Swimming Finals at the World Championships in Barcelona, Spain

Former Member
Former Member
The finals of the first day, show: .) in the men 400 meter free final, Thorpe (Aus.) went 3:42.58 for #1, Hackett (Aus.) went 3:45.17 for #2, and Coman (Rom.) went 3:46.8x for #3; Coman -who is my fellow countryman, and I was telling you about him for years-, defeated Rossolini (Ita.) of the 2000 Olympics fame, Keller (U.S.) and Carvin (U.S.); .) in the women 400 meter free final, Simona Paduraru (Rom.) finished #7, with a fast time; .) in the 4x100 men free relay, Russia won; the fastest split was by Frenchman Frederic Bousquet at 47.03 -which is the second fastest split in history-, and fast splits (in the 47s) were recorded by Alex. Popov (Rus.) and Jason Lezak (U.S.); .) in the 4x100 women free relay, U.S. won, anchored by an ace 53.xx from Jenny Thompson (U.S.). He! he! he! :D ho! ho! ho! I post this, ahead of www.swiminfo.com and www.swimnews.com who are sandbagging...
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Originally posted by nyswim Prost Ion! ... Prost nyswim! This keeps me on the edge: the men 100 meter free. It was the semi-finals. Popov went 48.51, splitting .25 seconds under world record at the half-way mark, a 22.91. Unbelievable split, by a 31 years old and a half. Split never done before by anyone. However, Hoogenband out touched him in 48.39. I hope it is not a repeat of the last year European championships, when Popov peaked in the semi-finals. I hope that Popov went .25 under world record at the 50 meter mark just to test his speed, then he eased off in anticipation of an all out final that he can win. In the other semi-final, Thorpe went 48.71 and Lezak went 48.78. Thorpe is top notch in the 100 free. Rik Neethling (R.S.A.) is amazing: in the 2000 Olympics he went 15:00.xx for the 1500 meter free, and now he swims the 100 free in 49.xx to qualify for the finals; these days, Rik routinely goes 22.xx in 50 meter free like a true sprinter, not like a distance ace. Milorad Cavic (Yug.) is also amazing: he trains a lot under Bottom (U.S.) at Berkeley, the coach that produced Ervin (U.S.), Hall (U.S.) and Draganja (Cro.), and he is 19 years old, tall, slim, strong and quick. Frederic Bousquet (Fra.) made it to the finals, too. Ashley Callus (Aus.) and Scott Tucker (U.S.), surprisingly didn't make it to the finals. In other news: .) Phelps (U.S.) won the 200 meter butterfly final, with Malchow (U.S.) surprisingly in third only, .) Kitajima (Jpn.) almost broke the 200 meter breaststroke world record with a 2:09.7x in semi-finals, .) Phelps -suprisingly to me- outdueled Hackett (Aus.) in the lead off of the 4x200 meter free relay, (I guess Phelps must be by now top three in the world for the 200 free) .) Keller (U.S.) amazingly nailed a 1:45.99 split in the 4x200 meter free relay, (like Bob Seltzer says, U.S. was strong with the lead-off Phelps and with the anchor leg by Keller, but was weak compared to Australia in the middle legs of the relay where for example Dusing split a slow for him 1:48.79 -considering that he swam an individual 1:47.08 last year so in this relay Dusing should have gone a much faster 1:46.xx instead-) and .) the 200 free final for women was fast from #1 to #8.
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  • Former Member
    Former Member
    Originally posted by nyswim Prost Ion! ... Prost nyswim! This keeps me on the edge: the men 100 meter free. It was the semi-finals. Popov went 48.51, splitting .25 seconds under world record at the half-way mark, a 22.91. Unbelievable split, by a 31 years old and a half. Split never done before by anyone. However, Hoogenband out touched him in 48.39. I hope it is not a repeat of the last year European championships, when Popov peaked in the semi-finals. I hope that Popov went .25 under world record at the 50 meter mark just to test his speed, then he eased off in anticipation of an all out final that he can win. In the other semi-final, Thorpe went 48.71 and Lezak went 48.78. Thorpe is top notch in the 100 free. Rik Neethling (R.S.A.) is amazing: in the 2000 Olympics he went 15:00.xx for the 1500 meter free, and now he swims the 100 free in 49.xx to qualify for the finals; these days, Rik routinely goes 22.xx in 50 meter free like a true sprinter, not like a distance ace. Milorad Cavic (Yug.) is also amazing: he trains a lot under Bottom (U.S.) at Berkeley, the coach that produced Ervin (U.S.), Hall (U.S.) and Draganja (Cro.), and he is 19 years old, tall, slim, strong and quick. Frederic Bousquet (Fra.) made it to the finals, too. Ashley Callus (Aus.) and Scott Tucker (U.S.), surprisingly didn't make it to the finals. In other news: .) Phelps (U.S.) won the 200 meter butterfly final, with Malchow (U.S.) surprisingly in third only, .) Kitajima (Jpn.) almost broke the 200 meter breaststroke world record with a 2:09.7x in semi-finals, .) Phelps -suprisingly to me- outdueled Hackett (Aus.) in the lead off of the 4x200 meter free relay, (I guess Phelps must be by now top three in the world for the 200 free) .) Keller (U.S.) amazingly nailed a 1:45.99 split in the 4x200 meter free relay, (like Bob Seltzer says, U.S. was strong with the lead-off Phelps and with the anchor leg by Keller, but was weak compared to Australia in the middle legs of the relay where for example Dusing split a slow for him 1:48.79 -considering that he swam an individual 1:47.08 last year so in this relay Dusing should have gone a much faster 1:46.xx instead-) and .) the 200 free final for women was fast from #1 to #8.
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