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McCullagh Morning Finals Bring In-Season 58.7 For Peaty, 48.8 For Scott

2020 MCCULLAGH INTERNATIONAL MEET

The 2020 McCullagh International Meet gives swimmers a chance to test out having finals in the morning, as the ‘day 1 prelims’ took place last night at Aurora Complex in Bangor. This mimicks the timing set to happen at this summer’s Olympic Games in Tokyo, Japan.

Not giving the timing a second thought was Olympic and World champion Adam Peaty, with the 25-year-old first busting out a night swim of 58.90 before lowering it further this morning to a swift 58.78 to take 100m breast gold.

The Loughborough man split 27.42/31.36 to beat a stacked field this AM by over a second, a field which included Commonwealth Games medalists James Wilby, Ross Murdoch, plus two-time Olympian Craig Benson.

Wilby finished under a minute as well tonight, dropping his 1:00.26 prelims swim down to 59.91 for a solid in-season effort. Splits for Peaty’s teammate included 28.08/31.83 to get him on the board with the silver.

Murdoch finished with the bronze in 1:00.54 to kick-off his 2020 calendar year.

As fast as Peaty was this morning, he sits just off the #1 time in the world, which stands at the 58.61 Dutch record holder Arno Kamminga clocked last month at the FINA Champions Series in Shenzen. Belarusian Ilya Shymanovich also ranks slightly above Peaty, holding a season-best of 58.73, albeit from last August at the FINA World Cup stop in Tokyo.

Also situated just ahead of Peaty is young gun Nicolo Martinenghi of Italy, who posted a mark of 58.75 in Riccione last December.

However, these rankings merely set the stage for what’s to come as the months roll on, with the British Championships still sitting 2 months away.

2019-2020 LCM MEN 100 BREAST

AdamGBR
Peaty
03/14
58.13
2Arno
Kamminga
NED58.4303/07
3Ilya
Shymanovich
BLR58.7308/02
4Nicolo
Martinenghi
ITA58.7512/12
5Zibei
Yan
CHN58.8301/18
View Top 26»

Additional racers in this morning’s finals session included Commonwealth Games champion Aimee Willmott putting up the fastest 400m IM time for the women, stopping the clock in 4:39.63. The 26-year-old Stirling standout will most likely be happy hitting a sub-4:40 this time of year.

Behind her was 3-time Olympian Hannah Miley in 4:44.60, while 15-year-old Katie Shanahan rounded out the top 3 in 4:47.95.

Aberdeen’s Miley is the long-time British record holder in this event, owning a lifetime best of 4:31.33 from 2009. Willmott is GBR’s 2nd fastest performer all-time, possessing a PB of 4:33.01 from the 2014 Commonwealth Games.

As for Shanahan, the teen has been as fast as 4:43.36 from the 2019 European Junior Championships, placing her at slot #11 among Britain’s all-time performers. That time also rendered her the bronze medalist last year in Kazan. This effort here checks-in as Shanahan’s 5th fastest time ever.

Also in the water was two-time relay Olympic silver medalist Duncan Scott, with the versatile 22-year-old immediately moving on to this McCullagh International after contesting BUCS last weekend.

Scott dove in the for 100m freestyle, posting a night prelim effort of 49.11 to represent the only heats swimmer to delve under the 50-second mark. He mimicked the feat in this morning’s finals, touching in a winning time of 48.86 to collect the only sub-49 second time of the field.

Splitting 23.44/25.42, Scott looked smooth as silk, getting clean water with the next-fastest swimmer being that of home nation World Championships 50m backstroke bronze medalist Shane Ryan.

Ryan secured silver in 49.92, while Bangor native Jack McMillan produced a mark of 49.97 to also land on the podium.

17-year-old Edward Mildred of Northampton represented the youngest finalist of this men’s 100m free by 3 years. But the teen held his own, checking with a very respectable 50.60 to drop .18 from last night’s swim.

Mildred’s 50.60 sits just .13 outside of the 50.47 lifetime best he achieved at the NASA County Championships just last month. Plus, Mildred knew he had the 200m fly just a couple of events later in this morning’s session.

In that 200 fly, it was Loughborough’s Max Litchfield who made a late surge to get to the wall first in 1:59.53. Mildred settled for runner-up in 1:59.97, off his 1:59.66 heats swim from last night.

Irish national record holder Brendan Hyland just missed breaking 2:00, touching in 2:00.04 as this morning’s bronze medalist.

Larne’s Danielle Hill and Stirling’s Kathleen Dawson produced the exact same time of 28.35 to tie for gold in the women’s 50m back, leaving Harriet West to snag the bronze in 28.97.

Hill has been on a record-breaking tear over the past year, a run which included taking the 50m backstroke national standard down to a swift 27.95 at last year’s Irish Summer Championships.

As for Dawson, although the Stirling athlete owns a PB of 27.92, this is a solid indicator that she is back to form after having battled injuries as of late.

Siobhan-Marie O’Connor produced a time of 1:08.15 in the women’s 100m breast, but so did her Loughborough teammate Sarah Vasey to give us our 2nd tie of the night. With both women coming in for gold, McSharry, fresh off the 100m free final just a few events earlier, snagged bronze in 1:08.20.

As noted in our meet preview, we expected this race to be tight and indeed it was. The fact that the aforementioned women, in addition to Molly Renshaw touching in 1:08.25 for 4th, are all pushing each other early in the year is essential if GBR wants to see anyone near the 1:06.34 British Swimming-mandated cut for Olympic qualification.

Entering this meet, no British woman ranked among the top 25 performers this season, which means the nation has some catching up to do in terms of confidence-boosting for April.  The 2019 British Championships saw Jocelyn Ulyett take the gold in a time of 1:07.35, while 18-year-old Tatiana Belonogoff reaped silver in 1:07.61.

Belonogoff has since pursued Russian sports citizenship, while Renshaw finished 7th in Gwangju last year in a time of 1:06.96.

During last night’s prelims, O’Connor did put up a time of 1:07.48, however, to establish her 17th this season.

Additional Winners:

  • Joe Litchfield nailed a winning 50m back time of 25.62 to win somewhat comfortably over Nick Pyle and his runner-up effort of 25.79. Litchfield’s time from this morning is now his lifetime best, rendering him the 16th fastest Brit all-time. Luke Greenbank was also in the Shane Ryan-less race, posting 26.14 for 3rd place.
  • Ireland’s Mona McSharry took the women’s 100m free in a time of 57.05.
  • Commonwealth Games champion Alys Thomas of Swansea got it done for gold in the women’s 200m fly, posting 2:10.07 to comfortably clear runner-up Charlotte Atkinson. Atkinson secured silver in 2:11.47, while Miley was back in the water to earn bronze in 2:16.16. Shanahan, also from the 400m IM, was back as well, taking 5th in 2:23.00.

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Eugene
4 years ago

Finally some racing in the meters pool on SwimSwam 🙌🏻

Dbswims
4 years ago

58.7? He must have had a lifting session right before he swam.

Swimmer
4 years ago

Are the live results working for anyone?

Thomas Selig
Reply to  Swimmer
4 years ago

Not me. I get an error message: “Forbidden – You don’t have permission to access this resource.”

Roll Bills
Reply to  Thomas Selig
4 years ago

Probably country-locked

Swim ireland memes
Reply to  Roll Bills
4 years ago

Its not, I’m in Ireland and have been getting that message for months, probably trying to get people to pay for Meet Mobile membership.

Troyy
Reply to  Swim ireland memes
4 years ago

I complained to them about it yesterday and they said it was being looked at and it’s fixed now.

Jeff
4 years ago

Correct me if I’m wrong but doesn’t O Connor’s prelim swim of the 100 breast rank her in the top 25(1:07.48)

Retta Race
Reply to  Jeff
4 years ago

Jeff – It ranks her 17th worldwide this season; I’ve included that now.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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