Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Champions League, Main Round, Day 11, Group B – Jug joins Recco and Marseille in the F8, Hannover passes OSC


 

With a fine win, Jug booked its spot in the Final Eight as expected, while Recco and Marseille kept on winning so their battle for the top spot is still open. The French’s winning streak now stands at 10 matches, this last one came at the expense of OSC, and since Hannover beat Crvena Zvezda, the Germans got ahead of the Magyars in the ranks so their encounter in Budapest next week will probably decide the last available berth.

 

Group B: Waspo 98 Hannover (GER) v Crvena Zvezda (SRB) 14-11, Spandau 04 Berlin (GER) v Pro Recco (ITA) 6-11, CN Marseille (FRA) v Genesys OSC Budapest (HUN) 13-9, Jug Adriatic Osiguranje Dubrovnik (CRO) v Steaua Bucharest (ROU) 14-7 Standings: 1. Recco 30, 2. Marseille 30, 3. Jug 24, 4. Hannover 14, 5. OSC 13, 6. Spandau 10, 7. Steaua 4, 8. Zvezda 4

 

After losing to Recco in the opening round, Marseille turned onto the winning track, and no one could derail their campaign ever since. OSC arrived to France with high hopes based on their brave performance in Recco, but after the French set the tone with a 3-0 start, the Magyars could never come closer than two goals.

 

It cost them the fourth place as Hannover overcame some early scares against Crvena Zvezda and with the brilliant shots of its lefties Ivan Nagaev and Fynn Schutze – they netted 7 combined –, the Germans built a commanding four-goal lead in the third period and never looked back. In the next round Hannover visits OSC – that clash will most probably decisive in the run for the last available F8 berth.

 

The third one has just been booked by Jug – it was not surprising as the Croats had an easy task and they delivered against Steaua at home. After 2-2 they had a 5-0 rush to leave no excitements for the second half. Jug has made the Final for the 6th time in a row, though after consecutive semi-final appearances they missed the top four in the last two editions, but they have been definitely on the rise in recent weeks.

 

Title-holder Recco didn’t have any headaches in Berlin, they had three good periods only to slow down for the last eight minutes. The Italians still won comfortably though they scored the fewest goals, 11, while winning a game in this season.

 

Recaps

Marseille v OSC 13-9

The French kicked off the game in style, buried three of their first four man-ups to go 3-0 up while the Hungarians couldn’t create any real danger in front. They finally opened their account after 5:24 minutes but could not reduce the gap further as after a killed man-down they missed their second man-up before the first break.

 

This pattern continued in the following period: the French had a couple of chances to increase their lead, but the Magyars defended well, however, they were unable to capitalise on that and soon Marseille found the way to regain some comfort. The hosts did really well in the 6 on 5s, their outside shooters usually found the holes, so they led 6-3 at halftime. OSC, which had come up with some spectacular offensive performances in Dubrovnik and in Recco thanks to their brilliant shots from the perimeter, struggled this time in front – the three goals they scored in 16 minutes were a clear proof for that.

 

When Vladan Spaic put away another extra – this time from the 2m line – Marseille seemed to have it at 7-3 but OSC found the tools to finish two man-ups in 58 seconds to climb back to 7-5. And they denied another French man-up but were unable to cut their deficit to a single-goal – and in the last 90 seconds Marseille scored two fine action goals, Andrija Prlainovic and Ugo Crousillat let the ball fly from the distance – Manhercz’s goal between the two was little more than a consolation.

 

The French opened the last period with an easily converted 6 on 4 for 10-6, but OSC unleashed a last surge and with two hits in 48 seconds they trailed only by two again at 10-8 with 6:05 minutes to go.  But Crousillat’s another blast from action killed their last momentum just 21 seconds later and the leftie put an end to the contest in a minute as he made it 12-8 (he finished the evening with 5 goals). Even though there were 4:40 minutes to go, OSC was done – two more goals were scored, one apiece, so Marseille claimed an easier-than-expected win, their 10th straight victory. At the same time, OSC fell one point behind Hannover so the clash with the Germans in Budapest next week will be a do-or-die match.

 

Hannover v Zvezda 14-11

Zvezda opened the match in a stunning mood and quickly jumped to a 1-3 lead and held on for 4-5 deep into the second quarter. Then the Serbs started fading a bit and the hosts’ lefties turned the cards, Fynn Schutze and Ivan Nagaev scored a series of fine goals from the perimeter. Hannover led 6-5 at halftime and soon the lefties put them three goals up, then Alexandar Radovic converted a penalty for 10-6.

 

The Serbs didn’t let it go, though, a double in the last 39 seconds brought them back to 10-8 before the final period, however, they were unable to come any closer. After a quick exchange of goals, Schutze netted his fourth to reset the four-goal gap – but Zvezda fought on and pulled two back once more, so it stood 13-11 with 1:33 to go, still, the Serbs didn’t have any realistic chance to grab at least a point. In fact, Jon Winkelhorst and the Germans had the last laugh as he scored from the last counter to secure three extremely valuable points to Hannover.

 

Spandau v Recco 6-11

The Italians didn’t leave much doubt that they would collect all three points in Berlin. They geared up a bit slowly as it stood 1-1 after six minutes but hit three in the last two minutes to take a 1-4 lead. A penalty put them 1-5 ahead soon in the second while their defence worked really well as they shut out Spandau for 8:56 minutes. Even more tellingly, Recco held the Germans on two goals for the first half while Gergo Zalanki netted an action goal 40 seconds before the middle break for 2-6.

 

Alexandar Ivovic also hit one early in the third and after that it was all about keeping the distance which the Italians did quite efficiently. Spandau scored two in the middle of this period to come back to 4-8 but Recco added two more late in the third for 4-10. With no excitements left, the game slowed down for the fourth period – Recco completed the compulsory task with a solid performance, though it was a bit modest too, their 11 goals is the fewest they scored while winning a game this season.

 

Jug v Steaua 14-7

The Croats had some ups and downs at the beginning but ultimately there was no question that they would bag all three points and book their spot in the Final Eight. After jumping to a 2-0 lead, Steaua equalised in 37 seconds, but the Croats responded well and netted two more in 1:06 minutes to lead 4-2 after the first period.

 

The score was frozen for a while in the second, Jug needed 5:08 minutes to find the back of the net again but once they did it, they were quick to add two more for a 7-2 lead while the Romanians struggled to unbalance the home defence. It took 13:08 minutes for them to score again, from a penalty, but Marin Tomasovic replied immediately from a man-up. And after 8-4 the hosts scored three more while Steaua’s offence was derailed again. This time it was a 6:18 minute-long blackout – at 12-4 it did not matter that much and credit to the visitors that they stepped up and managed to score three in the last period.

 

Fixtures for Wednesday – Group A

19.30 Zodiac Atletic Barceloneta (ESP) v Olympiacos Piraeus (GRE)

19.45 Novi Beograd (SRB) v FTC-Telekom Budapest (HUN)

20.30 Radnicki Kragujevac (SRB) v Jadran Split (CRO)

20.30 AN Brescia (ITA) v Dinamo Tbilisi (GEO)

 

Standings: 1. Brescia 23, 2. Novi Beograd 20, 3. Olympiacos 19, 4. Barceloneta 17, 5. Ferencvaros 16, 6. Radnicki 10, 7. Jadran 9, 8. Dinamo 0

 

For all information, visit our dedicated website:

www.championsleague.len.eu

Women’s LEN Trophy, Final, 2nd leg Ethnikos is set to repeat 2010 success


 

Courtesy: LEN

With a four-goal away win under their belt, Ethnikos players are set to march all the way to the club’s second LEN Trophy triumph after 12 years.

LEN Trophy, Final, 2nd leg

19.00 Ethnikos Piraeus (GRE) v Dunaujvarosi Foiskola (HUN) – first leg: 12-8

Results http://len.microplustiming.com/lentrophy2022/indexCL_web.php?cal=1http://len.microplustiming.com/lentrophy2022/indexCL_web.php?cal=1

 

Dunaujvaros needs a miracle to overturn this deficit, though the Hungarians demonstrated a couple of times that they never gave in.

A four-goal win, especially when gained on the road in a home-and-away final, is almost a guarantee for lifting the trophy at the end of the return game. And based on the match played in Dunaujvaros last Friday, Ethnikos has all the reasons to be confident before the Wednesday clash.

Apart from a shorter surge from the Hungarians in the second period, the Greeks outplayed their rival in all aspects. The difference in the quality of goaltending was especially spectacular – though it’s not surprising as Ashleigh Johnson is one of the most decorated goalies in history. The US Olympic and world champion was a key in Ethnikos’ dominating performance and if only the Greek defence keeps its composure for four more quarters, there will be no way back to Dunaujvaros.

Though the Magyar side caused some upsets in the past – it was definitely the underdog when faced Olympiacos in the 2018 LEN Trophy final, still managed to upend the fellow Piraeus side and later caused a huge surprise when they added the Super Cup by downing Euro League winner Kinef in Kirishi. They also were close to something big earlier in that year in the EL quarters – after losing by three goals to 8-time champion Orizzonte at home, they hit back with a three-goal win in Italy (led by five in the game a couple of times) only to bow out in the penalty-shootout.

These memories show that Dunaujvaros cannot be written off – though one still can have a feeling that only Ethnikos can blow this victory. This would be the second title for the Greeks in this competition, they won their first in 2010, when they beat Russia’s Yugra in the final.

Courtesy of the host club, LEN provides a free stream and livescoring from the final, please visit www.len.eu for more.

Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Champions League Water Polo, Main Round, Day 11 – It’s heating up



Courtesy: LEN

After a month-long break, here is the grand finish of the prelims with four more rounds in five weeks. So far, Recco and Marseille secured their respective spots in the Final Eight and Jug needs one point to join them from Group B. At the same time, Group A is quite balanced, and we’ll have two extremely important matches this Wednesday where teams ranked in the top five face off each other.

Brescia was the last one in the field to lose a game, it happened to them at home against Novi Beograd – but now they have the easiest task of all, to collect three points against bottom-ranked Dinamo at home and that can secure them the F8 spot.

The Serbs are in chasing mood now, though they face another tough test as Ferencvaros visits them – while for Novi Belgrade it’s all about the possibility to be ranked first (and pride, of course) since their place in the F8 is guaranteed as the hosts, for the Hungarians it’s now a do-or-die occasion. After an undefeated run of eight games, FTC lost back-to-back matches – going down in Split was a real blow, a crushing 7-17 defeat at home against Barceloneta was definitely an all-time low for the club which found itself in an extremely difficult position. They beat the Serbs at home in November but the trends are different now – Novi Belgrade is on the rise, they have a new coach, a living legend, Igor Milanovic who’ll be in charge in their Champions League campaign for the first time which is definitely a big boost for the home side. On contrary, Ferencvaros had ups and downs recently, and a third loss may leave them in the cold with three rounds to go.

It’s going to be exciting to watch this encounter almost parallel with the other big clash featuring Barceloneta and Olympiacos. The Spaniards had a terrific run in late February so the one-month break was definitely a setback for them – as their scoring machine Alvaro Granados mentions it in his pre game quote – and Olympiacos also bounced back after the shocks (lost to Radnicki in Kragujevac, then to Brescia at home). Here the winner gets some comfort for sure, but the loser will see challenging times so the outcome is absolutely crucial in this game too. Radnicki and Jadran should produce a fierce encounter but neither side has a realistic chance to catch the train to Belgrade.

In Group B, the top three ranked sides are in safe – Recco’s and Marseille’s spots are sealed, Jug needs a point against Steaua and this should be an easy ride for the Croats who look to find the right gears for the spring.

At the same time, Recco and Marseille keep on wrestling for the first place – the title-holder Italians visit Berlin where they might have an easier task then the French who prepares for a huge battle against OSC at home. Marseille won in Budapest with ease and now has a 9-game winning streak, but the Hungarians are coming up, had a great game in Recco in the last round and also played really well in the key matches in the domestic league. Facing a tough challenge from the two Germans in the hunt for the fourth qualifying spot, OSC will double its efforts for sure so their visit to Marseille is definitely the highlight of Day 10 action.

Their crucial showdown with Hannover is due in one week and if OSC loses in Marseille – which is still very much in the cards – and the Germans beat Crvena Zvezda – no one would be surprised either –, it would mean that Hannover gets ahead of OSC in the ranks before the grand battle on Day 12.

 

Champions League, Day 11 – Fixtures

Group A (Wednesday)

19.30 Zodiac Atletic Barceloneta (ESP) v Olympiacos Piraeus (GRE)

19.45 Novi Beograd (SRB) v FTC-Telekom Budapest (HUN)

20.30 Radnicki Kragujevac (SRB) v Jadran Split (CRO)

20.30 AN Brescia (ITA) v Dinamo Tbilisi (GEO)

Standings: 1. Brescia 23, 2. Novi Beograd 20, 3. Olympiacos 19, 4. Barceloneta 17, 5. Ferencvaros 16, 6. Radnicki 10, 7. Jadran 9, 8. Dinamo 0

 

Group B (Tuesday)

18.15 Waspo 98 Hannover (GER) v Crvena Zvezda (SRB)

19.00 Spandau 04 Berlin (GER) v Pro Recco (ITA)

19.00 CN Marseille (FRA) v Genesys OSC Budapest (HUN)

19.00 Jug Adriatic Osiguranje Dubrovnik (CRO) v Steaua Bucharest (ROU)

Standings: 1. Recco 27, 2. Marseille 27, 3. Jug 21, 4. OSC 13, 5. Hannover 11, 6. Spandau 10, 7. Steaua 4, 8. Zvezda 4

READ MORE https://championsleague.len.eu/champions-league-main-round-day-11-pre-game-quotes/

Monday, March 28, 2022

Men’s Euro Cup, Final, 2nd leg – Sabadell writes history, joins a special club of champions


 

The male team of Sabadell wrote history by claiming its first-ever European trophy after blowing away Italy’s Palermo in the return leg of the final. Goalie Eduardo Lorrio was the hero of the game, his 15 stops and 75% saving percentage was instrumental in Sabadell’s triumph. The Spanish side, whose women had won the Euro League five times, joined as the 7th member of an elite circle where both the men and women teams from the same club won at least one European cup title.

Euro Cup, final, 2nd leg: Astralpool Sabadell (ESP) v Telimar Palermo (ITA) 11-5

Aggregate score: 18-14

It took seven minutes to see the first goal in the grand battle, Sabadell’s Konstantin Averka sent the ball home from the perimeter – otherwise the defences dominated, both sides missed four man-ups apiece in the opening eight minutes.

The Spaniards continued to work extremely well in the back, their goalie Eduardo Lorrio came up with a magnificent performance delivering nine saves alone in sixteen minutes. Indeed, he was 9/9 as Palermo lost its composure in offence and was unable to score in the entire first half, while the hosts – propelled by the tremendous noise created by the capacity crowd – scored three more action goals to build a massive 4-0 lead by halftime, so they led by two in aggregate.

Andrija Basic finally broke the ice for Palermo, after 17:18 minutes, but Sergi Cabanas netted a man-up right from the next attack. The Italians had a better spell then, managed to halt the home sides’ march in front and Max Irving converted two penalties so the visitors were back to even at 5-3, at least in aggregate. But they couldn’t hold on, Dusan Banisevic buried a 6 on 5 to end the hosts’ almost four-minute silence, then they killed another man-down and Averka’s penalty goal reset the four-goal cushion. With five seconds to go in third, Basic pulled one back to score Palermo’s first man-up goal (they missed the first seven).

They were unable to come closer, though – they had numerous chances but the Spanish defence was simply brilliant as they killed three more man-downs in as many possessions early in the fourth, Lorrio delivered more saves – while at the other end Bernat Sanahuja hit one from an extra, and 48 seconds later Marcel Teclas’ nice centre-action gave a 9-4 lead to Sabadell.

Irving scored one from a counter but a lucky man-up goal from Sanahuja – the ball hit the crossbar then bounced in from the goalie’s back – sealed the Spanish triumph at 10-5 with 3:01 on the clock. The last Italian man-up was business as usual for the home defence – they held Palermo 1 for 12 –, it was catch No. 15 for Lorrio who finished the game with an outstanding 75% saving percentage. The festival got into full swing when Averka netted his third from a counter to send the home fans to seventh heaven.

With this win, Sabadell became the 7th club where both the male and the female team managed to clinch at least one European trophy – the Spaniards, whose women won the Euro League five times, joined Recco (ITA), Olympiacos (GRE), Roma (ITA), Honved (HUN), Vouliagmeni (GRE) and Shturm (RUS).

Also, this was the first Spanish victory in this competition since 2004 – and the first for the Sabadell men who had reached the final ten years ago, then lost to Savona, the team which they managed to oust in a record-breaking 34-shot penalty shootout in the quarters. There they were on the edge, just like against Barcelona in the semis, but on Saturday there was no question that they were the better side.

Women’s LEN Trophy, Final, 1st leg – Big win for Ethnikos, cup is heading to Piraeus



Ethnikos downed host Dunaujvaros with a series of fine action goals and the 8-12 away win sets up the Greeks to claim the trophy, for the second time in their history.

LEN Trophy Final, 1st leg: Dunaujvarosi Foiskola (HUN) v Ethnikos Piraeus (GRE) 8-12 Return leg: 30 March

Dunaujvaros managed to reach back-to-back finals in two years – in 2021 Olympiacos Piraeus edged them out in the Euro League endgame, now they faced the other top side from Piraeus, Ethnikos, this time in a home-and-away duel, but it seems they end up losing once more.

The first half brought a balanced battle, the opening quarter saw two goals apiece. The Greeks netted two fine goals from action early on in the second to go 2-4 up but the hosts bounced back and in 2:04 minutes they responded with three straight goals (two came from penalties). Tt turned out soon that this was their best spell in the evening – Christina Benekou scored one from the centre and Karolina Ioannou put away a man-up 5 seconds before the middle break for 5-6.

And the Greek carried on in the third, the Charalampidi sisters added two more, one from action by Ioanna and one from a penalty by Stefania. When Ioannou netted another man-up, Ethnikos was on a 0- 5 run – and Dunaujvaros in deep trouble. The Hungarians were clearly intimidated by US Olympic champion goalie Ashleigh Johnson who denied two of their finest chances and even if Greta Gurisatti managed to beat her later from an extra, the difference between the two sides was clearly recognisable at this stage.

And the Greeks landed the decisive punch at the beginning of the fourth, hit two more from action in 64 seconds for a 6-11 lead and never looked back. The hosts could reduce the gap to four by the end (could convert an extra when Johnson was excluded) but for them the return leg next Wednesday is very much a mission impossible in Piraeus. Ethnikos offered a brilliant performance, scored 7 action goals so the Greeks can get ready to celebrate their second LEN Trophy victory after 2010.

RESULTS http://len.microplustiming.com/lentrophy2022/indexCL_web.php?cal=1

Men’s Euro Cup, Final, 2nd leg – The first trophy to be lifted


 

Courtesy: LEN

The first winner of the European club season is to be declared this Saturday in Sabadell where the return leg of the Euro Cup final takes place. It’s going to be a historical first at the European stage for the victor, either the Spaniards or Italy’s Palermo come out on top in the end. Palermo won the first leg 9-7.

Sabadell needs to dig deep to overturn the two-goal deficit, but the hosts got used to playing nailbiters this season as they edged out Savona in the quarters after a thrilling 34-shot penalty shootout and survived a couple of scares against fellow Spanish side CN Barcelona in the semis.

It’s yet to be seen if their disastrous mistake committed in the last second of the first leg hits back: they were trailing by a single goal, killed Palermo’s last man-up but their excluded player returned to the field despite getting his third personal foul and the ensuing penalty doubled the Italians’ advantage.

The Sabadell pool witnessed a couple of great triumphs, thanks to the women’s team which won the Euro League five times – the men’s side is yet to claim a European trophy, they reached the final ten years ago but were denied by Savona, an Italian side.

Beforehand, Palermo has never been around when European silverware was at stake – now they have a great chance to add a golden chapter to the club’s history book. It would also boost Italy’s outstanding tally in this competition – since 1993 (back then called LEN Trophy) its clubs were absolutely dominant, lifted the trophy 10 times and had 10 more occasions when an Italian side finished runner-up. On contrary, Spain had only three appearances, with two victories and one lost final (by Sabadell).

Euro Cup, Final, 2nd leg – Saturday 12.30 Astralpool Sabadell (ESP) v Telimar Palermo (ITA) – first leg: 7-9

Schwimmen - Ponti Weltjahresdritter über 200 Delfin



Der 20-jährige Noè Ponti vom Nuoto Sport Locarno testete seine Form anlässlich der Langbahn-Schweizermeisterschaften in Uster. Über 200 Delfin experimentierte er mit einer hohen Anfangspace und schlug schliesslich mit 1:55.49 an. Damit klassiert er sich in der aktuellen Weltjahresbestenliste auf dem dritten Rang.

Auch der Kurzbahn-WM-Dritte Antonio Djakovic überzeugte mit einer Top Ten Leistung im Weltjahresranking bei seinem Sieg über 400 Freistil.

Resultate: Langbahn Schweizermeisterschaft - SPLASH Meet Manager 11 (swimrankings.net)

Stefan Trümpler

Media Manager Swiss Aquatics

Friday, March 25, 2022

RECORD DU SÉNÉGAL BATTU en bassin de 50 mètrespar Matthieu Ousmane SEYE au 200m Nage Libre

 


*Une semaine après son record du 200m Dos au 13e Meeting National Eurocom de Massy, Matthieu Ousmane SEYE réalise encore, lors de la 3ème journée (19/03/2022) des Championnats de France Nationale 2 - 50 m  à Saint-Raphaël (17 au 20 mars 2022), un Nouveau Record du Sénégal du 200m Nage Libre avec un chrono de 1’54”45  en finale.

Son ancien temps de 1’54”69 avait été réalisé le 03 juillet 2021 lors du Meeting de la Liberté à Caen en France.

NOUVEAU RECORD DU SÉNÉGAL

Félicitations et Encouragement à Matthieu Ousmane SEYE

LEN Open Water Cup, Leg 1, Eilat (ISR) – Star-studded line-up for the season opener

 


Olympic medallists, world and European champions are gathering in Eilat for the grand opening of the season. The first leg of the LEN Open Water Cup promises nothing less than a top-level race, worthy of any major championship.

Before the pandemic, Eilat staged the traditional kick-off meet of the European season – but this year the event offers even more as the usual February opening leg of the FINA World Series in Doha was cancelled so a handful of non-European swimmers also headed to Israel to test themselves early on (the LEN Cup is an open event, participation is not restricted to the continent’s athletes).

This adds an extra flavour to the races as the women’s field will welcome Brazil’s Ana Marcela Cunha, the reigning Olympic champion, arguably the greatest ever female open water swimmer. She will clash with the continent’s elite including 2021 European silver medallist Anna Olasz (HUN), 2021 European champion (in relay) and 5km runner-up Giulia Gabbrielleschi (ITA), relay world champion and the 2021 World Series overall winner Oceane Cassignol (FRA) and European silver medallist Leonie Beck (GER) who won the last 10km event in 2021, finishing atop in Abu Dhabi last December.

The race will also be special as France’s Aurelie Muller shows up again: the brilliant swimmer won back-to-back world titles in 2015 and 2017 but her Olympic campaigns failed (was disqualified in Rio, missed the cut for Tokyo by 0.1sec) and it seemed she was done with open water swimming. Now the 32-year-old is set to launch a final assault to fulfil her dreams at home, in Paris 2024.

The warm-up events held on Wednesday morning offered a glimpse of what we may expect in the Cup. The open Israeli championships in 5km saw a French 1-2 with Caroline Jouisse and Muller in front, ahead of Hungary’s Luca Vas and Anna Olasz, while Oceane Cassignol won the 2.5km.

As for the men, the 5km race podium already featured the usual ‘suspects’: European champion and Olympic bronze medallist Gregorio Paltrinieri (ITA) out-touched France’s world champion MarcAntoine Olivier (FRA) by 0.1sec (the same order they produced in Budapest last May in the 5km and 10km). Olympic silver medallist Kristof Rasovszky (HUN) followed them in 2.8sec, just ahead of 25km world champion Axel Reymond (FRA). Italians produced a 1-4 finish in the 2.5km with Matteo Furlan atop (he claimed medals in 25km at each major since 2015) – one cannot wait to see what these outstanding swimmers will bring to the Red Sea while contesting the 10km.

The starting pistol goes off at 8.00 (local time) in Eilat on Thursday – courtesy of the Israeli hosts, LEN offers free live streaming, and the results can also be checked on our website, just click here http://www.len.eu/?p=19251

LEN Open Water Cup – 2022 Calendar

Leg 1: 24 March, Eilat (ISR)

Leg 2: 13 May, Piombino (ITA)

Leg 3: 20 May, Alghero (ITA)

Leg 4: 10 July, Belgrade (SRB)

Leg 5: 27 August, Kiel (GER)

Leg 6: 24 September, Barcelona (ESP)

Montreal returns to the World Triathlon Para Series calendar in 2022


 

World Triathlon is pleased to announce that Montreal will be joining the World Triathlon Para Series circuit in 2022, with an event that will welcome the 80 best para triathletes of the world.

The World Triathlon Para Series Montreal will be hosted on Friday July 8, two weeks after the Montreal Sprint & Relay Championships. The Parc Jean Drapeau, where the Formula 1 circuit is located, will be the perfect scenario for medal events - six male and six female - scheduled for the second stage of the Para Series in 2022.

The spectacular venue at the Parc will see the athletes take to the Bassin Olympique for the 750m swim before transitioning out and onto five laps of the Gilles-Villeneuve race track, home of the F1 Grand Prix. The race concludes with one lap of the lake, giving the athletes an iconic setting to finish the race.

The Montreal Para Series will be the second stop of the series this year, after Yokohama and before Swansea, with the para triathletes then ready for the World Championships that will take place in Abu Dhabi in November 2022.

The 2022 season will bring perfect opportunities for all para triathletes to test their performances before the Paralympic qualification period starts in June 2023. For the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games, three more medal events have been added to the programme, which means that all classes except the PTS3 women will have a medal event at the Paralympics.

World Triathlon wants to thank Triathlon Canada, the local organisers, Sport Canada, the Quebec government as well as the city of Montréal, for again showing their total support for our sport and helping us delivering another magnificent event in the Canadian city, as well as providing great racing opportunities for all athletes.

 

ABOUT WORLD TRIATHLON

World Triathlon is the international governing body for the Olympic and Paralympic sport of triathlon and all related multisport disciplines around the world, including duathlon, aquathlon, cross triathlon and winter triathlon. Triathlon made its Olympic debut in Sydney 2000, with a third medal event, the Mixed Team Relay, added to the programme at Tokyo 2020, while para triathlon was first added to the Paralympic programme at Rio 2016. World Triathlon is proudly committed to the development of the sport worldwide, with inclusion, equality, sustainability and transparency at our core as we seek to help triathletes at all levels of the sport to be extraordinary. 

World Triathlon Multisport Championships to be held in Townsville in 2024


 

Organisers of the World Triathlon Multisport Championships have today announced that the event will be heading to Townsville, Australia, in 2024. The 10-day event will be held in the charming town in North Queensland in 2024, with thousands of athletes from around the world expected to take part.

The World Triathlon Multisport Championships will see duathlon, long distance triathlon, long distance aquabike, aquathlon, cross triathlon and cross duathlon world championship races organized together during a week-long festival. This ground-breaking event now allows for athletes to compete in various multisport races, as opposed to electing only one each season. And participants can even vie for the Multisport Legend, a title reserved for those who compete in four events.

World Triathlon President and IOC member Marisol Casado said that the organisation was looking forward to heading to Townsville in 2024. "We are absolutely delighted to return to Queensland after such a long time without events in Australia, this time for one of our flagship events: the Multisport World Championships in Townsville,” she said. “Over the last years, Australia has become synonymous of triathlon on its multiple variations, and has proved to be a magnificent host for the triathlon family, playing host to some truly memorable performances and great champions, staging races the results of which have helped shape the path of entire seasons.

“Being able to hold these important races in one fantastic location and all under the banner of one festival has proved to be hugely beneficial for athletes, spectators and media alike, allowing the global World Triathlon family the opportunity to gather together for a true celebration of the sport, and we are extremely excited to head to Townsville in 2024,” she said.

Member for Townsville Scott Stewart said the Multisport World Championships cemented Townsville’s place as the sporting events capital of northern Australia. “I’m looking forward to seeing the Multisport World Championships come to life here in the North, bringing together thousands of elite and age-group athletes,” Mr Stewart said. “The Palaszczuk Government is proud to support the Multisport World Championships because we understand the importance of events to local jobs and Townsville’s visitor economy.

“This event is great news for North Queensland tourism operators, accommodation and transport providers, and local retailers,” he said. “It’s also a golden opportunity for competitors and spectators to build extra time into their stay to explore Townsville’s amazing tourism and Indigenous cultural experiences, world-class dining, the reef, and breathtaking tropical islands and rainforests.”

Mayor Jenny Hill said the Townsville City Council and the wider community was looking forward to welcoming the Multisport World Championships to the city.

“Hosting this event is a real coup of Townsville and further reinforces our city’s reputation as the events capital of Northern Australia,” Cr Hill said. “With our beautiful natural environment and ideal weather, I can think of no better place for the world’s best athletes to test their skills and endurance.

“The championships will also provide a platform to promote our city and region to the world, which will boost our tourism industry for years to come.”

Miles Stewart OAM OLY, Triathlon Australia CEO, welcomed news that the event would be held in Townsville in 2024. “This is fantastic news for triathlon and multisport in Australia, and for our members who have been anticipating, and looking forward to racing and officiating at these world championships on home soil,” said Stewart. “We’re expecting our largest Australian representative team on record for Townsville 2024 with seven championships on the schedule from cross-triathlon, aquathlon to long course.

“The festival format will mean athletes can race across multiple disciplines on multiple days, which is really exciting, and will be a great boost for Australian events with athletes racing to qualify for a spot on the team from 2023,” he said. “Australia has some of the best triathlon events in the world, and we can’t wait to welcome the world’s best to Townsville, and continue to build on our legacy of hosting world-class events.

Official dates for the Townsville Multisport World Championships will be announced in the near future.

The World Triathlon Multisport Championships made its debut in the World Triathlon calendar in 2017 in Penticton (Canada), a successful event that was followed by Fyn (Denmark) in 2018 and Pontevedra (Spain) in 2019. After the event being cancelled in 2020 due to the pandemic, in 2021 the races were held in multiple locations (Almere, El Anillo and Aviles). In 2022 the event will travel to Romania and Slovakia, and will return to the original format of all races in one location during a 10-day festival in Ibiza (Spain) in 2023 and Townsville (Australia) in 2024.

 

ABOUT WORLD TRIATHLON

World Triathlon is the international governing body for the Olympic and Paralympic sport of triathlon and all related multisport disciplines around the world, including duathlon, aquathlon, cross triathlon and winter triathlon. Triathlon made its Olympic debut in Sydney 2000, with a third medal event, the Mixed Team Relay, added to the programme at Tokyo 2020, while para triathlon was first added to the Paralympic programme at Rio 2016. World Triathlon is proudly committed to the development of the sport worldwide, with inclusion, equality, sustainability and transparency at our core as we seek to help triathletes at all levels of the sport to be extraordinary. 

www.triathlon.org

 

About the Professional Triathletes Organisation

The Professional Triathletes Organisation is a not-for-profit entity consisting of professional male and female triathletes who have come together to form a representative body which not only gives them a meaningful voice in the way the sport operates but a means to contribute to its growth for the benefit of the entire triathlon community. The PTO seeks to showcase the passion, talents, determination, struggles and achievements of its dedicated professionals through iconic events, reimagined broadcast and compelling storytelling, inspiring global sports fans to watch, engage and participate in Triathlon. The Collins Cup logos and launch assets can be accessed via the PTO Media Portal. Anyone who has not previously accessed the media portal can register at protriathletes.org/media.

 

About the x-bionic®sphere

Home of the Collins Cup in 2021 and 2022, the x-bionic sphere in Šamorín is located just 25km from Bratislava, Slovakia’s capital. One of the most advanced sports complexes in the world, the x-bionic®sphere is Slovakia’s official Olympic Training Centre, offering professional-level conditions for 27 Olympic disciplines. Designed as a destination dedicated to helping all guests experience the excitement of victory and success, it’s a stunning location in a truly beautiful part of the world. With an on-site hotel catering for 1,150 guests; four restaurants; a three-floor 1000m2 gym; the x-bionic aquatic sphere with 25 and 50m pools; gymnastics centre; running track; and 379,167m2 dedicated equestrian activity space, there are activities for all the family. At the end of a hard, or easy, day you can fully unwind at the x-bionic® wellness sphere where you’ll find a luxurious assortment of individual relaxation, healing and beautifying procedures as well as relaxing massages administered by certified spa therapis.

FINA Bureau meets, makes decisions on Russian and Belarusian athletes and event hosting



LAUSANNE (Switzerland) – Further to the FINA Bureau’s decision on 8 March 2022 and the new measures at its disposal to exclude Russian and Belarusian athletes and officials from FINA competitions, and following the review of an independent risk assessment, the FINA Bureau met today and confirmed that athletes and officials from Russia and Belarus will not take part in the upcoming 19th FINA World Championships Budapest 2022.  

Following these decisions, FINA was informed by the Russian Swimming Federation of the withdrawal of all Russian aquatics athletes from all FINA events for the rest of this year.  

FINA also previously removed a number of aquatics events scheduled for Russia. Today, the FINA Bureau also decided to remove the hosting of the FINA Swimming World Championships (25M) 2022 from Kazan (RUS). The scheduled dates of 17-22 December 2022 will be maintained, and FINA is currently in discussions with potential hosts to take over the event.   

Separately, the FINA Executive confirmed that the FINA Disciplinary Panel has opened a procedure against Russian swimmer Evgeny Rylov for a potential violation of the FINA rules following his alleged participation in a pro-war rally at the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow. The FINA Executive has requested that the Panel’s proceedings be expedited.        

FINA maintains its strongest condemnation of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. FINA also wishes to reiterate its commitment to supporting the Ukraine Swimming, Diving and Artistic Swimming Federation as they prepare for upcoming competitions.

FINA

Fédération Sénégalaise de Natation et de Sauvetage (FSNS) organise la 1ère Journée de Compétition de Sauvetage Sportif en Mer


 

Dimanche 27 mars 2022 à 15h, à la Plage de Ngor

La Fédération Sénégalaise de Natation et de Sauvetage (FSNS) organise, la 1ère Journée de Compétition de Sauvetage Sportif en Mer, le Dimanche 27 mars 2022 à 15h à la Plage de Ngor.

A cet effet, nous invitons tous les CLUBS à prendre part à la Compétition en présentant une équipe composée de quatre (4) sauveteurs au moins.

Cette compétition servira ainsi de base de sélection pour les représentants du  Sénégal aux prochains championnats du monde de sauvetage sportif.

Les épreuves retenues pour cette 1e Journée de compétition de Sauvetage Sportif en Mer sont :

 

Épreuves au Programme : Dimanche 27 mars 2022 à 15h Après-midi à 15h

A Beach sprint

Toutes Catégories

Beach Flags Toutes Catégories

Rescue Tube Rescue Toutes Catégories

Board Race Toutes Catégories

Surf Race Toutes Catégories

Tout le public et les acteurs du Sport notamment des sports aquatiques sont conviés à cette compétition de sauvetage sportif.

*     Date limite de Dépôt des Engagements : Jeudi 24 mars 2022 à 18h 00mn

*     Il n’y aura pas d'engagement le jour de la compétition.

*     Cette compétition est ouverte aux clubs affiliés à la FSNS et aux Sauveteurs.

- Convocation : 14h 30mn

- Début des épreuves: 15h 00mn

Description des Epreuves

*Beach Sprint : c’est une épreuve individuelle de course de plage sur une distance de 90m au maximum avec des zones de ruissellement de 20m au moins à chaque extrémité.

Les concurrents, au moins 08 sont séparés par des couloirs de 1,5 à 1,8m de large.

Le compétiteur qui franchit la ligne d'arrivée uniquement sur la poitrine gagne la course.

* Beach Flags : c’est une épreuve individuelle consistant à aller chercher un bâton placé à équidistance entre deux concurrents après le signal donné sur une distance de 20m.

* Rescue Tube Rescue : c’est une épreuve par équipe de quatre dont  une "Victime", un "Sauveteur" et deux assistants qui concourent à l'aide d’une bouée tube sur une distance de 120 m environ.

* Board Race : c’est une épreuve individuelle où le compétiteur effectue un parcours de 400 m environ en contournant les bouées vers la droite.

* Surf Race : c’est une course individuelle de nage sur une distance de 400m environ en contournant les bouées vers la droite.

NATATION POUR TOUS - SAUVETAGE !!

LEN Open Water Cup, Leg 1, Eilat (ISR) – Rasovszky, Cunha and Cassignol kick off the season with wins


 

Rasovszky, Cunha and Cassignol kick off the season with wins

Hungary’s Olympic silver medallist Kristof Rasovszky kicked off the season with a hard-fought win at the first leg of the LEN Open Water Cup in Eilat. The women’s race saw Olympic champion Brazilian Ana Marcela Cunha touching in first, though the title and the €2,500 prize money – available for European competitors – went to France’s Oceane Cassignol.

Podium, men: 1. Kristof Rasovszky (HUN) 1:55.35.2, 2. Domenico Acerenza (ITA) 1:55.35.5, 3. Gregorio Paltrinieri (ITA) 1:55.37.2.

Women: 1. Oceane Cassignol (FRA) 2:07:22.7, 2. Ginevra Taddeucci (ITA) 2:07:24.9, 3. Angelica Andre (POR) 2:07:30.2

 

Complete Results here http://len.microplustiming.com/lenowcup2022-eilat/index_web.php?s=TG9hZENhbGVuZGFyaW8oJzAnKTs=&cat=&page=&spec=&bat=&td=CAL_CIS_DAY&hg=&descIT=&descEN=&descFR=&curCatSel_M_F=

 

The wind and the waves created a perfect open water swimming course in Eilat where the LEN Cup returned to after two years to serve as the continent’s traditional season opener once again.

The men’s race offered a thrilling contest right from the beginning. Hungary’s Kristof Rasovszky rushed in front early on, followed by a group of Italians with reigning European champion Gregorio Paltrinieri in the mix. Only fractions of a second separated the swimmers at the end of each round, Rasovszky tried to increase the pace in the penultimate seventh lap where he gained a 3.8sec advantage. However, the Italians – to whom Frenchman Marc-Antoine Olivier, European runner-up in 2021, joined for the final rush – chased him down and turned the finish into a shoulder-by-shoulder battle. Rasovszky managed to fend off Domenico Acerenza’s final assault and out-touched him by 0.3sec, while Paltrinieri came third with further 1.7sec adrift, and Olivier had to settle for the fourth place.

Though Rasovszky had a lot of podium finishes in the recent past, this was his first 10km win at international meets since August 2019 – but in time to celebrate his 25th birthday (due in three days) in style.

The women’s contest ended in a different way. Special guest star Ana Marcela Cunha was outstanding once more, the Brazilian Olympic champion – she celebrated her 30th birthday on the eve of the event, by the way – managed to swim away with the males who had caught up the women’s field in the second half of the race. Cunha won by a mile (1:21min), though she was not eligible to be officially ranked and awarded in the Cup as that is reserved for European participants.

The title went to France’s Oceane Cassignol, the relay world champion enjoyed a 2.2sec advantage ahead of Italy’s Ginevra Taddeucci, and Portugal’s Angelica Andre claimed the bronze medal.

 

Quotes from the winners

Kristof Rasovszky (HUN) “I’m really happy to win this race, it was a lot of fun out there in the waves. I love to swim in these conditions, this is real open water swimming. I was swimming with a bunch of Italians in front, they are all pretty good swimmers, so I thought in this choppy weather maybe the best tactics was to set a high pace and it worked. Acerenza was pretty fast at the end, I had to give it all and it’s great that I could touch in first.”

Ana Marcela Cunha (BRA) “At one point the men caught us up so after that I tried to swim with them. When they finished their race, there was only one lap to go for us and by then I was far ahead so the tactics worked well. For me, Eilat is a very special place, I won my first big race here and it’s always a pleasure to return here. It was so nice that I was greeted at the technical meeting because of my 30th birthday – now the 20s are over, it’s a new chapter but I’m still preparing hard, this year we have the World Championships in our focus.”

Oceane Cassignol (FRA) “It was a good race after a three-week training camp on high altitude, this is a good assessment of the level of my preparations. I like to compete here in Israel as I always perform well. Today we have huge waves, high water temperature so it was really difficult, but I managed to handle these challenges. With 2.5km to go, the boys passed us, and I tried to follow them with the maximum speed possible but that was very hard. It was a kind of second race starting from that point with a really high pace – I led up until then, but soon Ana Marcela managed to go with the guys while I could arrive in the second place. Since it’s a European event, I was declared first.”

 

LEN Open Water Cup – 2022 Calendar

Leg 1: 24 March, Eilat (ISR)

Leg 2: 13 May, Piombino (ITA)

Leg 3: 20 May, Alghero (ITA)

Leg 4: 10 July, Belgrade (SRB)

Leg 5: 27 August, Kiel (GER)

Leg 6: 24 September, Barcelona (ESP)

Saturday, March 19, 2022

Fédération Sénégalaise de Natation et de Sauvetage informer le CALENDRIER FÉDÉRAL DES ACTIVITÉS de la Saison 2022 de NATATION



La Fédération Sénégalaise de Natation et de Sauvetage (FSNS) informe que la Saison 2022 de NATATION débute officiellement le Samedi 19 mars 2022.

Veuillez recevoir ci-joint le CALENDRIER FÉDÉRAL des Activités de la Saison 2022.

La FSNS souhaite aux Nageurs, Parents, Officiels, Dirigeants de clubs et des Ligues, Amis de la Natation, Mécènes, Journalistes, Sponsors et Autorités de tutelles, une

Très Bonne Saison 2022, dans la sportivité et le respect strict des mesures barrières contre la COVID-19.





2022 World Triathlon Long Distance and Aquathlon Championships to run alongside the Collins Cup in Slovakia



World Triathlon is pleased to announce that the 2022 World Triathlon Multisport Championships for the Long Distance, Aquathlon and Aquabike events will take place at the iconic x-bionic® sphere sports complex, just 25km from the historic capital of Slovakia, Bratislava. The event will be hosted by  Professional Triathletes Organisation (PTO), and will run alongside both the Collins Cup and PTO age group races from 18-21 August 2022. The highly experienced Challenge Family team, who have delivered their flagship race The Championship at the same venue for the past 5 years, as well as the 2021 World Triathlon Multisports Championships in Almere, Netherlands have been appointed Event Delivery partner.

The Long Distance World Championships will be delivered over the 100km distance (2km swim, 80km bike and 18km run) on the Sunday, with Elite athletes, and age-groupers all vying for world titles. The Aquabike races will also take place on the Sunday, over a 2km swim and 80km bike, open for age-groupers only. The courses for 2022 will be shorter than the standard Long Distances World Triathlon Championship events to align with the existing planning of the Collins Cup..

The Aquathlon World Championships will take place on Thursday, over a 1km swim and 5km run, and with titles up for grabs in the Elite, U23, Junior, and Age-Group categories.

The Multisport Championships will offer a total prize purse for the elites of USD100,000: USD90,000 for the Long Distance and USD10,000 for the Aquathlon, with men and women having the same prize money, as with all World Triathlon events. The world’s best long distance athletes will compete in the iconic x-bionic®sphere, being watched live on TriathlonLive.

Marisol Casado, World Triathlon President and IOC member, said: “I want to thank all the parties involved in this event. I think partnering with the PTO, x-bionic®sphere and the Challenge Family will result in an event that will be a great spectacle for all the athletes and spectators as well as for the city and the region. Athletes will be able to watch many of the world’s very best long-distance triathletes in action during the weekend. We are all ready to offer all the athletes the best experience possible and to make this an unforgettable event”.

Sam Renouf, CEO of the PTO added: “We are  excited to welcome World Triathlon and the athletes who’ve qualified for the 2022 World Triathlon Multisport Championships to race alongside the PTO’s flagship event,  The Collins Cup.  With the inclusion of  age group racing to the Collins Cup for the first time giving amateurs the opportunity to meet and race alongside the world’s best PTO professionals from Team Europe, Team US and Team Internationals. The addition of the 2022 World Triathlon Multisport Championships to the event demonstrates the confidence in the organisation of PTO events as well as the fabulous venue that is the x-bionic®sphere. The additional events will add to the festival nature of the event, uniting the sport through celebration of its top athletes and will be watched by millions to help build a wider fan base.”. 

 

ABOUT WORLD TRIATHLON

World Triathlon is the international governing body for the Olympic and Paralympic sport of triathlon and all related multisport disciplines around the world, including duathlon, aquathlon, cross triathlon and winter triathlon. Triathlon made its Olympic debut in Sydney 2000, with a third medal event, the Mixed Team Relay, added to the programme at Tokyo 2020, while para triathlon was first added to the Paralympic programme at Rio 2016. World Triathlon is proudly committed to the development of the sport worldwide, with inclusion, equality, sustainability and transparency at our core as we seek to help triathletes at all levels of the sport to be extraordinary. 

www.triathlon.org

 

About the Professional Triathletes Organisation

The Professional Triathletes Organisation is a not-for-profit entity consisting of professional male and female triathletes who have come together to form a representative body which not only gives them a meaningful voice in the way the sport operates but a means to contribute to its growth for the benefit of the entire triathlon community. The PTO seeks to showcase the passion, talents, determination, struggles and achievements of its dedicated professionals through iconic events, reimagined broadcast and compelling storytelling, inspiring global sports fans to watch, engage and participate in Triathlon. The Collins Cup logos and launch assets can be accessed via the PTO Media Portal. Anyone who has not previously accessed the media portal can register at protriathletes.org/media.

 

About the x-bionic®sphere

Home of the Collins Cup in 2021 and 2022, the x-bionic sphere in Šamorín is located just 25km from Bratislava, Slovakia’s capital. One of the most advanced sports complexes in the world, the x-bionic®sphere is Slovakia’s official Olympic Training Centre, offering professional-level conditions for 27 Olympic disciplines. Designed as a destination dedicated to helping all guests experience the excitement of victory and success, it’s a stunning location in a truly beautiful part of the world. With an on-site hotel catering for 1,150 guests; four restaurants; a three-floor 1000m2 gym; the x-bionic aquatic sphere with 25 and 50m pools; gymnastics centre; running track; and 379,167m2 dedicated equestrian activity space, there are activities for all the family. At the end of a hard, or easy, day you can fully unwind at the x-bionic® wellness sphere where you’ll find a luxurious assortment of individual relaxation, healing and beautifying procedures as well as relaxing massages administered by certified spa therapis.