Who's your pick for the 50 free?
Roland Schoeman? Cullen Jones? Fred Bousquet?
HEAT 22/ 24
1 CAI Li 87 CHN 22.58
2 CIELO FILHO Cesar 87 BRA 22.32
3 ILES Salim 75 ALG 22.21
4 VOLYNETS Oleksandr 74 UKR 21.97
5 SCHOEMAN Roland 89 RSA 22.12
6 LAGUNOV Evgeny 85 RUS 22.24
7 GIMBUTIS Rolandas 81 LTU 22.43
8 TSAGKARAKIS Apostolos 82 GRE 22.63
HEAT 23/ 24
1 ROSE Matthew 81 CAN 22.56
2 BERNARD Alain 83 FRA 22.32
3 CALLUS Ashley 79 AUS 22.19
4 KIZIEROWSKI Bartosz 77 POL 21.88
5 SULLIVAN Eamon 85 AUS 22.00
6 NYSTRAND Stefan 81 SWE 22.22
7 STYMNE Petter 83 SWE 22.41
8 ITO Makoto 86 JPN 22.61
HEAT 24/ 24
1 GODEC Jernej 86 SLO 22.54
2 LORENTE GINESTA Eduard 77 ESP 22.27
3 WILDMAN−TOBRINER Benjamin 84 USA 22.16
4 JONES Cullen 84 USA 21.84
5 BOUSQUET Frederick 81 FRA 21.99
6 HAYDEN Brent 83 CAN 22.22
7 ALMASRI Rafed−Zyad 82 SYR 22.41
8 BOVELL George 83 TRI 22.59
Timing & Data-Handling by OMEGA
SWM010900_51 1.1 Report Created SAT 24 MAR 2007 18:29 Page 5/5
I'd like to see Jones take it with a new American record.
Parents
Former Member
quicksilver;85686
Very close finish. How did they ever decide who won before touch pads came into play?!
And before digital stopwatches were invented, we used to have two or three timers per lane with analog stopwatches that only had 0.2 seconds markings on the watch-face but where the hand could stop between between two of these marks (thereby indicating 1/10th of a second).
Then, they would take the average of the two or three times (per lane) to announce the final times per heat.
No, I am not over 100 years old but that was back in the early 60's in Cairo, Egypt (when self-winding watches were a novelty back then.)
quicksilver;85686
Very close finish. How did they ever decide who won before touch pads came into play?!
And before digital stopwatches were invented, we used to have two or three timers per lane with analog stopwatches that only had 0.2 seconds markings on the watch-face but where the hand could stop between between two of these marks (thereby indicating 1/10th of a second).
Then, they would take the average of the two or three times (per lane) to announce the final times per heat.
No, I am not over 100 years old but that was back in the early 60's in Cairo, Egypt (when self-winding watches were a novelty back then.)