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Swimming Canada Sheds Light On Canadian Way, Timing of Short Course Nationals

Swimming Canada announced its plan for the upcoming Olympic quadrennial in the run-up to the 2028 LA Olympics on Tuesday, releasing a tentative schedule for the next four years including dates and locations of domestic competitions.

The “Canadian Way” plan includes several new events, and a change in the timing of others, all geared towards optimal performance in the pool with the peak being the annual Trials meets—traditionally in the spring but now in the summer—and ultimately the major international event of the year for those who qualify.

The schedule left some questioning the timing and scheduling for certain events, however, specifically the Short Course National Championships.

One of the events that’s new to the domestic calendar in Canada, Short Course Nationals is scheduled to run in August every year.

While the short course season generally runs from September to March, Swimming Canada said the August date is designed to give swimmers a chance to qualify for the Short Course World Championships in addition to offering a meet in the timeframe where athletes are still at a relative peak after their summer long course championships.

“We are creating a 25m championships on the back of a long-course summer that should be very fast,” High Performance Director John Atkinson said in a statement. “This keeps the nation swimming and allows senior swimmers to continue on to a fast end-of-summer event. It will also offer an opportunity to post 25m pool times to qualify for short-course worlds, an increasingly prominent international event.”

Other questions included the timing of another new event, the Canadian Open, which will run in April. That meet is geared towards “strong domestic competition” and appears to be more of an early long course “form check” rather than a date swimmers will necessarily be tapering for.

In terms of the location selections, which is more diverse than we’ve seen in recent years with the vast majority of high-level meets being held at the Toronto Pan Am Sports Centre, Swimming Canada said it’s offering a balance between Eastern and Western Canada for meet sites.

The organization also said the national calendar allows and “encourages” provinces to provide their own long course championship events in the summer, reducing travel costs and “adding another layer of quality events across the country for the masses.”

FULL SCHEDULE

Date Event Location
Nov. 29 – Dec. 1, 2024 Ken Demchuk International Invitational Markham (Ont.) Pan Am Centre
April 10-12, 2025 Canadian Open Edmonton Kinsmen Sports Centre
May 17-19, 2025 Master Championships Saskatoon Shaw Centre
June 6-12, 2025 Canadian Swimming Trials Victoria Saanich Commonwealth Place
Aug. 7-10, 2025 Short Course National Championships Centre sportif de l’Université de Sherbrooke (Que.)
Aug. 12-13, 2025 Open Water Festival Montreal Olympic Basin
Nov. 28-30, 2025 Ken Demchuk International Invitational Markham (Ont.) Pan Am Centre
April 9-11, 2026 Canadian Open Edmonton Kinsmen Sports Centre
May 2026 Master Championships Windsor (Ont.) International Aquatic and Training Centre
July 5-9, 2026 Canadian Swimming Trials Montreal Olympic Pool
Aug. 2026 Short Course National Championships TBD
Aug. 2026 Open Water Festival TBD
Nov. 2026 Ken Demchuk International Invitational Montreal (Laval City)
April 8-10, 2027 Canadian Open Edmonton Kinsmen Sports Centre
May 2027 Master Championships TBD
June 4-10, 2027 Canadian Swimming Trials Victoria Saanich Commonwealth Place
Aug. 5-8, 2027 Short Course National Championships Toronto Pan Am Sports Centre
Aug. 10-11, 2027 Open Water Festival Welland (Ont.) International Flatwater Centre
Nov. 2027 Ken Demchuk International Invitational Montreal (Laval City)
April 6-8, 2028 Canadian Open Edmonton Kinsmen Sports Centre
May 2028 Master Championships Etobicoke (Ont.) Olympium
June 2-8, 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Swimming Trials Toronto Pan Am Sports Centre
Aug. 3-6, 2028 Short Course National Championships TBD
Aug. 8-9, 2028 Open Water Festival Montreal Olympic Basin
Nov. 2028 Ken Demchuk International Invitational Montreal (Laval City)

“We believe this new ‘Canadian Way’ is cutting edge, based on thorough consultation over eight months with carded coaches, Athlete Advisory Council and other national team athletes, coaches of carded athletes, provincial executive directors and technical leads, high performance staff, technical experts and performance science staff,” Atkinson said.

On the timing of annual Trials events, which now aligns with when powerhouses Australia and the United States hold their events, Atkinson said:

“We considered very carefully the placement of Trials and went into deep discussions with our carded coaches and sport science staff, looking at the performance data including training periodization. This work and the carded coaches discussions showed the strategy of a later Trials, including junior finals, was the right direction for swimming in Canada. The junior final at our Trials has been implemented very successfully the last two years.”

The Canadian Way plan for the 2025-28 quad was first announced in May 2023.

“This effort will deliver events that are good for all in Canada, and requires carded swimmers to attend a very minimal requirement of three events i.e. the Open, the Trials and the short-course championships,” Atkinson said.

A “carded” swimmer refers to those that receive funding from the Sport Canada Athlete Assistance Program.

“After the consultation with all parties and making the decisions ahead of time it’s an exciting time for coaches, athletes and provinces to work ahead to support the national strategy they helped to create,” Atkinson continued.

“In short we’ve consulted, we’ve delivered on what we said last year that we would do, now all can make their plans and go for it. The sky’s the limit!”

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Canaswim
9 months ago

Can someone get rid of JA please? Preferably Before he kills swimming in Canada?

Besides the trials being moved to June, I see nothing good in this schedule. Taking away west/east meets in the spring for juniors and replacing it with a senior meet is ridiculous. Those meets should be where the Canada open is like they were 5-8 years ago.

We Need more for junior meets imo. What interest and motivation is there for juniors to keep competing in only their province. Boring!!! And very few make it to trials.

Is the short course nationals in August for juniors? Seems to be very little reason for this to be short course except for 0.5% of swimmers.… Read more »

Newbie swim parent
Reply to  Canaswim
9 months ago

Canada is bleeding its best swimmers to NCAA and USA’s swim pro groups/clubs. Now they have even less reasons to fly back home for meets.. Recently, few good age groupers stayed in Canada because COVID messed with their recruiting plans, but look at Canadian Junior World Team 2023 – 99% of boys and girls are heading to US

Anony
Reply to  Newbie swim parent
9 months ago

SC clearly recognizes there’s an issue with top level swimmers attending national meets back here in Canada. Hence the reason for the requirement that carded athletes are required to attend at a minimum three of the meets as referred to in the article above. Additionally it’s highly likely that all 3 of these meets will become selection meets for senior national and junior national development teams. I would expect SC to “incent” more swimmers to return for domestic meets.

Swumswims
Reply to  Canaswim
4 months ago

Qualifying standards have now been published (though not in swim Canada site). Not too many juniors will qualify for the summer sc nationals – pretty big departure from the current CSC/CJC meet.

https://www.gomotionapp.com/cancdsc/UserFiles/Image/QuickUpload/2025-2028-swimming-canada-standards-1_027461.pdf

Anony
9 months ago

So the “Canadian Way” is really the “carded” way. The “masses” and Usports are welcome to come along for the ride or figure out something on their own. The JA quotes and use of the term “masses” is revealing to say the least.

Newbie swim parent
9 months ago

How exactly does Canadian carding work? I found a few lists of those supported by Swimming Canada and some provincial programs. Surprisingly, they all have pretty much the same names.. It looks like there are a couple of dozens Canadian swimmers that are getting money from few sources and hundreds of relatively (I’m not talking about Olympians!) comparable swimmers that are getting zero. Many who won medals at the last Canadian Championship and even some who went to Junior Worlds are not getting any carding money. While some who didn’t show any fast times last season are carded. I’m puzzled…

Anony
Reply to  Newbie swim parent
9 months ago

Swim Canada website, Resources tab, team Selection section. The carding criteria are under the approved cards tab. Carding is based on On track times by age.

Newbie swim parent
Reply to  Anony
9 months ago

Thank you, I did my research before posting my previous comment. It was not my point.

Anony
Reply to  Newbie swim parent
9 months ago

Well if you had done the research it doesn’t show in your post above. Given all the points you noted you would already have known the answers to the points raised. Instead you could have simply posed the question does carding on the basis of On track times only make sense.

Gyro
9 months ago

Love it when a British dude explains to all of us what the “Canadian Way” is.

bob
9 months ago

3 years of keeping Olympic trials out of Canada,s best and fastest pool..the Pan Am pool Toronto is just plain stupid..no other way to say it.

Darren Ward
Reply to  bob
9 months ago

Please define “fastest pool”?

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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