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Budapest To Birmingham: Top Swimmers Tackle Quick Turnaround At Commonwealth Games

2022 COMMONWEALTH GAMES

  • Friday, July 29 – Wednesday, August 3, 2022
  • Birmingham, England
  • Sandwell Aquatic Center
  • Start Times
    • Prelims: 10:30 am local / 5:30 am ET
    • Finals: 7:00 pm local / 2:00 pm ET
  • LCM (50m)
  • Meet Central
  • Event Schedule
  • Entry List
  • Entries (in seed order) – h/t to Troyy
  • All The Links

In the international sporting calendar, the Commonwealth Games have frequently flown a bit under the radar.

In recent years, the Games have been placed in varying spots on the schedule—four years ago it was in April, in 2010 they were in October, and in 2006, the Games took place in March.

Up until this year, 2014 was the only time in the last two decades that the event has taken place in prime time, mid-summer, and although the World Championships have already come and gone, the U.S. Nationals are currently ongoing and the European Championships are still to come, there seems to be more hype than usual surrounding this year’s Commonwealth Games.

In part, this is for good reason. In addition to the timing, some of the world’s best will be racing in Birmingham after missing out on Budapest. This list includes reigning Olympic champions Adam PeatyEmma McKeonAriarne Titmus and Tatjana Schoenmaker, along with the individual return of Maggie MacNeil.

We’ll also see seven recently-crowned world champions competing: Ben ProudElijah WinningtonZac Stubblety-CookMollie O’CallaghanKylie MasseKaylee McKeown and Summer McIntosh.

But while the top-end names will be racing and likely putting up some blazing-fast times, the competition as a whole, despite the hype, won’t compete with the times we saw in Budapest. The depth just isn’t there.

It will be interesting to see how the winning times stack up to what we saw at the World Championships, and how the swimmers that missed Budapest will fare in what will, at least for everyone except Peaty, be their target meet for the year.

Perhaps more interestingly, however, is how the World Championship swimmers manage their taper for the Games.

Particularly so in Australia, the Commonwealth Games are a big deal, and are of greater importance than say, this year’s World Championships, at least from the public’s perspective. While it’s not the Olympics, a Commonwealth gold medal goes a long way.

That’s part of the reason why swimmers like Titmus and McKeon didn’t race in Budapest, and it begs the question of if those at Worlds treated that meet as more of a tune-up for Birmingham.

We’ve seen swimmers from other countries, such as South Africa’s Matt Sates, suggest that the Commonwealth Games was his focus meet of the summer.

Someone like Kaylee McKeown didn’t appear to be in optimal form at Worlds and is likely in a similar boat, putting her focus on these Games, while a breakout star like Summer McIntosh was certainly peaking for Budapest and will have to juggle the one-month double-taper in Birmingham.

(We’ve already gotten a glimpse of how Australia and Canada are prioritizing this summer’s meets differently–McKeown dropped the 100 back at Worlds, as Olympic champion, in favor of the 200 IM to get experience racing the latter. McIntosh has done a similar thing at the Commonwealth Games, dropping the 200 fly, as world champion, to key in on the 200 IM more for developmental purposes.)

And then we can’t forget about the British swimmers, many of whom raced at Worlds, will be at the Games, and then will have to quickly shift to the European Championships in August.

How each group of athletes fares—those who missed Worlds and those juggling two or three ‘taper’ meets this summer—will be an emerging storyline to follow throughout the coming week.

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commonwombat
2 years ago

Furry Curmudgeon’s “stab in the dark” selections

Women
50fr – G McKeon S Harris B Hopkin or Jack
100fr – G McKeon S MOC B coin toss between Hopkin/Anderson or Jack
200fr – G Titmus S MOC B Wilson or Anderson
400fr – G Titmus S McIntosh B Pallister
800fr – G Titmus S Pallister B Melverton
50bk – G Masse S McKeown B MOC or Harris
100bk – G Masse S McKeown B MOC
200bk – G McKeown S Masse B Shanahan or Atherton
50brs – G Van Niekerk S Hodges B Clark
100brs – G Schoenmaker B Strauch S Renshaw or Van Niekerk
200brs – G Schoenmaker… Read more »

Joel
Reply to  commonwombat
2 years ago

After a quick scan, I think you’ll be pretty spot on with a lot of theses predictions. I’m hoping for a few more gold for AUS but maybe not realistic.

Tessa
Reply to  commonwombat
2 years ago

For men’s 50 fly, you ignored Carter and the Singaporean.

Jamesjabc
2 years ago

I can’t wait for this to finally start! Despite Australia having our best Olympics ever, it actually seems like the medals will be more spread out than 2018. Canada, England, Scotland and RSA all have some very strong swimmers at the moment in particular.

I will be very interested to see how event winners are faster than World Champs. After a year of being told this is a Mickey Mouse event, I’m looking forward to seeing how it stacks up.

Event winners I expect should be faster than Budapest: M100 Free, 50 Breast, 100 Breast, W100 Free, 200 Free, 400 Free, 100 Breast, 200 Breast, 100 free relay, 200 free relay.

Event winners that realistically could be faster than Budapest:… Read more »

Robbos
Reply to  Jamesjabc
2 years ago

Imagine 10 “Could’ve’ world champions we could get from the Mickey Mouse games.

Jamesjabc
Reply to  Robbos
2 years ago

There have already been so many “this american would have got X at Worlds”. I wonder if they will do the same analysis for Comm Games.

flicker
Reply to  Jamesjabc
2 years ago

Winnington’s 400 free is definitely the least likely of that list, I don’t expect him to even be faster than 3:43 let alone a 3:41.2

Tracy Kosinski
2 years ago

Super excited for the Canadian team! Good luck guys!!!!

🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦

Verram
2 years ago

Did I miss the big headline article about Summer McIntosh dropping 200 fly at Comm games ? Or is it only written when Aussies drop events specifically Kaylee McKeown?

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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