The FINA Swimming World Cup 2021 came to a close this weekend with three action-packed days of competition in Kazan, Russia. After the three successful stops in Berlin, Budapest, and Doha, all eyes were on Kazan at the Aquatics Palace when South Africa’s Matthew Sates and Australia’s most-decorated Olympian Emma McKeon were crowned the overall winners.
An impressive group of the world’s
best swimmers fiercely competed across the four legs for an overall prize pool
of US $1,452,000. The Swimming World Cup 2021 saw a total of 1021 athletes
compete (431 women and 590 men) and 57 national federations from five
continents represented.
Sates and McKeon topped the men’s and
women’s podiums respectively, earning them each US$ 100,000 in overall prize
money. Sates finished the World Cup with 227 total points. Less than one point
separated American Tom Shields in second place with 224.4 points and Arno
Kamminga of the Netherlands in third place with 224.1 points. In the women’s
chart, McKeon finished in with 228.3 overall points, followed closely by the
Netherlands’ Kira Toussaint who came in second place with 227.4 points.
Australian Madison Wilson finished in third place with 209.1 points.
There was no shortage of world
records across the four legs of the World Cup. Australian Kyle Chalmers broke
the World Record in the Men’s 100m freestyle with a time of 44.84 during the
second day of the competition in Kazan. Sates shattered multiple World Junior
Records, including Men’s 200m Medley (1:51.45), Men’s 200m Freestyle (1:40.65),
and Men’s 400m Freestyle (3:37.92). The United States set a new World Junior
Record for Mixed 4x50 Medley Relay (1:41.21).
Breaking World Cup Records were Kira
Toussaint in the Women’s 50m Backstroke (25.81), McKeon in the Women’s 100m
Freestyle (50.58), and Japan’s Daiya Seto in the Men’s 200m Medley (1:50.66).
All four stops of the 2021 Swimming
World Cup served as qualifying events for the FINA World Swimming Championships
which will be held in Abu Dhabi, Dubai from 16-21 December 2021.
More information and complete
rankings from the Swimming World Cup can be found here:
https://www.fina.org/competitions/1383/fina-swimming-world-cup-2021/rankings?scoringId=af06470d-9e7b-4a2d-b32a-d4328050bb42
Fédération Internationale de Natation
(FINA)
The Fédération Internationale de
Natation, founded in 1908, is the governing body for aquatics worldwide. FINA's
five discipline Swimming, Open Water Swimming, Diving, Water Polo and Artistic
Swimming - are all included in the Olympic programme. High Diving made its
first appearance in FINA events at the 2013 FINA World Championships. FINA
counts 209 affiliated National Federations on the five continents and has its
headquarters in Lausanne (SUI).
MichaelPhelps Teaches Swimming - Most of us can swim, but there’s a difference between dog paddling on vacation and swimming for fitness. If you’re looking to unlock the low-impact, calorie-burning benefits of swimming, check out this course from Michael Phelps on This Skills. The 26-time Olympic gold medalist will cover everything you need to feel confidant and comfortable swimming laps. You’ll learn all the basic strokes, plus wall kicking, diving and other techniques, but you’ll also get a glimpse into the mindset of the most decorated Olympian of all time. Learn more at https://tinyurl.com/v4nmne8h
No comments:
Post a Comment