You are working on Staging2

Full Final 2018 FINA World Cup Point Standings

2018 FINA WORLD CUP – SINGAPORE

  • Thursday, November 15th – Saturday, November 17th
  • OCBC Aquatic Centre, Singapore
  • SCM
  • Results

FULL FINA WORLD CUP SCHEDULE

  • September 7-9, Kazan, Russia (50m)
  • September 13-15, Doha, Qatar (50m)
  • September 28-30, Eindhoven, Netherlands (25m)
  • October 4-6, Budapest, Hungary (25m)
  • November 2-4, Beijing, China (25m)
  • November 9-11, Tokyo, Japan (25m)
  • November 15-17, Singapore (25m)

Sarah Sjostrom and Vladimir Morozov won the 2018 World Cup titles. See the full point totals for all competing athletes below.

WORLD CUP SCORING

Medal Points

Each individual event yields points for the top 3 finishers.

  • Gold: 12 points
  • Silver: 9 points
  • Bronze: 6 points

Each athlete can swim an unlimited amount of events, but only their best three finishes count for points.

World Record Bonuses

Each world record yields 20 points. Tying a world record is worth 10 points.

Performance Bonuses

The top 3 male and top 3 female swims of the meet earn bonus points. Top swims are determined based on FINA points. Only the top-scoring swim from each athlete is counted.

  • First: 24 points
  • Second: 18 points
  • Third: 12 points

Singapore PERFORMANCE BONUSES:

Women:

  1. Alia Atkinson, 100 breast: 1:02.74 = 981 FINA points
  2. Sarah Sjostrom, 50 fly: 24.63 = 969 FINA points
  3. Ranomi Kromowidjojo, 50 fly: 24.64 = 968 FINA points

Men:

  1. Vladimir Morozov, 100 IM: 50.31 = 999 FINA points
  2. Xu Jiayu, 100 back: 48.98 = 995 FINA points
  3. Mitchell Larkin, 100 back: 49.38 = 971 FINA points

2018 World Cup Point Standings

In This Story

0
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

0 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

Read More »