Alexander Kharlanov won the men’s 100 fly in 50.71. Belarusian Yauhen Tsurkin finished 2nd in 50.98.That’s a second short of her season-best time set in November. Viktoria Andreeva won the women’s 200 IM in 2:10.07.2016 Olympic champion in the 200 Dmitry Balandin of Kazakhstan took 3rd in 58.78, just missing his own national record in the event. For Prigoda, that completed a breaststroke sweep of the meet. Kiril Prigoda won the men’s 100 breastsroke in 57.03, with Ilya Shymanovich finishing 2nd in 57.65.She won the 100 breaststroke on day 1 of the meet. Natalia Ivaneeva won the women’s 50 breaststroke in 30.18.Popova later won the women’s 400 free by almost 11 seconds, touching 1st in 4:01.87.That’s just short of his Dutch age group record of 21.35 set at the European Championships. Her countrymate, 18-year old Nyls Korstanje, won the men’s 50 free later in the session in 21.62. Dutch swimmer Kim Busch won the women’s 100 free in 53.33, just out-racing the Russian record holder Veronika Popova (53.40).In that race, Grigory Tarasevich won in 1:51.19, holding off hard finishes from Mikita Tsmyh (1:51.42) and Dmitrii Maltcev (1:51.53). Kolesnikov skipped the 200 back, which is the event in which he placed 4th at this summer’s long course World Championship meet. Russia hasn’t updated their records recently, but he’s now been faster than his recognized Russian Junior Record from 2016 on 7 different occasions in the last 5 weeks. He also won the men’s 50 backstroke in 23.18, which is about three-tenths slower than his 22.83 best from the European Championships last week. That broke not only the Russian Junior Record of 1:43.58 set by Mikhail Vekovischev in 2016, but also made him the first swimmer under the FINA-set standard for the new World Junior Records being recognized in short course meters. He swam 1:41.75 early in the session, which won the race by 3 seconds. Note: Russian Junior Records are for girls aged 16 and under and boys aged 18 and under.Īlso breaking a Russian, and World, Junior Record was Kliment Kolesnikov in the 200 free final. That record pairs with Sabitova’s 56.84 in the 100 fly from day 1 of this meet, which was also a Russian Junior Record. The senior Russian Record is a 2:04.36, set by Svetlana Chimrova in November. Guzhenkova has gravitated more toward the freestyle events as she’s matured, and this summer at 20 years old was on Russia’s winning 400 free relay at the World University Games. In the 200 fly, Sabitova swam 2:06.79, which broke the old record of 2:11.12 set by Anastasia Guzhenkova in 2013. Sabitova’s record came in the form of a Russian Junior National Record. Share 13-Year Old Aleksandra Sabitova Breaks Another Russian Junior Record on LinkedInĭay 2 of the 2017 Vladimir Salnikov Swim Cup saw more records being broken by 13-year old Aleksandra Sabitova and 17-year old Kliment Kolesnikov.Share 13-Year Old Aleksandra Sabitova Breaks Another Russian Junior Record on Pinterest.
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