A TSX Stat Pack Special: the consolidated results of the XVIII Pan American Games in Lima, Peru: all 39 sports and 416 events in one, easy-to-use package! Click below for the PDF:
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A TSX Stat Pack Special: the consolidated results of the XVIII Pan American Games in Lima, Peru: all 39 sports and 416 events in one, easy-to-use package! Click below for the PDF:
[wpdm_package id=15965 template=”link-template-button-popup.php”]
| 1. | LANE ONE: What did we learn from the Lima Pan Ams? It’s going to get harder going forward
Any retrospective on the just-completed XVIII Pan American Games must start with this: the Games was a success.
With 6,687 athletes and 11,192 volunteers, this was the largest sporting event ever held in Peru and if the country can harness the energy it took to put on the Pan Ams – and the Parapan American Games coming on 23 August – the future opportunities could be significant.
Peru’s legacy from this Games will depend on its leadership, not the buildings it built. More takeaways from Lima 2019:
● The PanAm sports folks who own the Pan American Games will have their hands full over the next four years to try and generate more interest in the U.S. and Canada. Neither sent their best teams and the U.S. still ran away with the medal count with 293 (120 golds), the most it has won at this event in 20 years! Canada won 152 medals, third-best behind Brazil (171).
In 2023, the event will be held in Santiago (CHI) starting in late October. What U.S. athletes are going to be interested in going there? Not the top stars in track or swimming, whose seasons are already over. Not collegiate athletes, already back in school. And the pro basketball season will be starting as well. Good luck on that one.
● There were U.S. athletes who were brilliant in Lima who will become much better known in the coming months. Teens like Evy Leibfarth (Canoe Slalom), Hannah Roberts (BMX Freestyle) and Casey Kaufhold (Archery) all won gold in Lima. And veterans like 45-year-old Khatuna Lorig (Archery) and the immortal Kim Rhode (Shooting) will be medal contenders long after most athletes have retired.
● The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee is going to have its hands full in 2020. In addition to the Larry Nassar-related lawsuits and Congress looking at deeper oversight, two American athletes staged awards ceremony protests: Race Imboden took a knee during the Team Foil ceremony and hammer thrower Gwen Berry raised a clenched fist during her ceremony. Statements were issued about both and future sanctions will be considered.
● ESPN did a credible job in covering the Games, but did not make a substantial investment in added cameras or technology at the Games. However, the announce teams were generally good and the track and swimming teams were excellent. Could the network have done more to promote its coverage? Sure, but to tell the truth, the Pan Am Games is just not as important today as it was once was.
The future? It gets bumpy from here.
| 2. | PAN AMERICAN GAMES: Busy final day sees U.S. score more gold in archery and BMX
The United States sent a team of 643 athletes to the 2019 Pan American Games in Lima confident of coming back with the most medals. Boy, did they.
Even on the final day of the Games, the U.S. was thriving, scoring two golds, two silvers and a bronze on the archery field alone. World record-setter Brady Ellison missed a medal in the men’s individual event, but 45-year-old Khatuna Lorig won the women’s silver and 15-year-old Casey Kaufhold won the bronze.
Those two combined with Erin Mickelberry to win the women’s team title (pictured below) and Ellison, Tom Stanwood and Jack Williams won the men’s team bronze. Finally, it was Ellison and Kaufhold shooting together to score gold in the Mixed Team event and earn the U.S. another spot in Tokyo in 2020.
Another teen, Hannah Roberts, remained the queen of the BMX Freestyle set. One day after her 18th birthday, she won the first-ever women’s BMX Freestyle gold, scoring 86.67 on her first run. She was satisfied, but knew there was more in the tank if she needed it. “Today has been breathtaking, it’s awesome,” she said. “I held a few things back from my bag of tricks that aren’t quite ready for contests yet. I had a few mistakes and I just had to work through them. It wasn’t exactly what I wanted to do but I am happy to take the win.”
The U.S. ended with a total of 293 medals (120-88-85), well ahead of Brazil (171) and Canada (152) and the most medals won by the U.S. since 1999. More details? Sure! Click here.
You can check out all of our Pan Ams coverage here.
| 3. | GYMNASTICS: Biles storms to sixth national title, but Suni Lee stuns as runner-up
Barring a catastrophic injury, Simone Biles was going to win her sixth national All-Around title at the USA Gymnastics National Championships in Kansas City, but she was a lot happier with Sunday’s performance that the one she had on Friday.
No stumbles, no hops, and near-perfection on all four apparatus, as she scored 59.850 this time – a full point better than Friday – to win going away with a sensational total of 118.500. Biles’ sixth title ties her for the most ever with Clara Schroth, who won hers between 1945-52.
Biles’ score gave her a huge margin of victory of 4.95 points, which was not unexpected. The shocker was that 16-year-old Suni Lee, competing in the senior division for the first time at the Nationals, finished second on Friday and then tied for the third-highest score on Sunday and ended with second overall and a prime candidate for the U.S. team at the 2019 World Championships.
Lee further had the best scores on the Uneven Bars on the field – Biles included – and won the event title with a combined (two-night) score of 29.800.
Grace McCallum and Morgan Hurd mounted major charges on Sunday. McCallum, only ninth after Friday’s All-Around, had the no. 2 score on Sunday at 56.950 to move to third overall. Hurd, the 2017 World Champion, was eighth after Friday, but tied for third-best on Sunday (56.650, with Lee) and finished fourth, missing a medal by 0.150.
It was an impressive show for the U.S., which now has more depth than ever and will make the choice of the Worlds team – after a September training camp – extremely difficult. More coverage here.
| 4. | GYMNASTICS: Mikulak makes history with sixth Nationals A-A win, but the story was Shane Wiskus
After his excellent opening-night performance last Thursday, there was little doubt that Sam Mikulak (pictured above) was on his way to a sixth U.S. national All-Around championship and he was even better on Saturday, increasing his score from 86.750 to 87.400 to finish with a total of 174.150, with a dominating winning margin of 5.55 points.
With six wins, he tied Makoto Sakamoto, who won six All-Around titles between 1963-70 for second all-time. The all-time leader in national titles is Alfred Jochim, who won seven between 1925-33.
Behind Mikulak came the drama, as Minnesota sophomore Shane Wiskus – who tied for third on Thursday – performed brilliantly and even saved a sure fall on his High Bar routine with one hand to move into second place in the final rotation. That put the pressure on 2017 national champ Yul Moldauer and veteran Akash Modi, but both scored well: Modi on Vault (14/.500) and Moldauer on Floor (14.700) to secure second for Moldauer and third for Modi.
However, the fourth-place finish suddenly puts Wiskus into the mix for the U.S. team for Tokyo and could help the U.S. men in their search for an Olympic Team medal for the first time since Beijing in 2008.
On Saturday, Mikulak won the Horizontal Bar and Parallel Bars and tied with Moldauer for the Pommel Horse honors. Modi won the Vault and Trevor Howard had the top score on Rings. For more, check our coverage for Thursday and Saturday.
| 5. | SWIMMING: Morozov, Campbell and Hosszu star in second FINA World Cup
The competition level came down a notch in Jinan (CHN) for the second leg of the FINA Swimming World Cup, but the race for the big bonuses for the first three-meet “cluster” got hotter on the women’s side.
Two-time World Cup champion Vladimir Morozov (RUS) continued his steady march to a $50,000 bonus with three more wins, but American breaststroke ace Andrew Wilson suddenly got into the conversation with a win and two seconds, but also a big points bonus for the best mark of the meet, his 2:08.24 to win the 200 m Breast.
So, going into the final meet of the first cluster in Singapore, Morozov has a 96-87-72 lead over Wilson and Australia’s Mitch Larkin, and all three will be looking for that one fast time that will give them more bonus points. However, second isn’t all that either, at $35,000.
In the women’s event, Hungary’s five-time World Cup champ Katinka Hosszu won four events, but only three count for the points standings. Australia’s sprint star Cate Campbell (pictured above) won three events, but her impressive 52.34 to win the 100 m Free won 24 bonus points as the best performance of the meet and now she leads with one meet to go. Campbell has 105 points, to 102 for Hosszu and 63 for Emily Seebohm.
While Hosszu is rightly known as “The Iron Lady” for her ability to swim in multiple events, Russian Vitalina Simonova completed 14 events out of the 16 contested for the second World Cup in a row. With less world-class competition, she got a win too, in her specialty, the 200 m Breaststroke! More details here.
| 6. | VOLLEYBALL: U.S. storms through Rotterdam to join five others as Tokyo qualifiers
The U.S. men’s volleyball team joined Brazil, Italy, Poland, Russia and Argentina as qualifiers for the 2020 Olympic tournament in Tokyo by winning its pool in Rotterdam (NED). The U.S. won nine of 11 sets, sweeping past Belgium (3-1), South Korea (3-0) and the Netherlands (3-1) to secure its spot in its ninth straight Olympic Games.
The most impressive pool winner was probably Russia, which won all nine sets in sweeping Iran, Cuba and Mexico. Brazil had the most trouble, going down 0-2 to Bulgaria in the deciding game of its pool, then surviving the third set with a 32-30 win. It then won the final two sets by 25-16 and 15-11 to advance. More details here.
| 7. | ATHLETICS: Former World Champion Tatyana Chernova’s doping ban finalized
The lengthy doping saga of 2011 heptathlon World Champion Tatyana Chernova (RUS) has apparently come to a close as the IAAF’s Athletics Integrity Unit announced the finalization of her disqualification on Friday.
The case is important not only for the results which are altered, but because – per the AIU – “she accepted an anti-doping rule violation following charges based on McLaren evidence. This means her career results from Aug ‘08-Feb ‘16 have been disqualified.”
The “McLaren evidence” refers to the reports filed by Canadian law professor Richard McLaren in 2016, detailing the Russian doping scandal and providing significant additional evidence to assist federations in determining which athletes were doping. It’s an important precedent as the IAAF tries to determine whether to reinstate the Russian Federation and for the AIU as it works its way through the mountain of evidence provided to it by the World Anti-Doping Agency from the Moscow Laboratory earlier this year.
Chernova, now 31, was the 2008 Olympic bronze medalist in the hep, then won the 2011 World Championships and the bronze medal at the 2012 Olympic Games. She has been disqualified from these events. Her best score of 6,880 from 2011 would rank her 11th all-time, but with the annulment of her results from 2008-16, she reverts to her 2007 score of 6,768, now 22nd.
Make no mistake: the 2019 Pan American Games in Lima was a success.
The venues all worked, the competitions rolled on without too many problems, attendance at many of the venues was excellent and although it was unusually cold for this time of the year in Lima, the environmental problems were minimal (unless you had to compete outdoors in 60-degree weather).
PanAm Sports President Neven Ilic of Chile praised the Games and the hosts, calling the event the “best ever” Pan American Games multiple times, including during a passionate speech during the Closing Ceremony.
So what did we learn from Lima?
(1) Congratulations to Peru: they did it and did it well. Now what?
The Pan American Games were big. The organizers said that the Games welcomed 6,687 athletes, who were supported by an army of 11,192 volunteers. The cost was reported at $1.2 billion, including $430 million to organize the event, $180 million to build the Pan American Village – 1,700 new housing units – plus $470 million in venue construction. (For perspective, Peru’s government spent ~$65 billion in 2017 alone.)
Worth it?
Peru had never hosted an event of this size before, so the achievement is noteworthy. If the experience and expertise gained over the Pan Am Games, and Parapan American Games to come in two weeks, this can be the start of new enthusiasm in the country.
The intangible legacies of civic confidence, exposure to more people outside of Peru and the impact of having an event touch so many inside the country can be leveraged into new opportunities. But that takes considerable leadership and who can say what will happen?
(2) The credibility of the Pan American Games is an issue
Last Friday’s Lane One comment noted PanAm Sports Secretary General Ivar Sisniega’s comment that “Some countries … maybe need to open up to what happens in the world and not be so involved with what just happens (at home). …
“We have spoken to USA and Canada about these issues, it’s a perception that they have that the Games are not of a high quality. … It is certainly a challenge we have for the future.”
It’s a challenge they have right now. The United States won more medals in Lima (293) than it has won since 1999, led by teams that were third-tier in swimming (44 medals) and less than that in track & field (33). Where the U.S. sent strong teams, as in fencing (11 medals: 10 gold) and wrestling (15 medals: 9 gold), they dominated.
So what is the benefit to the U.S. to send stronger teams? Olympic qualifying ties are not the answer, since the international federations are not going to give away their own events to the Pan American Games. Just one example: while the PAG was ongoing, the International Volleyball Federation (FIVB) was running Olympic qualification tournaments for women and men in 12 different cities worldwide. The U.S. won both of its qualifying tournaments and is in Tokyo. The developmental U.S. teams sent to Lima finished sixth in the men’s event and seventh in the women. Track and swimming are time-based and not event-based, and are not really candidates for Olympic qualifying.
Looking ahead to 2023, the situation gets worse. Lima is in the middle of South America, on the west coast. The next PAG will be in Santiago (CHI), much further south and also close to the western coast. Given that the North American summer is the dead of winter in the Southern Hemisphere, the 2023 Games will be held from 20 October to 5 November.
Trying to get U.S. athletes even interested in Santiago will be extremely difficult. Collegiate athletes won’t be available as school will already be in full swing, the professional basketball leagues – major and minor league – will be starting in the U.S. and the track & field and swimming seasons will long be over and heavy training underway for the 2024 Olympic Trials and Olympic Games in Paris.
True, the 2011 Games in Guadalajara (MEX) were from 14-30 October, but that trip was an easy and quick one for U.S. athletes; that will not the case for Santiago. Excepting 2011, there hasn’t been a Pan Ams as late as the 2023 dates since Mexico City in 1975 (also much easier to get to from the U.S.).
Lima also had 39 sports and 419 events; even the PanAm Sports folks have recognized that the program is simply too big.
(3) Stars of 2020 showed well in Lima and will be a lot better known a year from now
Especially among the American team, multiple storylines came out of Lima that will become amplified as we move toward Tokyo.
Look for names like Evy Leibfarth, the 15-year-old Canoe Slalom gold medalist; 18-year-old Hannah Roberts, who won the BMX Freestyle gold with ease; 15-year-old Casey Kaufhold, who won a bronze medal in women’s archery and then teamed with World Champion Brady Ellison to win the Mixed Team gold.
On the other end of the spectrum, 45-year-old Khatuna Lorig won the women’s archery silver and will be trying to make her fifth Olympic team for three different countries in 2020. And we dare not forget 40-year-old Kim Rhode, who won the Skeet competition in Lima and will be trying to extend her record of having won a medal in each of her six Olympic Games so far.
The U.S. teams are already for most formidable in the world in track and swimming, but there were new stars there, too. The U.S. swimming performance, especially, was remarkable, with top-10 swims in multiple events and an encouraging return for cancer survivor Nathan Adrian in the Freestyle sprints.
(4) The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee is going to have its hands full next year
Remember the line in “Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home,” from Mr. Scott to the future-bound Dr. Gillian Taylor as the makeshift Klingon cruiser headed toward the sun to initiate a time warp:
“Hold on tight, lassie. It gets bumpy from here.”
That’s the kind of journey it’s going to be for the senior managers of the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee heading into 2020.
Beyond its already full plate in dealing with the fallout of the Larry Nassar mess and related sex-abuse scandals in other sports, moves by Congress to change the Ted Stevens Olympic and Amateur Sports Act to install more oversight and the pressure to manage a team with high expectations for Tokyo came more controversy in Lima.
Fencer Race Imboden went to one knee on the victory stand during the playing of the U.S. national anthem in the Team Foil awards ceremony. Where PanAm Sports’s Sisniega urged the U.S. and Canada not be so involved in domestic affairs, Imboden got more involved, tweeting:
and a president who spreads hate are at the top of a long list.
I chose to sacrifie my moment today at the top of the podium to call attention to issues that I believe need to be addressed. I encourage others to please use your platforms for empowerment and change.— Race Imboden (@Race_Imboden) August 10, 2019
USOPC spokesman Mark Jones released a statement noting:
“Every athlete competing at the 2019 Pan American Games commits to terms of eligibility, including to refrain from demonstrations that are political in nature. In this case, Race didn’t adhere to the commitment he made to the organizing committee and the USOPC.
“We respect his rights to express his viewpoints, but we are disappointed that he chose not to honor his commitment. Our leadership are reviewing what consequences may result.”
Imboden’s gesture preceded a similar protest on Saturday by American hammer thrower Gwen Berry, who raised her fist at the end of the national anthem after winning gold. The USOPC issued a similar statement.
Let’s look ahead a year: the Tokyo Olympic dates are 24 July-9 August, starting eight days after the end of the Democratic National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and ending 15 days prior to the start of the Republican Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina. Those athletes who wish to make a political statement will be in political prime time. However, on this topic, the Congress will hardly be on a single mind.
(5) ESPN did a pretty job with a hard-to-cover Games
In case you missed the Games entirely, many of the competitions from Lima were televised in the U.S. on ESPN2, ESPNU and ESPN Deportes. Working on a budget that was a tiny fraction of that used by NBC in bringing the Olympic Games to U.S. screens, the ESPN announce teams did fairly well.
ESPN did not produce the coverage; as with most events of this type, there was a host feed for all of the events, which could be supplemented if desired by a specific network. ESPN had reporters in the mixed zones at several venues speaking with athletes, with some success.
It spent considerable time covering track & field and swimming and both of those crews were very good. Dwight Stones, Jill Montgomery and Dan O’Brien, who cover track & field for ESPN during the collegiate season, did the work in Lima and were excellent, especially with no ability to call for replays or for shots in a specific direction. Jason Knapp and Rowdy Gaines, familiar voices on NBC’s coverage of swimming on NBCSN and NBC’s Olympic Channel, did a very nice job on both the morning heats and evening finals.
Could ESPN have done more, especially to promote the Games? Yes, of course. But the Pan American Games does not have the ring of quality in 2019 that it had in the 1980s and 1990s when it was heavily covered; it wasn’t as much of an attraction.
Congratulations to Lima; good luck to PanAm Sports and the USOPC. No doubt, it gets bumpy from here.
Rich Perelman
Editor
Simone Biles is nothing if not determined. And after a hop here and a stumble there, she was resolute that Sunday evening’s second All-Around would be better than the first at the USA Gymnastics Championships at the Sprint Center in Kansas City, Missouri.
And it was, a lot better. She completed each event with precision, hitting her landings on the Beam, Vault and Uneven Bars with big smiles and completing her triple-double flip-and-twists tumbling run without error this time. The reward was the top score of the day – 59.850 – a full point better than Friday evening, and a total score of 118.500.
That gives her, at age 22, six U.S. All-Around titles, in 2013-14-15-16-18-19 and ties her with Clara Schroth, who won her six between 1945-52. She won the individual titles (both rounds added together) in the Vault, Beam and Floor and was third on the Uneven Bars.
There’s no doubt that Biles is head and shoulders above the rest of the world, but behind her is the rest of the team that will be needed for the U.S. to win another team title at the World Championships this year and in Tokyo in 2020.
That competition mirrored the men’s competition, where Minnesota’s Shane Wiskus was second for much of the final rotation and then finished fourth overall, shooting him into contention for the U.S. team. On Sunday, Suni Lee – competing in her first year as a senior – did even better.
Lee, 16, compiled the third-highest score of the day (56.650) and had the highest score of all on the Uneven Bars (15.050), winning the national title in that event. She finished third on Floor over the two days and fourth on Beam and ended up in second overall at 113.550. That’s a long way behind Biles, but ahead of Grace McCallum (111.850), Morgan Hurd (111.700) and last year’s junior champ, Leanne Wong (111.250).
Riley McCusker, who stood fourth after day one, had her program cut short by her coach after two events on Sunday and did not compete on Beam or Floor.
Jade Carey, whose Olympic path is through the FIG World Cup series for individual events, performed strongly in her specialties of Floor (14.875: 2nd) and floor (14.100: 2nd) and ended up second in the cumulative scoring for both of those events.
USA Gymnastics will have a training camp next month from which the team for the Worlds in Stuttgart (GER) will be selected. It will not be an easy choice. Summaries from Kansas City:
USA Gymnastics National Championships
Kansas City, Missouri (USA) ~ 8-11 August 2019
(Full results here)
Women
All-Around I: 1. Simone Biles, 58.650; 2. Suni Lee, 56.900; 3. Jade Carey, 56.100; 4. Riley McCusker, 55.700; 5. tie, Leanne Wong and Trinity Thomas, 55.400; 7. Jordan Chiles, 55.350; 8. Morgan Hurd, 55.050.
Event leaders:
● Vault: 1. Biles, 15.300; 2. Jade Carey, 15.000; 3. Jordan Chiles, 14.750.
● Uneven Bars: 1. Lee, 14.750; 2. Hurd, 14.400; 3. Thomas, 14.200.
● Beam: 1. Biles, 14.950; 2. McCusker, 14.500; 3. Lee, 14.350.
● Floor: 1. Biles, 14.350; 2. Carey, 14.300; 3. Lee, 13.950.
All-Around II: 1. Biles, 59.850; 2. McCallum, 56.950; 3. Lee and Hurd, 56.650; 5. Wong, 55.850; 6. Chiles, 55.500; 7. Skinner, 54.700; 8. Finnegan, 54.350.
Event leaders:
● Vault: 1. Biles, 15.450; 2. Carey, 14.875; 3. Skinner, 14.800.
● Uneven Bars: 1. Lee, 15.050; 2. Biles, 14.750; 3. Hurd, 14.600.
● Beam: 1. Kara Eaker, 14.900; 2. Biles, 14.700; 3. Wong, 14.550.
● Floor: 1. Biles, 15.100; 2. Carey, 14.100; 3. McCallum and Lee, 14.000,
Final standings: 1. Biles, 118.500; 2. Lee, 113.550; 3. Grace McCallum, 111.850; 4. Hurd, 111.700; 5. Wong, 111.250; 6. Chiles, 110.850; 7. Carey, 109.950; 8. MyKayla Skinner, 109.600.
The final day of the XVIII Pan American Games will finish with the Closing Ceremony, but there was still competition in seven sports with considerable drama.
Archery had already been the scene of excitement early in the Games, as American Brady Ellison set a world record of 702 (out of 720) points for the 70 m ranking round. But that guaranteed him only the top seed in the eliminations.
In fact, Ellison was shut out in the quarterfinals by Canada’s Eric Peters, 6-0, and left without an individual medal. But he was busy later.
Peters ended up third as fellow Canadian Crispin Duenas, who had won a Pan Am silver back in 2011, took the gold medal (and an Olympic qualifying place) with a 6-4 victory over Brazil’s Marcus d’Almeida.
In the women’s Recurve final, Alejandra Valencia (MEX) won the gold medal (and Olympic qualifying spot), but the story of the silver and bronze medalists was equally compelling. Both were from the U.S., but the backgrounds of Khatuna Lorig and Casey Kaufhold could not be more different.
Lorig is now 45 and trying to make her fifth Olympic team for her third country, having won a Team bronze medal at age 18 for the Unified Team (former Soviet Union), then competed in Atlanta in 1996 for her native Georgia and in 2008-12 for the U.S. She missed out on 2016, but she’s on target for Tokyo.
Kaufhold is all of 15 and made her debut on the senior level during the World Archery indoor season, winning the GT Open in Luxembourg last November. She’s been improving steadily and in Lima, reached the semis before losing to Lorig, 6-4, and then winning the bronze medal, 6-0, over Ana Rendon of Colombia. But she wasn’t done for the day either.
In the team events, the U.S. won two golds and a bronze with Ellison, Lorig and Kaufhold in the middle of all of it. Ellison – who was selected to carry the American flag into the Closing Ceremony – teamed with Tom Stanwood and Jack Williams to win the men’s Team bronze, 5-3, over Mexico. Lorig, Kaufhold and Erin Mickelberry won the women’s Team gold, defeating Mexico, again by 5-3, in the final. Kaufhold’s bow broke just before the event started and had to shoot with her stabilizer, destroying her balance. She got a four on her first arrow, then re-adjusted her aim … and shot 10 and won the end. Repairs were made before the next end, but that second arrow might have won the match for the U.S.
Then Ellison and Kaufhold teamed up to win the Mixed Team event, 5-3, over Colombia and earn another Olympic quota spot. Said Kaufhold, “Shooting with Brady is always fun. I always shoot almost always my best when I shoot with him because he gives me confidence like nobody else does. It’s just great to be able to shoot next to him and compete with him. He’s just one of the best teammates I could ask for. It’s such an honor to win the medal with him.”
At the same time as one of the world’s oldest sports was finishing, one of the newest events on the Olympic program was being held: BMX Freestyle. The queen of this event is American teen Hannah Roberts, and she scored another victory on the day after her 18th birthday.
She was an easy winner, scoring 86.67 on her first run and that was more than enough to outdistance Macarena Perez of Chile (76.67). Asked about winning the first-ever BMX Freestyle event in the Pan American Games, she said “It’s the craziest experience. BMX Freestyle is getting out there and it’s meaning a lot to the riders that the professional aspect of the sport is being recognized at this level.
“Today has been breathtaking, it’s awesome. I held a few things back from my bag of tricks that aren’t quite ready for contests yet. I had a few mistakes and I just had to work through them. It wasn’t exactly what I wanted to do but I am happy to take the win.”
Venezuela’s Daniel Dhers, a star on the BMX Freestyle World Cup circuit, took the men’s title at 88.50 in a tight battle with three others who scored 83.50 or better.
The U.S. women’s basketball team was trying to win the Pan American Games tournament for the first time since 2007, but fell short against Brazil, falling 79-73 in the final late Saturday night.
Brazil led, 55-53, starting the fourth quarter, but after the U.S. tied the game at 55-all, the Brazilians went on a 10-4 run and then converted seven of its final eight foul shots to finish with a 79-73 victory. It’s the second straight silver for the U.S.
“It’s tough,” said U.S. (and Michigan State) head coach Suzy Merchant. “You have to give Brazil credit. Their guard play; they were better than our guards tonight, especially Taina Da Paixao. And, we turned it over early, uncharacteristically. So, you’d like to take maybe four or five of those back and have a shot at it again.”
At the end, the U.S. dominated the Games, winning 293 medals, its highest total since the 1999 Games in Winnipeg (296 or 304 depending on who you believe.). Americans won 120 golds, 88 silvers and 85 bronzes, ahead of 171 medals for Brazil (55-45-71) and 152 for Canada (35-64-53). A total of 31 of the 41 nations who competed in Lima won at least one medal.
You can find the complete results of the Games here.
One of the images of the Games that will be remembered is the mascot Milco, as each medalist was presented with a statuette instead of the traditional, wasteful flowers.
The Games ended without serious incident and the Peruvian organizers are to be congratulated for getting the construction completed on time and the events appeared – for the most part – to run fairly well. The cost to produce the event was reported at more than $1.2 billion (U.S.), with only about $430 million to organize the Games, and the rest for construction and state services.
The organizers said that the Games welcomed 6,687 athletes, who were supported by an army of 11,192 volunteers.
And, of course, Lima is not done yet. The Parapan American Games start on Friday, 23 August.
The penultimate stop on the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup tour in Lenzerheide (SUI) provided plenty of drama that will play out well into the future.
Dutch star Mathieu van der Poel won his third race – out of six held – and closed the gap with seasonal leader Nino Schurter to just 21 points with one race left … which he will not contest.
Sweden’s 2016 Olympic champ Jenny Rissveds left the sport entirely in 2018, then came back with a bronze medal in Val di Sole last week and won in Lenzerheide for her first World Cup win since 2016 … in Lenzerheide!
After winning her first World Cup medal in two years last week, Rissveds moved up to the front of the starting grid and crashed on the first lap, but got back into contention quickly. She had the lead by the second lap and was part of a front group that included Anne Terpstra (NED), Pauline Ferrand Prevot (FRA) and Swiss Jolanda Neff, the seasonal leader.
Neff was dropped with three laps to go and Rissveds rode away with the fastest final lap in the field to win by 1:21:09-1:21:34 over Terpstra. Neff faded to eighth and was passed by American Kate Courtney, vying with Neff for the seasonal title. When the dust cleared, the seasonal winner will be decided in two weeks in Snowshoe, West Virginia; the standings:
1. 1,625 Jolanda Neff (SUI)
2. 1,552 Kate Courtney (USA)
3. 1,225 Pauline Ferrand Prevot (FRA)
4. 1,210 Anne Terpstra (NED)
5. 992 Rebecca McConnell (AUS)
The men’s race was a slugfest between Van der Poel and Schurter. They rode together until van der Poel moved ahead smartly on the sixth lap and was never headed, winning by 1:17:50-1:18:15. That moved van der Poel into position to win the seasonal title in the finale:
1. 1,670 Nino Schurter (SUI)
2. 1,649 Mathieu van der Poel (NED)
3. 1,360 Henrique Avancini (BRA)
4. 1,348 Mathias Flueckiger (SUI)
5. 970 Gerhard Kirschbaumer (ITA)
However, van der Poel already decided to skip the finale in the U.S. in order to prepare for the UCI World Road Race Championships in Yorkshire (GBR) later in September. So the title will essentially be handed to Schurter, which will be his seventh World Cup win and third in a row.
In the Downhill events, France’s Amaury Pierron won his third race of the season, but teammate Loic Bruni will win the season’s title, his first, to go along with his three World Championships golds. Marine Cabirou (FRA) won the women’s race over Tracey Hannah (AUS) to close to within 150 points of the seasonal lead and they will fight it out in the final race of the season. Standings:
● Men:
1. 1,312 Loic Bruni (FRA)
2. 1,222 Amaury Pierron (FRA)
3. 1,094 Troy Brosnan (AUS)
● Women:
1. 1,460 Tracey Hannah (AUS)
2. 1,310 Marine Cabirou (FRA)
3. 819 Nina Hoffmann (GER)
The season finale in Snowshoe will be on 7-8 September. Summaries from Lenzerheide:
UCI Mountain Bike World Cup
Lenzerheide (SUI) ~ 9-11 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men
Cross Country Short (10.4 km): 1. Mathieu van der Poel (NED), 20:07; 2. Henrique Avancini (BRA), 20:08; 3. Nino Schurter (SUI), 20:12: 4. Maxime Marotte (FRA), 20:15; 5. Luca Braidot (ITA), 20:16.
Cross Country Olympic (29.0 km): 1. Van der Poel (NED), 1:17:50; 2. Schurter (NED), 1:18:15; 3. Mathias Flueckiger (SUI), 1:19:03; 4. Victor Koretzky (FRA), 1:1:34; 5. Gerhard Kerschbaumer (ITA), 1:19:34.
Downhill (1.847 km): 1. Amaury Pierron (FRA), 2:49.422; 2. Greg Minaar (RSA), 2:50.373; 3. Loic Bruni (FRA), 2:50.822; 4. Troy Brosnan (AUS), 2:51.582; 5. Danny Hart (GBR), 2:52.644.
Women
Cross Country Short (9.4 km): 1. Pauline Ferrand Prevot (FRA), 21:38; 2. Jolanda Neff (SUI), 21:38; 3. Jenny Rissveds (SWE), 21:39; 4. Anne Tauber (NED), 21:40; 5. Chloe Woodruff (USA), 21:47. Also in the top 10: 9. Kate Courtney (USA), 22:04; 10. Lea Davison (USA), 22:06.
Cross Country Olympic (24.8 km): 1. Rissveds (SWE), 1:21:09; 2. Anne Terpstra (NED), 1:21:34; 3. Ferrand Prevot (FRA), 1:22:28; 4. Sina Frei (SUI), 1:23:12; 5. Catharine Prendel (CAN), 1:23:21. Also in the top 10: 7. Courtney (USA), 1:23:43; … 9. Woodruff (USA), 1:24:08.
Downhill (1.847 km): 1. Marine Cabirou (FRA), 3:34.304; 2. Tracey Hannah (AUS), 3:34.568; 3. Emilie Siegenthaler (SUI), 3:41.389; 4. Kate Weatherly (NZL), 3:41.782; 5. Camille Balanche (SUI), 3:41.953.
Most of the competitions at the 2019 Pan American Games wrapped up on Saturday and the U.S. was in the thick of the action once again, with plenty of twists and turns, starting with softball.
The U.S. team is the best in the world and cruised through the round-robin games with a perfect 5-0 record, outscoring its opponents by 37-1.
In the playoffs, the U.S. (5-0) met Canada (4-1) in the semifinal, with the loser to face the winner of the Puerto Rico-Mexico game and qualify for the final. Only this time, the Canadians broke open a 1-1 game in the fourth inning with two runs off Cat Osterman for a 3-1 lead and Eujenna Caira and Danielle Lawrie managed to hold the U.S. to a Haylie McCleney solo home run in the seventh for a stunning 3-2 win.
That sent Canada to the final and the U.S. to face Puerto Rico in the play-in game. Monica Abbott pitched a one-hitter – a Jena Cozza home run in the second inning – and the U.S. advanced to its third game against Canada with a 3-1 win.
So in the final, would it be Abbott or Osterman? It was Abbott and she pitched a complete game, giving up four hits for her fourth win in the Games without a loss in a 3-1 U.S. victory. Lawrie took the loss, giving up two runs in the sixth inning, as right fielder Michelle Moultrie was the hero at the plate. She opened the scoring with a home run in the second and drove in a run in the sixth with a single. The U.S. won the Pan Am gold for the first time since 2011.
Three more powerful U.S. teams showed well on Saturday:
● In wrestling, American Freestylers won three of four divisions, with Jordan Burroughs, Kyle Snyder and Nick Gwiazdowski all taking gold medals.
Burroughs won his third straight Pan American Games gold medal impressively, winning his three bouts by 10-0, 15-4 and then 4-1 in the final over Franklin Gomez of Puerto Rico. Snyder won his second straight Pan American Games title at 97 kg, with a 10-0 win over Evan Ramos (PUR), a tense 3-1 win over defending champion Reineris Salas of Cuba and then 9-3 over Jose Diaz Roberti (VEN).
At 125 kg, Gwiazdowski continued his world-class wrestling with his first Pan American Games gold medal. He won all three of his bouts by technical fall, defeating Andrew Gunning (PER), Korey Jarvis (CAN) and Oscar Pino Hinds (CUB) by 10-0 scores.
The U.S. men ended their competition with four golds in six divisions plus two bronzes, to add to the women’s five medals in six events and three Greco-Roman medals in six classes: very impressive.
● In fencing, the American teams dominated the men’s Sabre and women’s Epee classes. The Sabre squad of Eli Dershwitz, Daryl Homer and Jeff Spear defeated Colombia., 45-41 in the final, while the women’s Epee trio of Katharine Holmes, Catherine Nixon and Isis Washington clubbed Cuba, 45-29, in their final.
The U.S. won all six events in the women’s competition and four of six in the men’s.
● In water polo, the U.S. won both the men’s and women’s golds, both times over Canada, with Brazil third.
The men sailed through pool play with a 3-0 record and 58-18 goal differential, and then stormed past Peru (24-2), Argentina (17-1) and Canada in the final by 18-6. Johnathan Cooper had 24 goals to lead the U.S.
The women won their group at 3-0 (66-10 in goals) and then pounded Peru (21-3), Cuba (31-7) and Canada in the final by 24-4. All together, the women scored 142 goals to 24 by its opponents. Stephanie Haralabidis and Makenzie Fischer led the U.S. – and the tournament – in scoring at 22 and 21, respectively.
Then there was the conclusion of the swimming events, with the U.S. continuing its domination, winning four of the six events. Alex Walsh and Meghan Small went 1-2 in the women’s 200 m Medley, 2:11.24-2:11.36 and then Will Licon won his second Pan Am gold in the men’s 200 Medley, drawing clear on the Freestyle leg to win in 1:59.13.
In the 4×100 m Medley relays, the U.S. got a stunning start in the women’s event from 100 m Backstroke gold medalist Phoebe Bacon. She won her individual event in 59.47, but led off in a sensational 59.02, moving her to no. 7 on the world list for 2019! With that kind of a lead to start, the rest of the American quartet of Annie Lazor, Kendyl Stewart and Margo Geer swam to an easy win in 3:57.84.
The men’s event figured to be much closer, and it was. Brazil’s Guilherme Guido out-swam Backstroke gold medalist Daniel Carr of the U.S. 53.70-53.95 to open, but Nic Fink and Tom Shields were brilliant in the middle strokes and gave Nathan Adrian a 77/100ths lead over 100 Free gold medalist Marcelo Chierighini. That was enough for Adrian, who split 47.33 and brought the U.S. in with a Pan American Games record of 3:30.25.
All together (and including the open-water events), the U.S. won 45 medals in Lima (21-15-9), to 21 for Brazil (11-9-12) and 15 for Canada (1-8-6). This amazing performance by the U.S. included 21 wins in the 36 events in the pool.
With only a few events remaining, the U.S. has 281 total medals, with 113 golds, 87 silvers and 81 bronzes. Brazil is second with 164 (54-42-68) and Canada is third (148: 33-64-51).
A review of the track & field events held earlier in the day is here. You can find the complete results of the Games here.
There wasn’t much doubt that unless he was injured, Sam Mikulak was going to win his sixth U.S. national All-Around title at the USA Gymnastics National Championships at the Sprint Center in Kansas City, Missouri. But there was plenty of drama during the evening.
The drama had nothing to do with Mikulak, who gave solid performances on all six apparatus and compiled a second-day score of 87.400, better than his Thursday total of 86.750. His total of 174.150 gave him two consecutive championships and six total, tying him with Makoto Sakamoto, who won six All-Around titles between 1963-70 for second all-time. The all-time leader in national titles is Alfred Jochim, who won seven between 1925-33.
Now to the excitement. Shane Wiskus, who just completed his sophomore season at the University of Minnesota, tied for third on Thursday, but then compiled strong scores on Floor (14.300), Vault (14.350) and Parallel Bars (14.850) – plus an amazing, one-handed save on High Bar (13.150) – to stand in second place with 167.600 points with former national champ Yul Moldauer and veteran Akash Modi needing good scores to pass him.
Modi’s Vault was excellent, earning 14.500 to move ahead of Wiskus and into second place, with Moldauer getting ready on floor. The Oklahoma star got his best score of the night – 14.700 – to finish second for the second straight year, finishing at 168.600 to 168.250 for Modi and 167.600 for Wiskus.
Wiskus was 2.700 points better than Trevor Howard in fourth and is suddenly a candidate for the 2019 World Championships team. The team will be selected after a September training camp, but Wiskus is a welcome addition to a team that wants to contend desperately for an Olympic team medal in Tokyo.
On Saturday, Mikulak won the Horizontal Bar and Parallel Bars and tied with Moldauer for the Pommel Horse honors. Modi won the Vault and Trevor Howard had the top score on Rings.
The women will compete tomorrow to complete the Nationals; NBC will have coverage at 8 p.m. Eastern time. Summaries so far:
USA Gymnastics National Championships
Kansas City, Missouri (USA) ~ 8-11 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men
All-Around I: 1. Sam Mikulak, 86.750; 2. Yul Moldauer, 84.000; 3. tie, Shane Wiskus and Akash Modi, 83.950; 5. Trevor Howard, 82.250; 6. Riley Loos, 81.150; 7. Donnell Wittenburg, 81.100; 8. Matt Wenske, 80.950.
Event leaders:
● Floor: 1. Mikulak, 14.650; 2. Loos, 14.350; 3. Moldauer, 14.300.
● Pommel Horse: 1. Stephen Nedoroscik, 14.950; 2. Mikulak, 14,750; 3. Michael Paradise, 14.550.
● Rings: 1. Alex Diab, 14.600; 2. Howard, 14,550; 3. Whittenburg, 14.500.
● Vault: 1. Wiskus, 14.500; 2. tie, Kiwan Watts and Tim Wang, 14.400.
● Parallel Bars: 1. Mikulak, 15.350; 2. Moldauer, 14.800; 3. tie, Wiskus & Modi, 14.500.
● Horizontal Bars: 1. Mikulak, 14.200; 2. Modi, 13.700; 3. Paul Juda, 13.600.
All-Around II: 1. Sam Mikulak, 87.400; 2. Moldauer, 84.600; 3. Modi 84.300; 4. Wiskus, 83.650; 5. Allan Bower, 83.000; 6. Howard, 82.650; 7. Sean Melton, 81.950; 8. Levi Anderson, 81.550.
Event leaders:
● Floor: 1. Moldauer, 14.700; 2. Mikulak, 14.650; 3. Gage Dyer, 14.500.
● Pommel Horse: 1. Mikulak and Moldauer, 14.400; 3. Bower, 14.350.
● Rings: 1. Howard, 14.700; 2. Whittenburg, 14.600; 3. Mikulak, 14.250.
● Vault: 1. Modi, 14.500; 2. Moldauer, 14.400; 3. Wiskus, 14.350.
● Parallel Bars: 1. Mikulak, 15.300; 2. Wiskus, 14.850; 3. Moldauer, 14.600.
● Horizontal Bars: 1. Mikulak, 14.500; 2. Modi and Melton, 13.650.
Final Standings: 1. Mikulak, 174.150; 2. Moldauer, 168.600; 3. Modi, 168.250; 4. Wiskus, 167.600; 5. Howard, 164.900; 6. Bower, 163.650; 7. Whittenburg, 163.100; 8. Melton, 162.750.
Women
All-Around I: 1. Simone Biles, 58.650; 2. Suni Lee, 56.900; 3. Jade Carey, 56.100; 4. Riley McCusker, 55.700; 5. tie, Leanne Wong and Trinity Thomas, 55.400; 7. Jordan Chiles, 55.350; 8. Morgan Hurd, 55.050.
Event leaders:
● Vault: 1. Biles, 15.300; 2. Jade Carey, 15.000; 3. Jordan Chiles, 14.750.
● Uneven Bars: 1. Lee, 14.750; 2. Hurd, 14.400; 3. Thomas, 14.200.
● Beam: 1. Biles, 14.950; 2. McCusker, 14.500; 3. Lee, 14.350.
● Floor: 1. Biles, 14.350; 2. Carey, 14.300; 3. Lee, 13.950.
The final day of action in the track & field stadium at the 2019 Pan American Games was a good one for the United States, which despite not bringing anything close to its best team, nearly doubled up the medals on the second-place Jamaicans.
Because of the timing of these Games – considered far less important than the IAAF World Championships coming at the end of September – the U.S. was never likely to field a deep, high-quality team, and USA Track & Field’s internal errors made a shambles of the selection process, ultimately decided by an arbitrator.
Will the situation get better for 2023, when the Games will go to Santiago in Chile? Nope; that event will be held in late October and early November and the U.S. teams in almost all sports will be worse. But in Lima on Saturday, the American squad won four events on the final day on the track and infield.
The U.S. started the day well, with a 1-2 sweep of the women’s hammer, with Brooke Andersen taking and holding the lead in the first round at 71.07 m (233-2). But Gwen Berry, wearing florescent blue lipstick, unloaded in the fifth round at 74.62 (244-10) and ended the issue, with her fourth-best meet of the year.
The men’s triple jump was a showdown between American veteran Omar Craddock and Cuban Jordan Diaz, 18, the World Youth and World Junior Champion over the last two years. Diaz took over the event in the fourth round, reaching 17.38 m (57-0 1/4) and pushing Craddock down to second. Under pressure, Craddock responded with 17.42 m (57-2) in the fifth round and Diaz could not match him.
The men’s vault was tricky due to a crosswind, but NCAA champ Chris Nilsen of the U.S. cleared his first four attempts, then slammed the bar at 5.76 m (18-10 3/4), but it stayed on. Augusto Dutra (BRA) managed 5.71 m (18-8 3/4) for second and American Clayton Fritsch (5.61 m/18-4 3/4) took the bronze.
The running events started with a wild final in the men’s 110 m hurdles. Crashes in the middle of the race eliminated Brazil’s Gabriel Constantin and American Jarret Eaton, but in lanes 6-7-8, Freddie Crittenden of the U.S. had a slight lead over Shane Brathwaite (BAR) and Eduardo Rodriguez (BRA), but Brathwaite was best on the run-in and won by 0.01 in 13.31 over Crittenden (13.32). Two more athletes pushed the hurdles down so the race had only four official finishers!
The men’s 800 m was a showcase for Canada’s Marco Arop, the SEC runner-up for Mississippi State, who inserted himself into the World Championships medal conversation with a brilliant stretch run and win in 1:44.25. Puerto Rico’s Wesley Sanchez made the race with a speedy 49.74 opening lap and he held on for second in 1:44.48 with Ryan Sanchez (PUR) third in 1:45.19. American Bryce Hoppel couldn’t move with the top three around the final 200 m and ended up fourth in 1:47.48.
Arop’s Mississippi State teammate Anderson Peters (GRN) unloaded a lifetime best of 87.31 m (286-5) in the first round and shocked the field, notably including 2012 Olympic champ Keshorn Walcott (TTO), who finished second at 83.55 m (274-1).
The Steeplechase races were studies in perseverance. Canada’s Genevieve Lalonde had the lead and kept it over American Marisa Howard over the last two laps, winning in a Games record of 9:41.45 to Howard’s 9:43.78. The men’s race saw Brazil’s Altobelli Santos hold the lead … and hold it … and hold it … and when the hard running started, no one could pass him. Gritting his teeth down the final straight, he won in a season’s best of 8:30.73; behind him, Carlos Sanmartin (COL) and Peru’s Mario Bazan sprinted of the last hurdle to pass American Benard Keter for the silver and bronze medals: 8:32.24-8:32.24-8:32.76.
The concluding relays were both come-from-behind affairs. The women’s 4x400m started with Lynna Irby of the U.S. well behind, but brilliant middle legs by Jade Stepter and Anna Cockrell got the U.S. into contention and then anchor Courtney Okolo took it from there. She started third, but made up the difference on Canada’s Sage Watson and Jamaica’s Roniesha McGregor coming into the home straight. Okolo had a lot more left and breezed to a half-second win with a 51.15 final leg.
The men’s 4×400 m was just as crazy, with the U.S. well behind after two legs, but a brilliant third leg by Justin Robinson brought the U.S. into the lead at the last pass. Machel Cedeno of Trinidad & Tobago took the lead over Wil London on the backstraight, but London was waiting with a burst onto the straightaway and looked like a possible winner. But Colombia’s 400 m winner Anthony Zambrano had a lot more left and whizzed by London, celebrating with 20 m left and won, 3:01.41-3:01.72.
With just the 50 km walking events left, the U.S. has grabbed 33 medals (7-14-12) in track & field to lead all countries, followed by Jamaica with 17 (6-5-6) and Brazil (16: 6-6-4). You can find the complete results here.
The rich got richer on the final day of the Jinan World Cup in China, as four star emerged as contenders for the big payday coming at the end of next week’s Singapore stage.
Hungary’s Katinka Hosszu won her fourth event of the meet by taking the 400 m Medley by more than eight seconds from countrywoman Szuszsanna Jakabos and won more individual events than anyone else.
However, Australia’s Cate Campbell’s brilliant sprinting became the highlight of the meet as she won the 100 m Freestyle on Sunday for her third win and at 52.34, was the best performance according to the FINA points table. Campbell has done 52.12 for the 100 Free this year, but her winning time in Jinan was bettered this season only by American Simone Manuel and Sweden’s Sarah Sjostrom (and herself).
Because of this, and the bonus points awarded for having the mark with the high point total, Campbell took over the lead in the women’s standings:
1. 105 Cate Campbell (AUS)
2. 102 Katinka Hosszu (HUN)
3. 63 Emily Seebohm (AUS)
The payoff for winning the three-meet cluster ending in Singapore is $50,000 to the winner, $35,000 for second and on down to $3,000 for eighth. So the competition next week will be fierce.
In the men’s division, Russia’s Vladimir Morozov already had his third win bagged on Friday, but Australian Mitch Larkin got his third win in the 100 m Backstroke. American Andrew Wilson suddenly moved into contention for cluster prize money with his 200 m Breaststroke win in 2:08.24, the top men’s performance in the meet. Combined with his second-place finishes in the other two Breast events, he’s in second place:
1. 96 Vladimir Morozov (RUS)
2. 87 Andrew Wilson (USA)
3. 72 Mitch Larkin (AUS)
Three other men won two events each: Danas Rapsys (LTU) in the 200-400 m Frees; Zibei Yan (CHN) in the 50-100 m Breast events, and Szebasztian Szabo (HUN) in the 50-100 m Flys.
In the women’s division, American Erica Sullivan won the 400-800 m Frees and Alia Atkinson (JAM) won the 50-100 Breaststrokes.
Russia’s Vitalina Simonova completed all 14 events she entered for the second week in a row. Against much less competition in Jinan, she made four finals and was sixth in the 800 m Free on Friday, her best single-day showing yet. And she won the 200 m Breast on Thursday!
Prize money of $1,500-1,000-500-400-300-200 was available in each individual event. Summaries:
FINA Swimming World Cup II
Jinan (CHN) ~ 8-10 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men
50 m Freestyle: 1. Vladimir Morozov (RUS), 21.50; 2. Michael Andrew (USA), 22.16; 3. Hexin Yu (CHN), 22.31. Also: 5. Blake Pieroni (USA), 22.39.
100 m Free: 1. Morozov (RUS), 47.99; 2. Pieroni (USA), 48.15; 3. Szebasztian Szabo (HUN), 48.63.
200 m Free: Danas Rapsys (LTU), 1:45.07; 2. Xinjie Ji (CHN), 1:46.68; 3. Pieroni (USA), 1:47.90.
400 m Free: 1. Rapsys (LTU), 3:43.91; 2. Ji (CHN), 3:49.87; 3. Thomas Fraser-Holmes (AUS), 3:54.20. Also: 5. Brennan Gravely (USA), 3:59.13.
1,500 m Free: 1. Ji (CHN), 15:16.15; 2. Rui Meng (CHN), 15:17.85; 3. Gravely (USA), 15:22.96.
50 m Backstroke: 1. Morozov (RUS), 24.43; 2. Andrew (USA), 24.85; 3. Jiayu Xu (CHN), 25.25.
100 m Back: 1. Mitch Larkin (AUS), 53.79; 2. Tristan Hollard (AUS), 54.39; 3. Andrew (USA), 54.44.
200 m Back: 1. Larkin (AUS), 1:56.39; 2. Hollard (AUS), 1:57.94; 3. J. Xu (CHN), 1:59.59.
50 m Breaststroke: 1. Zibei Yan (CHN), 27.12; 2. Nicolo Martinenghi (ITA), 27.18; 3. Andrew (USA), 27.45.
100 m Breast: 1. Z. Yan (CHN), 59.08; 2. tie, Lizhuo Wang (CHN) and Andrew Wilson (USA), 59.56.
200 m Breast: 1. A. Wilson (USA), 2:08.24; 2. Ruixuan Zhang (CHN), 2:10.68; 3. Andrius Sidlauskas (LTU), 2:11.65.
50 m Fly: 1. Szabo (HUN), 22.93; 2. Andrew (USA), 23.13; 3. Yauhen Tsurkin (BLR), 23.66.
100 m Butterfly: 1. Szabo (HUN), 51.45; 2. Grant Irvine (AUS), 51.60; 3. Santo Condorelli (ITA), 52.00. Also: 4. Andrew (USA), 52.08.
200 m Fly: 1. Irvine (AUS), 1:55.94; 2. Nic Brown (AUS), 1:57.32; 3. Wilrich Coetzee (NZL), 2:00.14.
200 m Medley: 1. Larkin (AUS), 1:57.26; 2. Haiyang Qin (CHN), 1:57.34; 3. Fraser-Holmes (AUS), 2:00.29.
400 m Medley: 1. Fraser-Holmes (AUS), 4:20.50; 2. Gravley (USA), 4:34.99; 3. Chen-Kai Chu (TPE), 4:38.75.
Women
50 m Freestyle: 1. Cate Campbell (AUS), 24.16; 2. Michelle Coleman (SWE), 24.74; 3. Holly Barratt (AUS), 24.91.
100 m Free: 1. C. Campbell (AUS), 52.34; 2. Coleman (SWE), 53.73; 3. Barratt (AUS), 54.78.
200 m Free: 1. Yawen Hou (CHN), 1:58,98; 2. Coleman (SWE), 1:59.07; 3. Zsuzsanna Jakabos (HUN), 1:59.28.
400 m Free: 1. Erica Sullivan (USA), 4:08.70; 2. Wenxin Bi (CHN), 4:10.23; 3. Jie Dong (CHN), 4:11.32.
800 m Free: 1. Sullivan (USA), 8:26.13; 2. Yawen Hou (CHN), 8:26.79; 3. Maddy Gough (AUS), 8:29.94.
50 m Backstroke: 1. Xiang Liu (CHN), 27.35; 2. Jie Chen (CHN), 27.88; 3. Emily Seebohm (AUS), 27.99.
100 m Back: 1. Katinka Hosszu (HUN), 59.65; 2. Seebohm (AUS), 59.76; 3. Jie Chen (CHN), 1:00.74.
200 m Back: 1. Seebohm (AUS), 2:09.56; 2. Yuru Jiang (CHN), 2:15.33; 3. Sullivan (USA), 2:6.36.
50 m Breaststroke: 1. Alia Atkinson (JAM), 30.92; 2. Ran Suo (CHN), 31.24; 3. Jingyao Yu (CHN), 31.61.
100 m Breast: 1. Atkinson (JAM), 1:07.06; 2. Vitalina Simonova (RUS), 1:08.03; 3. Jingyao Yu (CHN), 1:08.07.
200 m Breast: 1. Simonova (RUS), 2:24.52; 2. Jingyao Yu (CHN), 2:27.51; 3. Yun He (CHN), 2:28.13.
50 m Butterfly: 1. C. Campbell (AUS), 25.63; 2. Barratt (AUS), 25.66; 3. Jeanette Ottesen (DEN), 25.86.
100 m Fly: 1. Yufei Zhang (CHN), 57.41; 2. Ottesen (DEN), 58.34; 3. Zsuzsanna Jakabos (HUN), 58.39.
200 m Fly: 1. Hosszu (HUN), 2:07.26; 2. Szuszsanna Jakabos (HUN), 2:07.75; 3. Yufei Zhang (CHN), 2:08.89.
200 m Medley: 1. Hosszu (HUN), 2:09.41; 2. Jakabos (HUN), 2:13.32; 3. Seebohm (AUS), 2:17.39.
400 m Medley: 1. Hosszu (HUN), 4:36.99; 2. Jakabos (HUN), 4:45.28; 3. Xin Liu (CHN), 4:49.72. Also: 4. Sullivan (USA), 4:51.26.
Mixed
4×100 m Free: 1. Australia (Larkin, Fraser-Holmes, Seebohm, C. Campbell), 3:26.61; 2. China, 3:30.90; 3. China Club, 3:37.16.
4×100 m Medley: 1. China (Xu, Yan, Zhang, Zhu), 3:43.79; 2. Australia, 3:51.02; 3. China Club, 4:02.24.
Among the wrestling cognoscenti, the power of the United States women’s program is well known, but after four victories and a silver medal at the Pan American Games in Lima (PER), it’s becoming an open secret.
After wins by Whitney Conder (50 kg) and Sarah Hildebrandt (53 kg) on Thursday, the U.S. women collected two more golds on Friday in emphatic style:
● 62 kg: Kayla Miracle needed no divine help to win this class, winning her three matches by pinfall, pinfall and 12-0 in the final against Jackeline Renteria of Colombia in the final.
● 68 kg: Tamyra Mensah similarly pounded her opposition and collected another tournament victory this season. She won her matches by 12-0, pinfall and another pin in the final against Olivia di Bacco of Canada.
2
While four-time World Champion Adeline Gray withdrew from the 76 kg class, the American women won four golds and one silver in the remaining five divisions, from Jenna Burkert, who lost a tight, 2-1 decision to Ecuador’s Lissette Antes Castillo.
Hildebrant is ranked no. 1 in the world in the 53 kg class by United World Wrestling and Mensah is currently ranked second. These are good signs for the U.S. ahead of the 2019 World Championships in Kazakhstan beginning on 14 September. The U.S. men got their first Freestyle gold, from Daton Fix at 57 kg.
The U.S. also had a good day on the pistes, winning the men’s Team Foil event and the women’s Team Sabre. The American men had the advantage of having individual gold medalist Gerek Meinhardt and bronze medalist Race Imboden and defeated Brazil in the final, 45-23. The women’s Sabre gold was led by individual champ Eliza Stone and the Americans edged the Dominican Republic by 45-31 in the final. With two team events left, the U.S. has won three of the five men’s events and all five women’s divisions.
In the headline sports of track & field and swimming, the U.S. had pretty good days, with two gold medals in each:
● At the track, American women’s javelin record holder Kara Winger had one of her best series ever and bombed her second throw 64.92 m (213-0), a season’s best and moving her from 19th on the world list for 2019 to seventh. It’s her best throw in four years!
Nikki Hiltz waited patiently for her chance to sprint in the women’s 1,500 m and when she entered the final straightaway, she was ready with a powerful surge and a victory in 4:07.14, clear of Jamaica’s Aisha Praught (4:08.26). It’s the fifth time this season that Hiltz has run faster than her lifetime best coming into 2019 (4:09.14).
Jamaica’s women also had a good day, with Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce smoking the field in the 200 m in 22.43, eclipsing the Pan American Games record of Evelyn Ashford (22.45) that had stood for 40 years! In addition, shot winner Danniel Thomas-Dodd extended her own national record to 19.55 m (64-1 3/4) and maintained her status as no. 3 on the world list for this season.
Friday’s meet also produced a world-leading mark in the women’s triple jump, as Venezuela’s reigning World Champion Yulimar Rojas won with a lifetime best and national record of 15.11 m (49-7). Jamaica’s Shanieka Ricketts scored the silver with a lifetime best of her own at 14.77 m (48-5 1/2).
Brazil won both the men’s and women’s 4×100 m relays in 38.27 and 43.04, with the U.S. finishing third in both.
With one day to go, the U.S. has had an ordinary – even unimpressive – meet by its standards, but still leads the medal count with 24 (3-10-11), ahead of Jamaica (16: 6-5-5) and Brazil (13: 5-5-3).
● At the pool, Brazil had the best night, winning a tight men’s 50 m Freestyle with Bruno Fratus edging Nathan Adrian of the U.S., 21.61-21.87, a season’s best for Adrian. Etiene Medeiros won the women’s 50 m Free over American Margo Geer, 24.88-25.03.
The Brazilians also won the men’s 4×200 m relay in a meet record 7:10.66, ahead of the U.S. (7:14.82).
American swimmers got two wins on the night (and eight total medals) from the women’s 4×200 m Free relay and a very impressive performance from Charlie Swanson, 21, who moved from 56th on the world list for 2019 to no. 4 (!) with a 4:11.48 lifetime best that won the men’s 400 m Medley by almost eight seconds!
In women’s field hockey, world no. 3 Argentina confirmed its class with a 5-0 win over the no. 13-ranked U.S. in the semifinals and 5-1 over no. 18 Canada in the final. The Americans won the bronze over Chile, 5-0.
In judo, the iconic winner of the women’s 57 kg division in Rio, Brazil’s Rafaela Silva completed a set of Pan American Games medals with a victory over Ana Rosa (DOM). Silva won a silver medal in this division in 2011 and a bronze in 2015 and now has a gold as well.
In the overall medal standings, the U.S. now has 240 total medals (93-76-71), ahead of Brazil (142: 46-37-59) and Canada (131: 31-54-46). So far, 30 of the 41 nations entered in the Pan Am Games have won at least one medal.
The Games is being shown on ESPN channels in the United States, primarily on ESPN2, ESPNU and ESPN Deportes. Complete results can be found here; a compete summary of the medalists will be published in next week’s TSX Stat Pack!
“Tonight was pretty rough.”
That was Simone Biles’s summary of her night on the first of two All-Arounds at the USA Gymnastics National Championships at the Sprint Center in Kansas City, Missouri on Friday evening.
For Biles, a rough night was winning the four-event program, with 58.650 points, ahead of a surprise second-placer in Suni Lee (56.900) and a noteworthy performance from Jade Carey (56.100).
Biles had a major error on her opening tumbling run on Floor, trying a new combination that ended in a bobble and then a fall onto her hands. She still won on Floor (14.350), then had the top Vault score at 15.300, but had a second step on her landing on her first try. Biles had more problems on the Uneven Bars landing and was unsteady on the Beam before landing a new, unheard-of dismount that produced her only smile of the evening.
“Tomorrow will be better,” she told NBCSN’s Andrea Joyce afterwards. “I was so mad and disappointed on how I did; … I was very mad.”
She wasn’t the only one as many of the U.S. stars suffered through major errors. Riley McCusker lost a Pan American Games gold medal last week by falling off the Uneven Bars and she did so again, falling from a likely second to fourth overall. The 2017 World Champion, Morgan Hurd, had a couple of major errors on her Floor routine at the end of the night and ended up only eighth.
The good news from the evening came from excellent performances from Lee, in her first year in the senior division, and Carey. Lee won the bronze medal in the U.S. Junior All-Around in 2018, but hit her routines and ended up winning on the Beam (14.950) and scoring thirds on Beam (14.350) and floor (13.950).
Carey, who is trying to make the U.S. Olympic Team through the FIG World Cup apparatus qualifiers, posted the second-best scores – to Biles – in her specialties of Vault (15.000) and Floor (14.300). Even with 10th-place finishes on Bars and Beam, she finished third overall.
The men will compete on Saturday with the second All-Around; NBCSN will have it at 8 p.m. Eastern time. The women will be back for their second All-Around on Sunday. Summaries so far:
USA Gymnastics National Championships
Kansas City, Missouri (USA) ~ 8-11 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men
All-Around I: 1. Sam Mikulak, 86.750; 2. Yul Moldauer, 84.000; 3. tie, Shane Wiskus and Akash Modi, 83.950; 5. Trevor Howard, 82.250; 6. Riley Loos, 81.150; 7. Donnell Wittenburg, 81.100; 8. Matt Wenske, 80.950.
Event leaders:
● Floor: 1. Mikulak, 14.650; 2. Loos, 14.350; 3. Moldauer, 14.300.
● Pommel Horse: 1. Stephen Nedoroscik, 14.950; 2. Mikulak, 14,750; 3. Michael Paradise, 14.550.
● Rings: 1. Alex Diab, 14.600; 2. Howard, 14,550; 3. Whittenburg, 14.500.
● Vault: 1. Wiskus, 14.500; 2. tie, Kiwan Watts and Tim Wang, 14.400.
● Parallel Bars: 1. Mikulak, 15.350; 2. Moldauer, 14.800; 3. tie, Wiskus & Modi, 14.500.
● Horizontal Bar: 1. Mikulak, 14.200; 2. Modi, 13.700; 3. Paul Juda, 13.600.
Women
All-Around I: 1. Simone Biles, 58.650; 2. Suni Lee, 56.900; 3. Jade Carey, 56.100; 4. Riley McCusker, 55.700; 5. tie, Leanne Wong and Trinity Thomas, 55.400; 7. Jordan Chiles, 55.350; 8. Morgan Hurd, 55.050.
Event leaders:
● Vault: 1. Biles, 15.300; 2. Jade Carey, 15.000; 3. Jordan Chiles, 14.750.
● Uneven Bars: 1. Lee, 14.750; 2. Hurd, 14.400; 3. Thomas, 14.200.
● Beam: 1. Biles, 14.950; 2. McCusker, 14.500; 4. Lee, 14.350.
● Floor: 1. Biles, 14.350; 2. Carey, 14.300; 3. Lee, 13.950.
The 2019 edition of the Tour de Pologne will unfortunately be known forever as the year in which 22-year-old Bjorg Lambrecht of Belgium crashed during the third stage and died later in a hospital nearby.
He was having his best year ever, but after his death, the fourth stage was changed into a processional along a shortened route in his memory. But the racing continued in stage five and in the end, it was fitting that another 22-year-old, Russia’s Pavel Sivakov, became the overall champion with a strong finish in the final two stages.
With the first four stages (discounting the memorial stage) ending in sprint finishes won by Germany’s Pascal Ackermann (1st and 3rd) and Luka Mezgec (SLO: 2nd and 5th), the final two days finally included some climbing and the complexion of the event changed.
Another 22-year-old rider, Denmark’s Jonas Vengegaard won the sixth stage, leading the charge into the final, sharp climb up the Gubalowka with Sivakov and Australia’s Jai Hindley and then racing away on the descent to the finish in Zakopane. That gave Vengegaard the overall lead, but just four seconds over Siakov.
That set up the final stage on Friday, an undulating 153.3 km course that finished on an uphill climb to the Bukowina Resort. Slovenia’s Matej Mohoric made a powerful attack with 56 km to go and broke away from the field.
Polish star Rafal Majka attacked with 46 km to go and Sivakov went with him, but Vengegaard was dropped and with it, his chance for victory.With 35 km left, the group with Sivakov was 54 seconds behind Mohoric and although there were repeated attempts to catch the front-runner, none were successful and he won by 55 seconds.
Behind him, the lead group sprinted for the finish, with American Neilson Powless finishing second ahead of a strung-out series of challengers through seventh. With Vengegaard dropping back, the 18-man group that included Sivakov finished 2:15 behind, but it was enough for an overall win by two seconds over Hindley, with Diego Ulissi (ITA) 12 seconds back. Vengegaard faded to 26th overall. Summaries:
UCI World Tour/Tour de Pologne
Poland ~ 3-9 August 2019
(Full results here)
Final Standings: 1. Pavel Sivakov (RUS), 26:20.58; 2. Jai Hindley (AUS), +0:02; 3. Diego Ulissi (ITA), +0:12; 4. Sergio Higuita (COL), +0:14; 5. Tao Geoghegan Hart (GBR), +0:14; 6. Pierre Latour (FRA), +0:15; 7. Davide Formolo (ITA), +0:16; 8. Chris Hamilton (AUS), +0:16; 9. Rafal Majka (POL), +0:16; 10. James Knox (GBR), +0:16.
Stage winners: ● 1 (132.3 km): Pascal Ackermann (GER); ● 2 (152.7 km): Luka Mezgec (SLO); ● 3 (150.5 km): Ackermann (GER); ● 4 (133.7 km): no race; ● 5 (153.8 km): Mezgec (SLO); ● 6 (160.0 km): Jonas Vingegaard (DEN); ● 7 (153.3 km): Matej Mohoric (SLO).
The second day of the second leg of the FINA Swimming World Cup in Jinan (CHN) were productive ones for the series leaders Vladimir Morozov and Katinka Hosszu as both won two more events to give them three each for the meet.
The World Cup rules only count up to three events per swimmers for the points standings, so both can relax on Saturday if they wish, or can try to better their marks for the possibility of bonus points.
Morozov won the 50 m Free on Thursday, then added the 50 m Back and 100 m Free on Friday, both with impressive marks. His 50 m Back win over American Michael Andrew was decisive – 24.43 to 24.85 – and moved Morozov into a tie for fourth on the world list for 2019, with the same time that South African Zane Waddell swam to win the World Championships in Korea last month,
Morozov also improved his seasonal best in the 100 m Free to 47.99, keeping him at no. 11 on the world list this year.
Hosszu won the 100 m Back and 400 m Medley to add to the 200 m Butterfly on Thursday.
Australia had another good day, with sprinter Cate Campbell winning the 50 m Fly in 25.63 to move to no. 6 in the world for 2019, ahead of teammate Holly Barratt, whose 25.66 was a season’s best, but moved down to no. 7 on the 2019 list.
Mitch Larkin won the 200 m Medley to go along with the 200 m Back he won on Thursday and both he and Campbell scored a third win as members of the winning team in the Mixed 4×100 m Medley relay.
The continuing endurance saga of Russia’s Vitalina Simonova continued, as she completed all five individual events on Friday: 50 m Fly (13th); 100 m Breast (second); 200 m Free (10th); 400 Medley (fifth) and the 100 m Back (13th). She has now completed nine events in two days, on the way to finishing all 14 she entered … for the second meet in a row!
Competition continues through Saturday. Summaries so far:
FINA Swimming World Cup II
Jinan (CHN) ~ 8-10 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men
50 m Freestyle: 1. Vladimir Morozov (RUS), 21.50; 2. Michael Andrew (USA), 22.16; 3. Hexin Yu (CHN), 22.31. Also: 5. Blake Pieroni (USA), 22.39.
100 m Free: 1. Morozov (RUS), 47.99; 2. Pieroni (USA), 48.15; 3. Szebasztian Szabo (HUN), 48.63.
400 m Free: 1. Danas Rapsys (LTU), 3:43.91; 2. Xinjie Ji (CHN), 3:49.87; 3. Thomas Fraser-Holmes (AUS), 3:54.20. Also: 5. Brennan Gravely (USA), 3:59.13.
1,500 m Free: 1. Xinjie Ji (CHN), 15:16.15; 2. Rui Meng (CHN), 15:17.85; 3. Gravely (USA), 15:22.96.
50 m Backstroke: 1. Morozov (RUS), 24.43; 2. Andrew (USA), 24.85; 3. Jiayu Xu (CHN), 25.25.
200 m Back: 1. Mitch Larkin (AUS), 1:56.39; 2. Tristan Hollard (AUS), 1:57.94; 3. Jiayu Xu (CHN), 1:59.59.
50 m Breaststroke: 1. Zibei Yan (CHN), 27.12; 2. Nicolo Martinenghi (ITA), 27.18; 3. Andrew (USA), 27.45.
100 m Breast: 1. Z. Yan (CHN), 59.08; 2. tie, Lizhuo Wang (CHN) and Andrew Wilson (USA), 59.56.
100 m Butterfly: 1. Szabo (HUN), 51.45; 2. Grant Irvine (AUS), 51.60; 3. Santo Condorelli (ITA), 52.00. Also: 4. Andrew (USA), 52.08.
200 m Fly: 1. Irvine (AUS), 1:55.94; 2. Nic Brown (AUS), 1:57.32; 3. Wilrich Coetzee (NZL), 2:00.14.
200 m Medley: 1. Larkin (AUS), 1:57.26; 2. Haiyang Qin (CHN), 1:57.34; 3. Fraser-Holmes (AUS), 2:00.29.
Women
50 m Freestyle: 1. Cate Campbell (AUS), 24.16; 2. Michelle Coleman (SWE), 24.74; 3. Holly Barratt (AUS), 24.91.
200 m Free: 1. Yawen Hou (CHN), 1:58,98; 2. Coleman (SWE), 1:59.07; 3. Zsuzsanna Jakabos (HUN), 1:59.28.
400 m Free: 1. Erica Sullivan (USA), 4:08.70; 2. Wenxin Bi (CHN), 4:10.23; 3. Jie Dong (CHN), 4:11.32.
50 m Backstroke: 1. Xiang Liu (CHN), 27.35; 2. Jie Chen (CHN), 27.88; 3. Emily Seebohm (AUS), 27.99.
100 m Back: 1. Katinka Hosszu (HUN), 59.65; 2. Emily Seebohm (AUS), 59.76; 3. Jie Chen (CHN), 1:00.74.
100 m Breaststroke: 1. Alia Atkinson (JAM), 1:07.06; 2. Vitalina Simonova (RUS), 1:08.03; 3. Jingyao Yu (CHN), 1:08.07.
200 m Breast: 1. Simonova (RUS), 2:24.52; 2. Jingyao Yu (CHN), 2:27.51; 3. Yun He (CHN), 2:28.13.
50 m Butterfly: 1. C. Campbell (AUS), 25.63; 2. Barratt (AUS), 25.66; 3. Jeanette Ottesen (DEN), 25.86.
200 m Fly: 1. Hosszu (HUN), 2:07.26; 2. Szuszsanna Jakabos (HUN), 2:07.75; 3. Yufei Zhang (CHN), 2:08.89.
400 m Medley: 1. Hosszu (HUN), 4:36.99; 2. Jakabos (HUN), 4:45.28; 3. Xin Liu (CHN), 4:49.72. Also: 4. Sullivan (USA), 4:51.26.
Mixed
4×100 m Medley: 1. Australia (Larkin, Fraser-Holmes, Seebohm, C. Campbell), China, 3:30.90; 3. China Club, 3:37.16.
| 1. | LANE ONE: Lima has done well, but what is the future of the Pan American Games?
After some doubts about construction, the Lima organizers can be proud of the job they have done in staging the eighteenth Pan American Games – so far – as the event heads into its final weekend of competition.
The PanAm Sports organization, which owns the event, is also giddy about the event, but knows it has challenges ahead of it. The event has generated very modest interest in the U.S. despite excellent live coverage from Lima on ESPNU and ESPN Deportes and about the same reaction in Canada. Those are two key markets.
What can be done about it, and what is the future of this event, which dates back to 1951? It is held only one every four years and this year’s staging reportedly cost $1.2 billion, of which about two-thirds appears to be paid by Peruvian taxpayers.
Ivar Sisniega, the highly-regarded Secretary-General of PanAm Sports suggested in an interview that a closer tie to Olympic qualification will help in the future. But a look at the history of the Pan American Games suggests that other factors are responsible for its decline in interest not only among North American media, but among its top athletes as well.
There are other options, and the P.A.G. may be better off looking to find a better place on the international sports calendar in the second year after an Olympic Games, tightening up on the number of events and athletes involved and considering that other competitions – like the IAAF Diamond League and FINA Swimming World Cup – pay prize money where the Pan American Games does not.
Has time passed by the Pan American Games? Not necessarily, but it’s not 1951 any more either.
| 2. | PAN AMERICAN GAMES: U.S. swimmers win six more events and 11 more medals, as U.S. passes 200-medal mark
It’s simply hard to believe that USA Swimming has sent its third team to Lima for the 2019 Pan American Games. The squad in Lima has been exemplary – except for one big mistake on Thursday – and won another six events and 11 medals, taking its total to 31 of the 74 total medals awarded so far, with Brazil second at 20. On Thursday evening:
● Margo Geer won the 100 m Freestyle in 54.17, giving her an individual gold to accompany her two relays golds so far.
● Annie Lazor and Will Licon (pictured below) led 1-2 U.S. finishes in the 200 m Breaststrokes in fast times. Lazor set a Pan American Games record of 2:21.40, which would make her no. 4 in the world for 2019 if not for her 2:20.77 (no. 2) in May. She led Bethany Galat home, who finished in 2:21.84, moving her to no. 6 in the world for the year. Lazor’s win completed a sweep of the 100 and 200 m Breast events.
Licon, who was given a public warning by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency for the use of an inhaler that had a prohibited ingredient – but which did not register in an out-of-competition doping test – swam and won the men’s 200 m Breast in 2:07.62, a meet record that places him no. 8 in the world for 2019. Nic Fink (USA) won the silver in 2:08.16, which ranks 12th.
● Phoebe Bacon and Daniel Carr won the 100 m Backstroke events, Bacon in 59.47 (no. 13 for 2019) and Carr completed a 100-200 m double in 53.50, a season’s best and no. 16 on the world list.
● Andrew Abruzzo won the 800 m Free to go along with his win in the 400 m Free.
Brazil’s Marcelo Chierighini held on to win the men’s 100 m Freestyle in 48.09, but American Nathan Adrian continued his comeback from testicular cancer in second with a season-best 48.17, with American Michael Chadwick third in 48.88.
The only real disappointment for the U.S. came in the Mixed 4×100 m Medley Relay, where the team of Beacon, Cody Miller, Tom Shields and Geer won by almost six seconds in 3:42.96, but was disqualified, apparently on Miller’s leg. Brazil was handed the gold medal after finishing second in 3:48.61.
USA Swimming tweeted later, “The U.S. has been disqualified for two breaststroke kicks off the turn. While we disagree with the decision, Pan Am rules do not allow for official video review.”
More highlights:
● The powerful U.S. women’s Freestyle wrestling team got into action and collected gold medals from Whitney Conder (50 kg: pictured above ~ won 10-2) and Sarah Hildebrandt (53 kg: won 10-0), and a silver medal from Jenna Burkert (57 kg: lost 2-1).
● In track & field, there were upsets galore, no doubt in part thanks to 60-degree weather and humidity readings above 80%!
Costa Rica’s Andrea Vargas set a national record and defeated a field that included Chanel Brissett of the U.S., 12.82-12.99, with Sharika Nelvis of the U.S. seventh in 13.23. Then American Johnny Gregorek looked to be in good position to win the men’s 1,500 m over Canada’s William Poulsen, but then Carlos Villareal of Mexico, who finished fourth in the Pac-12 Champs for Arizona, flew down the final straight to win in 3:39.93.
Jamaica’s Shericka Jackson won the women’s 400 m as expected (50.73), but the men’s 400 m was a stunner, with Anthony Zambrano of Colombia finishing strongly to win in 44.83, surprising Jamaica’s Demish Gaye (44.94) with 17-year-old Justin Robinson of the U.S. coming through in third (45.07).
Canada’s Sage Watson, who also went to Arizona, won the 400 m hurdles with a charge down the straight in a season’s best of 55.16, then was disqualified for a trail-leg violation and running out of her lane. That gave the gold medal to American Anna Cockrell … for a few minutes. The Canadians protested and Watson was reinstated; the U.S. declined – after seeing video of the race – to counter-protest.
The men’s race was even crazier, with Dominican Juander Santos taking a big lead and looking like a sure winner, then crashing over the final hurdle and sprawling on the track. Brazil’s Alison Alves dos Santos sailed past for a 48.45 lifetime best and the gold medal, with Amere Lattin of the U.S. (48.98) flying in for second. Santos got up and finished, dazed, but with the crowd applauding, in 2:09.37.
Defending champions Lavern Spencer (LCA) and Yarisley Silva (CUB) both won their events, with Spencer clearing 1.87 m (6-1 1/2) in the cold and Silva clearing 4.75 m (15-7) to win on her last remaining jump over Katie Nageotte of the U.S. (4.70 m/15-5).
Some 276 of the 419 events have been completed in the Games, with the U.S. now leading with 206 total medals (82-69-55), with Brazil (115) and Canada (113) fighting for second. While the American medal count is impressive, there’s little likelihood of any records, as the U.S. won an astonishing 425 medals in 1995. Complete results of the 2019 Games are here.
| 3. | GYMNASTICS: Mikulak sailing at USA Gymnastics Nationals, but who is Shane Wiskus?
Five-time U.S. All-Around champ Sam Mikulak is sailing toward a sixth title, which would tie him for second all-time, after the first of two rounds of the USA Gymnastics National Championships at the Sprint Center in Kansas City, Missouri.
After completing the first of two All-Around programs, Mikulak has a solid 86.750-84.000 advantage over 2017 All-Around title winner Yul Moldauer. But the surprise has come from Minnesota sophomore Shane Wiskus, the two-time NCAA All-Around runner-up, who stands tied with veteran Akash Modi for third at 83.950.
Mikulak finished in the top four in five of the six events and won on Floor (14.650), Parallel Bars (14.200) and Horizontal Bar (also 14.200). The men’s competition continues on Saturday with the second All-Around. The women will take the stage tomorrow (and on Sunday); more details are here.
| 4. | SWIMMING: Simonova more than simply iron, now a winner at the Jinan World Cup!
Russia’s Vitalina Simonova has taken the role usually reserved for the “Iron Lady” – Hungary’s Katinka Hosszu – and swam 14 of 16 individual events in last week’s Tokyo opener of the FINA Swimming World Cup.
She’s at it again at this week’s stage, in Jinan (CHN), but with a major difference. As the fields are weaker than in Tokyo, she broke through and won her specialty, the 200 m Breaststroke in a season’s best of 2:24.52. She’s still on schedule to swim in 14 events again, but she will have some hardware to take home with her this time.
Hosszu was also in good form, winning the 200 m Butterfly in 2:07.26, which would rank her no. 7 in the world this year but for her existing 2:06.94 from May. The best performance on Thursday came from China’s world-record holder, Xiang Liu, who won the 50 m Backstroke in 27.35, the second-fastest mark in the world this year behind only Olivia Smoliga’s 27.33 that won the World Championships gold for the U.S.
The men’s points leader, Russia’s Vladimir Morozov, won the 50 m Free in 21.50, a season’s best that keeps him at no. 5 on the 2019 world list.
The meet continues on Friday and Saturday; our summary of Thursday’s action is here.
| 5. | EQUESTRIAN: When it comes to money, the FEI is not horsing around!
The Federation Equestre Internationale (FEI), international governing body for equestrian, released its annual report, including its 2018 financial statements.
Reported in Swiss francs (essentially equal to USD at current exchange), the federation showed 62.6 million in revenue, only 4% of which came from the IOC’s television revenue sharing program. Expenses were 58.9 million for operations, but there was an investment loss of 3.0 million for a total cost of 61.9 million, and a smaller surplus of 724,148 francs.
The biggest revenue contributor was sponsorship, at 27.8 million, followed by event fees (about 11.2 million). As of the end of 2018, the FEI has assets of CHF 64.6 million.
Very, very impressive.
| 6. | DOPING: When a USADA Doping Control Officer knocks on your door, you can expect …
The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency tweeted Thursday: “Athletes: when a USADA Doping Control Officer knocks on your door, you can expect them to be professional, accommodating, and knowledgeable.”
Clicking further leads to a 2017 post that explains:
● Professional: “It’s no secret that the sample collection process can be discomforting, especially if it’s an athlete’s first time providing a sample. … every USADA DCO undergoes extensive hands-on training and a rigorous certification process before entering the field.”
● Accommodating: “Athletes in USADA’s registered testing pool are also required to file Whereabouts and be available for no-notice testing at any time. These rights and responsibilities are key to ensuring that USADA maintains a robust anti-doping program that protects clean sport and athletes’ rights.
“While USADA DCOs are charged with upholding testing protocols, they also have athletes’ wellbeing at the forefront of their minds and understand that athletes are people with busy lives, responsibilities, and pressing concerns that aren’t related to anti-doping.”
● Knowledgeable: “DCOs are sometimes the only representative from USADA that athletes will interact with face-to-face, so athletes are encouraged to ask questions and use their DCO to learn more about anti-doping. Most USADA DCOs can provide information on a wide range of topics, including testing protocols, the results management process, therapeutic use exemptions (TUEs), and the many tools for athletes that address prohibited substances and methods.”
Doping control is one of the most unpleasant aspects of being a world-class athletes, but as the saying goes, it’s a necessary evil. Let’s hope the USADA’s team lives up to its advertising.
If you have been watching the XVIII Pan American Games in Lima, Peru, you have seen some compelling competition and some amazing stories, the type of drama that makes the Olympic Games a world-wide attraction.
But following his highly-upbeat mid-Games news conference on 3 August, PanAm Sports Secretary General Ivar Sisniega told Reuters that there is concern about the low interest from American and Canadian media about the Games:
“If you think the American continent is just USA and Canada then you’re right there is (a lack of interest). Some countries … maybe need to open up to what happens in the world and not be so involved with what just happens (at home).
“We have spoken to NBC and major television networks and it comes down to how many of the sports are Olympic qualifiers and that is something we are going to push really aggressively over the next four years.
“We have spoken to USA and Canada about these issues, it’s a perception that they have that the Games are not of a high quality.
“These are the highest quality Games in history so we are hoping to move forward on this and the U.S. and Canadian media understand how big these Games are and the level of athletes is high with over 100 Olympic medalists. It is certainly a challenge we have for the future.”
Reuters reporter Steve Keating further explained that “Sisneiga says a goal of Panam Sports and its president Neven Ilic is to have all the sports in the Olympic Games have qualifiers through the Pan American Games. In Lima, there are 21 Olympic qualifiers to Tokyo 2020, an increase from 18 in Toronto in 2015 and 12 in Guadalajara in 2011.”
Don’t underestimate either Sisniega or Ilic. Sisniega competed for Mexico in three Olympic Games in the modern pentathlon in 1980-84-88 and is a graduate of Stanford (Bachelor’s) and the University of Arizona (Masters). Ilic is from Chile and has modernized Olympic sport in that country, was elected to head PanAm Sports in 2017 and elected as a member of the International Olympic Committee in the same year.
The two are taking PanAm Sports in new directions, following the death of Mario Vasquez (MEX), the long-time leader of the Pan American Sports Organization (PASO) in 2015. The approach is more modern, more efficient and focused on their new mission statement: “PanAm Sports fuels the development of sport and supports the work of our 41 member nations to inspire the next generation of athletes in our continent … ensuring the success and celebration of our flagship event, the Pan American Games.”
And fearless. ESPN is televising the Games in the U.S. in 2019, but Sisniega talked about NBC in his comments. When was the last time you heard about a Games owner skipping over its U.S. rights holder?
OK, so what happens now?
As the Reuters story pointed out, it’s not just the U.S. and Canadian media who have low interest in the 2019 Pan American Games, but so do several of the key U.S. federations. USA Swimming picked its PanAm team off its 2018 Nationals, sending its top racers to the 2019 World Championships, second squad to the World University Games in Naples (ITA) and the third team to Lima. USA Track & Field didn’t have a selection meet for the Pan Am team because its 2019 Nationals were held late, to focus on the 2019 World Championships that will be in Doha (QAT) in late September. It picked its team off of the best marks list in 2019 (after an arbitrator’s decision), but many athletes declined to go and the American track team in Lima is weak.
So what now? A significant part of the problem is history.
The first (official) Pan American Games was held in Buenos Aires (ARG) in 1951 and it has been held every four years since. Back then, there were no World Championships in many sports; FINA started theirs for aquatics in 1973; the IAAF didn’t start a Worlds for track & field until 1983. There were no World Cup circuits, no Diamond League meets and so on.
From a time when a major international competition like the Pan American Games was looked at as an important destination – because there were so few opportunities otherwise – the calendar has become enormously crowded. This is important; aged observers of the Olympic Movement in the United States will remember that way back in 1979, the United States Olympic Committee created the National Sports Festival (later, U.S. Olympic Festival) to give American athletes a summer domestic competition opportunity and an Olympic-style experience. It served its purpose, but as the international calendar filled to overflowing, the event was ended after its 1995 edition in Denver, Colorado.
Sisniega indicated that he and Ilic see the future in tying the Pan American Games more closely to qualification for the Olympic Games. The increase in such ties – from 12 sports for the 2011 Games to 21 in Lima – is impressive, but it didn’t solve the problem of limited interest this year did it?
There are other options. If the desire is to have a bigger impact, perhaps consider:
● The PanAm Games have always been held in the year prior to the Olympic Games, But that’s also the years when the IAAF (track), FINA (aquatics) and FIBA (basketball) all hold their World Championships. Wouldn’t it make sense to have the Pan American Games in a bigger spotlight in the even-numbered year between Olympic Games?
The Asian Games, which is by far the biggest regional Games in the world, also started in 1951 but switched immediately to the second year after the Olympic Games and has grown in its importance in the region.
This would remove most of the Olympic qualifying ties for the Pan American Games, but if it were a bigger deal, would that matter? (Answer: it wouldn’t.)
● The Pan American Games is way too big. At 39 sports and 419 events, PanAm Sports is already asking itself if having all of these events is the right approach. In terms of reaching its goals, what do the non-Olympic sports bring to the event? What about the number of entries per event?
Moreover, what is the added costs to organizers? The 2019 Games in Lima have been reported to cost $1.2 billion U.S.: $430 million for organization, $470 million in infrastructure, $180 million for construction of the Pan American Village and $106 for other items.
Just as with the Olympic Games, less cost will open new opportunities for better Games.
● And then there is the question of what an “athlete-centric” event means in the 21st Century. In 1951, money wasn’t an issue due to the amateur code, but there are athletes today who will pass on an event like the Pan American Games because – unlike the IAAF Diamond League and FINA Swimming World Cup – it doesn’t pay any prize money.
The Olympic Games is under pressure from some elite athletes concerning prize money, but many more are happy just to be able to make it to the Games, and most (if not all) of the National Olympic Committees pay bonuses for medals. To attract the top athletes from the U.S. and Canada, prize money of even modest amounts ought to be looked at.
There is a place for the Pan American Games and as Ilic, Sisniega and others are bringing change to the PanAm Sports organization, new thinking can help the Pan American Games flourish in an environment far removed from the one that existed in 1951.
Rich Perelman
Editor
There was little doubt that five-time U.S. All-Around champ Sam Mikulak was going to be in front at the halfway mark of the USA Gymnastics National Championships in Kansas City. But even with one major error, he ran out to a big edge on Thursday night.
Mikulak, trying to become the second men’s gymnast in U.S. history to win six national All-Around titles, posted a first-day score of 86.750, way ahead of 2017 National Champion Yul Moldauer, who scored 84.000.
Mikulak won the Floor event (14.650), the Parallel Bars (14.200) and Horizontal Bar (also 14.200), and finished in the top four in five of the six events. He had a major error on his landing in the Vault and fell back to 23rd with a score of 13.500, or he could have been a point higher.
Moldauer was expected to be the top challenger, and was second overall (84.000), but had his problems on the Rings, where he tied for 11th. The surprise of the evening was Minnesota’s Shane Wiskus, who just finished his sophomore year and was NCAA All-Around runner-up for the second straight year. He placed seventh at the 2018 Nationals in the Horizontal Bar, but is now in rarified air, in a tie for third place (with veteran Akash Modi) going into the second night of All-Around competition on Saturday.
The women will compete in their first All-Around tomorrow; NBCSN will have it at 8 p.m. Eastern time. Summaries so far:
USA Gymnastics National Championships
Kansas City, Missouri (USA) ~ 8-11 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men
All-Around I: 1. Sam Mikulak, 86.750; 2. Yul Moldauer, 84.000; 3. tie, Shane Wiskus and Akash Modi, 83.950; 5. Trevor Howard, 82.250; 6. Riley Loos, 81.150; 7. Donnell Wittenburg, 81.100; 8. Matt Wenske, 80.950.
Event leaders:
● Floor: 1. Mikulak, 14.650; 2. Loos, 14.350; 3. Moldauer, 14.300.
● Pommel Horse: 1. Stephen Nedoroscik, 14.950; 2. Mikulak, 14,750; 3. Michael Paradise, 14.550.
● Rings: 1. Alex Diab, 14.600; 2. Howard, 14,550; 3. Whittenburg, 14.500.
● Vault: 1. Wiskus, 14.500; 2. tie, Kiwan Watts and Tim Wang, 14.400.
● Parallel Bars: 1. Mikulak, 15.350; 2. Moldauer, 14.800; 3. tie, Wiskus & Modi, 14.500.
● Horizontal Bars: 1. Mikulak, 14.200; 2. Modi, 13.700; 3. Paul Juda, 13.600.
The level of competition was down at the second stage of the FINA World Cup in Jinan (CHN), but the marks continued at a high level:
● China’s world-record holder Xiang Liu won the 50 m Backstroke in a speedy 27.35 on Thursday, the second-fastest time in the world this year, just behind American Olivia Smoliga’s 27.33 that won the World Championships.
● Australia’s Cate Campbell won the 50 m Freestyle in 24.16, the fifth-fastest performance in 2019, but slower than her own mark of 24.00, which is no. 2.
● Russia’s Vladimir Morozov, the men’s points leader, won the 50 m Free in 21.50, a season’s best that strengthens his hold on the no. 5 spot on the world list.
● Lithuania’s Danas Rapsys won the 400 m Free in 3:43.91, just slower then his 3:43.36 that is no. 4 on the world list.
● Erica Sullivan got the first women’s World Cup win of the season for the U.S., taking the 400 m Freestyle in 4:08.70.
Hungary’s Katinka Hosszu won the 200 m Butterfly in a very fast 2:07.26; that would be no. 7 on the 2019 list except for her own 2:06.94 mark from May. She put the World Cup in some perspective, noting “After the World Championships, we don’t have time to make adjustments, so I just carried through. The World Cup is more relaxed than the World Championships. I think it is a fun way to just enjoy swimming for what it is and not what you have to do. You choose your events and see what you can do. We have more time to spend with other swimmers, we traveled together and we had days off to walk around the city, it’s really fun.”
As was the case in the Tokyo season opener, the real “Iron Lady” was Russian Vitalina Simonova, who competed in four of the five events held. She finished 11th in the 50 m Free, ninth in the 400 m Free, 11th in the 50 m Back, but won in her specialty, the 200 Breast in 2:24.52, a season’s best. She’s trying to swim in 14 of the 16 individual events for the second straight meet.
Competition continues through Saturday. Summaries so far:
FINA Swimming World Cup II
Jinan (CHN) ~ 8-10 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men
50 m Freestyle: 1. Vladimir Morozov (RUS), 21.50; 2. Michael Andrew (USA), 22.16; 3. Hexin Yu (CHN), 22.31. Also: 5. Blake Pieroni (USA), 22.39.
400 m Free: 1. Danas Rapsys (LTU), 3:43.91; 2. Xinjie Ji (CHN), 3:49.87; 3. Thomas Fraser-Holmes (AUS), 3:54.20. Also: 5. Brennan Gravely (USA), 3:59.13.
200 m Backstroke: 1. Mitch Larkin (AUS), 1:56.39; 2. Tristan Hollard (AUS), 1:57.94; 3. Jiayu Xu (CHN), 1:59.59.
100 m Breaststroke: 1. Zibei Yan (CHN), 59.08; 2. tie, Lizhuo Wang (CHN) and Andrew Wilson (USA), 59.56.
100 m Butterfly: 1. Szebasztian Szabo (HUN), 51.45; 2. Grant Irvine (AUS), 51.60; 3. Santo Condorelli (ITA), 52.00. Also: 4. Michael Andrew (USA), 52.08.
Women
50 m Freestyle: 1. Cate Campbell (AUS), 24.16; 2. Michelle Coleman (SWE), 24.74; 3. Holly Barratt (AUS), 24.91.
400 m Free: 1. Erica Sullivan (USA), 4:08.70; 2. Wenxin Bi (CHN), 4:10.23; 3. Jie Dong (CHN), 4:11.32.
50 m Backstroke: 1. Xiang Liu (CHN), 27.35; 2. Jie Chen (CHN), 27.88; 3. Emily Seebohm (AUS), 27.99.
200 m Breaststroke: 1. Vitalina Simonova (RUS), 2:24.52; 2. Jingyao Yu (CHN), 2:27.51; 3. Yun He (CHN), 2:28.13.
200 m Butterfly: 1. Katinka Hosszu (HUN), 2:07.26; 2. Szuszsanna Jakabos (HUN), 2:07.75; 3. Yufei Zhang (CHN), 2:08.89.
| 1. | PAN AMERICAN GAMES: U.S. swimmers win six of seven events, score 11 medals in one session!
USA Swimming sent essentially its third team to the Pan American Games in Lima, Peru, but what a team it is!
During Wednesday’s evening session, the United States won six of the seven events held, had three 1-2 finishes and collected 11 total medals out of a possible total of 13! And against good competition, especially from Brazil:
● 200 m Freestyle: Claire Rasmus and Meghan Raab went 1-2 in the women’s final, with Rasmus winning by just 0.06, followed by Drew Kibler finishing third in the men’s race, behind a 1-2 finish for Brazil’s Fernando Scheffer and and Bruno Correia.
● 100 m Fly: Veteran Kendyl Stewart won the women’s race in 58.49 ahead of Canada’s Danielle Hanus (58.93) with Sarah Gibson third (59.11).
The men’s race showcased why sport outdraws theater. No matter where in the world, or in what language Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet is performed, you know that neither character will make it to the end. American Tom Shields, a relay gold medalist at the 2015 Worlds and 2016 Olympics, finished dead last in the 200 m Fly final on Tuesday – almost five seconds behind everyone else – and tweeted, “No excuses. I’m ashamed. I’m sorry.”
On Wednesday, he was back in the pool for the 100 m Fly. He got off to a late start – seventh out of eight – and was fifth at the turn. But he somehow moved to a different gear, buzzed the field with the fastest second lap by almost 2/10ths of a second and won in 51.59, out-touching Pan American Games record holder Luis Martinez (GUA) by 4/100ths of a second. No need to apologize for this one; he wore the wry smile of vindication on the victory stand (pictured above; courtesy Lima 2019).
● 200 m Back: Americans Alexandra Walsh and Isabelle Stadden were stroke-for-stroke in the women’s final, but Walsh edged ahead in the final 15 m to touch first in 2:08.30, moving to no. 10 on the world list for 2019. Stadden was only 0.09 behind and now ranks 12th. The men’s final was more of the same, with Daniel Carr taking a slight lead on the third lap and then expanding his advantage over Nick Alexander on the way home for another 1-2 and a 1:58.13-1:58.30 win.
● Mixed 4×100 m Free Relay: The U.S. got a reasonable opening leg from Michael Chadwick (49.09), but Nathan Adrian closed the deficit to Brazil with a great second lap and a 47.56 split with Rasmus going third. She held close to Brazil’s Larissa de Oliveira and left U.S. anchor Margo Geer with just a 6/10ths of a second deficit. No problem for Geer, who swam 53.09 to 54.83 for Etiene Medeiros and the U.S. had its sixth gold, 3:24.84-3:25.97.
That’s 19 medals in two nights for the American swimmers and Thursday’s program includes Adrian swimming in the 100 m Free and the Mixed 4×100 m Medley Relay.
The startling success of the U.S. in the pool overshadowed a lot of other great stuff happening in Lima:
● In track & field, American Mike Rodgers won his first individual international championship in his 12-year professional career with a 10.09 victory in the men’s 100 m. He started well as usual, but moved smartly through the middle of the race to establish a clear lead over the fast-charging Paulo Camilo of Brazil and won by 0.07. The victory was all the sweeter as his gold medal was presented by organizing committee guest Carl Lewis, elegantly attired in a suit and tie!
Jamaica’s Elaine Thompson, the 100-200 m Olympic winner in Rio, had no trouble with the field in Lima, running away in the second half of the race to beat Michelle-Lee Ahye (TTO), 11.18-11.27.
The most exciting event was the men’s shot put, which go crazy in the final round. Brazil’s Darlan Romani was the clear leader at 21.54 m (70-8) and appeared safe, with Canada’s Tim Nedow second at 20.47 m (67-2). But then Mexico’s Uziel Munoz spun the ball out to 20.56 m (67-5 1/2) and Nedow was third. Then Jordan Geist of the U.S., standing fourth, got into his final throw and sent the shot to 20.67 m (67-9 3/4), zooming into second and moving Nedow out of the medals. Nedow couldn’t pass either on his final toss and finished fourth, but then Romani exploded on his final throw, reaching 22.07 m (72-5) and taking the Pan American Games record away from countryman O’Dayne Richards, who finished fifth. Whew!
Cuba’s Juan Miguel Echevarria won a tense duel with Jamaican Tajay Gayle in the long jump, 8.27 m (27-1 3/4) to 8.17 m (26-9 3.4), and Canada’s Damian Warner was a clear winner in the Decathlon with 8,513 points.
● American cycling star Chloe Dygert won her second gold of the Games, taking the 18.5 km Time Trial by more than a minute in 23:36.51. It was an impressive double, after she won a gold with the U.S. Team Pursuit squad in track cycling last Friday!
● In fencing, the U.S. was expected to lead the way and won five of the six individual events, with 2016 Olympic silver winner Daryl Homer winning the men’s Sabre and Katharine Holmes taking the women’s Epee. The team competitions are next.
The Pan Am Games continue through Sunday, and with four competition days left, the U.S. is up to 180 total medals (73-57-50), well ahead of Canada’s 104 (25-41-38) and 102 for Brazil (31-26-45). You can consult the complete results from Lima here.
| 2. | ARCHERY: Stunning world record in Pan Am ranking round for American Brady Ellison
Think about competing in archery, with a bow more than five feet in height and the string so tight it requires 48 pounds of draw weight to shoot each arrow.
Now consider shooting 72 arrows at a target that is 70 m or about 77 yards away. On a football field, that would be shooting from your own 20-yard line to the opponents 3-yard line.
The reigning World Champion, Brady Ellison of the U.S. shot exactly that program on Wednesday in the ranking round of the Pan American Games. He didn’t just hit the target consistently, he shot 55 of his 72 arrows in the 10-ring, plus 15 in the nine-ring and two in the eights. Add it all up and he scored 702 points to set the world record, held by Korea’s Woo-Jin Kim from the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio.
It didn’t win him a medal – this was only the seeding round for the eliminations – but it’s a very meaningful record among archers and places Ellison at the very top of the world as World Champion and world-record holder. Much more on his day (and a photo of the scorecard!) here.
| 3. | GYMNASTICS: Sam Mikulak and Simone Biles going for history at the U.S. Nationals in Kansas City
Both of the defending national All-Around Champions from 2018 are looking for a share of history at the 2019 USA Gymnastics Championships starting on Thursday at the Sprint Center in Kansas City:
● Sam Mikulak, now 26, will be trying for his sixth All-Around national title, which would tie him with Makoto Sakamoto, who won six between 1963-70 for second all-time. The leader in U.S. All-Around national titles in Alfred Jochim, who won seven between 1925-33.
● Simone Biles, still just 22, is also trying for her sixth A-A crown, to tie Clara Schroth, who won in 1945-46-49-50-51-52, for the most ever. During her 2018 triumph, Biles achieved the first Nationals event sweep of her career, not only taking the All-Around, but all four of the individual events as well, for a total of five golds.
Check out the leading contenders for honors and their performances over the last couple of years of the Nationals in our preview here.
| 4. | SWIMMING: Remembering double Olympic gold medalist Mike Troy
Sad news from Arizona, where Mike Troy, winner of two Olympic gold medals in 1960, passed away at the age of 78 on 3 August.
Troy won the 200 m Butterfly and swam on the 4×200 m Freestyle Relay in Rome, with both swims resulting in world-record times. He set the 200 m Fly world record six times, but he held it only until 1961.
He starred at Indiana University, swimming under the direction of Doc Counsilman. He finished his competitive career after college but kept swimming, serving in the U.S. Navy with the underwater demolition program that eventually became known as the S.E.A.L.S. He received the Silver Star for his service in Vietnam.
He moved to San Diego, California after his military service concluded and later to Arizona. He remained active in swimming as a coach of both able-bodied swimmers and Paralympic swimmers, and serves as the national director of the U.S. Paralympic Swim Team.
(Thanks to reader Pete Cava for the tip!)
| 5. | SKIING: Really, skiing? Time for the Roller Ski World Championships in Madona
Believe it or not, the Federation Internationale de Ski is quite busy these days and this week sees the FIS World Roller Ski Championships taking place in Madona, Latvia.
This is a summertime substitute for Cross Country skiing, with a Classical race for men (20 km) and women (10 km), a 200 m Freestyle Sprint, a Freestyle Mass Start race (15 km women, 20 km men) and a Freestyle Team Sprint.
The biggest names on the entry list are Russia’s 2018 triple Olympic silver medalist Alexander Bolshunov and 2019 Worlds bronze medalist Natalia Nepryaeva. Look for results here.
Oh yes, and the World Cup is coming up quickly for Freestyle and Snowboard, with opening events in Cardrona (NZL) on 24-25 August!
| 6. | BOXING: Interim AIBA chief Moustahsane to resign late this month
Multiple sources are reporting that AIBA Interim President Mohamed Moustahsane (MAR) has agreed to resign at the next AIBA Executive Committee meeting to be held later this month.
The Executive Committee will appoint another interim chief until a special Congress is held – possibly in November – where a permanent President is scheduled to be elected.
Moustahsane was appointed in March after elected President Gafur Rakhimov (UZB) resigned in view of criminal allegations against him.
What’s important about AIBA’s actions now – despite its suspension until after the 2020 Tokyo Games – is that the International Olympic Committee’s task force has been meeting with the federation and working with them on a “roadmap” for reinstatement. No doubt this is part of it, as Moustahsane was involved in prior AIBA activities which came under IOC scrutiny on the way to its suspension.
| 7. | IOC to Italy: leave CONI alone, or else …
A proposed law in Italy that would allow the government to “reorganize” the country’s National Olympic Committee (CONI) has draw the attention of the International Olympic Committee.
Agence France Presse reported that a letter from the IOC to CONI expresses deep concern about measures which would interfere with the autonomy of CONI. Sanctions could include the suspension of Italy from the 2020 Tokyo Games; the IOC did just that with Kuwait, where the government essentially took over that country’s NOC and the NOC was suspended from October 2015 until 5 July of this year.
This issue is a touchy one for the IOC and could color the work of the U.S. Congress as it considers changes to the Ted Stevens Olympic and Amateur Sports Act. For its part, the Italian government stated the IOC misunderstands the resolution that was actually passed.
The gateway to the 2019 World Championships in gymnastics is in Kansas City, where the USA Gymnastics National Championships will take place from Thursday through Sunday.
Although the actual Worlds team won’t be selected until a final training camp in September, the Nationals will play a key role in getting invited to the training camp in Colorado Springs for the men (5-9 September) or from 25-27 September for the women. So there is a lot on the line this week:
● 08 August: Men, session I ~ 8 p.m. Eastern on NBCSN
● 09 August: Women, session I ~ 8 p.m. Eastern on NBCSN
● 10 August: Men, session II ~ 8 p.m. Eastern on NBCSN
● 11 August: Women session II ~ 8 p.m. Eastern on NBC
The U.S. National Junior Championships will take place on the same dates, but in the afternoon.
The stars expected to compete:
Men:
● Sam Mikulak ~ 2013-14-15-16-18 National All-Around Champion
● Yul Moldauer ~ 2017 National All-Around Champion, 2018 runner-up
● Akash Modi ~ 2017 Parallel Bars winner
● Allan Bower ~ 2018 All-Around bronze; 2017 All-Around silver
● Colin van Wicklen ~ 2018 Vault and High Bar bronzes
● Trevor Howard ~ 2018 Rings winner
● Donothan Bailey ~ 2018 Parallel Bars and High Bar silver
● Alec Yoder ~ 2018 Pommel Horse winner
Mikulak, 26, finally won a World Championships individual medal with a bronze last year in the High Bar, but has dominated the American scene since 2013. If he wins in Kansas City, he will tie Makoto Sakamoto, who won six All-Around titles between 1963-70 for second all-time. The all-time leader in national titles in Alfred Jochim, who won seven between 1925-33.
Women:
● Simone Biles ~ 2013-14-15-16-18 National All-Around Champion
● Morgan Hurd ~ 2018 All-Around runner-up; Uneven Bars & Floor bronzes
● Riley McCusker ~ 2018 All-Around bronze; Uneven Bars silver, Beam bronze
● Kara Eaker ~ 2018 Balance Beam silver
● Jade Carey ~ 2018 Floor silver; Vault bronze; 2017 Vault winner
● Jordan Chiles ~ 2018 Vault silver; 2017 All-Around silver
● MyKayla Skinner ~ 2016 Vault silver and Floor bronze
● Trinity Thomas ~ 2017 Balance Beam and Floor bronzes
● Leanne Wong ~ 2018 National Junior Champion
Eaker, Hurd, McCusker, Wong and Aleah Finnegan won the team gold medal at the Pan American Games in Lima last week. McCusker won the Balance Beam and Eaker won the Balance Beam.
Biles will also be looking for her sixth national All-Around title, to tie Clara Schroth, who won in 1945-46-49-50-51-52, for the most ever. Biles had a first during her victory last season; she not only won the All-Around, but won all four of the individual events as well, for a total of five golds.
Including the juniors, the fields for Kansas City include 77 men and 46 women. Look for results here.
There are no medals handed out for qualifying scores. But one of the truly respected records in archery is the ranking round score, which for Olympic-style (Recurve) competitions is 72 arrows shot at 70 m (~230 feet, or almost 77 yards).
A perfect score would be 720, or 72 consecutive 10s. As of Wednesday morning in Lima, Peru, the world record was 700, shot by Korea’s Woo-Jin Kim in Rio in 2016. Then American Brady Ellison, who won the 2019 World Championship in June, stepped up to the line for the Pan American Games ranking round.
Shooting in a ranking round is in groups of three arrows, known as “ends,” for which 30 would be a perfect score. He started 30-28-30-30-30-28 and finished the first half with 30-29-30-29-29-27 for 350 points, halfway to Kim’s mark.
He was better in the second half, starting 30-28 and then scoring 16 straight 10s and then finishing with 30-29-30-28 for a 702 total.
Out of 72 arrows, the 30-year-old Ellison shot 55 10s, just 15 nines and two eights. He is now only the second ever to shoot 700 in a competition round.
“It means so much,” he told World Archery’s Chris Wells afterwards. I’ve been shooting so good this year and I’ve shot so many 700s in practice. I shot 708 yesterday in practice. And we stepped onto that field today and there wasn’t a touch of wind on it and I was like, I know it, I got it.
“I’ve been shooting good enough and I had the weather to do it and it’s nice to finally get it.”
As brilliant as Ellison was, he wasn’t alone on the field. Marcus D’Almeida (BRA) qualified second at 692 points and American Jack Williams was third with 689.
It’s important to note that Ellison, the 2011 Pan American Games champion and 2015 silver medalist, hasn’t won anything yet. He’s obviously seeded first going into the elimination rounds, but anything can happen there. But he will long remember setting a world record in Lima that promises to last for a while.
Whenever it seems certain that Olympic sport is essentially dead and that most of these sports are on their way back to recreational status comes an event that shows their epitaph is not quite ready to be confirmed.
Last week, over a total of six days, a total of 178,000 spectators showed up to watch a combined program of 10 national championships in Berlin, Germany.
That’s right: 178,000! 178,000! Vas ist das? Wunderbar!
And of that total, the two-day crowd for the track & field championships in the renovated Olympiastadion was 60,550, with 26,200 on Saturday and 34,350 on Sunday! Really!
This didn’t come about by accident. The 10 events were combined into a defined program called Die Finals Berlin 2019, promoted as a group for a full year, and included:
● 30 July (1): Boxing preliminaries
● 31 July (2): Boxing ~ Track Cycling
● 1 August (3) : Boxing ~ Track Cycling ~ Swimming
● 2 August (3): Boxing ~ Track Cycling ~ Swimming
● 3 August (10): Archery ~ Athletics ~ Boxing ~ Canoe Sprint ~ Track Cycling ~ Gymnastics ~ Modern Pentathlon ~ Mountain Biking ~ Swimming ~ Triathlon
● 4 August (10): Archery ~ Athletics ~ Boxing ~ Canoe Sprint ~ Track Cycling ~ Gymnastics ~ Modern Pentathlon ~ Mountain Biking ~ Swimming ~ Triathlon
The total of 178,000 did not include the free family sports festival in the grounds around the stadium, where some of the sports could be tried, especially by youngsters, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.
The concept was a combined effort of the national governing bodies in Germany, the two public television stations in Germany – ARD (on Saturday) and ZDF (on Sunday) – who combined to show the event from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. each weekend day, and the City of Berlin. According to the announcement of the event:
“The sports associations organize their national championships as independent organizers. The state of Berlin and the broadcasters ARD and ZDF are creating an overarching multi-sport event brand in their first, close and direct cooperation. Only the sports metropolis of Berlin has the venues, resources and competencies to set up this multi-sports event in a timely manner and, with its infrastructure, offers the ideal venue.”
The climactic weekend program featured about 3,000 athletes competing for 180 titles in 140 disciplines within 48 hours. There were nine venues operating in four clusters around the city, with five of the sports held in and around the Olympiastadion.
Attendance at the archery, canoeing, mountain biking, modern pentathlon and triathlon were free and the combined spectator total was in the hundreds of thousands. Tickets were sold for athletics, boxing, track cycling, gymnastics and swimming (and totaled 178,000 combined). For the track & field events, tickets were reportedly priced as low as € 12.50 (about $14 U.S.).
The metropolitan area also has a population of 3.6 million and a huge hotel infrastructure, with more than 55,000 available rooms.
It’s a remarkable feat and raises the question of why this can’t be replicated elsewhere. It’s certainly far beyond what happens in the U.S. with individual championships held in different cities. For example, in the past couple of weeks:
● 25-28 July: USA Track & Field National Championships at Des Moines, Iowa drew 30,367 over four days at Drake Stadium, with crowds of 5,179, 7,150, 8,218 and 9,820.
● 31 July-4 August: USA Swimming National Championships at Stanford, California drew about 2,000 people per day (over five days) at the Avery Aquatic Center, which seats 2,530.
The United States Olympic Committee has had ideas analogous to this in the past that failed. The Titan Games was held in 2003 and 2004, featuring boxing, fencing, wrestling, judo, taekwondo, karate, weightlifting and the shot put, in a “USA vs. the World” format, but had no relation to the national championships in any sport. (No relation to the 2019 NBC television show of the same name.)
There idea of putting together a half-dozen or more national championships in the same U.S. city at the same time has not, to my knowledge, been tried. It should be.
The sports do not have to be the same as were combined in Berlin, but it’s worth noting that the “big three” of athletics, gymnastics and swimming were all involved in the Berlin program.
This is not a program which could held soon. Certainly not in 2020, with the Olympic Games in Tokyo on the horizon. Not in 2021, with world championships being held in athletics and aquatics and many venues already selected.
But in 2022, there are no FINA or IAAF Worlds and the FIG World Championships are held late in the year. This might be worth a try.
Moreover, this is not a program which requires any coordination by the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC), which – going into 2022 – will already have its hands full preparing for the Olympic Winter Games in Beijing (CHN). In Berlin, the coordination of the events was made directly with the German national governing bodies.
Perhaps the U.S. governing bodies could get together on this? After all, there is an NGB Council, with Rich Bender of USA Wrestling its representative on the USOPC Board.
NBC would a possible broadcast partner, but ESPN is showing more than 100 hours of the Pan American Games on its channels, both in English and Spanish. The other sports networks are also possibilities. Even the FIFA World Cup will not be an issue in 2022, since it will be held in November and December due to the hot weather in Qatar, leaving the summer period wide open.
Is this concept possible in the U.S.? Yes. Likely? No, as it requires enormous coordination and a host city which is willing to not just help with some of the logistics, but to help promote it as both a civic and tourism attraction.
Los Angeles already has the 2028 Olympic Games to worry about, but there are many other options, especially in university towns which have significant facilities and some pro sports. And what about Texas?
This was a new concept for Berlin and it worked beyond the expectations of the planners, who had expected about 70,000 spectators … and got 178,000. Are some of the NGB chiefs willing to try something this wild?
Can the Olympic Movement in the U.S. afford not to?
Rich Perelman
Editor
The second leg of the FINA Swimming World Cup is assembling in Jinan (CHN) with competition from Thursday through Saturday at the Jinan Olympic Sports Center Natatorium.
The entries are not at the level of the first World Cup in Tokyo. The American contingent, as expected, shrunk considerably from the Tokyo opener. Five Americans are entered in Jinan, led by Michael Andrew, with seven events. Freestylers Blake Pieroni and Brennan Gravely are also in, plus breaststroke ace Andrew Wilson and Erica Sullivan, the only women’s entrant.
However, there are plenty of quality swimmers to look for:
● Mitchell Larkin (AUS) ~ 50-100-200 m Back; 200 m Medley
● Vladimir Morozov (RUS) ~ 50-100 m Free; 50 m Back; 50 m Fly
● Danas Rapsys (LTU) ~ 100-200-400 m Free; 50-100 m Back; 100 m Fly
● Blake Pieroni (USA) ~ 50-100-200-400 m Free; 50-100 m Fly
● Andrew Wilson (USA) ~ 50-100-200 m Breast
● Michael Andrew (USA) ~ 50 m Free; 50 m Back; 50-100 m Breast; 50-100 m Fly; 200 m Medley
● Cate Campbell (AUS) ~ 50-100 m Free; 50 m Back; 50 m Fly
● Emily Seebohm (AUS) ~ 50-100-200 m Back; 50 m Breast; 200 m Medley
● Alia Atkinson (JAM) ~ 50-100-200 m Breast; 50-100 m Fly
● Erica Sullivan (USA) ~ 200-400-800 m Free; 200 m Back; 200 m Fly; 400 m Medley
● Vitalina Simonova (RUS) ~ 50-100-200-400-800 m Free; 50-100 m Back; 50-100-200 m Breast; 50-100 m Fly; 200-400 m Medley
● Katinka Hosszu (HUN) ~ 100-200-400-800 m Free; 50-100-200 m Back; 100-200 m Breast; 50-100-200 m Fly; 200-400 m Medley
Hosszu and Russia’s Simonova both entered 14 events, and where Hosszu cut back in Tokyo, Simonova went on to compete in all 14 she entered! She only made one final, but the feat was impressive. Let’s see how many each competes in this week.
Hosszu won the 200 m Fly, and the 200-400 m Medleys, plus a silver medal in the 100 m Back. Adding in the bonus points for the second-best performance of the meet (per the FINA points table) and she’s the leader in the overall women’s standings:
● Men:
1. 48 ~ Vladimir Morozov (RUS)
2. 42 ~ Andrew Wilson (USA)
3. 42 ~ Yasuhiro Kusuke (JPN)
● Women:
1. 54 ~ Katinka Hosszu (HUN)
2. 45 ~ Cate Campbell (AUS)
3. 36 ~ Emily Seebohm (AUS)
Morozov, a two-time World Cup champ, won the 50-100 m Free and 50 m Back in Tokyo.
Prize money is available for the top six: $1,500-1,000-500-400-300-200. Look for results here.
The UCI Mountain Bike World Cup season in hurtling toward the close, with only this week’s clashes in Lenzerheide (SUI) and a final set of races in Snowshoe, West Virginia in early September left to decide the seasonal titles. The men’s race has four primary challengers and the women’s title is down to two real contenders:
● Men/Cross Country:
1. 1,390 ~ Nino Schurter (SUI) ~ 6-time World Cup Champion
2. 1,274 ~ Mathieu van der Poel (NED) ~ Two wins, one silver this season
3. 1,165 ~ Henrique Avancini (BRA) ~ Two bronzes this season
4. 1,143 ~ Mathias Flueckiger (SUI) ~ One win, two silvers, one bronze this season
5. 813 ~ Jordan Sarrou (FRA)
● Women/Cross Country:
1. 1,415 ~ Jolanda Neff (SUI) ~ Four silvers in five races in 2019
2. 1,382 ~ Kate Courtney (USA) ~ Three wins this season; reigning World Champion
3. 950 ~ Anne Terpstra (NED) ~ One win in 2019
4. 940 ~ Pauline Ferrand-Prevot (FRA) ~ One win this season
5. 805 ~ tie, Anne Tauber (NED) and Sina Frei (SUI)
Scoring in Cross Country includes the Short Track race (worth up to 125 points) and the XCO race, worth up to 250.
● Men/Downhill:
1. 1,132 ~ Loic Bruni (FRA) ~ Three wins, two silvers this season
2. 1,000 ~ Amaury Pierron (FRA) ~ Defending World Cup Champion
3. 939 ~ Troy Brosnan (AUS) ~ One silvers, three bronzes this season
4. 754 ~ Loris Vergier (FRA) ~ One silver, two bronzes this season
5. 723 ~ Danny Hart (GBR)
● Women/Downhill:
1. 1,250 ~ Tracey Hannah (AUS) ~ Only one to win medals in all five XCO races
2. 1,080 ~ Marine Cabirou (FRA) ~ One win, two silvers in last three races
3. 739 ~ Nina Hoffmann (GER) ~ One silver, one bronze in 2019
4. 730 ~ Rachel Atherton (GBR) ~ Two wins, one silver this season
5. 639 ~ Veronika Widmann (ITA)
The Cross Country Short Track race will be held on Friday, the Downhills on Saturday and the Cross Country Olympic race on Sunday. Look for results here.
Lenzerheide last hosted a Mountain Bike World Cup in 2017, when Schurter won the XCO race, along with Annie Last (GBR); the Downhills were won by Greg Minaar (RSA) and Myriam Nicole (FRA).
| 1. | CANOE/SLALOM: American Olympic fans, remember this name for Tokyo: Evy Leibfarth
One of the powers of sport is to propel an unknown into the public spotlight. While she hasn’t quite made it yet, all the elements are in place for a pigtailed teen from Bryson City, North Carolina to be a star.
Her name is Evy Leibfarth (pictured above) and she is the Pan American Games gold medalist in the Canoe Slalom K-1.
She has been the talk of the Canoe Slalom world since she debuted on the ICF World Cup circuit in June, paddling through the very difficult course in Bratislava (SVK) and making the finals in both the C-1 and K-1 events, placing seventh and 10th, respectively.
The shocker came a week later, in the Ljubljana (SLO) World Cup. After finishing ninth in the K-1 finals, she picked up only two penalties on the way to a third-place finish in the C-1, the first-ever World Cup medal by an American women in that discipline!
So she came to the Pan American Games as someone to watch and she did not disappoint. She won the K-1 title with ease, gliding through the gates without a penalty and clocking 93.70 seconds to win by exactly seconds ahead of Argentina’s Nadia Riquelme.
“It’s really incredible,” she said afterwards “It’s really such a great event. There are so many great athletes competing here and it’s so cool to be part of such a big team. I’m just psyched I was able to put together two good runs.
“I’m not as strong as some of the senior athletes, but for me right now racing is just a lot of fun and I feel like I don’t have a lot of expectations.”
Leibfarth then won a silver medal behind Brazil’s reigning World Champion, Ana Satila, in the Extreme K-1, an insane mix of a summer-camp race and the demolition derby in which four racers start at the same time and race together down a course which required them to roll over (into the water) at one point on the route.
Said Leibfarth, “It was definitely the most fun event of the weekend. At some point, you just forget everyone that’s there and are just focused on getting around the gates the fastest.
“Sometimes that means trying to cut other people off, but in the end it’s kind of funny because all of a sudden instead of just seeing boats, you start to see the athletes and that’s pretty cool. The photos from the event are all really funny. We all have really bad paddling faces. Just so focused and just ‘ugggh’.”
For much more on Leibfarth, check out her story on canoeicf.com.
| 2. | PAN AMERICAN GAMES: U.S. continues to roar in Lima, passes 50 golds with a week to go
The Pan Am Games in Lima (PER) has moved into its final week and the United States team – as expected – is running away in the medal race, having won 141 total medals (57-46-38) through Monday night.
Canada is second with 88 medals (23-38-27) and there is a tight race for third between Brazil (78: 23-18-37) and Mexico (76: 21-18-37).
The scope of the Pan Am Games is enormous, with 416 total events. To check out the medalists from the first eight full days of competition at the Games (27 July-4 August), you can only go to one place: the TSX Stat Pack for Monday, 5 August here.
On Monday in Lima:
● The U.S.’s Lee Kiefer (pictured below) won the first women’s fencing event of the Pan Am Games in Foil, the start of what is expected to be a strong U.S. showing in the sport.
● Americans won 11 out of the 24 medals awarded in Rhythmic Gymnastics, with Evita Griskenas winning the All-Around, Hoop, Ball and Ribbon events, while Camilla Feeley won the Clubs event and scored a silver in the All-Around and bronzes in Hoop and Ball.
The organizing committee has been complimented by PanAm Sports for the smooth running of the event so far, with the primary concerns about transportation times getting to and from events in the congested city of Lima. But there are smiles all around.
| 3. | CYCLING: Unthinkable tragedy as 22-year-old Bjorg Lambrecht dies after crash in Tour de Pologne
An almost incomprehensible tragedy struck the 76th Tour de Pologne on Monday, as Belgian rider Bjorg Lambrecht, 22, crashed and fell into a concrete channel. He was severely injured and despite the efforts of the medical staff, passed away in a nearby hospital during surgery.
Monday’s third stage of 150.5 km was held on a flat, loop course between the cities of Chorzow and Zabrze. Lambrecht crashed 48 km into the race, on a section of road that was not considered dangerous.
His team, Lotto-Soudal, was devastated of course and the stage winner, German Pascal Ackermann – who won only after a disqualification of another rider – said afterwards, “Today, the result of the race doesn’t matter.”
The Tour will continue, but the fourth stage will be substantially shortened and flattened as a tribute. Lambrecht was a promising rider, winning the silver medal in the 2018 UCI U-23 World Championships road race. Rest in peace.
| 4. | SWIMMING: Lochte’s Medley success at Stanford best of his four events there
On the day after he turned 35 years old, 12-time Olympic medalist Ryan Lochte returned to the USA Swimming National Championships for the first time in three years and had a busy five days.
While his sensational win in the 200 m Medley that moved him to no. 11 on the world list for 2019 was widely reported, his other swims were less so:
● 200 m Free: 27th in heats (1:50.25); skipped D Final
● 100 m Back: =15th in heats (55.08); skipped B Final
● 100 m Fly: 23rd in heats (53.25); 4th in C Final (53.36)
● 200 m Medley: 1st in heats (1:58.77); won A Final (1:57.76)
It’s still a remarkable performance for Lochte, who was suspended for 10 months on 8 September 2016 for his role in the early-morning incident at a Rio gas station during the Olympic Games (more here) and then for 14 months by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency on 23 July 2018 for taking a “prohibited intravenous infusion” without a pre-arranged Therapeutic Use Exemption.
Beyond the world ranking of his Medley win, the time ranks fourth among Americans for the year and was 0.98 seconds behind Chase Kalisz’s bronze-medal performance at the 2019 World Championships in Korea. He’s back in the mix.
| 5. | ATHLETICS: Olympic gold medalist Sally Pearson retires; Mihambo jumps 23-6 in Berlin in front of 34,350!
“I am here to let you all know that I have decided to retire from my sport of athletics. It has been a long 16 years, but also a fun and exciting 16 years. My body has decided it is time to let it go, and move forward onto a new direction. I hope I have made you proud Australia.”
Age and injuries – conditions often intertwined – have closed the career of Australian hurdles star Sally Pearson at age 32. She won the 100 m hurdles at the 2011 and 2017 World Championships and out-lasted defending champion Dawn Harper-Nelson of the U.S. at the finish of the 2012 Olympic Games in London (Harper-Nelson would have won if the race was 101 m).
Pearson had suffered repeated injuries of late, but had run 12.70 this year and could have been a contender for medals at the Worlds in Doha if not for the physical problems. The winner of 16 Australian titles, she leaves highly respected and with a lifetime best of 12.28, no. 6 on the all-time list, from back in 2011 at the World Championships.
American Brittney Reese, now 32, is the four-time World Champion in the women’s long jump, winning in 2009-11-13-17, to go along with her 2012 Olympic gold medal and 2016 silver. But Germany’s Malaika Mihambo, 25, sent a message on Sunday: “Catch me if you can.”
Mihambo, already the world leader in the long jump at 7.07 m (23-2 1/2), extended that lead – and her lifetime best to 7.16 m (23-6) in winning the German Nationals at the Olympiastadion in Berlin.
She performed in front of a big audience, too: 34,350 on the final day of the meet (video evidence here) and 60,550 for the two-day event. Wow!
| 6. | COMING ATTRACTIONS: USA Gymnastics Nationals start Thursday in Kansas City
While the Pan Am Games continue, the selection event for the U.S. teams for the 2019 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships comes this week with the USA Gymnastics National Championships in Kansas City.
The incomparable Simone Biles will lead the women’s competition, of course, along with members of the gold medal-winning women’s team from the Pan American Games in Lima.
Also: the second FINA Swimming World Cup will be staged in Jinan (CHN) this weekend and the 2019 Sport Climbing World Championships will begin a 10-day run next Sunday in Hachioji (JPN).
| 7. | FLASHBACK: The legend of Babe Didrikson was born this week, 87 years ago
Women were only allowed to compete in Olympic track & field in 1928 and by the 1932 Games in Los Angeles, there were only six events available: 100 m, 80 m hurdles, 4×100 m relay, high jump, shot put, discus and javelin.
If she was allowed, Babe Didrikson might have tried to win them all. As it was, she became a legend in Los Angeles, 87 years ago this week.
She started off on 31 July (last week) with an Olympic Record of 43.69 m (143-4) in the javelin, then won in the 80 m hurdles on 4 August in a world record of 11.7, out-leaning Evelyne Hall at the tape.
Her third event – the limit imposed by U.S. officials – was the high jump and she and Jean Shiley of the U.S. tied with a world record of 1.65 m (5-4 3/4). As they both missed three times at 1.67 m (5-5 1/2), they had a jump-off back at 1.65 m and both cleared. But the judges said Didrikson went over head first – she said she jumped the same way she had all during the event – and declared Shiley the winner.
But the 21-year-old from Port Arthur, Texas was a star. She went on to become the greatest female athlete in the world, competing in basketball and then in golf. She took up the sport in 1935 and during her career that ended only with her death in 1956, she won 41 LPGA Tour events and 41 other events. She competed in four PGA (men’s) tournaments, missing the cut in the 1938 Los Angeles Open, but making the cut in three other events in 1945, the only female player to ever do so.
Imagine what she could do today, in an environment much more favorable to women in sports!
The ultimate tragedy struck the UCI World Tour on Monday during the third stage of the Tour de Pologne, when Belgian rider Bjorg Lambrecht, 22, crashed into a concrete channel and died hours after receiving medical treatment.
The crash took place during Monday’s 150.5 km flat stage, held on a loop course from Chorzow to Zabrze. Lambrecht crashed 48 km into the race, on a flat section that did not appear dangerous.
CyclingNews.com reported that “Race doctor Ryszard Wisniewski was quoted as saying, ‘We don’t know why he fell, it was on a totally flat road. We tried to give a heart massage just afterwards, then we called for a helicopter but his condition was so serious it wasn’t able to transport him.
“‘So we did more reanimation there where he was and then took him to the hospital by ambulance. More reanimation was done on the way to the hospital, but he died during the operation there in the hospital [in Rybnik].’”
Lambrecht’s team, Lotto-Soudal posted, “The biggest tragedy possible that could happen to the family, friends and teammates of Bjorg has happened. Rest in peace Bjorg.”
The race will continue with a shortened, flattened fourth stage. Originally on a hilly, 173.3 km route from Jaworzno to Kocierz, the race organizers posted a notice stating “The race organisers, the jury and the cycling teams have made a decision to neutralize the 4th stage of Tour de Pologne to pay our respects to Bjorg. The stage route is reduced to 133.7km and the final laps cut to 1. Any further decisions regarding tomorrow’s stage will be communicated in agreement with Lotto Soudal.”
The third stage was shaken again at the end, as Fabio Jakobsen (NED) won but was disqualified for pushing another rider during the final sprint, giving the victory to German Pascal Ackermann. Also the winner of Stage 1, Ackermann is the overall leader in the race, but said of the unimaginable tragedy of a rider dying from injuries during a race, “Today, the result of the race doesn’t matter.”
Lambrecht was a promising rider, having finished second in the U-23 World Championships road race in 2018. He was 13th in the Tour de Pologne second stage on Sunday. The race is scheduled to continue through Friday (9th). Results and standings are here.
The Stat Pack: a summary of results of international Grand Prix, World Cup and World Championships events, plus U.S. domestic events and Pan American championships events of note.
In this week’s issue are reports on 12 events in 6 sports, plus the Pan American Games:
● Multi-Sport: Pan American Games in Lima
● Badminton: World Tour 500: Thailand Open in Bangkok
● Beach Vllybl: FIVB World Tour 5-star Major in Vienna
● Cycling: UCI MWT: Clasica Ciclista San Sebastien in San Sebastian
● Cycling: UCI MWT: Prudential RideLondon-Surrey Classic in London
● Cycling: UCI WWT: Prudential RideLondon Classique in London
● Cycling: UCI Mountain Bike World Cup Downhill-XCO-XCC in Val di Sole
● Golf: LPGA AIG Women’s British Open in Little Brickhill
● Swimming: FINA World Cup 1 in Tokyo
● Swimming: USA Swimming National Championships in Stanford
● Swimming: FINA Marathon World Series 6 at Lac Megantic
● Volleyball: FIVB Women’s Olympic Qualification at six sites
plus our calendar of upcoming events through 25 August. Click below for the PDF:
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| 1. | SWIMMING: New talent shines at the 2019 USA Swimming Nationals, as if the U.S. didn’t have enough stars already
In the aftermath of the 2019 FINA World Championships, where a U.S. team picked in 2018 won 27 medals and won 14 events while the next closest country won five, how important could the USA Swimming Nationals Championships a week later at Stanford be?
Great, as it turned out, no doubt causing the rending of garments and tearing of hair among coaches and athletes of other countries when they saw a whole new generation of stars emerge:
● Maxime Rooney (21) came into the meet with a lifetime best in the men’s 100 m Butterfly of 52.28 and left as national champ after swimming 50.68 in the heats, a time which would have won the Worlds silver medal. He now stands no. 2 in the world for 2019, behind only World Champion Caeleb Dressel.
● Regan Smith (17), already a double gold medalist and double world-record setter in the Worlds in the Backstroke, won the 200 m Butterfly in 2:07.26, no. 6 on the 2019 world list. Another event for 2020? “I love butterfly,” she said.
● Emma Weyant (17), won the women’s 400 m Medley in 4:35.37, a lifetime best by five seconds and fastest by an American this year and no. 5 on the world list. She beat both members of the U.S. Worlds team in the final.
● Shaine Casas (19) finished second in the 200 m Backstroke in a lifetime best of 1:55.79 to move to sixth on the year list, then exploded in the 100 m Back, dropping almost two seconds to win in 52.72, no. 5 on the world list and a time that would have won the Worlds bronze medal!
● Bobby Finke (19) appears ready to breathe some life into American men’s distance swimming; he won three events at Stanford, in the 800 m Free, 1,500 m Free and the 400 m Medley. His Medley time of 4:13.15 ranks no. 9 on the world list, as does his 1,500 m win (14:51.15) and his 7:47.58 for the 800 m is no. 11.
There was much more, including a 47.39 in the 100 m Free – no. 3 for 2019 – by veteran Ryan Held (with Rooney – pictured below – right behind at 47.61 (no. 5 for 2019) and the return of Ryan Lochte – at age 35 – who won the 200 m Medley in 1:57.76, placing him no. 11 in the world for 2019.
Not only is the rest of the world shaking its head, but so are some members of the U.S. World Championships team that will have to deal with these folks at the Olympic Trials in Omaha next summer.
| 2. | LANE ONE: Anti-Olympic activists appear to be getting their strategy from … Dr. Quincy Adams Wagstaff?
I don’t know what they have to say
It makes no difference anyway
Whatever it is, I’m against it!
That’s how Groucho Marx – as the new head of the fictional Huxley College – opened the 1932 comedy classic “Horse Feathers” and over 87 years later, his position has been adopted as the stance to be used by anti-Olympic activists in Japan in advance of the 2020 Olympic Games. Groucho’s lines went over a lot better – then and now – and despite the dire predictions to the contrary, and a taxpayer cost estimated at about $7 billion, the Japanese public has embraced the Games and volunteered in droves (about 154,000!) and more than 7.5 million online applicants are chasing the 7.8 million tickets available for the Games.
There are significant issues related to the Olympics in Tokyo, but decrying how the Games will impact the homeless for a few weeks instead of solving their long-term care needs demonstrates that the activists actually don’t care about the Games at all, but about trying to use the Games to get some attention for their failed political agenda by another means.
(Yes, the video of Groucho singing “I’m Against It!” is embedded.)
| 3. | PAN AMERICAN GAMES: U.S. on target, as Rhode goes 6-for-6 with Skeet gold
As expected, the United States is running away with the medal count at the Pan American Games in Lima (PER). Through the first nine full days of competition, the American squad has earned 132 medals (54-44-34) to 79 for Canada (19-36-24) and 72 for Brazil (22-16-34).
The most impressive U.S. team at the PAG has been from USA Shooting, which won an astonishing 20 medals (10-8-2) to 25 for everyone else! The American gold winners included Sandra Uptagrafft in the 25 m Pistol, Alison Weisz and Lucas Kozeniesky in the men’s and women’s 10 m Air Rifle; Tim Sherry and Sarah Beard in the 50 m Rifle/3 Positions; Brian Burrows and Ashley Carroll in men’s and women’s Trap; Christian Elliott and Kim Rhode in men’s and women’s Skeet and the Mixed Trap duo of Carroll and Derek Haldeman.
Kozeniesky had a wild week of canceled flights, lost luggage, stolen equipment and a kidney infection (more here) – and still won – but Rhode (pictured below) might be an even more amazing story. She has already won six Olympic medals in her six Olympic Games in 1996-2000-04-08-12-16, but she has also now won six Pan American Games medals in six different Games: 1999-2003 golds in Double Trap and then when that event was dumped from the Olympic program, she started fresh and won a 2007 silver in Skeet and now golds in Skeet in 2011-15-19.
At 40, she has no interest in slowing down, and is well aware of the feats of Swedish shooter Oscar Swahn, who won a gold medal in 1912 at age 64 and a silver medal at age 72 in 1920!
The U.S. also had noteworthy success in weightlifting, with victories from Wesley Kitts in the men’s 109 kg class (389 kg/~858 lbs.), and Sarah Robles, who dominated the women’s +87 kg division, lifting a combined total of 284 kg (~626 lbs.).
The U.S. boxers won a total of 10 medals (1-4-5), with Oshae Jones winning the women’s 69 kg division. The American men won five medals (0-2-3), but were 0-4 in bouts against Cuba, which won eight of the 10 men’s weight classes. The U.S. women won medals in all five weight classes.
Competition continues this week, with more than 200 events remaining, including major attractions including track & field, swimming and wrestling.
| 4. | FOOTBALL: U.S. Women’s National Team swamps Ireland, 3-0 at Rose Bowl
The first game of the five-stop “Victory Tour” for the U.S. women was an easy, 3-0 victory over outclassed Ireland in front of an impressive crowd of 37,040 at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California on Saturday night.
The American squad, playing without Megan Rapinoe and Alex Morgan, got first-half goals from Tobin Heath (16th minute), Lindsey Horan (31st) and Carli Lloyd (41st), her 114th for the United States. The U.S. out-shot Ireland, 29-2 for the game, and will next face Portugal twice, on 29 August in Philadelphia and on 3 September in St. Paul.
| 5. | VOLLEYBALL: U.S. women one of six to qualify for Tokyo, but it wasn’t easy
After surviving a real scare against Bulgaria in its second game, the U.S. women’s team punched its ticket to Tokyo by defeating Argentina on Sunday in straight sets (3-0) to win its “regional” in Shreveport-Bossier City, Louisiana.
There were six Tokyo qualifying spots on offer in four-team competitions in six different groups worldwide. Italy, China and Serbia all swept through their qualifiers, winning all three matches fairly easily. Russia won all three of its matches to qualify and Brazil survived scares and barely made it through five-set wins against Azerbaijan and the Dominican Republic.
The U.S. women breezed past Kazakhstan in straight sets, but then almost got beat by a tenacious Bulgarian squad. The U.S. lost the first set, 25-21, won the second set by 25-19, lost the third set by 25-21 again and had to win two sets in a row. The fourth set went back and forth, but excellent blocking keyed a 25-20 win. In the final set, strong hitting from Jordan Larson and Jordan Thompson helped the U.S. survive with a 15-10 victory.
Said U.S. coach Karch Kiraly, “It was pretty rough, and we got pushed to the brink, and I loved the response that our team had down 2-1.”Now they can look ahead to Tokyo, where they will be favorites for a medal.
| 6. | BEACH VOLLEYBALL: And the gold-medal favorites for Tokyo are …
Just in case you are interested, the favorites for the gold medals in Tokyo – as of right now – are Norway’s Anders Mol and Christian Sorum and Canada’s Sarah Pavan and Melissa Humana-Paredes. Both won impressively at the FIVB 5-star Major in Vienna (AUT) on Sunday.
Mol and Sorum have become almost invincible over the last two years and won their seventh tournament of this season, tying with four other squads for the second-most wins in one campaign. They’re two short of the record of nine held by Americans Phil Dalhausser and Todd Rogers from 2020, but they’re just about out of tournaments for 2019. The Norwegians beat Brazil’s Alison Cerutti and Alvarho Filho in the final and have now won 61 of their 65 matches this season!
Pavan and Humana-Paredes won the world title in 2019 and have followed up with two more wins, this time defeating Brazil’s Maria Antonelli andCarol Salgado by 21-19, 21-16 in 47 minutes. It’s the sixth World Tour win for the Canadians as a team and they will be hard to beat in Tokyo.
The World Tour season will end in early September with the World Tour Final in Rome (ITA).
| 7. | FLASHBACK: Remembering Jesse Owens, Mary Lou Retton in their Olympic moments
● Games of the XIth Olympiad/Berlin 1936: Jesse Owens won the first of his four gold medals in the infamous Berlin Olympic Games on 3 August, leading a 1-2 finish for the U.S. with Ralph Metcalfe in a wind-aided 10.3-10.4. He followed that up with the long jump gold on the following day, taking the lead in the first round (7.74 m/25-4 3/4), then extending his lead to 7.87 m (25-10) in the second round and 7.94 m (26-0 3/4) in round five. German Luz Long reached 7.87 m (25-10) in round five, so Owens felt the pressure going into his final jump, and he responded with the best jump of the day: an Olympic Record of 8.06 m (26-5 1/2) to confirm his second gold.
The final of the 200 m was on 5 August and Owens won his third gold in three days with a world-record time of 20.7, leading another 1-2 sweep ahead of Mack Robinson – older brother of Jackie Robinson – at 21.1. His fourth gold didn’t come until 9 August, when he and Metcalfe replaced Marty Glickman and Sam Stoller – both Jewish – on the 4×100 m relay, and the combo of Owens, Metcalfe, Foy Draper and Frank Wykoff equaled the world record (40.0) in the heats and then set it at 39.8 in the final. Set against the backdrop of the Nazi government in Germany, it was one of the most important moments in sports history.
● Games of the XXIIIrd Olympiad/Los Angeles 1984: It seems impossible, but it was 35 years ago that the revolutionary Los Angeles Games were underway and had already made heroes out of gymnast Mary Lou Retton and sprinter Carl Lewis.
Retton, standing all of 4-9, electrified the crowd at UCLA’s Pauley Pavilion with her energetic and powerful style that presaged today’s stars like Simone Biles. She finished the Team competition with 39.525 points for the All-Around, slightly ahead of Romania’s Ecaterina Szabo. Retton scored 10.0s on the Vault and Floor to one for Szabo (on Beam) and managed a 0.5-point victory, 79.175-79.125 in what was considered a noteworthy upset.
Szabo showed why later. In addition to winning the Team gold, Szabo claimed individual golds on Floor, Vault and Beam (shared with teammate Simona Puica) and left with four golds packed in her suitcase, along with the All-Around silver. Retton also won five medals, with a Team silver, Vault silver and bronzes on Floor and Uneven Bars. But the All-Around is what American fans remember.
Lewis was trying to equal Owens’s feat 48 years later and won the 100 m on 4 August impressively in 9.99, ahead of American Sam Graddy (10.19) and Canadian Ben Johnson (10.22; remember him?). On 6 August, Lewis won the long jump at 8.54 m (28-0 1/4), taking only two jumps and choosing rest with the 200 m coming up. No one was close; Gary Honey (AUS) finished second at 8.24 m (27-0 1/2).
Gold medal no. 3 came on 8 August in the 200 m, as Lewis led a U.S. sweep in an Olympic Record of 19.80, ahead of Kirk Baptiste (19.96) and Thomas Jefferson (20.26). The fourth gold, in the 4×100 m relay, was assured when Calvin Smith got the stick on the third leg and gave Lewis an insurmountable lead that finished in a world record 37.83 on 11 August.
Was it really 35 years ago?
In one of the most riotous comedies of all time and a world-class spoof of American college life, Professor Quincy Adams Wagstaff addressed the faculty and students of Huxley College in song in “Horse Feathers” (1932). Played by Groucho Marx, Wagstaff tells the assembled:
I don’t know what they have to say
It makes no difference anyway
Whatever it is, I’m against it!
No matter what it is
Or who commenced it
I’m against it!
Fast forward 87 years later and the same concepts apply to the anti-Olympic activists who turn up now and again in news reports after holding a lightly-attended press conference or demonstration.The latest chapter was headlined in a story entitled “We’ll all be losers in 2020, anti-Olympic activists say” in the Japan Times on 23 July which started with “Activists opposed to the Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games say the events will hurt individuals and businesses through high costs and disruption, and will provide only fleeting gains for a small number of people in the political, economic and media elite.”
That an anti-Olympic event in Japan was held at the Foreign Correspondents Club and featured an American academic demonstrated the weakness of the anti-Games movement in Japan. Moreover, the anti-Games efforts have been sidelined by a tsunami of support for the 2020 Games which has reached a level of popularity which was unforeseen even by its boosters during the bid process. Consider:
● The domestic sponsorship and suppliership program with the Tokyo Olympic Organizing Committee has reached record heights. The chair of the International Olympic Committee’s Coordination Commission said in late June that 62 companies had signed up as Gold Partners (15), Official Partners (32) and Official Supporters (15) contributing more than $3.1 billion, nearly three times what London 2012 ($1.1 billion) was able to bring in.
That’s the business response.
● The people of Japan have signaled their support of the Games twice over, in record numbers of volunteer applications and ticket requests … neither of which were expected in such volume.
The Tokyo organizers launched a volunteer recruitment campaign last fall, hoping to have about 80,000 applications to assist with the Olympic and Paralympic Games. Between 25 September and 21 December, a startling total of 186,101 applications were received, with 63% (~117,243) from Japan itself and the remainder from other countries (which says a lot about the power of the Games elsewhere).
That does not count the 36,649 applicants who signed up to volunteer – against a hoped-for total of 20,000 – the Tokyo Metropolitan Government during the Games period.
● The response to the ticketing program was just as amazing, with 7.5 million applicants in Japan itself registering for the first round of the ticket lottery. That’s against a total tickets-available target of 7.8 million for the Games, priced from about $22 U.S. up to more than $1,183 for the most expensive tickets for the ceremonies.
There were so many people who didn’t get the tickets they wanted that a second round of lottery sales for those folks will be held against on 22 August.
This is a level of actual, individual support for the Games which is remarkable on every level.
This is not to say that Tokyo has not had its problems, notably with the cost of the Games, which exploded – especially on the governmental side – with the building of a new national stadium, a new aquatics center and an Olympic Village. There have been governmental reports that link projects with barely any relationship to the Games to the costs, but the current projections are that the 2020 events will actually cost about $12.6 billion U.S. Of that, $5.6 billion will be paid by the self-funding organizing committee.
The remainder, or $7 billion, will be paid by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government ($5.6) and the Japanese national government ($1.4). The TMG aspect of the budget has been heavily criticized – and rightly so – but as a total expenditure over the seven years of the preparation period, it’s worth noting that the annual TMG budget (as of 2016) was 7 trillion yen or about $65.8 billion.
The anti-Tokyo Games group claimed the event will “‘violate human rights’ through disruptions to public transportation and the displacement of homeless people.” That there is going to be traffic in Tokyo is hardly news and what happens to the homeless during the Games period is hardly as important as what happens to them long-term.
But this demonstrates a long-standing truth: protests against the Olympic Games usually have very little to do with the event and are almost always a stalking horse for dissent against one or more levels of government in the city or country where the Games take place. Activists who have lost at the ballot box use these events to try and gain some measure of notice by attacking their real target – government – in another way.
Tokyo’s Olympic success is far from assured, however. Staging an Olympic Games is an enormous effort that will stretch even a megalopolis like Tokyo to its limit. The current heat wave in Japan will be the cause celebre – at least for now – through to the Games next summer.
There will be problems and the organizing committee, governments, businesses and the client participants – such as the International Olympic Committee, the International Federations and the National Olympic Committees will all have to be part of the solutions.
But the stunning turnout of support for the Games in Japan, from business and individuals, show that the voices of the anti-Games crowd have been recognized for what they are: an unfunny, 21st Century version of Groucho as Prof. Wagstaff, head of the fictional Huxley College. As he put it:
Your proposition may be good
But let’s have one thing understood
Whatever it is, I’m against it!
And even when you’ve changed it
Or condensed it
I’m against it!
Personally, I preferred “Animal Crackers” or “Duck Soup“, but that’s ir-elephant to what this column was about.
Rich Perelman
Editor
“This was a lot easier 10 years ago.”
No doubt, but it was a remarkable scene at Stanford’s Avery Aquatics Center to see a 35-year-old Ryan Lochte taking the winner’s interview after his victory in the 200 m Medley, especially in a meet which had seen younger swimmers emerge as stars in advance of the Olympic year of 2020.
Lochte hadn’t done much in his other events during the USA Swimming National Championships, but he is still the world-record holder in this event and was the fastest qualifier in the morning at 1:58.77. He was only sixth off the first leg, but charged on the backstroke and took the lead, then increased it on breaststroke and free leg, winning in 1:57.76. That’s a long way from his 1:54.00 world record set back in 2011, but it ranks no. 11 in the world for 2019 and fourth among Americans.
“I’m really happy to go out there and get a win, but there is a long way to go for 2020,” he said afterwards. But at 35, he’s unquestionably a contender: his winning time at Stanford is 0.98 from the bronze-medal swim of Chase Kalisz of the U.S. at the 2019 Worlds.
Back to the youngsters, especially 19-year-old Bobby Finke, who came from behind to score his third win at Stanford, winning the men’s 800 m Free in 7:47.58, no. 11 on the world list for 2019, but the fastest among Americans this season. He beat Zane Grothe, who swam in the heats of the Worlds in Korea, but did not qualify for the final. Finke’s time would have made the Worlds final.
Ryan Held, who won the 100 m Free so impressively in 47.39, led from start to finish in the 50 m Free, touching in 21.87, no. 14 on the 2019 world list but third among Americans behind Caeleb Dressel (21.04) and Michael Andrew (21.62).
Hardly a newcomer, but Madisyn Cox made an important comeback after her doping suspension and then clearance, winning the women’s 200 m Breaststroke and then the 200 m Medley, plus two fifth-place finishes in the 100 m Breast and 400 m Medley. Her 2:10.00 winner in the 200 Medley was a seasonal best and maintained her position as no. 9 on the world list (and no. 2 American) this season.
In the absence of the big U.S. stars like Katie Ledecky or Leah Smith, Ally McHugh, 22, completed a distance triple by winning the 400, 800 and 1,500 m Freestyles.
This was a much more impressive meet than it figured at the start and showcased a rising tide of talent that will make next summer’s Olympic Trials a lot more unpredictable than expected just a week ago. Summaries:
USA Swimming Phillips 66 National Championships
Stanford, California (USA) ~ 31 July-4 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men
50 m Freestyle: 1. Ryan Held, 21.87; 2. tie, Robert Howard and Bowe Becker 22.00; 4. Payton Sorenson, 22.18; 5. David Curtiss, 22.25; 6. Erik Risolvato, 22.32; 7. Gus Borges (BRA), 22.46; 8. Jack Thorpe (GBR), 22.56.
100 m Free: 1. Ryan Held, 47.39; 2. Maxime Rooney, 47.61; 3. Tate Jackson, 47.88; 4. Dean Farris, 48.07; 5. Daniel Krueger, 48.55; 6. Jack Conger, 48.64; 7. Robert Howard, 48.71; 8. Becker, 49.00.
200 m Free: 1. Elijah Winnington (AUS), 1:46.19; 2. Kieran Smith, 1:46.25; 3. Dean Farris, 1:46.45; 4. Rooney, 1:46.78; 5. Patrick Callan, 1:47.36; 6. Trenton Julian, 1:48.03; 7. Mitch D’Arrigo, 1:48.37; 8. Jordan Pothain (FRA), 1:48.98.
400 m Free: 1. Whittington (AUS), 3:47.39; 2. Jake Mitchell, 3:48.09; 3. Bobby Finke, 3:48.17; 4. Eric Knowles, 3:48.34; 5. Julian, 3:49.47; 6. tie, Patrick Callan and Mitch D’Arrigo, 3:50.37; 8. Zach Yeadon, 3:51.16.
800 m Free: 1. Finke, 7:47.58; 2. Zane Grothe, 7:50.47; 3. Michael Brinegar, 7:54.56; 4. Winnington (AUS), 7:55.11; 5. Dant, 7:56.03; 6. Knowles, 7:57.00; 7. Johannes Calloni (ITA), 7:58.76; 8. J. Mitchell, 7:59.15.
1,500 m Free: 1. Finke, 14:51.15; 2. Grothe, 14:56.10; 3. Brinegar, 15:00.82; 4. Arik Katz, 15:05.93; 5. J. Mitchell, 15:11.52; 6. Knowles, 15:13.52; 7. Jack Collins, 15:15.75; 8. Dant, 15:22.06.
100 m Backstroke: 1. Shaine Casas, 52.72; 2. Yohann Ndoye Brouard (FRA), 53.80; 3. Clark Beach, 53.95; 4. Craig McNally (GBR), 54.48; 5. Nicolas Albiero, 54.64; 6. Bryce Mefford, 54.79; 7. Matthew Klotz, 55.00; 8. Wyatt Davis, 55.07.
200 m Back: 1. Austin Katz, 1:55.72; 2. Casas, 1:55.79; 3. Beach, 1:57.14; 4. Mefford, 1:57.39; 5. Zachary Poti, 1:57.40; 6. Carson Foster, 1:58.26; 7. Albiero, 1:59.21; 8. Davis, 1:59.78.
100 m Breaststroke: 1. Devon Nowicki, 59.69; 2. Craig Benson (GBR), 59.79; 3. Reece Whitley, 1:00.05; 4. Theo Bussiere (FRA), 1:00.08; 5. Daniel Cave (AUS), 1:00.30; 6. Samuel Williamson (AUS), 1:00.61; 7. Caspar Corbeau (NED), 1:00.68; 8. Trent Pellini, 1:00.70.
200 m Breast: 1. Whitley, 2:09.69; 2. Daniel Roy, 2:10.01; 3. Joshua Matheny, 2:11.02; 4. Cave (AUS), 2:11.22; 5. Benson (GBR), 2:11.27; 6. Corbeau (NED), 2:11.54; 7. Nicholas Quinn (GBR), 2:11.77; 8. Brandon Fischer, 2:12.15.
100 m Butterfly: 1. M. Rooney, 51.09; 2. Conger, 51.70; 3. Jack Saunderson, 51.76; 4. Held, 52.15; 5. John Shebat, 52.19; 6. Danny Kovac, 52.22; 7. Giles Smith, 52.25; 8. Luca Urlando, 52.31.
200 m Fly: 1. Urlando, 1:54.92; 2. Miles Smachlo, 1:55.94; 3. Albiero, 1:56.05; 4. Trenton Julian, 1:45.09; 5. Bowen Gough (AUS), 1:56.65; 6. Brooks Fail, 1:57.00; 7. Corey Gambardella, 1:57.32; 8. Justin Wright, 1:58.79.
200 m Medley: 1. Ryan Lochte, 1:57.76; 2. Casas, 1:58.83; 3. J, Foster, 1:59.15; 4. John Shebat, 1:59.24; 5. tie, Grant Sanders and Kieran Smith, 2:00.14; 7. Tommy Cope, 2:00.40; 8. Matt Willenbring, 2:00.83.
400 m Medley: 1. Finke, 4:13.15; 2. C. Foster, 4:13.39 (World Junior Record; old, 4:4.00, Sean Grieshop (USA), 2016); 3. Jake Foster, 4:15.03; 4. K. Smith, 4:15.17; 5. Sean Grieshop, 4:15.50; 6. Brodie Williams (GBR), 4:16.63; 7. Grant Sanders, 4:18.28; 8. Mark Szaranek (GBR), 4:18.90.
Women
50 m Freestyle: 1. Erika Brown, 24.71; 2. Gretchen Walsh, 24/85; 3. Anna Santamans (FRA), 24.92; 4. Aly Tetzloff, 24.97; 5. Natalie Hinds, 25.02; 6. Catie DeLoof, 25.11; 7. Maxine Parker, 25.21; 8. Grace Cooper, 25.33.
100 m Free: 1. Abbey Weitzeil, 53.18; 2. tie, Walsh and E. Brown, 54.13; 4. C. DeLoof, 54.28; 5. Hinds, 54.34; 6. Allison Schmitt, 54.81; 7. Linnea Mack, 54.87; 8. Isabel Ivey, 54.97.
200 m Free: 1. Schmitt, 1:56.97; 2. Paige Madden, 1:57.84; 3. Brooke Forde. 1:57.98; 4. Cierra Runge, 1:58.82; 5. Gabby DeLoof, 1:59.03; 6. Claire Tuggle, 1:59.42; 7. Erica Laning, 1:59.67; 8. Emma Atkinson, 1:59.82.
400 m Free: 1. Ally McHugh, 4:07.08; 2. Haley Anderson, 4:07.77; 3. Sierra Schmidt, 4:07.79; 4. Tuggle, 4:07.85; 5. Cierra Runge, 4:07.90; 6. Lauren Pitzer, 4:08.68; 7. Schmitt, 4:08.81; 8. Kensey McMahon, 4:10.62.
800 m Free: 1. McHugh, 8:26.04; 2. . Schmidt, 8:27.13; 3. Ashley Twichell, 8:27.36; 4. Kensey McMahon, 8:28.68; 5. H. Anderson, 8:29.11; 6. Emma Weyant, 8:29.31; 7. Runge, 8:29.87; 8. Chase Travis, 8:32.46.
1,500 m Free: 1. McHugh, 16:05.98; 2. McMahon, 16:09.80; 3. Schmidt, 16:10.12; 4. Hannah Moore, 16:10.92; 5. Amanda Nunan, 16:20.08; 6. Paige McKenna, 16:26.49; 7. Emily Hetzer, 16:28.37; 8. Travis, 16:28.96.
100 m Backstroke: 1. Amy Bilquist, 59.64; 2. Claire Curzan, 1:00.39; 3. Caitlin Brooks, 1:00.46; 4. Erika Brown, 1:00.64; 5. Kylee Alons, 1:00.71; 6. Lucie Nordmann, 1:00.83; 7. Isabel Ivey. 1:00.85; 8. Annabel Crush, 1:00.88.
200 m Backstroke: 1. Asia Seidt, 2:08.90; 2. tie, Emma Seiberlich and Erin Voss, 2:10.86; 4. Atkinson, 2:10.96; 5. Nordmann, 2:11.43; 6. Chloe Hicks, 2:11.93; 7. Abi Wilder, 2:12.02; 8. Natalie Mannion, 2:14.63.
100 m Breaststroke: 1. Breeja Larson, 1:06.78; 2. Kaitlyn Dobler, 1:07.23; 3. Miranda Tucker, 1:07.33; 4. Zoie Hartman, 1:07.37; 5. Madisyn Cox, 1:07.51; 6. Emily Weiss, 1:07.56; 7. Ellie Andrews, 1:08.37; 8. Nikol Popov, 1:08.93.
200 m Breast: 1. M. Cox, 2:23.84; 2. Abby Arens, 2:25.80; 3. Jenna Strauch (AUS), 2:26.05; 4. Tucker, 2:26.50; 5. Gillian Davey, 2:26.80; 6. Anna Keating, 2:26.90; 7. Andrews, 2:29.02; 8. Kate Douglass, 2:29.70.
100 m Butterfly: 1. Kelsi Dahlia, 57.35; 2. Amanda Kendall, 57.51; 3. Aly Tetzloff, 57.70; 4. Torri Huske, 57.80; 5. Claire Curzan, 57.87; 6. Lillie Nordmann, 57.96; 7. Katie Drabot, 58.43; 8. Natalie Hinds, 58.78.
200 m Fly: 1. Regan Smith, 2:07.26; 2. Nordmann, 2:07.43; 3. Dakota Luther, 2:07.76; 4. Olivia Carter, 2:08.22; 5. Megan Kingsley, 2:08.26; 6. Emily Large (GBR), 2:08.39; 7. Drabot, 2:08.56; 8. Taylor Pike, 2:10.68.
200 m Medley: 1. M. Cox, 2:10.00; 2. Vanessa Pearl, 2:12.49; 3. Julia Poole 2:12.53; 4. Emma Barksdale, 2:13.06; 5. Evie Pfeifer, 2:13.17; 6. Hannah Miley (GBR), 2:14.07; 7. Calypso Sheridan, 2:14.55; 8. Justina Kozan, 2:17.25.
400 m Medley: Emma Weyant, 4:35.37; 2. Brooke Forde, 4:36.06; 3. McHugh, 4:38.65; 4. Miley (GBR), 4:39.00; 5. Cox, 4:29.26; 6. Emma Barksdale, 4:41.49; 7. Kelly Fertel, 4:41.53; 8. Kate Moore, 4:42.23.
Switzerland’s Nino Schurter is the four-time defending World Cup champion in Cross Country and the two-time defending World Cup seasonal champion. But he is going to have to work for the 2019 title as Dutch rider Mathieu van der Poel scored a double win in the Mountain Bike World Cup in Val di Sole.
Last year’s Mountain Bike Cross Country World Championships bronze medalist, van der Poel is also an outstanding road cyclist, but is concentrating on Mountain Bike for the rest of this season. In the five stops so far, he’s won the Cross Country Short Track race in all four he has entered and finished 2-1-16-1 in his four Cross Country Olympic races. So now he is one of four contenders to fight it out for the season title:
1. 1,390 ~ Nino Schurter (SUI)
2. 1,274 ~ Mathieu van der Pol (NED)
3. 1,165 ~ Henrique Avancini (BRA)
4. 1,143 ~ Mathias Flueckiger (SUI)
Van der Poel won the Short Track race by five seconds over Avancini and then had the fastest finish in the Cross Country Olympic race to expand a one-second lead over Flueckiger and Schurter with a lap to go (4.3 km) to 18 seconds at the finish over Flueckiger and 53 over Schurter.
In the women’s Cross Country Olympic race, France’s Pauline Ferrand Prevot led from wire-to-wire, building up a 41-second lead midway through, but then barely surviving a late charge from Swiss Jolanda Neff to win by just 1:21:59-1:22:00 at the finish.
With her win in the Short Track race and runner-up in the XCO, Neff took over the seasonal lead in the World Cup standings, ahead of American Kate Courtney:
1. 1,415 ~ Jolanda Neff (SUI)
2. 1,382 ~ Kate Courtney (USA)
3. 950 ~ Anne Terpstra (NED)
Courtney finished 17th in Val di Sole, her first time out of the top 10 this season. There are two stops left, in Lenzerheide (SUI) next weekend and the finale in Snowshoe, west Virginia (USA) on 7-8 September. Summaries:
UCI Mountain Bike World Cup
Val di Sole (ITA) ~ 2-4 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men
Cross Country Short (10.1 km): 1. Mathieu van der Poel (NED), 20:31; 2. Henrique Avancini (BRA), 20:36; 3. Jens Schuermans (BEL), 20:45; 4. Ondrej Cink (CZE), 20:45; 5. Nino Schurter (SUI), 20:45.
Cross Country (28.1 km): 1. Van der Poel (NED), 1:20:47; 2. Mathias Flueckiger (SUI), 1:21:05; 3. Schurter (SUI), 1:21:40; 4. Avancini (BRA), 1:22:33; 5. Luca Braidot (ITA), 1:22:48.
Downhill (2.187 km): 1. Laurie Greenland (GBR), 3:37.819; 2. Loic Bruni (FRA), 3:40.873; 3. Loris Vergier (FRA), 3:42.701; 4. Amaury Pierron (FRA), 3:42.986; 5. Danny Hart (GBR), 3:44.668.
Women
Cross Country Short (9.1 km): 1. Jolanda Neff (SUI), 20:24; 2. Sina Frei (SUI), 20:26; 3. Pauline Ferrand Prevot (FRA), 20:32; 4. Rebecca McConnell (AUS), 20:35; 5. Eva Lechner (ITA), 20:35. Also in the top 10: 7. Chloe Woodruff (USA), 20:41; … 10. Kate Courtney (USA), 20:47.
Cross Country (23.8 km): 1. Ferrand Prevot (FRA), 1:21:59; 2. Neff (SUI), 1:22:00; 3. Jenny Rissveds (SWE), 1:23:00; 4. Yana Belomoina (UKR), 1:23:28; 5. Anne Tauber (GER), 1:23:55. Also in the top 10: 6. Woodruff (USA), 1:24:43.
Downhill (2.187 km): 1. Marine Cabirou (FRA), 4:25.790; 2. Tracey Hannah (AUS), 4:37.566; 3. Camille Balanche (SUI), 4:44.114; 4. Veronika Widmann (ITA), 4:48.312; 5. Emile Siegenthaler (SUI), 4:52.383.
Although the route included five climbs of Box Hill, the finish of the eighth Prudential RideLondon Surrey Classic was always going to come down to a sprint and Italy’s Elia Viviani was able to get his bike across first on Sunday.
It was his 25th World Tour victory and 75th overall, but only his fifth victory in a World Tour one-day race. “We knew it was a chaotic finish but we knew also we can move smart and use the legs. It was amazing [Deceunick-Quick Step] teamwork because Michael [Morkov] was third so thanks to the team for sure.”
The early breakaways were caught by the peloton with 14 km to go and the mass proceeded to the finish. Viviani and Morkov were careful to stay near the front and a crash that took out several rides from the chasing group with 2 km left did not impact them.
Viviani had the legs to beat Ireland’s Sam Bennett to the finish, with Morkov third. For Viviani, this was a race he wanted to win badly and moved up from second last year. Summaries:
UCI World Tour/RideLondon Surrey Classic
London (GBR) ~ 4 August 2019
(Full results here)
Final Standings (169.0 km) 1. Elia Viviani (ITA), 3:46:15; 2. Sam Bennett (IRL), 3:46:15; 3. Michael Morkov (DEN), 3:46:15; 4. Jasper Stuyven (BEL), 3:46:15; 5. Amund Jansen (NOR), 3:46:15; 6. Giacomo Nizzolo (ITA), 3:46:15; 7. Alexander Kristoff (NOR), 3:46:15; 8. Oliver Naesen (BEL), 3:46:15; 9. Jasper de Buyst (BEL), 3:46:15; 10. Ethan Hayter (GBR), 3:46:15.
They’re not invincible, but pretty close. Norway’s Anders Mol (22) and Christian Sorum (23) won their seventh World Tour event this season by defending their Vienna Major title with a straight-set win over Brazil’s Alison Cerutti and Alvaro Filho, 21-11, 21-17.
True, they “only” won the bronze medal at the World Championships, but playing tournament after tournament against the world’s best, they have now won 20 straight matches in World Tour play and 61 of their 65 matches this season!
With seven wins, they are now tied for second all-time with seven wins in a season; it’s been done by three other teams a total of four times. The record for a single season is nine wins by Americans Phil Dalhausser and Todd Rogers, back in 2010. Dalhausser, now paired with Nick Lucena, placed fourth in Vienna.
Mol and Sorum’s run actually got going in 2018, when they reunited in mid-year and then started winning, including the Vienna Major and the World Tour Final. “It’s so hard to describe because one year ago, two years ago, we were watching the stars on YouTube,” Sorum said. “I was playing some qualifications, some opens and two years later we are No. 1 in the world, and we play in tournaments in front of people like this, we beat teams like Alison, a legend in the sport.”
The victory was worth $40,000 to the Norwegians, same as received by Canada’s Sarah Pavan and Melissa Humana-Paredes, who had to wait for the women’s final until Sunday due to a weather delay.
The world champs defeated Brazil’s Maria Antonelli and Carol Salgado by 21-19, 21-16 in 47 minutes to win their third World Tour tournament this season and sixth together.
“We got better and better as the tournament went on,” said Pavan. “That’s always been our motto all season, just one percent better every game and I think we did that. Our serving was very effective in that last set, as good as it’s ever been. We put it all together at a good time.”
The season is winding down, with some minor tournaments still to be played, plus a four-star in Moscow from 14-18 August and the World Tour Final in Rome from 4-8 September. Summaries:
FIVB World Tour/5-star Major
Vienna (AUT) ~ 31 July-4 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men: 1. Anders Mol/Christian Sorum (NOR); 2. Alison Cerutti/Alvaro Filho (BRA); 3. Grzegorz Fijalek/Michal Bryl (POL); 4. Phil Dalhausser/Nick Lucena (USA). Third: Fijalek/Bryl d. Dalhausser/Lucena, 2-1. Final: Mol/Sorum d. Alison/Alvaro Filho, 2-0 (21-11, 21-17).
Women: 1. Saran Pavan/Melissa Humana-Paredes (CAN); 2. Maria Antonelli/Carol Salgado (BRA); 3. Agatha Bednarczuk/Duda Lisboa (BRA); 4. Talita Da Rocha Antunes/Taiana Lima (BRA). Third: Agatha/Duda d. Talita/Taiana Lima, 2-0. Final: Pavan/Humana-Paredes d. Maria Antonelli/Carol, 2-0 (21-19, 21-16).
China’s men’s Doubles pair of Junhui Li and Yuchen Liu are the reigning World Champions and were the heavy favorites in the finals of the Thailand Open in Bangkok over the 16th-ranked (and unseeded) team of Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty from India.
In three closely-contested sets, the Indian pair triumphed, 21-19, 18-21, 21-18. What?!?
Said Rankireddy: “I was not playing like usual but I kept telling myself that it’s just one more match, one more match. I was so calm and whenever I got a chance, I wanted to finish the shot. I could see that they didn’t want to lift the shuttle for me.”
Shetty added: “I can’t believe that we’ve just beaten the current world champs. They are really good attacking players so our plan was to keep the shuttle low.
“We varied our shots. We played a few flat shots but then they rushed to the net so we decided that Satwik would play a few hard smashes and I would play some soft shots down to the net. Their defense is usually very good too but I think at their height, it looked like they were struggling to come forward low at the net.”
Liu was as shocked as everyone else: “They were more than we expected. They were calm and in control. In stressed situations, they managed to pull through. They are a big potential threat for a long time.”
That was the shocker from the Thailand Open, where no. 3 Tien Chen Chou (TPE) and no. 4-ranked Yufei Chen won the men’s and women’s Singles titles and no. 2-ranked Yi Lyu Wang and Dong Ping Huang won the Mixed Doubles over Japan’s no. 3-ranked team of Yuta Watanabe and Arisa Higashino. Summaries:
BWF World Tour/Thailand Open
Bangkok (THA) ~ 30 July-4 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men/Singles: 1. Tien Chen Chou (TPE); 2. Ka Long Angus Long (HKG); 3. Zii Jia Lee (MAS) and Kanta Tsuneyama (JPN). Final: Chou d. Long, 21-14, 11-21, 23021.
Men/Doubles: 1. Satwiksairaj Rankireddy/Chirag Shetty (IND); 2. Junhui Li/Yuchen Liu (CHN); 3. Hiroyuki Endo/Yuta Watanabe (JPN) and Sung Hyun Ko/Baek Cheol Shin (KOR). Final: Rankireddy/Shetty d. Li/Liu, 21-19, 18-21, 21-18.
Women/Singles: 1. Yufei Chen (CHN); 2. Ratchanok Intanon (THA); 3. Sayaka Takahashi (JPN) and Pornpawee Chochuwong (THA). Final: Chen d. Intanon, 22-20, 21-18.
Women/Doubles: 1. Shiho Tanaka/Koharo Yonemoto (JPN); 2. Yue Du/Yin Hui Li (CHN); 3. So Hee Lee/Seung Chan Shin (KOR) and Ye Na Chang/Hye-Rin Kim (KOR). Final: Tanaka/Yonemoto d. Du/Li, 21-19, 14-21, 21-13.
Mixed Doubles: 1. Yi Lyu Wang/Dong Ping Huang (CHN); 2. Yuta Watanabe/Arisa Higashino (JPN); 3. Chun Man Tang/Ying Suet Tse (HKG) and Dechapol Puavaranukroh/Sapirsee Taerattanachai (THA). Final: Wang/Huang d. Watanabe/Higashino, 24-22, 23-21.
The first of seven stops on the FINA Swimming World Cup circuit for 2019 has been completed and four familiar names were the headliners in Tokyo (JPN).
Five-time World Cup seasonal winner Katinka Hosszu took the lead in the series with five medals, including wins in the 200 m Butterfly and 200 m and 400 m Medleys, plus silver medals in the 200 m Backstroke and a leg on Hungary’s 4×100 m Mixed Freestyle relay.
That earned her $6,000 for the weekend, but more importantly, 54 points toward the cluster rankings which have a much larger payout, topped by a $50,000 first prize!
She wasn’t the only one to score three individual golds – the most that are allowed for cluster scoring purposes – as three others also did it: Russia’s Vladimir Morozov in the 50-100 m Freestyles and 50 m Backstroke; Australia’s Mitch Larkin, who won the 100-200 m Backstrokes and the 200 m Medley, and Emily Seebohm (AUS), who won the Backstroke triple in the 50 m, 100 m and 200 m races.
Morozov was the only one of those three to get any performance bonus points and leads the men’s standings with 48 points.
Two of the most impressive swims on Sunday came from swimmers who claimed season’s bests and confirmed their places in the world’s top 10 for 2019. Australia’s Kiah Melverton won the 800 m Free in 8:22.24, strengthening her grip on the no. 7 spot in the world rankings. American Andrew Wilson won the 200 m Breaststroke in 2:07.77, a small improvement on his season’s best and continuing him in seventh position. Wilson’s swim was the best of the meet, according to the FINA points table!
American sprinter Michael Andrew was busy, making six finals and earning medals in three.
The award for endurance goes to Russian Vitalina Simonova, who – like Hosszu – entered 14 of the 16 individual events. Where Hosszu scratched down to concentrate on a few events, Simonova did compete in all 14! The European silver medalist in the 200 m Breaststroke back in 2013, Simonova competed in the 800 m Free, 100 m Butterfly, 50 m Breaststroke, 100 m Free and 200 m Medley and did not qualify for the finals (or finish in the top eight) in all of them. Over the three days, she made one final, finishing seventh in her specialty, the 200 m Breaststroke.
Summaries from Tokyo:
FINA Swimming World Cup I
Tokyo (JPN) ~ 2-4 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men
50 m Freestyle: 1. Vladimir Morozov (RUS), 21.56; 2. Shinri Shioura (JPN), 21.92; 3. Michael Andrew (USA), 21.94. Also: 4. Blake Pieroni (USA), 22.03.
100 m Free: 1. Morozov (RUS), 48.12; 2. Pieroni (USA), 48.43; 3. Szebasztian Szabo (HUN), 48.45. Also: 6. Andrew Seliskar (USA), 48.80.
200 m Free: 1. Danas Rapsys (LTU), 1:45.74; 2. Dominik Kozma (HUN), 1:45.77; 3. Pieroni (USA), 1:46.62.
400 m Free: Rapsys (LTU), 3:45.57; 2. Zac Reid (NZL), 3:50.25; 3. Jeremy Bagshaw (CAN), 3:52.20.
1,500 m Free: 1. Syogo Takeda (JPN), 15:07.05; 2. Ayatsugu Hirai (JPN), 15:12.08; 3. Shingo Nakaya (JPN), 15:18.81.
50 m Backstroke: 1. Morozov (RUS), 24.53; 2. Andrew (USA), 24.87; 3. Mikita Tsmyh (BLR), 25.06. Also: 5. Jacob Pebley (USA), 25.28.
100 m Back: 1. Mitch Larkin (AUS), 53.76; 2. Markus Thornmeyer (CAN), 54.05; 3. Pebley (USA), 54.28. Also: 8. Andrew (USA), 56.49.
200 m Back: 1. Larkin (AUS), 1:55.97; 2. Pebley (USA), 1:56.37; 3. Hayate Matsubara (JPN), 1:57.74.
50 m Breaststroke: 1. Ilya Shymanovich (BLR), 26.78; 2. Nicolo Martinenghi (ITA), 26.88; 3. Yasuhiro Koseki (JPN), 27.05. Also: 4. Andrew (USA), 27.23.
100 m Breast: 1. Shymanovich (BLR), 58.73; 2. Koseki (JPN), 59.01; 3. Andrew Wilson (USA), 59.02.
200 m Breast: 1. Wilson (USA), 2:07.77; 2. Koseki (JPN), 2:08.49; 3. Ryuya Mura (JPN), 2:10.05.
50 m Butterfly: 1. Andrii Govorov (UKR), 23.10; 2. Szabo (HUN), 23.11; 3. Andrew (USA), 23.24.
100 m Fly: 1. Seliskar (USA), 51.34; 2. Grant Irvine (AUS), 51.63; 3. Szabo (HUN), 51.67. Also: 5. Zach Harting (USA), 52.02; … 7. Andrew (USA), 52.14; 8. Ryan Murphy (USA), 52.51.
200 m Fly: 1. Nao Horomura (JPN), 1:55.25; 2. Harting (USA), 1:56.26; 3. Takumi Terada (JPN), 1:56.79.
200 m Indiv. Medley: 1. Larkin (AUS), 1:57.06; 2. Thomas Fraser-Holmes (AUS), 2:00.00; 3. Kosuke Hagino (JPN), 2:00.03.
400 m Medley: 1. Daiya Seto (JPN), 4:11.41; 2. Joanllu Pons (ESP), 4:15.68; 3. Takumi Uchiyama (JPN), 4:17.08.
Women
50 m Freestyle: 1. Michelle Coleman (SWE), 24.66; 2. Cate Campbell (AUS), 24.81; 3. Ting Wen Quah (SGP), 24.92.
100 m Free: 1. C. Campbell (AUS), 52.64; 2. Federica Pellegrini (ITA), 53.40; 3. Coleman (SWE), 53.83.
200 m Free: 1. Brianna Throssell (AUS), 1:56.99; 2. Madison Wilson (AUS), 1:57.44; 3. Nagisa Ikemoto (JPN), 1:58.19.
400 m Free: Kiah Melverton (AUS), 4:06.71; 2. Mireia Belmonte (ESP), 4:06.81; 3. Miyu Nambu (JPN), 4:09.39. Also: 4. Erica Sullivan (USA), 4:10.44.
800 m Free: 1. Melverton (AUS), 8:22.24; 2. Belmonte (ESP), 8:24.28; 3. Yukimi Moriyama (JPN), 8:32.40.
50 m Backstroke: 1. Emily Seebohm (AUS), 28.03; 2. Caroline Pilhatsch (AUT), 28.20; 3. Emi Moronuki (JPN), 28.27.
100 m Back: 1. Seebohm (AUS), 59.44; 2. Katinka Hosszu (HUN), 59.65; 3. Federica Pellegrini (ITA), 1:00.13.
200 m Back: 1. Seebohm (AUS), 2:09.03; 2. Aisa Mataki (JPN), 2:10.82; 3. Sayaka Akase (JPN), 2:11.04.
50 m Breaststroke: 1. Alia Atkinson (JAM), 30.35; 2. Satomi Suzuki (JPN), 31.09; 3. Alina Zmushka (BLR), 31.12.
100 m Breast: 1. Tatjana Schoenmaker (RSA), 1:06.64; 2. Miho Teramura (JPN), 1:06.77; 3. Reona Aoki (JPN), 1:07.06.
200 m Breast: 1. Schoenmaker (RSA), 2:22.35; 2. Aoki (JPN), 2:24.33; 3. Jessica Vall Montero (ESP), 2:25.32.
50 m Butterfly: 1. Holly Barratt (AUS), 25.96; 2. Jeanette Ottesen (DEN), 25.97; 3. Yukina Hirayama (JPN), 25.98.
100 m Fly: 1. Louise Hansson (SWE), 57.92; 2. Ai Souma (JPN), 58.29; 3. Throssell (AUS), 58.31.
200 m Fly: 1. Hosszu (HUN), 2:07.10; 2. Brianna Throssell (AUS), 2:07.36; 3. Szuzsanna Jakobos (HUN), 2:08.86.
200 m Indiv. Medley: 1. Hosszu (HUN), 2:08.63; 2. Yui Ohashi (JPN), 2:08.80; 3. Miho Teramura (JPN), 2:10.23.
400 m Medley: 1. Hosszu (HUN), 4:32.30; 2. Ohashi (JPN), 4:34.27; 3. Belmonte (ESP), 4:34.47.
Mixed
4×100 m Freestyle: 1. Australia (McEvoy, Fraser-Holmes, M. Wilson, C. Campbell), 3:24.89; 2. Hungary, 3:27.56; 3. Singapore, 3:27.75.
4×100 m Medley: 1. Japan (Sakai, Koseki, Mizunuma, Omoto), 3:44.75; 2. Australia, 3:47.07; 3. Belarus, 3:49.47.
There was plenty of celebrating and fireworks, and the U.S. women’s National Team began its five-game “Victory Tour” with a convincing 3-0 win over an outclassed Ireland at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.
After playing almost the entire first 15 minutes close to the Irish goal, a Christen Press cross from the left side of goal sailed all the way across to the far post, where Tobin Heath headed the ball into the goal for a 1-0 lead in the 16th minute.
Although there was no doubt of the outcome, the issue was decided in the 31st minute when Heath gathered three defenders on a dribble at the right side of the box, then popped the ball back into the middle to Sam Mewis. Her cross to the left post landed right at the foot of Lindsey Horan, who finished for a 2-0 lead.
In the 41st minute, Kelley O’Hara dribbled down the right side, then sent a ball into the far side of the box toward Carli Lloyd, who was well guarded by two defenders. But Lloyd rose above both and her header floated over everyone and landed gently in the net for a 3-0 lead at halftime. It was the 114th career goal for Lloyd, 37, for the U.S.
The second half passed without significant incident. Ireland had more impact, but the game was played mostly in their end.
The U.S. had a 29-2 edge in shots and is now 13-0 vs. Ireland all-time. Just as impressive as the U.S. control of the game was the enthusiastic crowd of 37,040 at the Rose Bowl.
The next games on the Tour are 29 August in Philadelphia and 3 September in St. Paul, Minnesota, both against Portugal.
The breakthrough came in the final event of the penultimate day of the USA Swimming National Championships at Stanford, during a memorable week for Texas A&M’s Shaine Casas.
He just finished his freshman year at A&M, swimming mostly the 200-yard Backstroke, where he made the consolation final at the NCAA Championships.
He’s exploded at the U.S. Nationals, finishing just 0.07 back of NCAA runner-up Austin Katz for second in the 200 m Backstroke, then charging from national class to world class at Stanford in the 100 m Back.
He came into the meet with an entry time of 54.51, but lowered that to 53.28 to lead all qualifiers for the final. Then he rocketed from the start, forged a big lead at the turn and came home strongly to finish in 52.72, winning by more than a second.
How good is 52.72? It would have won a bronze medal at the recent World Championships in Korea and placed him – at age 19 – no. 5 on the world list, right between 2016 Olympic Champion Ryan Murphy and 2012 Olympic Champion Matt Grevers! And Murphy and Grevers finished 4-5 at Gwangju at this distance, at 52.78 and 52.82. Wow!
The other feel-good story from Saturday was the return of Breeja Larson to the top of the podium, in the 100 m Breaststroke. Now 27, she was sixth in the London 100 m Breast and won a gold on the 4×100 m Medley Relay. She missed making the team in 2016 and hadn’t come close to her lifetime best of 1:05.92 from 2012.
But at Stanford, she led wire-to-wire and finished with her best time – 1:06.78 – since her third at the 2014 Nationals in 1:06.73, i.e., her best in five years. It ranks her 13th on the world list for 2019 and third in the U.S. behind world-record holder Lilly King and new star Annie Lazor (1:06.03 this year). Larson is in the game once again.
Devon Nowicki won his first national title in the 100 m Breast, taking an early lead and then holding on in 59.69. That makes him the no. 5 American on the 2019 list.
Ally McHugh won her second national title of 2019 with a 4:07.08-4:07.77 win over Open Water star Haley Anderson; McHugh won the 400 m Medley earlier.
The meet continues on Sunday; NBC’s Olympic Channel has coverage at 8 p.m. Eastern time. Summaries so far:
USA Swimming Phillips 66 National Championships
Stanford, California (USA) ~ 31 July-4 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men
100 m Freestyle: 1. Ryan Held, 47.39; 2. Maxime Rooney, 47.61; 3. Tate Jackson, 47.88; 4. Dean Farris, 48.07; 5. Daniel Krueger, 48.55; 6. Jack Conger, 48.64; 7. Robert Howard, 48.71; 8. Bowe Becker, 49.00.
200 m Free: 1. Elijah Winnington (AUS), 1:46.19; 2. Kieran Smith, 1:46.25; 3. Dean Farris, 1:46.45; 4. Rooney, 1:46.78; 5. Patrick Callan, 1:47.36; 6. Trenton Julian, 1:48.03; 7. Mitch D’Arrigo, 1:48.37; 8. Jordan Pothain (FRA), 1:48.98.
400 m Free: 1. Whittington (AUS), 3:47.39; 2. Jake Mitchell, 3:48.09; 3. Bobby Finke, 3:48.17; 4. Eric Knowles, 3:48.34; 5. Julian, 3:49.47; 6. tie, Patrick Callan and Mitch D’Arrigo, 3:50.37; 8. Zach Yeadon, 3:51.16.
1,500 m Free: 1. Finke, 14:51.15; 2. Zane Grothe, 14:56.10; 3. Michael Brinegar, 15:00.82; 4. Arik Katz, 15:05.93; 5. J. Mitchell, 15:11.52; 6. Knowles, 15:13.52; 7. Jack Collins, 15:15.75; 8. Ross Dant, 15:22.06.
100 m Backstroke: 1. Shaine Casas, 52.72; 2. Yohann Ndoye Brouard (FRA), 53.80; 3. Clark Beach, 53.95; 4. Craig McNally (GBR), 54.48; 5. Nicolas Albiero, 54.64; 6. Bryce Mefford, 54.79; 7. Matthew Klotz, 55.00; 8. Wyatt Davis, 55.07.
200 m Back: 1. Austin Katz, 1:55.72; 2. Casas, 1:55.79; 3. Beach, 1:57.14; 4. Mefford, 1:57.39; 5. Zachary Poti, 1:57.40; 6. Carson Foster, 1:58.26; 7. Albiero, 1:59.21; 8. Davis, 1:59.78.
100 m Breaststroke: 1. Devon Nowicki, 59.69; 2. Craig Benson (GBR), 59.79; 3. Reece Whitley, 1:00.05; 4. Theo Bussiere (FRA), 1:00.08; 5. Daniel Cave (AUS), 1:00.30; 6. Samuel Williamson (AUS), 1:00.61; 7. Caspar Corbeau (NED), 1:00.68; 8. Trent Pellini, 1:00.70.
200 m Breast: 1. Whitley, 2:09.69; 2. Daniel Roy, 2:10.01; 3. Joshua Matheny, 2:11.02; 4. Cave (AUS), 2:11.22; 5. Benson (GBR), 2:11.27; 6. Corbeau (NED), 2:11.54; 7. Nicholas Quinn (GBR), 2:11.77; 8. Brandon Fischer, 2:12.15.
100 m Butterfly: 1. M. Rooney, 51.09; 2. Conger, 51.70; 3. Jack Saunderson, 51.76; 4. Held, 52.15; 5. John Shebat, 52.19; 6. Danny Kovac, 52.22; 7. Giles Smith, 52.25; 8. Luca Urlando, 52.31.
200 m Fly: 1. Urlando, 1:54.92; 2. Miles Smachlo, 1:55.94; 3. Albiero, 1:56.05; 4. Trenton Julian, 1:45.09; 5. Bowen Gough (AUS), 1:56.65; 6. Brooks Fail, 1:57.00; 7. Corey Gambardella, 1:57.32; 8. Justin Wright, 1:58.79.
400 m Medley: 1. Finke, 4:13.15; 2. C. Foster, 4:13.39 (World Junior Record; old, 4:4.00, Sean Grieshop (USA), 2016); 3. Jake Foster, 4:15.03; 4. K. Smith, 4:15.17; 5. Sean Grieshop, 4:15.50; 6. Brodie Williams (GBR), 4:16.63; 7. Grant Sanders, 4:18.28; 8. Mark Szaranek (GBR), 4:18.90.
Women
100 m Freestyle: 1. Abbey Weitzeil, 53.18; 2. tie, Gretchen Walsh and Erika Brown, 54.13; 4. Catie DeLoof, 54.28; 5. Natalie Hinds, 54.34; 6. Allison Schmitt, 54.81; 7. Linnea Mack, 54.87; 8. Isabel Ivey, 54.97.
200 m Free: 1. Allison Schmitt, 1:56.97; 2. Paige Madden, 1:57.84; 3. Brooke Forde. 1:57.98; 4. Cierra Runge, 1:58.82; 5. Gabby DeLoof, 1:59.03; 6. Claire Tuggle, 1:59.42; 7. Erica Laning, 1:59.67; 8. Emma Atkinson, 1:59.82.
400 m Free: 1. Ally McHugh, 4:07.08; 2. Haley Anderson, 4:07.77; 3. Sierra Schmidt, 4:07.79; 4. Tuggle, 4:07.85; 5. Cierra Runge, 4:07.90; 6. Lauren Pitzer, 4:08.68; 7. Schmitt, 4:08.81; 8. Kensey McMahon, 4:10.62.
800 m Free: 1. McHugh, 8:26.04; 2. . Schmidt, 8:27.13; 3. Ashley Twichell, 8:27.36; 4. Kensey McMahon, 8:28.68; 5. H. Anderson, 8:29.11; 6. Emma Weyant, 8:29.31; 7. Runge, 8:29.87; 8. Chase Travis, 8:32.46.
100 m Backstroke: 1. Amy Bilquist, 59.64; 2. Claire Curzan, 1:00.39; 3. Caitlin Brooks, 1:00.46; 4. Erika Brown, 1:00.64; 5. Kylee Alons, 1:00.71; 6. Lucie Nordmann, 1:00.83; 7. Isabel Ivey. 1:00.85; 8. Annabel Crush, 1:00.88.
200 m Backstroke: 1. Asia Seidt, 2:08.90; 2. tie, Emma Seiberlich and Erin Voss, 2:10.86; 4. Atkinson, 2:10.96; 5. Nordmann, 2:11.43; 6. Chloe Hicks, 2:11.93; 7. Abi Wilder, 2:12.02; 8. Natalie Mannion, 2:14.63.
100 m Breaststroke: 1. Breeja Larson, 1:06.78; 2. Kaitlyn Dobler, 1:07.23; 3. Miranda Tucker, 1:07.33; 4. Zoie Hartman, 1:07.37; 5. Madisyn Cox, 1:07.51; 6. Emily Weiss, 1:07.56; 7. Ellie Andrews, 1:08.37; 8. Nikol Popov, 1:08.93.
200 m Breast: 1. M. Cox, 2:23.84; 2. Abby Arens, 2:25.80; 3. Jenna Strauch (AUS), 2:26.05; 4. Tucker, 2:26.50; 5. Gillian Davey, 2:26.80; 6. Anna Keating, 2:26.90; 7. Andrews, 2:29.02; 8. Kate Douglass, 2:29.70.
100 m Butterfly: 1. Kelsi Dahlia, 57.35; 2. Amanda Kendall, 57.51; 3. Aly Tetzloff, 57.70; 4. Torri Huske, 57.80; 5. Claire Curzan, 57.87; 6. Lillie Nordmann, 57.96; 7. Katie Drabot, 58.43; 8. Natalie Hinds, 58.78.
200 m Fly: 1. Regan Smith, 2:07.26; 2. Nordmann, 2:07.43; 3. Dakota Luther, 2:07.76; 4. Olivia Carter, 2:08.22; 5. Megan Kingsley, 2:08.26; 6. Emily Large (GBR), 2:08.39; 7. Drabot, 2:08.56; 8. Taylor Pike, 2:10.68.
400 m Medley: Emma Weyant, 4:35.37; 2. Brooke Forde, 4:36.06; 3. Ally McHugh, 4:38.65; 4. Hannah Miley (GBR), 4:39.00; 5. Cox, 4:29.26; 6. Emma Barksdale, 4:41.49; 7. Kelly Fertel, 4:41.53; 8. Kate Moore, 4:42.23.
Still just 22, Hungary’s Kristof Rasovszky has become one of the most-respected open-water swimmers in the world. The 2019 World Championships gold medalist at 5 km and fourth-place finisher at 10 km, he was in Quebec to try and win his third consecutive FINA Marathon World Series race at Lac Megantic.
The course was changed for 2019 to a point-to-point route instead of last year’s loop course and the wind made for a difficult race. But it was no problem for Rasovszky
“For the first 2K, I was in the back of the pack to save energy,” Rasovszky said, “but it didn’t feel good for me. I wanted to know what was happening in the lead. After the 6K feed, I found myself in the lead. I don’t know how. In the last K, I had a lot of people around me. I started to push more and really show something to the finish.”
Rasovszky finished ahead of Italy’s Dario Verani (+1.8) and Hau-Li Fan (CAN: +6.4) and won his third straight race on the circuit and fourth medal in the six races held so far. He’s the leader of the seasonal series, but there are still three races to go.
The women’s race came down to a sprint, with Italy finishing 1-2 with Arianna Bridi taking her second win of the season, ahead of Worlds 10 km bronze medalist Rachele Bruni (+2.6) and Hungary’s Anna Olasz (+4.5). It was her second win at Lac Megantic, after 2016.
Said Bridi, “I had a terrible world championship,” where she placed 13th in the 10 km race. “I didn’t qualify for the Olympics [in the top 10], so now I want to improve my experience so I have to do a lot of races, change my tactics, and learn to fight.” She will have another chance for Tokyo, but for now, she will prepare for the next stop on the World Series circuit, in Ohrid (MKD) on 28 August. Summaries:
FINA Marathon Swimming World Series
Lac Megantic (CAN) ~ 3 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men (10 km): 1. Kristof Rasovszky (HUN), 2:06:46.3; 2. Dario Verani (ITA), 2:06:48.1; 3. Hau-Li Fan (CAN), 2:06:52.7; 4. Matteo Furlan (ITA), 2:06:52.8; 5. Guillem Pujol Belmonte (ESP), 2:06:53.0.
Women (10 km): 1. Arianna Bridi (ITA), 2:24:30.0; 2. Rachele Bruni (ITA), 2:24:32.6; 3. Anna Olasz (HUN), 2:24:34.5; 4. Caroline Jouisse (FRA), 2:25:10.1; 5. Stephanie Horner (CAN), 2:25:40.9.
The UCI World Tours for men and women got back into action on Saturday, with dramatic finishes in both London and Donostia.
At the Prudential RideLondon Classique, a 20-lap course of 3.4 km loops (68 km) in the city meant a flat race and would be decided by the sprinters at the finish.
A mass of riders prepared for the finish and Dutch star Kirsten Wild came through the maze of riders and won the race for her third victory out of the four editions of this event, escaping a mass crash behind her that took out a dozen riders.
But officials checked the video and held Wild responsible for the incident, in which she clipped another one of the favorites – Australia’s Chloe Hosking – and her fall set off the mass crash.
Wild just beat countrywoman Lorena Wiebes to the line and now Wiebes, 20, was the winner, her second World Tour win and fourth medal of the season. Italy’s Elisa Balsamo and American Coryn Rivera advanced to the silver and bronze medals, respectively.
“I didn’t have a very good position over the last five kilometres so I had to go to the front and start my sprint really early,” said Wiebes. “It was a surprise win at the end. Kirsten came over in the last 50 m but she was disqualified so it was really surprising. It’s just crazy.”
There was another long review well after the ceremonies were over and Wild’s disqualification was reversed, but she was placed at the back of the group in which she was riding, in 37th.
In Spain, the big names in the Clasica San Sebastian were Tour de France heroes Egan Bernal and Julian Alaphilippe, but both had to drop out on a hot day with lots of climbing; Alaphilippe with 80 km remaining on the 227.3 km course and Bernal with about 55 km left.
The course offered plenty of opportunities for breakaways, and a nine-rider attack early in the race had a lead of as much as five minutes on the main group. As the race thinned, and with Deceunick-Quick Step teammate Alaphilippe out of the race, Belgian Remco Evenepoel changed from servicing his team with water bottles to rejoining the front pack.
He got back into the action before the final climb up the Murgil-Tontorra and then followed the attack of Latvian Toms Skujins with about 20 km left. The two broke away by 49 seconds, but then Skujins fell back with less than 9 km left and the 19-year-old Evenepoel was free to fly to the finish for his first major victory.
“I can’t believe it,” he said afterwards. “I don’t have words to describe this day and this victory. When Alaphilippe pulled out, the team’s plans changed. He’s the strongest rider in the world and all the team bets on him. It wasn’t his day and he was really honest when he decided to stop. Enric Mas and I were designated to go for the win. I told him that I was going to attack and that he could come with me if he wanted. At the end I was able to go on my own to get to the finish line first.”
Skujins finished 13th in the mass sprint to the line, while Greg van Avermaet (BEL) got up for second and Marc Hirschi (SUI) was third.
Is Evenepoel a star of the future? He’s off to a good start in his rookie year. Summaries:
UCI World Tour/Clasica Ciclista San Sebastian
Donostia (ESP) ~ 3 August 2019
(Full results here)
Final Standings (227.3 km): 1. Remco Evenpoel (BEL), 5:44:27; 2. Greg van Avermaet (BEL), 5:45:05; 3. Marc Hirschi (SUI), 5:45:05; 4. Gorka Izagirre (ESP), 5:45:05; 5. Bauke Mollema (NED), 5:45:05; 6. Patrick Konrad (AUT), 5:45:05; 7. Jelle Vanendert (BEL), 5:45:05; 8. Enric Mas (ESP), 5:45:05; 9. Michael Woods (CAN), 5:45:05; 10. Alejandro Valverde (ESP), 5:45:05.
UCI Women’s World Tour/Prudential Ride London Classique
London (GBR) ~ 3 August 2019
(Full results here)
Final Standings (68.0 km): 1. Lorena Wiebes (NED), 1:33:55; 2. Elisa Balsamo (ITA), 1:33:55; 3. Coryn Rivera (USA), 1:33:55; 4. Lotte Kopecky (BEL), 1:33:55; 5. Letizia Paternoster (ITA), 1:33:55; 6. Marianne Vos (NED), 1:33:55; 7. Christine Majerus (LUX), 1:33:55; 8. Marta Tagliaferro (ITA), 1:33:55; 9. Maria Giulia Confalonieri (ITA), 1:33:55; 10. Eugenie Duval (FRA), 1:33:55.
Russian sprinter Vladimir Morozov won the 2016 and 2018 FINA Swimming World Cup title by getting out to a big lead in the early meets and then maintaining it with quality performances in every competition.
He’s trying to do the same thing this season, starting in Tokyo (JPN), where he has now won three events in two days, ensuring he’ll earn close to the maximum points for the first event on the circuit.
He added wins in the 100 m Free and 50 m Backstroke on day two, so he can’t add any more events to his point total, but he will try to grab the best performance of the meet, worth an additional 24 points. His effort in the 50 m Back – 24.53 – moved him to equal-ninth on the world list for 2019.
Hungary’s Katinka Hosszu entered 14 events, but has been more picky in actual competition. She’s won two events, the 200 m Butterfly and the 400 m Medley, but also picked up a second in the 100 m Backstroke. She’ll try for a third win on Sunday in the 200 m Medley.
Russia’s Vitalina Simonova also entered 14 events and it looks like she is going to swim in all of them. She hasn’t had much success, however, failing to make the final on Saturday in all five: the 400 m Medley, 200 m Free, 100 m Back, 50 m Fly, and 100 m Breast. That’s nine events in two days, with one final; there are five more to go on Sunday! Summaries so far:
FINA Swimming World Cup I
Tokyo (JPN) ~ 2-4 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men
50 m Freestyle: 1. Vladimir Morozov (RUS), 21.56; 2. Shinri Shioura (JPN), 21.92; 3. Michael Andrew (USA), 21.94. Also: 4. Blake Pieroni (USA), 22.03.
100 m Free: 1. Morozov (RUS), 48.12; 2. Pieroni (USA), 48.43; 3. Szebasztian Szabo (HUN), 48.45. Also: 6. Andrew Seliskar (USA), 48.80.
400 m Free: Danas Rapsys (LTU), 3:45.57; 2. Zac Reid (NZL), 3:50.25; 3. Jeremy Bagshaw (CAN), 3:52.20.
1,500 m Free: 1. Syogo Takeda (JPN), 15:07.05; 2. Ayatsugu Hirai (JPN), 15:12.08; 3. Shingo Nakaya (JPN), 15:18.81.
50 m Backstroke: 1. Morozov (RUS), 24.53; 2. Andrew (USA), 24.87; 3. Mikita Tsmyh (BLR), 25.06. Also: 5. Jacob Pebley (USA), 25.28.
200 m Back: 1. Mitch Larkin (AUS), 1:55.97; 2. Pebley (USA), 1:56.37; 3. Hayate Matsubara (JPN), 1:57.74.
50 m Breaststroke: 1. Ilya Shymanovich (BLR), 26.78; 2. Nicolo Martinenghi (ITA), 26.88; 3. Yasuhiro Koseki (JPN), 27.05. Also: 4. Andrew (USA), 27.23.
100 m Breast: 1. Shymanovich (BLR), 58.73; 2. Koseki (JPN), 59.01; 3. Andrew Wilson (USA), 59.02.
100 m Butterfly: 1. Seliskar (USA), 51.34; 2. Grant Irvine (AUS), 51.63; 3. Szabo (HUN), 51.67. Also: 5. Zach Harting (USA), 52.02; … 7. Andrew (USA), 52.14; 8. Ryan Murphy (USA), 52.51.
200 m Fly: 1. Nao Horomura (JPN), 1:55.25; 2. Harting (USA), 1:56.26; 3. Takumi Terada (JPN), 1:56.79.
200 m Indiv. Medley: 1. Larkin (AUS), 1:57.06; 2. Thomas Fraser-Holmes (AUS), 2:00.00; 3. Kosuke Hagino (JPN), 2:00.03.
Women
50 m Freestyle: 1. Michelle Coleman (SWE), 24.66; 2. Cate Campbell (AUS), 24.81; 3. Ting Wen Quah (SGP), 24.92.
200 m Free: 1. Brianna Throssell (AUS), 1:56.99; 2. Madison Wilson (AUS), 1:57.44; 3. Nagisa Ikemoto (JPN), 1:58.19.
400 m Free: Kiah Melverton (AUS), 4:06.71; 2. Mireia Belmonte (ESP), 4:06.81; 3. Miyu Nambu (JPN), 4:09.39. Also: 4. Erica Sullivan (USA), 4:10.44.
50 m Backstroke: 1. Emily Seebohm (AUS), 28.03; 2. Caroline Pilhatsch (AUT), 28.20; 3. Emi Moronuki (JPN), 28.27.
100 m Back: 1. Seebohm (AUS), 59.44; 2. Katinka Hosszu (HUN), 59.65; 3. Federica Pellegrini (ITA), 1:00.13.
100 m Breaststroke: 1. Tatjana Schoenmaker (RSA), 1:06.64; 2. Miho Teramura (JPN), 1:06.77; 3. Reona Aoki (JPN), 1:07.06.
200 m Breast: 1. Schoenmaker (RSA), 2:22.35; 2. Aoki (JPN), 2:24.33; 3. Jessica Vall Montero (ESP), 2:25.32.
50 m Butterfly: 1. Holly Barratt (AUS), 25.96; 2. Jeanette Ottesen (DEN), 25.97; 3. Yukina Hirayama (JPN), 25.98.
200 m Fly: 1. Hosszu (HUN), 2:07.10; 2. Brianna Throssell (AUS), 2:07.36; 3. Szuzsanna Jakobos (HUN), 2:08.86.
400 m Medley: 1. Hosszu (HUN), 4:32.30; 2. Yui Ohashi (JPN), 4:34.27; 3. Belmonte (ESP), 4:34.47.
Mixed
4×100 m Freestyle: 1. Australia (McEvoy, Fraser-Holmes, M. Wilson, C. Campbell), 3:24.89; 2. Hungary, 3:27.56; 3. Singapore, 3:27.75.
There are athletes and coaches around the world who will read the results of the USA Swimming National Championships at Stanford and begin screaming and pounding the table.
A week after the World Championships were concluded and with the cream of the American team either resting or at the FINA World Cup in Tokyo, U.S. youngsters are still re-writing the world lists in event after event.
The newest shocker came in the morning qualifying, with 21-year-old Maxime Rooney – a five-time medalist at the 2015 World Junior Championships – slashed his best in the 100 m Butterfly from 52.28 to 50.68 and moved to no. 2 on the world list for 2019. That time would have won the Worlds silver behind world-record setter Caeleb Dressel!
Rooney had company in the final, but he maintained his form and out-touched veteran Jack Conger, who made it as far as the semis in this event in Gwangju. Rooney finished in 51.09 with Conger at 51.70, faster than he swam in Korea.
With his amazing prelim time and an equally-impressive 47.61 in the 100 m Free for second to Ryan Held, Rooney is now firmly on the radar as a possible Olympian in 2020.
That was only one of the highlights of Friday’s short program:
● In the women’s 400 m Medley, 17-year-old Emma Weyant won in 4:35.37, fastest by an American this year and now no. 5 on the world list. She beat both members of the U.S. Worlds team in the final: Brooke Forde, whose 4:36.06 for second was a season’s best by three seconds (!), and Ally McHugh, who finished third on Friday, but was also sixth in the Worlds final in this event. Weyant’s time was a lifetime best by five seconds and would have been fourth in Gwangju!
● Bobby Finke, 19, collected his second win of the meet, adding the 400 m Medley to his victory in the 1,500 m Free. He trailed 17-year-old Carson Foster for most of the race and was 1.79 seconds behind going into the final leg., But his Freestyle chops were on display and he overtook Foster on the final lap to touch first in 4:13.45, moving him to no. 9 on the year list.
Foster finished second in 4:13.39, setting a World Junior Record, held by American Sean Grieshop from 2016. Now 20, Grieshop finished in firth in 4:15.50. Finke and Foster would have finished 4-6 at the Worlds with these times.
● The women’s 100 m Fly saw Worlds sixth-placer Kelsi Dahlia come back from sixth at the turn to edge Amanda Kendall in the final 15 meters and win another U.S. title, 57.35-57.51. The race also saw the final race in the glittering career of Dana Vollmer. She swam 59.94 in the qualifying to rank 32nd, but retires as the American Record holder at 55.98 from 2012 and she was the London Olympic champion in the event.
The meet continues through Sunday; NBC’s Olympic Channel has coverage on Saturday and Sunday at 8 p.m. Eastern time. Summaries so far:
USA Swimming Phillips 66 National Championships
Stanford, California (USA) ~ 31 July-4 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men
100 m Freestyle: 1. Ryan Held, 47.39; 2. Maxime Rooney, 47.61; 3. Tate Jackson, 47.88; 4. Dean Farris, 48.07; 5. Daniel Krueger, 48.55; 6. Jack Conger, 48.64; 7. Robert Howard, 48.71; 8. Bowe Becker, 49.00.
200 m Free: 1. Elijah Winnington (AUS), 1:46.19; 2. Kieran Smith, 1:46.25; 3. Dean Farris, 1:46.45; 4. Rooney, 1:46.78; 5. Patrick Callan, 1:47.36; 6. Trenton Julian, 1:48.03; 7. Mitch D’Arrigo, 1:48.37; 8. Jordan Pothain (FRA), 1:48.98.
1,500 m Free: 1. Bobby Finke, 14:51.15; 2. Zane Grothe, 14:56.10; 3. Michael Brinegar, 15:00.82; 4. Arik Katz, 15:05.93; 5. Jake Mitchell, 15:11.52; 6. Eric Knowles, 15:13.52; 7. Jack Collins, 15:15.75; 8. Ross Dant, 15:22.06.
200 m Backstroke: 1. Austin Katz, 1:55.72; 2. Shaine Casas, 1:55.79; 3. Clark Beach, 1:57.14; 4. Bryce Mefford, 1:57.39; 5. Zachary Poti, 1:57.40; 6. Carson Foster, 1:58.26; 7. Nicolas Albiero, 1:59.21; 8. Wyatt Davis, 1:59.78.
200 m Breaststroke: 1. Reece Whitley, 2:09.69; 2. Daniel Roy, 2:10.01; 3. Joshua Matheny, 2:11.02; 4. Daniel Cave (AUS), 2:11.22; 5. Craig Benson (GBR), 2:11.27; 6. Caspar Corbeau (NED), 2:11.54; 7. Nicholas Quinn (GBR), 2:11.77; 8. Brandon Fischer, 2:12.15.
100 m Butterfly: 1. M. Rooney, 51.09; 2. Conger, 51.70; 3. Jack Saunderson, 51.76; 4. Held, 52.15; 5. John Shebat, 52.19; 6. Danny Kovac, 52.22; 7. Giles Smith, 52.25; 8. Luca Urlando, 52.31.
200 m Fly: 1. Urlando, 1:54.92; 2. Miles Smachlo, 1:55.94; 3. Albiero, 1:56.05; 4. Trenton Julian, 1:45.09; 5. Bowen Gough (AUS), 1:56.65; 6. Brooks Fail, 1:57.00; 7. Corey Gambardella, 1:57.32; 8. Justin Wright, 1:58.79.
400 m Medley: 1. Finke, 4:13.15; 2. C. Foster, 4:13.39 (World Junior Record; old, 4:4.00, Sean Grieshop (USA), 2016); 3. Jake Foster, 4:15.03; 4. K. Smith, 4:15.17; 5. Sean Grieshop, 4:15.50; 6. Brodie Williams (GBR), 4:16.63; 7. Grant Sanders, 4:18.28; 8. Mark Szaranek (GBR), 4:18.90.
Women
100 m Freestyle: 1. Abbey Weitzeil, 53.18; 2. tie, Gretchen Walsh and Erika Brown, 54.13; 4. Catie DeLoof, 54.28; 5. Natalie Hinds, 54.34; 6. Allison Schmitt, 54.81; 7. Linnea Mack, 54.87; 8. Isabel Ivey, 54.97.
200 m Free: 1. Allison Schmidt, 1:56.97; 2. Paige Madden, 1:57.84; 3. Brooke Forde. 1:57.98; 4. Cierra Runge, 1:58.82; 5. Gabby DeLoof, 1:59.03; 6. Claire Tuggle, 1:59.42; 7. Erica Laning, 1:59.67; 8. Emma Atkinson, 1:59.82.
800 m Free: 1. Ally McHugh, 8:26.04; 2. Sierra Schmidt, 8:27.13; 3. Ashley Twichell, 8:27.36; 4. Kensey McMahon, 8:28.68; 5. Haley Anderson, 8:29.11; 6. Emma Weyant, 8:29.31; 7. Cierra Runge, 8:29.87; 8. Chase Travis, 8:32.46.
200 m Backstroke: 1. Asia Seidt, 2:08.90; 2. tie, Emma Seiberlich and Erin Voss, 2:10.86; 4. Atkinson, 2:10.96; 5. Lucie Nordmann, 2:11.43; 6. Chloe Hicks, 2:11.93; 7. Abi Wilder, 2:12.02; 8. Natalie Mannion, 2:14.63.
200 m Breaststroke: 1. Madisyn Cox, 2:23.84; 2. Abby Arens, 2:25.80; 3. Jenna Strauch (AUS), 2:26.05; 4. Miranda Tucker, 2:26.50; 5. Gillian Davey, 2:26.80; 6. Anna Keating, 2:26.90; 7. Ellie Andrews, 2:29.02; 8. Kate Douglass, 2:29.70.
100 m Butterfly: 1. Kelsi Dahlia, 57.35; 2. Amanda Kendall, 57.51; 3. Aly Tetzloff, 57.70; 4. Torri Huske, 57.80; 5. Claire Curzan, 57.87; 6. Lillie Nordmann, 57.96; 7. Katie Drabot, 58.43; 8. Natalie Hinds, 58.78.
200 m Fly: 1. Regan Smith, 2:07.26; 2. Nordmann, 2:07.43; 3. Dakota Luther, 2:07.76; 4. Olivia Carter, 2:08.22; 5. Megan Kingsley, 2:08.26; 6. Emily Large (GBR), 2:08.39; 7. Drabot, 2:08.56; 8. Taylor Pike, 2:10.68.
400 m Medley: Emma Weyant, 4:35.37; 2. Brooke Forde, 4:36.06; 3. Ally McHugh, 4:38.65; 4. Hannah Miley (GBR), 4:39.00; 5. Cox, 4:29.26; 6. Emma Barksdale, 4:41.49; 7. Kelly Fertel, 4:41.53; 8. Kate Moore, 4:42.23.
The FINA Swimming World Cup started up in Tokyo (JPN) and coming on the heels of the World Championships in Korea, the swimming was of high caliber.
Hungary’s Katinka Hosszu, who had entered 14 of the 16 individual events, scratched out of most of them and then won the 200 m Butterfly in a very good 2:07.10, a time which would have finished fourth at the Worlds and missed a medal by 0.06.
A pleasant surprise was American Andrew Seliskar’s impressive win in the 100 m Butterfly in 51.34, a lifetime best; that time would have finished fifth in the Worlds final. As it is, it ranks equal-6th on the 2019 year list and gives the U.S. a second contender in the event. Seliskar was the surprise national champion in the 200 m Free in 2018, but didn’t make the final in Gwangju.
There was a big surprise in the women’s 50 m Freestyle, where Sweden’s Michelle Coleman, who made it as far as the semis in Gwangju, beat Australian star (and Worlds bronze medalist) Cate Campbell, 24.66-24.81. It was a seasonal best for Coleman, but still would not have put her in the Worlds final.
Russian Valentina Simonova also entered 14 of the 16 women’s events and she was busy on Friday. She swam but did not qualify for the finals in the 400 m Free, 50 m Back and 50 m Free, but she was seventh in the prelims and finals of the 200 m Breaststroke.
Summaries so far:
FINA Swimming World Cup I
Tokyo (JPN) ~ 2-4 August 2019
(Full results here)
Men
50 m Freestyle: 1. Vladimir Morozov (RUS), 21.56; 2. Shinri Shioura (JPN), 21.92; 3. Michael Andrew (USA), 21.94. Also: 4. Blake Pieroni (USA), 22.03.
400 m Free: Danas Rapsys (LTU), 3:45.57; 2. Zac Reid (NZL), 3:50.25; 3. Jeremy Bagshaw (CAN), 3:52.20.
200 m Back: 1. Mitch Larkin (AUS), 1:55.97; 2. Jacob Pebley (USA), 1:56.37; 3. Hayate Matsubara (JPN), 1:57.74.
100 m Breaststroke: 1. Ilya Shymanovich (BLR), 58.73; 2. Yasuhiro Koseki (JPN), 59.01; 3. Andrew Wilson (USA), 59.02.
100 m Butterfly: 1. Andrew Seliskar (USA), 51.34; 2. Grant Irvine (AUS), 51.63; 3. Szebasztian Szabo (HUN), 51.67. Also: 5. Zach Harting (USA), 52.02; … 7. Andrew (USA), 52.14; 8. Ryan Murphy (USA), 52.51.
Women
50 m Freestyle: 1. Michelle Coleman (SWE), 24.66; 2. Cate Campbell (AUS), 24.81; 3. Ting Wen Quah (SGP), 24.92.
400 m Free: Kiah Melverton (AUS), 4:06.71; 2. Mireia Belmonte (ESP), 4:06.81; 3. Miyu Nambu (JPN), 4:09.39. Also: 4. Erica Sullivan (USA), 4:10.44.
50 m Backstroke: 1. Emily Seebohm (AUS), 28.03; 2. Caroline Pilhatsch (AUT), 28.20; 3. Emi Moronuki (JPN), 28.27.
200 m Breaststroke: 1. Tatjana Schoenmaker (RSA), 2:22.35; 2. Reona Aoki (JPN), 2:24.33; 3. Jessica Vall Montero (ESP), 2:25.32.
200 m Butterfly: 1. Katinka Hosszu (HUN), 2:07.10; 2. Brianna Throssell (AUS), 2:07.36; 3. Szuzsanna Jakobos (HUN), 2:08.86.
| 1. | LANE ONE: U.S. men’s soccer players want a “fair share” ~ how much is that?
The United States National Soccer Team Players Association sent out a statement on Tuesday ostensibly supporting the U.S. Women’s National Team and its “equal pay” campaign, but also ripping the U.S. Soccer Federation because the men’s Collective Bargaining Agreement ran out at the end of 2018.
So they’re unhappy. So are U.S. soccer fans, after the embarrassment of 2017, in which the American men’s squad failed to qualify for the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia.
There’s no doubt that U.S. Soccer has money, but how much as these guys actually worth? Isn’t there actually some base value in representing the United States itself that is independent of whoever the players are?
A review of the U.S. men’s team schedule in 2018 – a year in which the team was at its low point, playing 11 friendlies and compiling a 3-5-3 record – showed that an astonishing total of 169,801 showed up to the seven games they played in the U.S.
That’s an average of 24,257 per game to see the U.S. play three teams which did not compete in the 2018 World Cup in Russia and four teams that did (Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, Peru).
That interest has very little to do with the players on the team that actually played in these games, and a lot to do with the brand built by players like Cobi Jones, Landon Donovan, Alexi Lalas, Clint Dempsey and others. Why should today’s players be paid for what they did?
It was be fascinating to see how U.S. Soccer – which had 2018 revenues of $102 million – handles this, no doubt after dealing with the women’s team that will start its “Victory Tour” matches on Saturday at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena. The details are here.
| 2. | SWIMMING: If you think you’re fit, you’re not … compared to the Iron Lady
FINA’s annual Swimming World Cup series begins on Friday in Tokyo (JPN), this year in long-course (50 m) pools to ensure all times will be valid for Olympic qualifying purposes.
The first-week program features 16 individual events for both men and women and with the rules now allowing swimmers to enter as many events as they want – although only three will count for seasonal point totals – Hungary’s amazing Katinka Hosszu is back to her old tricks.
The triple gold medalist from the Rio 2016 Games once entered – and swam in – every event in a single World Cup. In Tokyo, she’s entered in 14 of 16 events, which means that if she qualifies for the final in each one, she would compete in 27 swims over three days.
Starting just a week after the end of the 2019 World Championships and being in Tokyo, the World Cup has attracted a good field, but the two-time defending women’s champ, Sarah Sjostrom (SWE) is not entered this week. That’s good news for Hosszu, who won the prior five titles!
Two-time men’s champion Vladimir Morozov is the likely favorite among the men’s swimmers. The U.S. has 10 entries (nine men), including star sprinter Michael Andrew.
Hosszu will have company in Tokyo, as Russia’s Vitalina Simonova, the European silver medalist in the 200 m Breaststroke back in 2013, has also entered 14 events! Let’s see if she goes through with it. Our World Cup preview is here.
| 3. | SWIMMING: Youngsters leading the way at U.S. Nationals at Stanford
In a show of ridiculous scheduling, the USA Swimming National Championships are being held at Stanford a week after the World Championships in Korea concluded and on the same weekend as the first leg of the FINA World Cup. But the future of U.S. swimming is performing beautifully.
On Wednesday, teenagers Luca Urlando (17) and double world-record holder Regan Smith (17) won in the 200 m Butterfly, both with times ranking them in the top 10 on the 2019 world list.
On Thursday, 20-year-old Austin Katz of Texas won the national title in the 200 m at the touch over Shaine Casas of Texas A&M and the times placed them 5-6 on the year list … and they weren’t even on the World Championships team.
In the 100 m Free finals, Olympic veterans Abbey Weitzeil and Ryan Held triumphed, again with marks moving them into the top 10, and Held’s 47.39 placed him at no. 3. Alison Schmitt, the 2012 Olympic 200 m Free champ who swam poorly in Gwangju, came back to win the event at Stanford, and Madisyn Cox, swimming in the Nationals again after her drug suspension was commuted, won a satisfying victory in the 200 m Breaststroke.
| 4. | SWIMMING: FINA Council member indicted for masterminding a 1998 murder
We asked in May why an accused murderer has been maintained as a member of the FINA Council. Now the question is why Tamas Gyarfas (HUN) continues to be a member of the FINA Council after indictment as the mastermind of a successful 1998 plot to kill a business rival.
Gyarfas responded to our May story, writing that there had been no prosecution after more than a year of investigation, but now there is. He’ll have his hands full with his defense, but will FINA do anything about his status?
In addition to his responsibilities on the FINA Council, Gyarfas was also the Technical Delegate in Gwangju for the women-dominated sport of Artistic Swimming. Why?
| 5. | ATHLETICS: Long-time IAAF Council member alarmed at possible easy-on-doping candidates
Amadeo Francis of Puerto Rico, a member of the decision-making IAAF Council from 1976-2007 and an Honorary Vice President, is sounding the alarm in advance of the 25 September Council elections in Doha (QAT), just before the World Championships begin.
The candidate field is huge, with 11 vying for four Vice President positions and 40 running for 13 Council spots, including Willie Banks from the U.S. But Francis is worried about three candidates, from India, Kenya and Ukraine: countries with less-than-stellar records on doping control.
Wrote Francis to dozens of voting members: “This is the ultimate decision making body of the IAAF and, in the absence of positive measures from the Members, could have a dominant presence of members from countries which have shown an inability or unwillingness to comply with IAAF rules and regulations and thus could not be depended upon to guarantee a clean sport for the rest of the Athletics community.”
Game on.
| 6. | DOPING: No supplement is safe: Olympic bronze winner Galloway suspended
The 2016 Olympic bronze medalist in the women’s Taekwondo open-weight category, U.S. fighter Jackie Galloway, was suspended for six months for a doping positive. She took a supplement that contained a prohibited substance, even though it was not listed among the ingredients.
This is the same situation as hit Madisyn Cox and the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency posted a video with the sad story of teenage weightlifter Abby Raymond, whose career in her chosen sport was threatened when a supplement provided by a family friend caused a doping positive. Her penalty was confined to three months since she had no idea that the supplement had a prohibited substance in it. It was the USADA’s first case of a contaminated supplement involving a minor.
It’s an issue that is only going to get more prevalent as time goes on.
| 7. | WATCH PARTY: Weekend picks for the Olympic sports fan
If you’re in the mood for more Olympic sports this weekend, some suggestions:
● Football: The U.S. Women’s National Team begins its “Victory Tour” with a match against Ireland in Pasadena, California on Saturday at 7 p.m. Pacific time on ESPN2 and Galavision.
● Swimming: The USA Swimming National Championships continue from Stanford at 5 p.m. Pacific time on Friday (NBCSN), Saturday (NBC Olympic Channel) and Sunday (NBC Olympic Channel).
● Pan American Games: The quadrennial hemispheric spectacle in Lima, Peru turns the corner for the second week on ESPN; check their program guide for the events on ESPN2 and ESPNNews.
The lowest point in the last 30 years for the U.S. men’s soccer team came on 10 October 2017, when Trinidad & Tobago defeated the American squad, 2-1, in Couva, in a stadium named for NBC track & field commentator Ato Boldon.
That loss sent the U.S. home for the 2018 FIFA World Cup, while Mexico (ranked 17th in the world), Costa Rica (15th) and Panama (63rd) went to the tournament for the 15th, fourth and first times, respectively. The U.S. finished fifth among six CONCACAF teams and didn’t even qualify for the play-in matches against Australia, lost by fourth-place Honduras on a 1-3 aggregate.
The next year, 2018, wasn’t a lot better. Playing under interim coach Dave Sarachan, the U.S. played in 11 friendlies during the year with a 3-5-3 record and scored an unimpressive total of 10 goals during the year and gave up 14.
Gregg Berhalter was announced as the USMNT coach on 2 December and through the first half of 2019, the U.S. is 8-3-1 thanks to five Gold Cup wins and has a 22-7 goals-against tally.
So the low-point in popularity for the U.S. men was essentially the lost year of 2018.
Let’s keep that in mind when reviewing the amazing statement issued by the United States National Soccer Team Players Association on Tuesday to support the U.S. women’s player association in its fight for “equal pay” with the U.S. Soccer Federation.
Far from being a “players supporting players” announcement, the posting simply made public the men’s players unhappiness about their own pay situation with the USSF. Responding to USSF President Carlos Cordeiro’s open letter noting that the federation actually paid the women’s team members more than the men’s team members, the men’s players statement just asked for more money:
“As you may know, our CBA expired at the end of 2018 and we are currently waiting on a response from US Soccer to our proposal that would pay the men a fair share of all of the revenue they generate and would provide equal pay to the USMNT and USWNT players.”
And, of course, they criticized Cordeiro’s arithmetic. In his statement, Cordeiro noted that the in-game ticket revenues vs. event expenses for the women’s matches from 2009-19 results in a loss of $27.5 million. That does not include television rights fees or sponsorships, which are federation-wide and not apportioned between the various U.S. teams (men, women, youth and so on).
The men’s player association railed against this, calling the figures “false accounting” and asking “What US sports team makes money if they don’t count television, sponsorship, and marketing revenue?”
Certainly, USSF makes money. Its financial statement for the fiscal year ending 31 March 2018 showed $195 million in assets and yearly income – even with the bad men’s performance on the field in 2017 – of $102 million.
Of that $102 million, sponsorships and national-team game revenues accounted for $77.3 million. The expense side of the ledger showed National Team costs of $71.9 million, which included youth teams and player development ($27.3 million), men’s team costs of $14.6 million, women’s team costs of $17.1 million – more than the men – and coaching, equipment and support for smaller teams of about $12.9 million.
So the men’s players see all that money and they want more!
But given the results on the field, let’s go back and see what the attendance was for the men at their lowest ebb, that empty year of 2018. The U.S. played seven home games:
● 29 Jan.: 11,161 vs. Bosnia & Herzegovina at Carson, California
● 27 Mar.: 9,825 vs. Paraguay at Cary, North Carolina
● 28 May: 11,822 vs. Bolivia at Chester, Pennsylvania
● 07 Sep.: 32,489 vs. Brazil in East Rutherford, New Jersey
● 11 Sep.: 40,914 vs. Mexico in Nashville, Tennessee
● 11 Oct.: 38,631 vs. Colombia at Tampa, Florida
● 16 Oct.: 24,959 vs. Peru at East Hartford, Connecticut
That’s a total of 169,801 or 24,257 per game to see the U.S. play three teams which did not compete in the 2018 World Cup in Russia and four teams that did (Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, Peru).
That, and the accompanying television ratings for those games represent – in my opinion – the base value of the U.S. men’s team, regardless of who the players are. These games meant nothing, were not part of any tournament and were simply a development exercise for younger players under an interim coach and helped keep the idea that the U.S. had a men’s team alive.
A very deep dive into the revenues and expenses of these games – including sponsorship and licensing impact and television ratings in both England and Spanish – will be needed for the USSF to estimate the “value of the shield,” that is, the value of an American men’s team playing a game on U.S. soil.
Certainly, there are players who are responsible for this revenue. Cobi Jones, Alexi Lalas, Landon Donovan and others built up the U.S. men’s soccer team and made it competitive on the world level, but they have already been paid and are retired. Given the current standing of the U.S. team – currently 22nd in the FIFA World Rankings, just ahead of Iran and Wales – the current players should be paid by what they add to the base value of the team, a public standing which they did not create, but on which they stand.
Their training facilities, travel accommodations, medical support, coach and so on were provided by the players who made the U.S. a world player between 1990-2014, not now.
Because club soccer is so profitable worldwide, there are U.S. players who make millions and many who do well, but aren’t annual millionaires just yet. That’s why the U.S. men’s last labor agreement was based on game bonuses, since few players actually perform with the national team on a consistent basis.
But in the negotiations to come, while the USSF can be generous, it can also look the player’s reps straight in the eye and ask “what is the actual value you bring to our games?”
Cordeiro won’t do that, of course; he has taken a conciliatory tone throughout all of the whining from both the men’s and women’s teams. But it’s worth considering the value of the USSF shield and how that makes the players who wear it more valuable themselves.
Oh yes, one more thing. The U.S. men’s players statement belittled Cordeiro’s suggestion that more people watch the National Women’s Soccer League games. Has it occurred to you that increased ratings are the key to better rights agreements and more money? Maybe you’ve taken a few too many headers.
Rich Perelman
Editor
News, views and noise from the non-stop, worldwide circus of Olympic sport:
● Aquatics ● Back in May, we asked why the international federation responsible for the aquatic sports – FINA – had an accused murderer as a member of its governing council and serving as the Technical Delegate for Artistic Swimming at the 2019 World Championships in Gwangju (KOR).
The person in question, Tamas Gyarfas, replied to the story quickly, stating:
“On 11 February 1998 a well-known figure was shot dead with whom I had had debates which had been finally settled one and a half years prior to the murder.
“A couple of persons, who got sentenced in the meantime, wanted to blackmail me with the story that I stood behind the murder.
“One of them recorded our conversations. The voice-recordings having surfaced recently prove that I never ordered or asked anyone to commit this killing. The investigations have been going on for more than a year. There was no prosecution and trial.
“You have to be sure that I didn’t commit any crime.”
Things have changed.
Gyarfas was charged with “ordering the murder of a business rival” on Tuesday by Hungarian authorities. The facts are that media-company owner Janos Fenyo was killed by submachine gun fire while sitting in a car at a stoplight, and that Slovakian native Jozef Rohac was convicted of the killing and sentenced to life in prison.
Police have believed since at least 2010 that the instigators of the action were Gyarfas and an associate named Tamas Portik, a businessman sentenced to 13 years in jail in 2018 for a different crime.
According to the prosecutor’s statement released Tuesday, “In 1997, the accused decided to kill the victim to put an end to the conflicts. For this reason, in September 1997, he hired a well known mobster to kill Fenyo for the amount of 12 million forints [~$61,500 at the time], which, after receiving an advance of 6 million forints, did not execute the order. For this reason, the suspect has mandated Tamas [Portik], whom he knew since 1994 to kill Janos Fenyo.” Portik is said to have convinced Rohac to kill Fenyo.
Gyarfas’s lawyer called the indictment “absurd,” but that will not deter the prosecutors. And FINA’s reaction? Not a word.
● Athletics ● The fight over doping in track & field, a major issue in the sport with Russia still on suspension since 2015, has now spilled over to politics.
The International Association of Athletics Federations – soon to change its name to World Athletics – will hold elections for its Council, its senior decision-making body, on 25 September, just ahead of the start of the 2019 World Championships in Doha (QAT).
The candidate list is long, with 11 vying for four Vice President slots and 40 candidates for 13 member seats (nine of the V.P. candidates are also standing for the Council … just in case).
There are some familiar faces on the lists of Council candidates: 1976 double Olympic champion Alberto Juantorena (CUB), who has been a long-time Council member, 1984 Olympic gold medalist Nawal El Moutawakel (MAR), also a member of the International Olympic Committee, and American Willie Banks, the former world-record holder in the triple jump and 1983 Worlds silver medalist.
But the question of doping and support for keeping the sport clean has become an issue. Former long-time Council member Amadeo Francis of Puerto Rico has raised the issue of fitness to serve of the Vice Presidential candidates from India, Kenya and Ukraine:
● Adille Sumariwalla (IND)
● Jackson Tuwei (KEN)
● Sergey Bubka (UKR) ~ 1988 Olympic pole vault winner & six-time World Champion
Francis knows the Council well. He served as the area representative for North America, Central American and the Caribbean (NACAC) from 1976-99 and then as a Vice President from 1999-2007 before retirement. He continues to be involved as a Honorary Life Vice President.
Wrote Francis to the delegates of the region he served:
“I am particularly concerned that three of the candidates for vice presidents are from countries – Ukraine, Kenya and India – which, as noted in the attached article ‘have the worst doping records beyond only Russia.’
“If these candidates were elected to the positions they seek, they would automatically become members of the all powerful Executive Board whose function, as described in the 2019 Constitution, is ‘to govern the IAAF.’ The Board is comprised of the president, the four vice presidents and three members nominated by the President. This is the ultimate decision making body of the IAAF and, in the absence of positive measures from the Members, could have a dominant presence of members from countries which have shown an inability or unwillingness to comply with IAAF rules and regulations and thus could not be depended upon to guarantee a clean sport for the rest of the Athletics community. This is a matter that I brought to the attention of the president just a few weeks ago and now that the aspirants have been revealed, concerns me even more as it should you.
“What will we do, individually and collectively to assure that our sport continues to move forward in its effort to ensure that a level playing field can be enjoyed by all athletes, including our own?
“And to assure that the work that has been done over the past four years to improve our image is not now cast in doubt by unfortunate appointments to our governing body?”
As further proof, Francis circulated a 2018 notice from the Athletics Integrity Unit – the independent doping watchdog created by the IAAF – that listed five countries “having the highest doping risk to the sport” and included Bahrain, Belarus, Ethiopia, Kenya and Ukraine (India was not listed in this category).
Francis is pushing hard, but will have a hard time unseating Bubka, also an IOC member since 2008. He may have more luck with the others.
The one person running unopposed is IAAF President Sebastian Coe, who will be re-elected to a second term.
The IAAF can hardly afford a black eye on doping, especially with the trial of its former President, Senegal’s Lamine Diack, coming up in France on allegations of bribery, doping cover-ups, extortion and money-laundering.
● Taekwondo ● More and more it is becoming clear that there is no such thing as a “safe supplement.”
The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency announced on Monday (29th July) that Jackie Galloway, the 2016 Olympic bronze medalist in the +67 kg class has been suspended for six months due to a positive doping test for ibutamoren, a growth hormone. The USADA notice continued (broken up for easier reading):
“Following notification of her positive test, Galloway provided USADA with information about dietary supplement products she was using at the time her positive sample was collected and which she declared during the sample collection session.
“Although no prohibited substances were listed on the supplement labels, subsequent analysis conducted by the WADA-accredited laboratory in Salt Lake City, Utah, indicated that one of the supplements the athlete provided, a multivitamin she purchased from a grocery store, contained ibutamoren.
“The laboratory conducted additional specialized analysis on multiple supplement tablets, enabling USADA to understand the distribution of the contamination and conclude that the product was more likely than not contaminated during the manufacturing process.”
Doping positives coming from medications or products which do not list a prohibited substances in its ingredients allow for a lesser suspension that the 2-4 years usually applicable. Galloway was fortunate in receiving a short sentence that will not impact her Olympic opportunities in 2020, in the same way that swimmer Madisyn Cox had her suspension commuted to six months by the Court of Arbitration for Sport. Cox won the U.S. national title in the 200 m Breaststroke on Thursday.
Are any supplements really safe? USADA just posted a video chronicling the experience of weightlifter Abby Raymond, who used a supplement provided by a family friend … and suffered a doing positive just weeks later. This is a problem which, for now, simply won’t go away.