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Haughey Heats It Up In Hong Kong With 1:55.81 200 Free

HONG KONG NATIONAL OLYMPIC TIME TRIAL

  • Sunday, March 21st
  • HKASA Swimming Pool
  • LCM (50m)
  • Results

At the Hong Kong Sports Institute (HKSI) today, the Hong Kong National Olympic Time Trial concluded as the first elite home meet since 2020. Among the exclusive 66 invitations offered only to training grant swimmers, former Michigan Wolverine Siobhan Haughey made a statement with just months to go until the postponed Olympic Games.

As a refresher, both fans and press were shut out of the event, rendering it taking place behind closed doors due to the coronavirus pandemic. For the athletes, the meet followed the International Swimming League (ISL) bubble-type environment with multiple COVID-19 testing protocols in place. You can read our original post on the matter here.

For World Championships finalist Haughey, the 23-year-old produced a head-turning time of 1:55.81 to easily take the gold in the women’s 200m freestyle. Opening in 56.94 and bringing it home on the back half in 58.87, Haughey’s winning effort came within a second of her national record of 1:54.98, a time she produced in Gwangju for 4th place.

Haughey’s 1:55.81 very comfortably dipped under the FINA ‘A’ cut of 1:57.28 needed for the Olympic Games, with the national record holder’s time checking her in as the world’s #3 performer this season.

2020-2021 LCM Women 200 Free

AriarneAUS
Titmus
06/14
1:53.09
2Siobhan
Haughey
HKG1:53.9207/28
3Yang
Junxuan
CHN1:54.3707/29
4Katie
Ledecky
USA1:54.4004/09
5Penny
Oleksiak
CAN1:54.7007/28
View Top 26»

Haughey also did major damage in the 100m free where she registered a gold medal-worthy result of 53.34. With this speedy outing she split 25.68/27.66 to put up a time that ranks among the top 5 in the world this season en route to getting under the 54.38 FINA ‘A’ cut.

The Olympic medal contender owns the national record in 53.30 from the Pro Swim Series in Des Moines last year.

Additional Notes:

  • Ming Ho Cheuk clocked a new Hong Kong national record in the men’s 800m free, taking the gold in a time of 8:03.41. He also scored a new national record of 1:48.46 in the men’s 200m free to hit a FINA ‘B’ standard.

 

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boknows34
3 years ago

During the Festival of Sport in Hong Kong on April 18th, Siobhán Haughey set a national record in the women’s 200 freestyle with a 1:54.89. She was 0.09 faster than her own previous record from the 2019 World Championships.

https://twitter.com/SwimmingStats/status/1383645467024580612/photo/1

Places her 3rd in the world this season and 13th all-time fastest performer.

Last edited 3 years ago by boknows34
Gheko
3 years ago

Yang went a 1.54.70 two weeks ago!

Jackman
3 years ago

Is that a best time in the 100?
Edit: to answer my own question – her best time is 53.30

Last edited 3 years ago by Jackman
SwimJon
3 years ago

The list needs an update. Emma McKeon just did 1:55:56 this weekend

SwimJon
Reply to  SwimJon
3 years ago

just saying this is not opinion, it is fact previously reported here… https://staging2.swimswam.com/mckeon-now-wears-200free-world-rankings-crown-155-56/

frizzaly
Reply to  SwimJon
3 years ago

the list of top swims is embedded in the article and usually takes a few hours or days to update after a new fast swim, so it’s not an error, just a process that takes longer than you want it to

Swammer
3 years ago

Are we really at a place where a 1:55-high in a 200 Free time trial is a “statement” swim? Exactly what is the statement?

Njones
Reply to  Swammer
3 years ago

In season less than 2 sec off the fastest textile ever. I would put any women’s 155 and any men’s 145 as pretty significant in season ‘statement’ swim, as in ‘here I am a few months out and in very good medal threat position’…

CHY
Reply to  Njones
3 years ago

Not when done in a low-pressure time trial with very limited competition in a one-off swim (no prelims, travel, etc.) Then it’s just a “look-at-me” practice swim.

Njones
Reply to  CHY
3 years ago

For many that’s much more challenging to ‘race’ with no one pushing you. There are literally less then 1/2 doz women going 155s in the world this year, it’s not that ez otherwise we’d compare it to breaking 2min…

The unoriginal Tim
Reply to  CHY
3 years ago

You heard about Covid right? Depending on the rules where she is a time trial might be the only option.

swimfast
Reply to  Njones
3 years ago

Noooo…1:55 high is sooo 2008

Kit Lee
Reply to  Swammer
3 years ago

It means she can swim 1:55:xx anytime and it means she can swim faster if she wanted to.

Laars
3 years ago

Not her fault, but sad to see Siobhan going the time trials route in place of a true competitive situation and someone trying to sell it as an “elite” setting.

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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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