Articles worth reading from The Olympic Community

 

Articles worth reading from the Olympic Community

updated November 1, 2013
 
 
FROM NOV 1, 2013 WSCA NEWS:  OCEANIA SWIMMING ASSOCIATION -- A report posted by the Oceania Swimming Association (OSA) details facilities and sport histories for 13 Pacific island groups: American Samoa, Cook Islands, Fiji, Guam, the Marshall Islands, Micronesia (Kosrae and Pohnpei), New Caledonia, Norfolk Island, Northern Marianas, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Samoa and Tahiti. The 74-page report can be downloaded from the OSA website via here:

Inside the Games:  Russians caught for drugs doubled in a year, admit country's anti-doping agency

Wednesday, 09 October 2013

By Duncan Mackay

Blood samplesOctober 9 - Doping cases involving Russian athletes has more than doubled this year, it has been revealed in a new report published today. 

The Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA) admitted that since the beginning of this year 88 athletes across a range of sports have been sanctioned for a variety of offences, while more than 80 other competitors are currently under investigation. 

The eye-catching statistics are set to reignite fears that Russia's doping problem is out of control.

But RUSADA claim that the increased figures is down to the fact that they are carrying out more drugs testing than ever before. 

"The number of breaches of anti-doping rules, including those at the investigation stage, over the first nine months of the current year is almost double the analogous data for the whole of last year," RUSADA said in a statement published on the Russian language section of its website today.

Following international criticism, Russia has radically stepped up the amount of testing it is doing in the build-up to major events that are being held in the country, including the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) World Championships, held in Moscow in August, and next year's Winter Olympics and Paralympics in Sochi.

There has been widespread international criticism of Russia's anti-doping problem There has been widespread international criticism of Russia's anti-doping problem

The statement on the RUSADA website claimed 13,674 urine and 3,118 blood tests were carried out.

More than 50 per cent of the tests were conducted out of competition.

RUSADA also claimed that more 1,000 athletes had a biological passport, an individual, electronic record for professional athletes, in which profiles of biological markers of doping and results of doping tests are collated over a period of time. 

"The Agency's work in 2013 focused primarily on the preparation for the Winter Olympic Games in Sochi," the statement said.

"[It has] formed a national testing pool that includes candidates for the Olympic team and conducted a systematic work on the training of athletes, coaches, medical staff teams in an effort to combat doping in sport. 

"It has held 38 seminars and educational interactive quizzes...it has reached more than 80 per cent of the athletes who are candidates for a place in the Olympic team."

Contact the writer of this story at [email protected]

 
 

Australia Swimming President's Message

It’s been just over a month since I took up the role of President, and I continue to be filled with pride and passion for what lies ahead for our sport and for the Australian Swim Team.  Over the last couple of weeks I’ve been fortunate to have been involved in various celebrations around the 30th anniversary of Australia II winning the America’s Cup in 1983.  In catching up with old friends and colleagues, and talking with the general public and media, many have remarked on my decision to take on the role of President at Swimming Australia.  And, as I said when I first came into the role, it was a simple decision. Swimming is of ‘national importance’ to Australia, we are talking about the ‘Green and Gold’ and that is something I take very seriously.

Success in sport is about aspiration, setting targets and reaching those milestones with a clear and common vision.  Our vision, and I say our vision because to achieve it we need complete alignment throughout the sport, is to be the world leaders by 2020 from the Olympic and Paralympic Podium through to the grass roots level at the 1,000 or more Swim Clubs around the nation. That is a huge challenge, but it is something which is achievable if we garner our strengths around the nation.

To become the best in the world requires four key links of a chain to be world class. World class administration of the sport, world class technology, world class athletes – both as individuals and as a team - and world class coaching. And the glue? Cultural values. Values of trust, integrity, transparency of communication, respect for others and having fun.

In taking the next steps towards meeting this goal, and building a world class team, we have started to engage a core group of advisors to provide strategic value and counsel for our sport.  These ‘Friends of the Australian Swim Team’ will work behind the scenes to assist in key areas for our sport.  As volunteers wanting to contribute and help where they can, we are talking about past Olympic champions, some of our great coaches, as well as prominent business men and women, sporting administrators, military personnel and politicians.  Such is the power of swimming in this country, and the reality of what we can achieve, that all are committed to helping the AustralianSwim Team and Swimming Australia succeed, and all understand the importance of us reaching that end goal by 2020.

It would be remise of me not to mention one of the real highlights of the year. To see our junior team return from the FINA World Junior Championships in Dubai on top of the medal tally ahead of the US and Russia was one thing, but then to hear of the way that they conducted themselves out of the water was another. To have such talent and professionalism in the ranks certainly bodes well for the years ahead and only highlights just how achievable our goal really is.
 
Lastly, I must say that I was extremely honoured and humbled to be recognised by my peers and colleagues at last night’s Sport Australia Hall of Fame dinner in Melbourne, and to be next to the Legends of sport, from Don Bradman through to Susie O’Neill is something myself and my family are over the moon about.
 
It was also fantastic to see Maddison Elliott recognised for her hard work at such a young age and to have Cate Campbell nominated for the major award of the evening the Don Award – two terrific ambassadors for our sport, and again further signs that we are on the way to achieving our goals.
 
Go Australia!


John Bertrand AM
President


U.S. Olympic Committee won’t decide on bid for 2024 Summer games until end of 2014

By Liz Clarke, Published: October 1 at washingtonpost.com
PARK CITY, Utah—More than seven months after querying the mayors of 35 U.S. cities about their interest in hosting the 2024 Summer Games, the U.S. Olympic Committee is far from deciding whether to go forward with a bid.
 
According to the USOC’s CEO Scott Blackmun, that decision won’t likely be made until the end of 2014, and it will turn on three factors.
 
“Can it be financially successful? Can we do a great job putting on the Games? Can we win?” Blackmun said Tuesday during a news conference at the Olympic Media Summit, which is being held to showcase the top winter athletes expected to compete at the 2014 Sochi Games in February.
 
In August, a Washington-based non-profit, DC 2024, announced its interest in bringing the 2024 Olympics to the city despite the USOC’s snub of a combined Washington-Baltimore bid just more than a decade ago. New York was the city the USOC chose instead to vie for the 2012 Olympics, which were ultimately awarded to London. More recently, a USOC-backed bid to bring the 2016 Games to Chicago was rejected by the IOC in the first round of voting.
 
On Tuesday, USOC officials made clear they only want to campaign for the 2024 Games if they have a strong sense they’ll prevail, given the high-profile rejections of New York and Chicago. But the process they’ll use to reach that decision hasn’t been determined.
 
Blackmun said the USOC wouldn’t necessarily cull the field of interested U.S. cities — believed to be fewer than 10, with Los Angeles, Dallas and Washington among them — as an initial step.
 
“Ideally we’d like to have the decision made by the end of 2014, and a city selected,” Blackmun said. “We’re not in any huge hurry right now.”
 
Asked about the potential impact of Russian anti-gay legislation during the upcoming Sochi Games, USOC chairman Larry Probst noted that IOC President Thomas Bach recently stated that he had received assurances from Russian officials that no athlete taking part in the games would be affected.
 
Blackmun added that the USOC, “first and foremost,” was a sports organization.
 
“We are not an advocacy group or a human rights organization,” Blackmun said. “We are a part of a worldwide movement, though. I think what we can do is advocate for change within our movement. Anything we can do within the International Olympic movement, within the U.S. Olympic movement, we want to do to make sure that people understand that we want all of our athletes — irrespective of any differentiating characteristics or orientation— to feel comfortable and are part of the U.S. team. We want to lead by example and advocate that we as a family are doing everything we can do to send the message that we don’t tolerate discrimination.”
 
Probst said he would support a change in the Olympic charter to explicitly state that discrimination based upon sexual orientation would not be permitted if such an amendment were put forth.
 
On Monday, Bode Miller, the country’s most decorated male Alpine skier, called the Russian law “an embarrassment” and said he felt it was hypocritical to prohibit athletes from voicing political views during the Games given the impossibility of separating sports from politics.
 
Blackmun said the USOC has never told its athletes what they can’t say but has simply sought to make them aware of the Russian law and potential consequences.
 
 

Portuguese appointed new executive director of LEN

Friday, 27 September 2013
By Duncan Mackay of Inside the Games

Paulo Frischknecht has been appointed as the new executive director of LENSeptember 27 - Portugal's Paulo Frischknecht has been appointed as the new executive director of LEN, the European governing body for aquatic sports, it was announced today at the organisation's Congress in Edinburgh.

He replaces Hungarian Laszlo Szakadati, who stepped down in April following ten years in the position. 

Frischknecht's appointment was recommended by President Paolo Barelli, in agreement with the LEN executive with the ruling Bureau giving its unanimous support. 

Frischknecht, 52, represented Portugal in two Olympics, Montreal in 1976 and Moscow 1980, before becoming a successful coach. 

He is the President of the Portuguese Swimming Federation and was elected to the FINA Bureau in 2009 and to the LEN Bureau in 2012.

After accepting his new position he resigned from the LEN Bureau.

Frischknecht will work closely with LEN's executive manager Marco Birri, marketing manager David Rouger, administrative supervisor Katharina Haue and administrative assistant Lucie Lapierre at the organisation's headquarters in Luxembourg.

"I was surprised when the President approached me in Barcelona [at the World Aquatics Championships]," said Frischknecht.

"We had a couple of interviews, then I asked for a little time as I wanted to make sure that I would be up to the task."

He admitted that LEN faces problems in the immediate future.

"Europe is facing hardship right now both in economic and political terms," said Frischknecht.

"However, we have responsibility towards our predecessors who has made LEN one of the strongest federations.

"And we have to further improve our positions."

Contact the writer of this story at [email protected]
 

Sheikh Ahmad on the record

Author Alan Abrahamson published his article on September 15, 2013 at 3 Wire Sports 

BUENOS AIRES — Kuwait’s Sheikh Ahmad al-Fahad al-Sabah laughed the laugh of a man who had accomplished everything here he had set out to do.

“The media asked what I thought,” he said. “And I said, ‘Thank you for making me a hero.’ “

This was last Tuesday afternoon here in the lobby of the Hilton hotel. Germany’s Thomas Bach had just been elected the ninth International Olympic Committee president. Earlier in the session, wrestling had been put back on the program. Tokyo had won for 2020.

Some moments before, Anita DeFrantz of Los Angeles had won election to the IOC’s policy-making election board. This had delighted some. Some found it almost improbable. After all, without the sheikh in her corner, DeFrantz had managed just single-digits in prior campaigns over the past 12 years.

The U.S. Olympic Committee is still a long way from making a decision on a bid from 2024. The costs are staggering. Federal government is extremely unlikely. That said, if DeFrantz can win for the executive board with the sheikh’s backing, a 2024 U.S. bid — which he is known right now to support — has to at least be considered.

125th IOC Session - IOC Presidential Election

The IOC’s leading man, playing a key role in the election of president Thomas Bach and Tokyo 2020 and the reinstatement of wrestling: Kuwait’s Sheik Ahmad al-Fahad al-Sabah // Getty Images

The sheikh riffed some more: “The Americans asked me, ‘Are you the most powerful man in sport?’ I ask, ‘Are you the most powerful country?’ “

Then the sheikh got serious: “To ask if I am the most powerful man does a disservice to the power of Dr. Bach.” He ticked off Bach’s accomplishments: gold medal-winning fencer, IOC member for 22 years, veteran on the executive board, chair of the legal commission, chief of anti-doping investigations, negotiator of European television rights.

“Do not,” he said, “do not make it look like Dr. Bach is not the power. He is the power.”

Bach, 59, was elected last Tuesday the ninth IOC president.

Over the course of last week in Buenos Aires, meanwhile, the sheikh, head of the Olympic Council of Asia and of the 205-member Assn. of the National Olympic Committees, firmly established himself as the leading man of Olympic influence.

Tokyo, wrestling, Bach — the sheikh completed a trifecta. Then, for good measure, DeFrantz.

The corollary questions:

How is this happening, and why? And is this concentration of influence in one man good for the Olympic movement?

Some are delighted. Here is a man who says he will get things done. They get done.

At the same time, others — within and without the movement — are wary.

And there are those, truth be told, who would would use stronger words still.

The al-Sabah family holds key positions in the Kuwaiti government and military; it has wide-ranging interests in the petroleum industry. The sheikh has made no secret of any of this. His Olympic biography, for instance, recounts his own military service as a Kuwaiti army officer (1985-90). It details, too, how he was OPEC chairman from 2003-05 as well as his country’s energy minister and, since 2006, its minister of national security.

A 2008 American embassy cable, disclosed by Wikileaks, proclaims that Sheikh Ahmad is “widely perceived as being corrupt.” It offers no evidence for this assertion. It also offers this no-holds-barred compliment about him: “[Sheikh Ahmad] is clever and ambitious and is widely seen as being the only member of the ruling family having both the will and the capacity to rule.”

At his very first news conference as president, just hours after being elected, Bach fielded questions from around the room about his relationship with the sheikh, whose support had been well-known.

“You can’t win the elections for the IOC president with the support of one person alone,” Bach said, adding a moment later and referring to the IOC members, “They are very strong individual personalities. You have to convince them individually. This is what I tried to do in my campaign.”

Responding to another question, Bach said, “In all my conversations with the members, there was not a promise being made. This allows me next Tuesday, when I go to Lausanne,” meaning IOC headquarters in Lausanne, Switzerland, along Lake Geneva, “to start with a white sheet of paper.”

Already, meanwhile, speculation is rampant that the sheikh might be interested in himself running one day for president of the IOC. Bach’s term is for eight years, renewable for four more. The sheikh is just 50. There’s plenty of time.

What so many want to know about the sheikh is whether is he a force for good, or otherwise.

All journalists learn early on that if one is suspicious one should think like the police or prosecutors do. If it’s misconduct or wrongdoing you’re looking for, look for evidence of sex, money, drugs, a lust for power or some combination thereof.

The sheikh’s hangout in Lausanne is the upscale Beau Rivage hotel, along the lake. His money is for sure good there. But the same can be said of any number of IOC members.

The sheikh threw a party in Buenos Aires at the conclusion of the landmark 125th session. It was a private affair, invitation only at a super-fancy hotel. It probably was a pretty nice deal. A couple days earlier, at the same hotel, the wrestling people threw a really nice celebration party. It for sure was a really nice deal.

The sheik — and his many, many supporters — insist there’s nothing to be suspicious about.

They say he is completely legit.

In fact, they assert, he is unequivocally committed in the Olympic sphere to best-practices good governance and transparency.

The sheikh took over ANOC last year. That role gives him oversight of the IOC’s Solidarity Commission, a program that aims to provide financial, technical and administrative assistance to national Olympic committees, particularly those in developing nations.

Its 2009-13 budget: $435 million, up nearly 40 percent from the 2009-12 cycle’s $311 million.

As one senior European IOC member, speaking on condition of anonymity said, “The sheikh is dedicated. The sheikh is active. The sheik is interested. It’s a new order.”

There endures an air of mystery about Sheikh Ahmad because of the part of the world he is from; because he is a member of his nation’s royal family; because he moves in a circle to which access can be tightly controlled; and because he rarely gives on-the-record interviews.

The sheikh moves easily in Arab, western and Asian cultures. He is completely at ease in languages, including English.

It would be a fundamental mistake to underestimate Sheikh Ahmad. He is tireless. He is also keenly intelligent.

The skeptic would say it helps the sheikh considerably, as that formal Olympic bio notes, to have been minister of his country’s national security’s office for the past seven years. A more benign view would be that one doesn’t get to that office in the first instance without first being shrewd and sophisticated about human beings, and what makes them tick.

The sheikh has been an IOC member since 1992; his father had been killed the year before, on the second day of the Iraqi invasion. The son learned a great deal from Juan Antonio Samaranch, the IOC president from 1980 until 2001, particularly about the value of relationships. The outgoing president, Jacques Rogge, referred to him last Monday in a light moment as “someone who is like my younger brother.”

This is a significant key to the sheikh’s success in moving within the IOC.

It has been said many, many times about the IOC but bears repeating. Within the so-called Olympic family, relationships are everything.

So, too, the sheikh said, in trying to advance any campaign: “Logic.”

And, he said: “Credibility.”

And: “In the end, winning.”

As simple as this seems, it’s also elemental, and why so many want to jump aboard with him: “People like to win.”

Before the presidential voting, the only issue was not whether Bach would win. It was whether he would steamroll to a first-round victory.

Almost.

In a field of six, Bach needed 47 for victory. He got 43 — itself a remarkable thing.

In the next round, again needing 47, Bach picked up six more votes, winning easily.

His nearest challenger, Richard Carrión of Puerto Rico, managed 29. Ser Miang Ng of Singapore took six, Denis Oswald of Switzerland five, Sergei Bubka of Ukraine four. C.K. Wu of Chinese Taipei had been eliminated in the first round.

Asked if non-believers ought to believe in him now, the sheikh said, “I think people ought to believe in those numbers.”

He made a joke: “I am not competing for a spot in the international journalists’ federation.”

Then, again, seriously, “There [are] rumors, media, PR,” adding a moment later, “In the end you have to accept. I think people are accepting me.”

 

FIFA medical chairman says 2022 World Cup must be played in winter
 
by Mike Prindiville published Sep 17, 2013, 9:53 AM EDT - Reuters 
 
The chairman of the FIFA’s medical committee says the 2022 World Cup in Qatar must be played in the winter.
 
Medical committee chairman Michel D’Hooghe will advise FIFA that the extreme heat of the Qatari summer poses too great a risk to supporters.
 
“The World Cup is about more than games and players,” said D’Hooghe. “I am sure the Qataris have the technical skill to organize a tournament where teams could play and train in a stable, acceptable temperature, but it’s about the fans.
 
“They will need to travel from venue to venue and I think it’s not a good idea for them to do that in temperatures of 47C or more.”
 
The topic of when the 2022 World Cup will be played remains one of great debate.
 
D’Hooghe’s opinion mirrors that of FIFA President Sepp Blatter, who is determined to switch the date of the tournament from summer to winter and will be submitting a proposal to FIFA’s executive committee in October. Blatter has rejected the idea that air conditioned stadiums is enough to combat the extreme heat, noting that “you can cool down the stadiums, but you can’t cool down the whole country and you can’t simply cool down the ambience of a World Cup.”
 
Major dissenters of the switch include the Premier League, for the major impact that a wintertime World Cup would have on the English domestic season. Premier League chief executive Richard Scudamore is adamant that the tournament go forward in the summer. “The bid was extremely thorough, they dealt with all the issues about the heat and the managing of the air conditioning in the stadiums,” Scudamore said. “My view is you can do it in the summer. You can do it there.”
 
The vote as to whether to move the date of the World Cup is set to go forward at the next executive committee meeting on October 3rd. Sunil Gulati, one of 25 people on FIFA’s executive committee, opposes the vote altogether saying “I don’t see at this stage, frankly, how I or any member of FIFA’s executive committee could make a sensible decision.”
 
For now, however, that vote appears to be going forward. Early indications are that D’Hooghe’s opinion will be given weight as the executive committee is expected to agree in principle on the winter move before embarking on a starting a six-month exercise to work out how it will affect the international calendar and domestic leagues.
 
 
Daichi Suzuki Joins WOA Board
 
The WOA is delighted to announce that Daichi Suzuki, who won Gold in the men’s 100m Backstroke at Seoul 1988, has joined the WOA Board. Daichi brings a wealth of experience to the Board as a former WOA Board member and an active and successful sports administrator, media personality and educator. Daichi is currently the President of the Japanese Swimming Federation and the Japan Olympians Association. Daichi was also present at the 125th IOC Session as an Executive Board Member of Tokyo’s successful bid to host the 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games.
 
 
Toronto to hold PASO General Assembly and 2019 Pan American Games host election
 
By Gary Anderson
 
September 17 - Mario Vázquez Raña will announce the host city for the 2019 Pan American and Parapan American Games in TorontoToronto, host of the 2015 Pan and Parapan American Games, has been named as the venue for next month's Pan American Sports Organisation (PASO) General Assembly, at which the host city for the 2019 Games will be revealed.
 
More than 350 officials and delegates from the 41 National Olympic Committees (NOC) of PASO, including international sports federations and members of Rio 2016 will attend the event on October 8-11 at the Westin Harbour Castle hotel located next to Lake Ontario.
 
The undoubted highlight of the General Assembly will be the announcement of the host city of the 2019 Games by PASO President Mario Vázquez Raña on the Friday afternoon (October 11) following the presentations from the four bid cities in the morning.
 
The cities that will be hoping to persuade PASO members of their readiness to stage the event are La Punta in Argentina, Chile's capital Santiago, Ciudad Bolívar in Venezuela and Lima, the capital city of Peru.
 
La Punta will be looking to follow in the footsteps of fellow Argentine cities, such as Buenos Aires which hosted the very first Pan American Games in 1951, Mar del Plata which staged the event in 1995 and Las Leñas in 1990, where the sole Winter Games were held.
 
Venezuelan capital Caracas staged the 1983 Games, while the event has never been held in Chile or Peru.
 
Toronto 2015 will also provide a progress update to delegates before presentations from the organising committees of future Games will take place.
 
It is less than two years to go until Toronto 2015 gets underway on July 10, and will see around 6,000 athletes from 41 countries competing in 36 sports, across both the Pan American and Parapan American Games.
 
Contact the writer of this story at [email protected]
 
 
ALL-CHINA GAMES RECAP BY CRAIG LORD OF SWIMVORTEX.COM
The All-China Games ended in Shenyang yesterday. The meet,  as has been the case every four years from the early 1990s,  flooded the world rankings with new entries. Concern has been expressed by China's anti-doping officials about  the impact of high rewards offered by the Games. Setting that issue aside for the moment,  what Shenyang made clear is that China is not swimming to capacity and full strength in world waters,  many of the efforts at the Games overshadowing what the London 2012 No2 swimming nation put on show at the FINA World Championships in Barcelona this summer past., 
Among all the questions for China in the wake of Shenyang,  these two should be given consideration by swimming,  anti-doping and national authorities:, would it not make sense to drop the financial rewards packages,  which extend to rewarding coaches,  programs and local politicians,  for the domestic event and make the international sports arena the priority in elite (with carrots dangled in front of clean athletes selected for international action)?, and would that not help to bring China close in line with its responsibility,  under FINA and therefore its own swimming rules,  to not only play fair but plays a rol in international relations (not easy to square if a domestic event, qualification for which does not necessarily require a qualification target to be met, is bigger than a world championships)?, The FINA Constitution states as on of the international federations objectives:, to promote and encourage the development of international relations, it adds: "The constitution and rules of a Member must not be in conflict with those of FINA" ... and where there is doubt "FINA Rules shall prevail"., 
As we ponder the deeper meaning of that and events in Shenyang,  here is a trawl across the surface of Shenyang and  its impact at the helm of the sport this year., Paper exercises based on the clock can only ever provide an indication of potential strength,  nothing like the real pressure cooker of a world championships to sort the world order out. Even so,  interesting to not that the helm of the medals table in Barcelona,  which looked like this:, 
 
United States    13   8   8   29,
China                    5   2   2    9, 
France                  4    1   4    9, 
Australia              3  10  0   13, 
 
might well have looked like this:, 
 
United States    12   7   7   26, 
China                    6   6   5   17, 
France                  4    1   4    9, 
Australia              3   9    1  13, 
 
That would have had quite an impact a year after China floated up to become the world No 2 swim nation., Women, 50m freestyle, BCN2013: no finalist, All-China times making BCN top 8,  with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:, 6th 24.61 Chen Xinyi (2012 best: 25.74), 8th 24.76 Yang Li (on 24.81 at the last All-China Games in 2009, Yang had a lifetime set of 25.62 before that, from 2007. The 28-year-old has no time registered since 2009 and did not race at China nationals this far or last. Not sure how qualification works in China or what tim she would have entered the meet on)., 100m freestyle, BCN2013: 7th, All-China times making BCN top 8,  with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:, 7th 53.84 Chen Xinyi (no time inside 57sec in 2012, prev best of 55.61 from nationals in northern spring this year), 8th 53.87 Tang Yi (Olympic medallist in 2012 with best of 53.28; on 54.27 in 7th in Barcelona), 200m freestyle, BCN2013: no finalist, All-China times making BCN top 8,  with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:, 5th 1:56.25  Cao Yue (2012 best: 1:59.26), 6th 1:56.27  Shen Duo (2012 best: 2:01.78), 8th 1:56.36  Zhang Yuhan (2012 best: 2:01.87), 400m freestyle, BCN2013: no finalist, All-China times making BCN top 8,  with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:, 3rd 4:03.11 Cao Yue (2012 best: 4:09.02, 6th 4:04.38 Zhang Yuhan (4:11.09), 7th 4:04.41 Chen Qian (no time in 2012, 2011: 4:13.45)
 
800m freestyle
BCN2013: no finalist
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
4th 8:19.43 Xin Xin (2012 best: 8:22.76)
6th 8:21.22 Zhang Yuhan (no time inside 8:50 before this year and on 8:37.34 at Chinese nationals in spring)
8th 8:24.35 Bi Yirong (2012 best: 8:35.76)
 
100m backstroke
BCN2013: 5th
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
4th 59.36 Fu Yuanhui (59.61 in BCN final, 2012 best, 59.82)
 
200m backstroke
BCN2013: No finalist
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
4th 2:07.94 Zhao Jing (2010 lifetime best and China rcord 2:06.46)
6th 2:08.37 Liao Yali (2012 best: 2:11.06)
 
100m breaststroke
BCN2013: no finalist
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
no impact
Gold: 1:07.28 Zhao Jin (2012 best: 1:07.68)
 
200m breaststroke
BCN2013: no finalist
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
no impact
Gold: 2:24.57 Shi Jinglin (9th ranked from Barcelona and good enough for 8th in the final; 2012 best: 2:27.50)
 
100m butterfly
BCN2013: no finalist
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
3rd 57.04 Lu Ying
7th 57.51 Liu Zige
(9th 58.04 Jiao Liuyang)
 
200m butterfly
BCN2013: Gold and 6th
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
1st 2:04.54 Jiao Liuyang (Olympic champion 6th in Barcelona in world-title defence race, on 2:06.65)
(2nd Liu Zige claimed the world crown in 2:04.59 and took silver in Shenyang in 2:04.78
8th 2:07.71 Sun Mengyue (2012 best: 2:12.99)
(9th  2:07.80 Zhou Yilin (2012 best: 2:14.62)
 
200m medley
BCN2013: 4th
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
2nd 2:09.12 Ye Shiwen (2:10.48 in Barcelona)
5th 2:09.55 Chen Xinyi (2012 best: 2:13.77 … now has a place among the only five women in the world to crack 2:10 this year: cast your eye down the 200Im world top 100 and the only improvements that compare to that are those of two other Chinese swimmers, Zhang Wenqing, 16, up from 2:16.08 in 2012 to 2:11.34 at world titles in Barcelona, and Zhou Min, 16, up from a 2:13.70 best last year to a 2:11.50 at China nationals)
 
400m medley
BCN2013: 7th
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
3rd 4:31.59 Ye Shiwen (on 4:38.51 in Barcelona in 7th, the Olympic champion claimed the world record of 4:28.43 for London gold, hr last 100m free split of 58 a large aberation in world swimming statistics)
6th 4:33.50 Zhou Min (2012 best: 4:37.83)
(9th 4:34.89 Li Xuanxu (Olympic medallist on 4:32.91 in London, out of the picture in Barcelona)
 
Relays are academic, only national teams entering at world level, but the speed of domestic quartets in China takes them into the world top 10 and is worth noting:
 
4x100m freestyle
BCN2013: no finalist
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
4th 3:36.55 Shanghai 3:36.55
 
4x200m freestyle
BCN2013: 4th - 7:49.79
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
5th 7:50.50 Shanghai
6th 7:51.47 Zhejiang
(9th 7:57.48 Shandong)
BUT: take the top 4 in the 200m freestyle and, without taking anything away for flying relay starts, the combination adds up to 7:45.36, just 0.22sec shy of the world-title winning time of the USA and 1.72sec faster than Australia's silver-winning effort. Add in the flying starts and the virtual world crown on paper goes to China this summer. In the real world, the national quartet, taking flying starts into account, was more than a second per swimmer down on the pace of Shenyang.
 
4x100m medley
BCN2013: 4th - 3:57.30
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
6th 3:58.43 Shanghai
(9th 4:00.63 Liaoning)
 
Men
50m freestyle
BCN2013: no finalist
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
No impact
Gold: Ning Zetao 21.96 after 21.91 NR in heats (Ning had not broken 23 coming into 2013 and at China nationals this year clocked 22.09 in the heats but 22.41 in the final)
 
100m freestyle
BCN2013: no finalist
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
No impact… but only just:
9th 48.27 Ning Zetao (2012 best: 51.19)
10th 48.33 Lu Zhiwu (2012 best: 48.92)
 
200m freestyle
BCN2013: no finalist
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
2nd 1:44.47 Sun Yang Asian record (2012 best: 1:44.93)
(9th 1:46.85 Hao Yun (2012 best: 1:47.12)
 
400m freestyle
BCN2013: Gold and 8th
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
4 3:44.87 Hao Yun (8th in Barcelona 3:48.88)
 
1500m freestyle
BCN2013: Gold
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
On 14:41.15 for the world title, Sun Yang needed only a 14:53 to win in Shenyang but in doing that he served as pace-setter for this, comparing where Shenyang would have ranked in a list with times in Barcelona and at World Juniors in Dubai:
6th 14:56.60 Mack Horton (2012 best: 15:10.07)
8th 14:58.09 Yang Zhixian (2012 best: 15:42.05)
9 th14:58.32 Wang Kecheng
10th 14:58.52 Zu, Lijun, CHN LCM2013
For Yang, the race meant a debut entry in the world top 150, for Wang a rise from a best of 15:16.23, for Zu, 24, his first lifetime best over 30 laps since a 15:01.74 effort in 2009.
 
100m backstroke
BCN2013: no finalist
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
7th 53.43 Xu Jiayu (2012 best: 55.46)
 
200m backstroke
BCN2013: 7th
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
No impact
Gold 1:56.67 Xu Jiayu (In Barcelona rounds on 1:56.42, Xu finished 7th in 1:57.13 in the final)
 
100m breaststroke
BCN2013: no finalist All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
No impact
Gold: 1:00.31 Xie Zhi (2012 best: 1:01.95)
 
100m breaststroke
BCN2013: no finalist
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
No impact… but only just:
Gold and silver both ins is the previous national record
2:10.25 Mao Feilian (a best tim by at least 7sec according to all time registered with FINA and entered into the world rankings, official and independent)
2:10.55 Li Xiang (2012 best: 2:11.67)
NB: on 1:03.50 in 2011 over 100m, Mao had no time inside 2:17 before this year. In the 200m medley in Shenyang, he clocked 1:59.63, up from a 2012 best of 2:04.32 and lifetime best of 2:02.90 from 2011. In 2013, h has also made a debut in the world ranks over 200m freestyle (1:49) and 200m backstroke (1:59). Up to 2011, he was a regular 400IMer, racing between 4:21 and 4:27 six times between 2009 and 2011.
 
100m butterfly
BCN2013: no finalist
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
none
Gold: 51.88 - Zhou Jiawei (last in final at Barcelona, 51.65)
 
200m butterfly
BCN2013: bronze and 4th
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
no impact
Both Wu Peng and Chen Yin are a touch slower in Shenyang than in Barcelona after respective 2012 season bests of 1:54.91 and 1:54.43
 
200m medley
BCN2013: 4th
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
No impact
Gold 1:57.71 Wang Shun (five times inside 1:58 this year and on 1:56.86 in 4th in Barcelona)
 
400m medley
BCN2013: no finalist
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
2nd 4:09.10 Wang Shun (best in 2012: 4:17.92; now just half a second shy of Japanese Daiya Seto's world-title pace this summer)
7th 4:10.78 Yang, Zhixian (2012 best: 4:11.92)
(9th 4:11.99 Huang Chaosheng (2012 best: 4:17.47)
(10th 4:13.56 Li Xiang (2012 best: 4:18.61)
Relays are academic, only national teams entering, but the speed of domestic quartets in China takes them into the world top 10 and is worth noting:
 
4x100m freestyle
BCN2013: no final
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
No impact
Gold: 3:15.61 Zhejiang (would have ranked 9th in Barcelona and fell just 0.11ssec shy of the Chinese national record set by Beijing in shiny suits in 2009 … BUT, add the top 4 time in all quartets and you get 3:12.52, a big national mark in prospect, one that would have left China 5th in the world-title final just over a second from the podium).
 
4x200m freestyle
BCN2013: bronze - 7:04.74
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
No impact
 
4x100m medley
BCN2013: no final
All-China times making BCN top 8, with rank comparing Barcelona and Shenyang:
No impact … but
Gold 3:34.94 Zhejiang: inside the 3:35.95 of the national team in Barcelona