go pro, there’s expectations from, well, everyone. I just keep thinking one word. Sad.

HulkSwim
Reply to  Swimmer1
8 years ago

expectations to do what? he’s one of the top 4 americans in the 100m breaststroke. and he’s in the top 10 in a few other races.

what exactly are your expectations of pro swimmers? by that notion, david nolan isn’t ‘pro’ level…

Swimmer1
Reply to  HulkSwim
8 years ago

Your claims are 100% false.
USA swimming data base says otherwise:
50 free-19th
100 free- 80th
100 fly- 34th
100 back- 38th
100 breast- 5th
200 breast – 32nd ( which speaks volumes)
200 IM- 12th
400 IM- 457th

HulkSwim
Reply to  Swimmer1
8 years ago

ok- 5th, not 4th… 12th, not 10th… my bad.

who cares what his 200m BR time is? does his 200 ranking take away his 59 in the 100 or something?

you keep trying to apply ‘general’ things to this specific, unique swimmer.

he has, up till now, clearly been focusing on the 50’s/100’s of stroke, and the 50/100free and 200im..

racepaceswimming
Reply to  Swimmer1
8 years ago

Who could you possibly recommend as a new coach for MA? Seems to me the kid is mature, confident and very happy with where he is in his life. Why screw that up just to think someone else would put MA’s interest at heart? I think if you talk to some of the coaches around the circuit who know Pete and Michael, they believe he’s doing just fine.

Swimmer1
Reply to  racepaceswimming
8 years ago

It’s my opinion. I stand by it. We’ll check back in a year. If at least 1 to 2 same age or younger swimmers have not posted faster times, you can say “I told you so.” Swim fans are too sensitive. Similar fan sites for football or basketball people talk about athletes, make predictions, etc and people don’t get offended so easily. The dude went pro. If you can’t handle a fan critique or criticism you’re in the wrong profession.

HulkSwim
Reply to  Swimmer1
8 years ago

“we’ll check back in a year”… this is the same comment made every year 🙂

and on those other sites, folks defend the same athletes, too… so take your own advice.

Skoorbnagol
8 years ago

If he wants to win money he needs to be smarter, swimming so fast in heats, at a very unattended high quality meet with everyone chasing the dollar, is wasting energy.
If he isn’t then fair play for swimming so fast in prelims.

coacherik
Reply to  Skoorbnagol
8 years ago

I believe, I should say I heard his contract has incentives for JR World Records. Not saying they are more then the cash prizes at the stops, but he may be after records as well. Or he’s just like Ricky Bobby…

Attila the Hunt
Reply to  coacherik
8 years ago

If Jr WRs are what he’s after, shouldn’t he limit the number of events he swim?

Here’s what he swam in Paris-Chartres and how far he’s from JR WRs in each event:
50 back: 0.8 seconds slower
100 back: 5 seconds
50 breast: 0.5 seconds
100 breast: 1.7 seconds
50 free: 0.82 seconds
100 free: 1.95 seconds
100 IM: 3.13 seconds
200 IM: 13.7 seconds (prelims)

If he’s really serious about breaking one or two JR WRs, he knows what to do.

Attila the Hunt
Reply to  Skoorbnagol
8 years ago

200 IM SCM Jr WR is 1:52.48, so 1:58 is not exactly fast. Maybe fast for him, he swam 2:06 in Paris Chartres.

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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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