Swim
Ireland’s 2024 Irish Open Swimming Championships and Olympic Trials start on
Wednesday 22nd May at the Sport Ireland National Aquatic Centre in Dublin. The
5-day event will see over three hundred swimmers from sixty clubs compete for
National titles in thirty-four individual events and for places on three senior
National Teams, including the European Aquatics Championships (50m) in June,
the Paris Olympic Games in July and the World Aquatics Championships (25m) in
December.
The
Championships will be the final opportunity for swimmers to post an Olympic
Qualification Time (OQT) for the Games, with places also to be decided at the
event as to who will represent Ireland as part of their qualified Olympic
relays.
Daniel
Wiffen, Ellen Walshe and Mona McSharry have already secured qualification times
for Paris, while two relays, the Women’s and Men’s* 4x100m Medley are within
the top sixteen ranking required by World Aquatics for an invite to be issued
next month.
2021
Olympians Danielle Hill, Darragh Greene and Shane Ryan will feature at the
Championships, along with numerous strong contenders including (amongst others)
Tom Fannon, Conor Ferguson, John Shortt, Victoria Catterson, Nathan Wiffen and
Maria Godden. In all events bar the longer distances, each will each have at
least three opportunities across the competition to secure OQT’s in their
respective events.
The
opening day of competition will see Hill and Ferguson go in the 100m Backstroke
Heats with both requiring personal best swims to achieve the OQT of 59.99
(women) and 53.74 (men). Daniel and Nathan Wiffen compete in the 800m
Freestyle; while Daniel has already hit the OQT of 7:51.65, Nathan will need to
knock a further six seconds off his best of 7:57.79 to have a chance at joining
his brother in Paris. Ellen Walshe, who broke the 400m Individual Medley Irish
Record just ten days ago, will compete in the 200m IM, an event in which she
has already secured the OQT. Other events taking place on Wednesday include the
Women’s 1500m Freestyle, the Men’s 200m Freestyle and the Women’s 200m
Butterfly.
Speaking
ahead of the Championships, Swim Ireland’s National Performance Director Jon
Rudd said, “There is only an Olympic Games itself which is more exciting than
an Olympic Trials and the stage is set in Dublin for Irish swimming dreams to
become reality. A home pool, an enthusiastic gallery of Irish swimming fans and
a chance to book a seat on the plane to Paris. What more could we all want? Not
only can our athletes claim their Paris place outright by hitting the necessary
OQT’s, but spots in our relays will be finalised here – and those races will
have something extra about them, particularly in the instances where we know
someone will be selected – it’s just a case of who. If you love swimming, if
you love sport, if you love the notion of the Olympic dream – you should be
here at least once over these five days to will on these terrific athletes. It
will be absolutely electric, and we all wish everyone the very best of luck in
their final stages of preparation”.
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