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World University Games – finalist in 200 backstroke!

August 15th, 2011 | Stingray Office Manager | Stingray News

 

Swanston places 6th at 2011 Summer Universiade
August, 14, 2011

SHENZHEN, China (CIS) – The swimming competition got under way on Sunday at the 26th Summer Universiade and although Canada took part in two finals, the country’s first medal will have to wait at least another day.

Canada’s top results on the first day of action at the pool came from Matthew Swanston of Newmarket, Ont., who placed sixth in the men’s 200-metre backstroke, and the women’s 4×100 freestyle relay, which bettered that performance a few moments later with a fifth-place finish in the final race of the night session.

Swanston created a buzz in the morning preliminaries when he posted the second fastest time, a “post full-body swimsuit” personal best 1:59.46, only 42 hundredths of a second slower than Cody Chitwood of the USA. The Stanford University student once again went under the two-minute mark in the final, touching the wall 1:59.54, but saw his rivals pick up the pace significantly including a spectacular 1:56.01 effort by gold medallist Ryosuke Irie of Japan.

Rexford Tullius of the USA took silver in 1:58.66, while New Zealand’s Gareth Kean claimed bronze in 1:58.74. Chitwood fell all the way down to fourth place with a time of 1:59.48.

“I would have loved to reach the podium of course, considering I was second after the preliminaries, but I can’t be disappointed with a personal best and back-to-back races under two minutes,” said Swanston, a veteran of the 2009 Universiade in Serbia, where he also finished sixth in the 200 back – in 2:00.42 – and helped Canada to a bronze medal in the 4×200 freestyle relay. “My third turn was messy, that was my one major mistake in the final.”

In the last event of the evening, Canada was hoping to at least match its performance from the 2009 Games, a bronze medal. Lead swimmer Marie-Pier Ratelle of Trois-Rivières, Que., and anchor Seanna Mitchell of Manotick, Ont., who were both part of the third-place foursome two years ago, this time teamed up with Heather MacLean of Etobicoke, Ont., and Sandrine Mainville of Boucherville, Que.

Ranked fifth after the preliminaries, the Canadians fell behind early in the final, dropping to sixth at both the 100 and 200-metre marks, and could never make up ground on their way to a time of 3:44.35. In a thrilling finish, Australia captured gold in 3:40.03, followed closely by the USA (3:40.19) and host China (3:40.29).

“I thought all in all, we did pretty well today,” said Canadian head coach Mike Blondal, who was also at the helm in 2009. “Matthew had two solid races but made a costly mistake on his third turn in the final. As for the girls, we knew they’d have to shave a good two seconds from their morning time and they didn’t quite make it.”

“As a team, it will be hard to match our seven medals from 2009,” added Blondal, whose University of Calgary Dinos are reigning CIS women and men’s champions. “The competition here is very tough. But we’re optimistic. Our relays are pretty strong.”

Nine other Canadian swimmers were in action on Sunday. Eight of them saw their day end following the morning’s prelims, while another took part in a time final in the evening.

Of the group, Zack Chetrat of Oakville, Ont., came closest to earning a spot in the final. The University of Toronto student finished 10th in the men’s 200 butterfly thanks to a time of 1:59.00. His teammate Jonathan Gagné of Montreal settled for 35th place in 2:06.98.

In the men’s 200 breaststroke, Richard Funk of Edmonton was 11th in 2:15.07 and Jason Block of Calgary was 23rd in 2:18.62.

In the men’s 200 backstroke, Adam Best of Ottawa finished 17th in 2:01.97.

In the women’s 50 butterfly, Paige Schultz of Toronto placed 12th in 27.70, while Caroline Kuczynski of Montreal followed in 19th position in 28.21.

In the women’s 800 free, Zsofia Balazs of Toronto and Pamela Ruskys of Kingston, Ont., were 18th and 19th, respectively, with times of 8:59.70 and 9:00.73.

The swimming competition resumes on Monday with finals in the men’s 100 back, women’s 100 free, women’s 200 individual medley, women’s 400 free, men’s 50 fly, men’s 800 free, and men’s 4×100 free relay.

Team Canada website: http://english.cis-sic.ca/universiade/summer
2011 Summer Universiade website: http://www.sz2011.org/Universiade

About the Summer Universiade

The Summer Universiade is an international multi-sport event that takes place every two years and is second only to the Olympic Games in the number of participating athletes and countries. Close to 9,000 athletes from over 150 countries will compete in Shenzhen. The Universiade is open to competitors who are at least 17 and less than 28 years of age as of January 1 in the year of the Games. Participants must be full-time students at a post-secondary institution (university, college, CEGEP) or have graduated from a post-secondary institution in the year preceding the event.

 

 

2 Newmarket Stingray Swimmers have been selected to represent Canada at the World University Games which are being held in Shenzhen, China this August. The meet, also known as the Universiade, or FISU Games, is a gathering of University swimmers from all over the world competing in many different sports.   The swimming competition will take place from Aug. 13-19th.  Matthew Swanston and Michael Zoldos both gained selection to the team while representing the Newmarket Stingrays at the World Trials which were held in Victoria last month. Both Matthew and Michael attend Stanford University in California

There are only 2 entries per country per event.  Matthew will be swimming the 50, 100, and 200 backstroke, as well as the backstroke leg of the medley relay.   Michael will be swimming the 400 and 800 freestyle.

This is the second World University Games Team for Matthew.    Two years ago he was in Belgrade, Serbia, and was a finalist in the 200 backstroke, finishing 6th.  He was also a bronze medalist , swimming the anchor leg for Canada’s 4 x 200 freestyle relay

Congratulations to Matthew and Michael, and good luck in China!

From Swimming Canada:

Four past medalists highlight Canadian swim selection for 2011 Summer Universiade
May, 13, 2011
OTTAWA (CIS) –
Canadian Interuniversity Sport, in conjunction with Swimming Canada, announced Friday the 41 student-athletes who will represent Canada in swimming at the 26th Summer Universiade from August 12-23, 2011, in Shenzhen, China.
The Canadian swim team is coming off back-to-back solid showings at the biennial event with seven medals (1-4-2) in 2009 in Belgrade, Serbia, and 10 podiums (4-2-4) in 2007 in Bangkok, Thailand.
No sport has brought more Universiade glory to Canada over the years. Since the inaugural Summer Games in 1959, Canadian swimmers have won 95 medals including 21 golds – both record tallies for the country.
“After head coaching the 2009 team I am very excited to return to that competition,” said University of Calgary head coach Mike Blondal. “With less than one year to go until Canada’s Olympic Trials this meet will be the first stop on the final step to make the Main Show in London in the summer of 2012.”
For the second straight Universiade, the Canadian squad will be comprised of 21 female and 21 male swimmers including 31 from CIS universities, 10 from NCAA schools and one from a cegep.
The University of Calgary Dinos – reigning CIS champions in both women’s and men’s competition – and the University of Toronto Varsity Blues lead the way with eight selections apiece.
A third of the delegation (13) has previous world university games experience including two-time veterans MacKenzie Downing of Whitehorse, a graduate of the University of Victoria who was at the 2007 and 2005 Games (Izmir, Turkey), and Seanna Mitchell of Manotick, Ont., a fourth-year Dino senior who competed for the Red and White in 2009 and 2007.
Other returnees from 2009 include the U of C’s Allison Long of Calgary, and David Dimitrov of Milton, Ont.; U of T teammates Heather Maitland of Toronto and Zack Chetrat of Oakville, Ont.; the UBC duo of Hanna Pierse of Edmonton and Kelly Aspinall of Nanoose Bay, B.C.; Laval’s Marie-Pier Ratelle of Trois-Rivières, Que.; McGill’s Steven Bielby of Pointe-Claire, Que.; Dalhousie’s David Sharpe of Halifax; and Stanford’s Matthew Swanston of Newmarket, Ont. 
UNLV’s Kier Maitland of Edmonton is a veteran of the 2007 Games.
Downing, Mitchell, Ratelle and Swanston have all reached the podium in their previous trips to the Universiade.
Downing, who competed at the 2007 FINA world championships in Australia, claimed Universiade gold (100 fly), silver (200 fly) and bronze (4×100 medley) that same summer. Mitchell won a silver in Belgrade (4×200 free) and a bronze in Bangkok (4×100 medley). Ratelle (4×100 free) and Swanston (4×200 free) both returned from Serbia with a bronze medal.
Rounding out the women’s team for Shenzhen is the Varsity Blues’ foursome of Zsofia Balazs of Toronto, Pamela Ruksys of Kingston, Ont., Paige Schultz of Toronto and Vanessa Treasure of Mississauga, Ont.; the Dinos’ pair of Julianne Brown of North Vancouver, B.C., and Lindsay Delmar of Calgary; the UBC duo of Heather MacLean of Toronto and Tera Van Beilen of Oakville; Arizona State teammates Caroline Kuczynski of Montreal and Cassie Morrice of Victoria; Missouri’s Dominique Bouchard of North Bay, Ont.; Victoria’s Hilary Caldwell of London, Ont.; Cegep Édouard-Montpetit’s Sandrine Mainville of Boucherville, Que.; and Texas A&M’s Paige Miller of Brampton, Ont.
MacLean represented Canada at the 2009 FINA Worlds in Rome where she reached the final of the 4×200 freestyle relay and was a semi-finalist in the 100 free.
Rounding out the men’s squad are Dino teammates Jason Block of Calgary and Colin Miazga of Saskatoon; the U of T duo of Cam Cummings of Oakville and Mike Smerek of St. Catharines, Ont.; UVic teammates and fellow Victoria natives Craig Dagnall and Nicholas Sinclair; Jonathan Gagné of Montreal and Tim Ruse of Pointe-Claire, both students at Concordia; Ottawa’s Adam Best of Ottawa; Michigan’s Richard Funk of Edmonton; Simon Fraser’s David Hibberd of Calgary; Laval’s Dominique Massie-Martel of Ottawa; Texas A&M’s Kyle Troskott of Lethbridge, Alta.; and Stanford’s Michael Zoldos of Newmarket.
In addition to Blondal, the support staff includes team leader Ken Radford from Swimming Canada; assistant coaches Peter Carpenter from McGill, Martin Gingras from UQTR, Steve Price from Edmonton Keyano Swim Club and John Rogers from the University of Toronto’s high-performance centre; managers Elizabeth El-Hawary and Kelly Steeves; and therapists Rick Pelletier and Yanic Szoghy.
The delegation is set to leave Canada on August 7. The Universiade swimming competition runs from August 14-19.
NOTES: Canadian swimmers won a team-record six events and 15 Universiade medals in Buffalo in 1993… Their second best performances came in Sheffield, England, in 1991 and in Edmonton in 1983 as they claimed three victories and 14 medals on both occasions…
TEAM CANADA ROSTER
Women
Name, University, Hometown
Zsofia Balazs, Toronto, Toronto, Ont.
Julianne Brown, Calgary, North Vancouver, B.C.
Dominique Bouchard , Missouri , North Bay, Ont.
Hilary Caldwell, Victoria, London, Ont.
Lindsay Delmar, Calgary, Calgary, Alta.
MacKenzie Downing, Victoria, Whitehorse, Yukon
Caroline Kuczynski, Arizona State, Montreal, Que.
Allison Long , Calgary, Calgary, Alta.
Heather MacLean, UBC, Etobicoke, Ont.
Sandrine Mainville, Cegep Édouard-Montpetit Boucherville, Que.
Heather Maitland , Toronto, Toronto, Ont.
Paige Miller, Texas A&M, Brampton, Ont.
Seanna Mitchell, Calgary, Manotick, Ont.
Cassie Morrice , Arizona State, Victoria, B.C.
Hanna Pierse , UBC, Edmonton, Alta.
Marie-Pier Ratelle, Laval , Trois-Rivières, Que.
Pamela Ruksys, Toronto, Kingston, Ont.
Paige Schultz, Toronto, Toronto, Ont.
Vanessa Treasure , Toronto, Mississauga, Ont.
Tera Van Beilen, UBC, Oakville, Ont.
Men
,
Kelly Aspinall, UBC, Nanoose Bay, B.C.
Adam Best, Ottawa, Ottawa, Ont.
Steven Bielby, McGill, Pointe-Claire, Que.
Jason Block, Calgary, Calgary, Alta.
Zack Chetrat , Toronto, Oakville, Ont.
Cam Cummings, Toronto  , Oakville, Ont.
Craig Dagnall, Victoria, Victoria, B.C.
David Dimitrov, Calgary, Milton, Ont.
Richard Funk, Michigan, Edmonton, Alta.
Jonathan Gagné, Concordia , Montreal, Que.
David Hibberd , Simon Fraser , Calgary, Alta.
Kier Maitland, UNLV, Edmonton, Alta.
Dominique Massie-Martel Laval , Ottawa, Ont.
Colin Miazga, Calgary, Saskatoon, Sask.
Tim Ruse, Concordia , Pointe-Claire, Que.
David Sharpe, Dalhousie , Halifax, N.S.
Nicholas Sinclair, Victoria, Victoria, B.C.
Mike Smerek, Toronto, St. Catharines, Ont.
Matthew Swanston, Stanford , Newmarket, Ont.
Kyle Troskott, Texas A&M, Lethbridge, Alta.
Michael Zoldos, Stanford , Newmarket, Ont.
STAFF,
Position, Name, University/Club, Hometown
Team leader, Ken Radford, Swimming Canada  Victoria, B.C.
Head coach, Mike Blondal, Calgary , Calgary, Alta.
Assistant, Peter Carpenter, McGill , Montreal, Que.
Assistant, Martin Gingras, UQTR, Quebec City, Que.
Assistant, Steve Price, EKSC, Edmonton, Alta.
Assistant, John Rogers, UTHPC, Toronto, Ont.
Manager, Elizabeth El-Hawary – , Halifax, N.S.
Manager, Kelly Steeves, – , Toronto, Ont.
Therapist, Rick Pelletier, – , Calgary, Alta.
Therapist, Yanic Szoghy , – , Montreal, Que