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Australia Details Selection Process for Tokyo–Including Relaxed Plan B Criteria

The Daily Telegraph is reporting that Swimming Australia has unveiled an alternative selection process if the coronavirus pandemic scuttles its Olympic Trials meet scheduled for June 12-17 in Adelaide.

The selection meet for Tokyo is planned for six weeks before the start of the Olympic Games, which is two months later than past selections meets. (In 2016, for example, the Australian Trials for Rio de Janeiro were held from April 7-14, 2016. The selection meet for London took place in March 2012.) Given that we are still in the midst of a global pandemic, Swimming Australia felt they had little room for error in case of illnesses or travel bans -it would be too late to reschedule the meet- so they came up with a Plan B to assure their athletes would still be considered for selection.

Swimming Australia’s “Plan A” requires swimmers to achieve a top-8 time in the world at Trials, a brutal selection criterion that nearly kept Mack Horton out of the 400 free at 2019 World Championships.

Should Australian Trials be canceled, Plan B would kick in. Swimmers would be allowed to enter times from the Australian Championships at the Gold Coast (April 14-18) and the Sydney Open (May 13-16) for consideration. There would also be an allowance made for “extenuating circumstances.”

Meanwhile, no special precautions are being taken to ensure the safety of the athletes at Australian Trials. There are expected to be hundreds of swimmers at the meet and no one will be required to be tested for COVID before arriving. Swimming Australia Chief Strategist Alex Baumann said, “That’s the medical advice we’ve been given. We have a pretty safe COVID environment at this point in time. We’re not in the same situation as the US and Canada and we hope that continues so we don’t feel like we have to change the qualifying standards or adjust the ­number of athletes.”

Since the beginning of the pandemic in February 2020, Australia has registered 29,002 cases of COVID. With approximately 25.5 million people living in Australia, that is a mere 0.1% – or one-tenth of a percent – of the population. The country has experienced 909 deaths as of March 4, 2021.

By comparison, the United States has logged some 28.8 million cases (8.7% of the population) and 519 thousand deaths. In Canada, those numbers are 878 thousand cases (2.3% of the population) and 22,151 deaths.

That said, Australia is lagging other countries in vaccine rollouts. There are five phases in the Australian rollout plan, with the first group of Australians expected to start receiving the COVID-19 vaccine in February 2021. Moreover, on March 2, the government extended its international travel ban for three more months, through June 17, 2021. There are some 39,000 Australian citizens who are currently stuck abroad, unable to return home due to the regulations.

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Anon
3 years ago

It’s already pretty hard to post top 8 2019 WC times, particularly given some athlete have had disrupted training in the last year
They should just say the two fastest people who post qualifying times from any of those 3 trials get to go. They’ll only be a couple of events where this might even be an issue (women’s 100m free and 100m backstroke)
If a swimmer posts a qualifying time in the April or May meets but mistimes the taper for the June trials, should they really miss out on an Olympics?

Troyy
3 years ago

Could see some swimmers, in an effort to protect themselves in the event of trials cancellation, peaking at the wrong meet. They should just sanction multiple qualification meets rather than this mess.

Last edited 3 years ago by Troyy
Samesame
Reply to  Troyy
3 years ago

Wonder if they’ll do the same for junior worlds selection ( if it goes ahead)?

BronzedAussie
Reply to  Samesame
3 years ago

hope not as under 15’s can’t enter the plan B meets.

Verram
3 years ago

I don’t think they’re all necessarily “stuck” overseas .. most of them are probably dual citizens who chose to be overseas instead of Australia

Samesame
3 years ago

Vaccines have started for frontline healthcare workers etc.
There is currently no community transmission of Covid in Australia. Basically all new cases are incoming persons who are already in hotel quarantine. Hence the lack of covid testing for the athletes going to trials. Of course, this could change.
(btw second paragraph should say two months later than normal, not two months earlier)

Jackman
3 years ago

Given there are no active cases in Australia outside of hotel quarantine, I’m looking forward to a classically fast Australian trials!

Samesame
Reply to  Jackman
3 years ago

Maybe they should just revert to FINA A standards anyway. Especially as some Victorian swimmers were out of the pool for months.

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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