2021 FINA SHORT COURSE SWIMMING WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS
- Thursday, December 16th – Tuesday, December 21st
- Etihad Arena, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
- SCM (25m)
- Prize Money
- Meet Site
- Psych Sheet
- SwimSwam Preview Index
- FINA Live Results
- Omega Live Results
Tunisia’s Ahmed Hafnaoui took the silver medal in the men’s 1500 behind newly-minted World Record holder Florian Wellbrock in 14:10.94. That swim was the 7th fastest 1500 of all-time and makes Hafnaoui the 5th fastest performer ever, behind only Wellbrock, Gregorio Paltrinieri, Mykhailo Romanchuk and Grant Hackett.
The swim also chops nearly 8 seconds off Tunisian swimming legend Ous Mellouli‘s African Record of 14:18.79, which was set at the 2014 Short Course Worlds when Mellouli took silver behind Paltrinieri. Hafnaoui also broke the African Record in the 800 at the 800 meter split of this race.
|
Hafnoui 2021 | Mellouli 2014 | ||
50m
|
26.75 | 26.75 | 26.52 | 26.52 |
100m
|
27.68 | 54.43 | 28.59 | 55.11 |
150m
|
28.20 | 01:22.63 | 28.65 | 01:23.76 |
200m
|
28.35 | 01:50.98 | 28.74 | 01:52.50 |
250m
|
28.70 | 02:19.68 | 28.63 | 02:21.13 |
300m
|
28.47 | 02:48.15 | 28.75 | 02:49.88 |
350m
|
28.58 | 03:16.73 | 28.99 | 03:18.87 |
400m
|
28.59 | 03:45.32 | 28.78 | 03:47.65 |
450m
|
28.53 | 04:13.85 | 28.74 | 04:16.39 |
500m
|
28.46 | 04:42.31 | 28.66 | 04:45.05 |
550m
|
28.64 | 05:10.95 | 28.58 | 05:13.63 |
600m
|
28.36 | 05:39.31 | 28.58 | 05:42.21 |
650m
|
28.69 | 06:08.00 | 28.72 | 06:10.93 |
700m
|
28.62 | 06:36.62 | 28.64 | 06:39.57 |
750m
|
28.64 | 07:05.26 | 28.65 | 07:08.22 |
800m
|
28.43 | 07:33.69 | 28.62 | 07:36.84 |
850m
|
28.39 | 08:02.08 | 28.65 | 08:05.49 |
900m
|
28.19 | 08:30.27 | 28.91 | 08:34.40 |
950m
|
28.53 | 08:58.80 | 28.79 | 09:03.19 |
1000m
|
28.42 | 09:27.22 | 28.84 | 09:32.03 |
1050m
|
28.42 | 09:55.64 | 28.79 | 10:00.82 |
1100m
|
28.46 | 10:24.10 | 28.77 | 10:29.59 |
1150m
|
28.49 | 10:52.59 | 28.85 | 10:58.44 |
1200m
|
28.92 | 11:21.51 | 28.89 | 11:27.33 |
1250m
|
28.71 | 11:50.22 | 28.95 | 11:56.28 |
1300m
|
28.65 | 12:18.87 | 29.11 | 12:25.39 |
1350m
|
28.87 | 12:47.74 | 29.07 | 12:54.46 |
1400m
|
28.79 | 13:16.53 | 29.04 | 13:23.50 |
1450m
|
28.47 | 13:45.00 | 28.33 | 13:51.83 |
1500m
|
25.94 | 14:10.94 | 26.96 | 14:18.79 |
Looking at the splits, Hafnaoui was consistently faster than his idol from start to finish, splitting 28 mids to Mellouli’s 28 highs over the first half of the race, though Hafnaoui made a clear speed change at the halfway point where Mellouli stayed consistent. Hafnaoui dropped from 28.6s to 28.3s and 28.4s, which he held until the 1200 mark, where his splits started to creep up, though still ahead of Mellouli’s record pace. Hafnaoui closed in a blistering 25.94, the fastest in today’s field to seal the silver medal.
Hafnaoui will be following in his idol’s footsteps further, as he plans to make the move to Bloomington, Indiana in the fall and compete in the NCAA. While Mellouli swam for USC in Los Angeles, he was an NCAA champion in 2005 in the 400 IM and 16 time All American for the Trojans, including individual All American honors in the 400 IM, 500 free and 1650 free.
With his silver medal here in short course meters, Hafnoui demonstrates an even further likelihood that he will be able to translate his long course success, which included a shocking upset win in the 400 free at the Tokyo Olympics, to the NCAA short course yards format.
All-Time Performances, Men’s 1500 Freestyle (SCM)
- Florian Wellbrock (GER), 14:06.88 – 2021 SC Worlds
- Gregorio Paltrinieri (ITA), 14:08.06 – 2015 SC Euros
- Mykhailo Romanchuk (UKR), 14:09.14 – 2018 SC Worlds
- Gregorio Paltrinieri (ITA), 14:09.87 – 2018 SC Worlds
- Florian Wellbrock (GER), 14:09.88 – 2021 SC Euros
- Grant Hackett (AUS), 14:10.10 – 2001 Australia SCM Champs
- Ahmed Hafnaoui (TUN), 14:10.94 – 2021 SC Worlds
- Mykhailo Romanchuk (UKR), 14:11.47 – 2021 SC Worlds
- Gregorio Paltrinieri (ITA), 14:13.07 – 2021 SC Euros
- Mykhailo Romanchuk (UKR), 14:14.59 – 2017 SC Euros
So much for him being a fluke
That 2001 swim from Grant Hackett is bonkers in context
Grant and Thorpe were the prototypes for Freestyle along with PVDH, if they were here today peaked with todays training/suits, the podium in the 200 would be straight 1:43s. Nuts
I am much more ok with the Biedermann record after the Agnel news.
Can’t wait for Ahmed Hafnaoui and Bobby Finke 1650 in 2022. Hopefully, their coaches peak them correctly.
Bobby Finke is a senior this year. He will probably go pro after this upcoming March.
Doesn’t he get a bonus year if he wants it? I totally understand going pro instead, but maybe he’ll get enough NIL money to stick around another year.
Yeah so that converts to 14:05 SCY 1650. I’m just leaving that there.
Not too shabby for a guy no one had even heard of 6 months ago…
IU has a heck of a distance swimmer coming in next year!