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Sarah Sjostrom Withdraws From 200 Free at Worlds After Swedish Nationals

Swedish superstar Sarah Sjostrom will focus her efforts on the sprint events at the upcoming FINA World Aquatics Championships in Kazan, Russia, after she told Swedish paper Goteborgs-Posten that she was withdrawing from the 200 free.

That leaves Sjostrom to race the 50 and 100 fly, plus the 50 and 100 free, individually at the meet whose swimming portion runs from August 2nd-9th.

According to the paper, Sjostrom said she wasn’t looking forward to the 200 free, and thinks that dropping the longest race on her schedule will help her improve her outcome in the 200 free.

Sjostrom recently finished competition at the Swedish National Championships with a new Meet Record in the 100 free in 52.97 (she said afterward that the first 50 “felt slow,”), and among her six gold medals was also a win in the 200 free – swimming 1:55.94 and dominating the field.

Sjostrom swam a lifetime best in the 200 free in May (1:54.77) that ranks her 2nd in the world. That time would’ve been enough to win gold at the 2013 World Championships ahead of Missy Franklin.

The 21-year old Swede has never medaled in the individual 200 free internationally, though she’s the defending World Short Course Champion in the event. She finished 4th in 2013, and was slower in the finals than she was in the semi-finals, demonstrating the possible fatigue that three rounds puts upon her while focusing on sprints.

Sjostrom has not yet committed to her relay swims; Sweden has strong medal chances in the 400 free and 400 medley relays, and despite being silver medalists last year at the European 800 free relay, didn’t enter the race at worlds in 2013. That would be the longest shot to medal among the three for them, but with Sjostrom as their ace, it wouldn’t be completely out of reach either.

Sjostrom’s absence will leave Missy Franklin, Femke Heemskerk, and a resurgent Federica Pellegrini as the primary medal contenders, with Hungarian Katinka Hosszu an unpredictable threat. Young Australian Emma McKeon is the least heralded of the above crowd, who could also wind up on a podium in this 200 free if she reacts well to a recent coaching change in May.

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Swedish Swimmer
9 years ago

Sarah got the question “what’s your goals for wc” in an interview yesterday, and she answered ” I’ve decided that in the 100 fly I’m gonna break the world record”. It’s going to be a great race to watch and I love her confidence, the question is; with how much will she break it?

Tm
9 years ago

My picks are
Heemskerk
Ledecky
Pellegrini
Franklin
Hoszu
Mckeon

luigi
9 years ago

I would rather say, Bobo, that her chances at gold in the 200 free were as good as anybody else’s.
It is the smartest decision in the broader perspective, but it’s still sad for us fans.

bobo gigi
9 years ago

Very smart decision.
She knows her best chances of gold medals are the 100 free and especially the 50 and 100 fly.
Had at best in my opinion a little chance of 3rd place in the 200 free. It could have costed her too much energy before the 100 free.
Only the gold counts for the big names.
And Sarah lacks gold in her career so far with “only” 2 golds at worlds and 0 at olympic games.

Joe
Reply to  bobo gigi
9 years ago

Don’t think you could possibly say with a straight face that she had a bronze chance at best in the 200. She’s swum 1.54-1.55 all year in the 200 totally uncontested in all of them, and last year she dropped the SC WR in style + 1.53.6 split in the LC. Her last 50m in that race is uncontested.

I’m almost more excited about her 200 relay split than I am about her 50 free/fly races now. As a Swede I wouldn’t even be mad if she blows it in the 50 free, so that she puts 200 on her schedule for sure come Rio. Maybe I just have Alshammar too fresh on my memory, how painful were all those… Read more »

Teamwiess
9 years ago

Thought this might happen but would have liked to see her swim it.

I would personally also include Ledecky as a medal chance.

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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