Athletes take flight in Xi'an,
Montreal and Berlin for the Diving World Cup 2023 season
LAUSANNE (Switzerland) – The World
Aquatics Diving World Cup 2023 season will feature three events, with the
annual series concluding with a Super Final as the competitive lead-in to the
World Aquatics Championships - Fukuoka 2023.
The World Aquatics Diving World Cup
2023 event schedule:
14-16 April, Xi'an (CHN)
5-7 May, Montreal (CAN)
4-6 August, Berlin (GER) – Super
Final
The World Aquatics Diving World Cup
2023 season kicks off in the diving hotbed of Xi’an in central China. The host
is no stranger to hosting international events, as China has held seven
previous Diving World Cups, 14 editions of the Diving World Series and 13
Diving Grand Prix events, with Xi’an holding a trio of these Grand Prix’s from
2000-2002.
From Xi'an, the 2023 tour continues
on to Montreal. Fresh off hosting the 24th FINA World Junior Diving
Championships 2022, Montreal also previously held three consecutive Diving
World Series events (2018-2020).
The Canadian competition venue is
well-known in sporting circles, with the event taking place in the Montreal
Olympic Pool, which has been in use since the city hosted the 1976 Olympic
Games.
From Montreal, the 2023 tour
concludes where last year's season also ended: in the German capital of Berlin
for the World Aquatics Diving World Cup Super Final.
While the Diving World Cup 2022
marked the first time Berlin held this event, Germany has a long tradition of
hosting aquatics events, including 20 consecutive editions of the Diving Grand
Prix (2001-2020).
Berlin, meanwhile, has been a regular
on the Swimming World Cup circuit, holding 19 events from 2000-2022, making the
bustling city and SSE Swimming & Diving Hall the perfect place to close out
the 2023 international diving season.
Sports Event Spotlight: World
Aquatics’ Diving Events Strategy
With a new diving event competition
system approved by the World Aquatics Bureau and in place for 2023 and 2024,
the top-tier international diving series follows a new, simpler event format
and gets a new name following the organisation’s rebranding: the World Aquatics
Diving World Cup.
The World Cups will have three stops
each year and fits better into the annual diving calendar and the ‘Majors’ –
the Olympic Games and the World Aquatics Championships – as well as the
national, regional and continental championship events.
Revised Diving Competition Format
Following this past summer’s World
Aquatics Championships in Budapest, Hungary, a collection of coaches, former
and current athletes, high-performance sports directors and World Aquatics
staff met regularly to determine what, exactly, could be changed to help drive
diving progress and development.
The findings call for a more
inclusive diving events strategy, one open to athletes from all World Aquatics
Member Federations – so long as athletes meet a minimum point standard. The
goal is to get more athletes and countries competing in the World Aquatics
Diving World Cup, thereby increasing the level of diving performance around the
globe.
The competition format that will be
used in the World Aquatics Diving World Cup has been reworked to create events
shorter in duration, even with a larger pool of competing athletes.
Starting in 2023, the first two
events will have a three-day competition programme comprised of two days of
training, followed by a Preliminary-to-Final model for the individual events
and a straight-to-final format for the synchronised and team events.
Previously, individual diving events
progressed through three rounds: preliminary, semi-final, final.
Removing the semi-final round makes
it easier and less costly for hosts to hold events. The new two-round
competition system also lessens the physical wear-and-tear athletes face with
the current system – a factor of athlete health and safety that shouldn’t be
taken lightly in an impact sport that sees 10m platform divers hit the water at
50 km/h.
With the addition of a top-level
diving event this past October in Berlin, Germany, World Aquatics brought these
event format changes out on the field of play. The diving community expressed
strong support for the competition changes.
“With the World Aquatics Diving
Working Group, we took a holistic approach to review our sport for the maximum
benefit to athletes, fans and event hosts alike,” said Jane Figueiredo, Great
Britain coach and trainer to world champion and Tokyo 2020 gold medallist Tom
Daley.
“We came into the project with a
spirit of innovation and immersed ourselves in the work. I am sure the outcome
will be well received by the divers and the greater sports community. I can’t
wait to see what the future holds for our sport.”
The Super Final|Capstone event to the
World Aquatics Diving World Cup season
Results from the first two World
Aquatics Diving World Cup 2023 events will qualify divers for the third and
final stop, the Super Final. This event will feature the top 18 athletes in
individual events and the top 8 in the synchronised and team events.
Deepening the Diver Prize Purse
For the first two stages, athletes
will earn prize money (5’000, 4’000, 3’000 USD) for podium finishes. The World
Aquatics Diving World Cup Super Final will pay prize money from the 1st to 12th
places in the individual events and from the 1st to 8th for the synchronised
and team events.
The Super Final makes for a deeper
athlete prize purse as the previous FINA Diving World Series paid prize money
to the top 8 in all individual events and top 6 in the synchronised events.
Count Rio 2016 Olympic gold medallist
and World Aquatics Athletes’ Committee Member Jack Laugher among those enthused
with the upcoming diving event changes.
“I really felt the mojo with the
Diving Working Group and where we are setting up the sport for the next years
heading into the World Aquatics Championships in Fukuoka and the Paris 2024
Games,” said Laugher.
“The future of our sport is bright.
I’m excited about the upcoming changes we’ll see in diving. From the refinement
of the competition format to having a deeper prize pool, we’re making this
sport even more attractive for athletes. This gives me, my peers, and future
generations more to aim for and achieve in this beautiful sport.”
WORLD AQUATICS DIVING WORLD CUP SUPER
FINAL PRIZE MONEY
1st Place
$25,000 USD
2nd Place
$20,000 USD
3rd Place
$15,000 USD
4th Place
$10,000 USD
5th Place
$9,000 USD
6th Place
$8,000 USD
7th Place
$7,000 USD
8th Place
$6,000 USD
9th Place
$5,000 USD
10th Place
$4,000 USD
11th Place
$3,000 USD
12th Place
$2,000 USD
Refreshed Approach Brings in World
Aquatics Recognised Events
Another key pillar to growing the
diving community and athlete development pathways identified by the World
Aquatics Diving Working Group was having more diving events at the regional and
continental levels.
Looking to make it easier to host
diving events and to empower World Aquatics National Federations in this
process, World Aquatics Diving Recognised Events will replace Diving Grand Prix
events.
Starting this year, all World
Aquatics Member Federations have been able to apply for their competitions to
become a World Aquatics Diving Recognised Event.
World Aquatics Diving Recognised
Events must follow the World Aquatics Rules, and include the Olympic events
(Women and Men 3m Springboard and 10m Platform Individual event, and the Women
and Men 3m Springboard and 10m Platform Synchronised events) among the
slimmed-down event hosting criteria.
Organisers of World Aquatics Diving
Recognised Events will receive the following: official use of the World
Aquatics Recognised Event logo; event added to the World Aquatics International
Events Calendar and results published on the World Aquatics website.
For the application form and criteria
for hosting a World Aquatics Diving Recognised Event, visit HERE.
The calendar of this year’s World
Aquatics Diving Recognised Events will be published later in 2023.
Helping steer these changes was World
Aquatics Technical Diving Committee Chair Bashar Al-Saffar.
“I am so grateful for everyone who
has worked so hard on enhancing our diving events. Our core task was to make
our events more attractive to hosts and athletes alike. I’m proud of what we’ve
accomplished and can’t wait to get the World Aquatics Diving World Cup
started."
An ardent supporter of pushing for
innovation in aquatics sports, World Aquatics President Husain Al-Musallam
expressed his pleasure in the new diving event changes.
“Today is another incredibly exciting
milestone for the sport. By creating a World Aquatics Diving World Cup that’s
open to more athletes and countries, deepening the prize pool at our top annual
event series, and making it easier for organisers to hold World Aquatics
events, we’ve put in place the platform for diving to reach new heights in the
years to come.”
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