Dutch swimmer Kim Busch, one of the few foreigners at the meet, won the women’s 50 free in 24.25.Aleksandr Krasnykh from Tarstan won the men’s 400 free by a similar margin in 3:40.38.He was more than 2 seconds ahead of runner-up Andrew Pribytko (1:53.14). Alexander Kharlanov dominated the men’s 200 fly in 1:51.90.Anastasia Fesikova won the women’s 50 backstroke in 26.72.Shcherbakov had a 1.3 second lead over Shcherbakov and a 2 second lead over Suchkov at the halfway mark, but both nearly ran him down to finish in 1:57.23 and 1:57.26, respectively. 17-year old Maksim Stupin won the men’s 200 IM in 1:57.11, holding off a hard charge from Dmitry Shcherbakov and Egor Suchkov.Natalia Ivaneeva won the women’s 100 breaststroke in 1:05.52, beating out teenager Daria Chikunova (1:06.10). Russian Record holder Vlad Morozov isn’t swimming at this meet. Kolesnikov also took away a win in the 100 free in 46.58, beating out his Muscovite teammate Andrey Zhilkin (47.51).Kirill Prigoda won the men’s 50 breaststroke (25.94) and 200 breaststroke (2:03.62) in the same day.Petersburg leads the medals table after day one with 17 of all colors, followed by Moscow with 10. Her Russian Record in the event is 1:52.46. Veronika Andrusenko (formerly Veronika Popova) swam a 1:53.60 in the 200 free final, for a 927-point swim. Hers was only the 2nd-best female swim by power points, however, measured on proximity to World Records. Sabitova’s swim is less than half-a-second from Chimrova’s senior Russian Record of 56.39, and ranks the young swimmer 13th in the world. Exactly a second behind her was Belarusian 14-year old Anastasiya Shkurdai in 57.84. The old record of 58.93 was set in 2012 by Svetlana Chimrova at 58.93. That swim broke the Russian Junior Record, which is recognized for swimmers aged 16 and under. 13-year old Aleksandra Sabitova, who in April went under 1 minute in the 100 fly in long course, won the short course final on Friday in 56.84. He swam 48.90, which improved the Russian Record of 48.95 set in 2010 by Stanislav Donets, and also undercut Matt Grevers’ World Record of 48.92 from 2015.īut he wasn’t the only young Russian swimmer that wowed on the first day of the annual winter meet. On day 1 of the 2017 Vladimir Salnikov Swim Cup, a World Record in the 100 meter backstroke by 17-year old Kliment Kolesnikov was the clear shot-stopper of the meet. Share 13-Year Old Aleksandra Sabitova Breaks Russian Jr Record in 100 Fly on LinkedIn.Share 13-Year Old Aleksandra Sabitova Breaks Russian Jr Record in 100 Fly on Pinterest.Submit 13-Year Old Aleksandra Sabitova Breaks Russian Jr Record in 100 Fly to Reddit.Tweet 13-Year Old Aleksandra Sabitova Breaks Russian Jr Record in 100 Fly.Share 13-Year Old Aleksandra Sabitova Breaks Russian Jr Record in 100 Fly on Facebook.December 23rd, 2017 Europe, International, News
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