About: Open water swimming/2012 qualifier   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

After giving the starting signal for the women’s FINA Olympic Marathon Swim Qualifier in the bay of Setúbal, Rosa Mota, the first Portuguese female gold Olympic medallist waited less for the final of the race than her time in the 1988 successful marathon in the roads of Seoul (KOR). The “godmother” of the Setúbal event saw the first swimmer to finish the 10km race in 1h44m30s6, much faster than a standard time in a women’s road marathon. The victory came to United States (also known as ) File:Flag of the United States.svg Haley Anderson, who got the opportunity to win her “ticket” for her first Olympic appearance.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Open water swimming/2012 qualifier
rdfs:comment
  • After giving the starting signal for the women’s FINA Olympic Marathon Swim Qualifier in the bay of Setúbal, Rosa Mota, the first Portuguese female gold Olympic medallist waited less for the final of the race than her time in the 1988 successful marathon in the roads of Seoul (KOR). The “godmother” of the Setúbal event saw the first swimmer to finish the 10km race in 1h44m30s6, much faster than a standard time in a women’s road marathon. The victory came to United States (also known as ) File:Flag of the United States.svg Haley Anderson, who got the opportunity to win her “ticket” for her first Olympic appearance.
dbkwik:aforathlete...iPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • After giving the starting signal for the women’s FINA Olympic Marathon Swim Qualifier in the bay of Setúbal, Rosa Mota, the first Portuguese female gold Olympic medallist waited less for the final of the race than her time in the 1988 successful marathon in the roads of Seoul (KOR). The “godmother” of the Setúbal event saw the first swimmer to finish the 10km race in 1h44m30s6, much faster than a standard time in a women’s road marathon. The victory came to United States (also known as ) File:Flag of the United States.svg Haley Anderson, who got the opportunity to win her “ticket” for her first Olympic appearance. “It was long-time dream! It finally came true. It’s an amazing feeling”, said Anderson after her effort. Discreet during the first two laps of the race – there were six loops to complete the 10km event – she started to appear in the leading group only after the first 55 minutes of the race. “It was a hard race, with a lot of physical contact. In the last 500 metres, I really made a push and it paid off. I was counting on my speed and the strategy was successful”, Anderson added. In fact, most of the winning strategy during the race was made by Eva Risztov, of Hungary (also known as ) File:Flag of Hungary.svg second at the end of the first lap, but always in the lead in the subsequent loops with the notable exception of the arrival. The Magyar swimmer got the silver (and also the qualification for the Olympics), leaving on her trail her teammate Anna Olasz (bronze, but no possibility of qualification, as only one spot was allowed per country). The “national fights” were also interesting among swimmers from USA (Ashley Twichell finished fourth and will also miss the Olympics), Canada (also known as ) File:Flag of Canada.svg (Zsofia Balazs finished sixth, qualified, ahead of her country fellow Nadine Williams, not qualified), Russia (also known as ) File:Flag of Russia.svg (Anna Guseva, ninth, was better than Ekaterina Seliverstova in 14th, a very disappointing position, after being in the leading positions for the first five laps), China (also known as ) File:Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg (Yanqiao Fang was faster than Xue Li), and South Africa (also known as ) File:Flag of South Africa.svg, where Jessica Roux got the continental qualification in detriment of Natalie Du Toit, a legendary swimmer who performs only with one leg and had been present in Beijing's 2008 Olympics, for the first Olympic appearance of marathon swimming. Passing in 21 minutes for the first loop, 37min for the second, 54min for the third, 1h11min for the fourth, 1h28min for the third and then the winning time of 1h44min, the field of 40 swimmers was packed for most of the race (the water temperature in Setúbal was 20°), with few exceptions getting progressive delay in relation to the leading competitors. Only one athlete did not finish, Mexico (also known as ) File:Flag of Mexico.svg’s Alejandra Gonzalez Lara. “For the last two years, I have been focusing on open water and it was tough to beat Ashley (Twichell) here. She is a great swimmer and a good friend”, commented the winner in Setúbal. Curiously, in 2008, United States (also known as ) File:Flag of the United States.svg Chloe Sutton had also been the leader of the qualification, but ended up being only 22nd in the Olympic race. Other qualified athletes were naturally happy with this outcome. “The race was held in very good conditions. We swam fast, but there was fair-play among the swimmers. Even packed, I didn’t feel so much the physical contact. For London, I hope to arrive in the top-8”, summarised Ophelie Aspord, from France (seventh). Poland’s Natalia Charlos, eighth and also qualified for the Olympics, had a slightly different vision of the race: “The weather was a bit hot, and I felt a lot of arms hitting me. I almost lost my goggles twice. I tried to be always next to the leading athletes and I managed to stay in the front. As I like cold water, I still hope to improve in London”. Besides the direct qualification of the first 10 ranked swimmers in the race – one by country – the remaining five qualification spots were given on a continental basis. The beneficiaries of these berths were Olga Beresnyeva (Ukraine (also known as ) File:Flag of Ukraine.svg, 15th), Cara Baker (New Zealand (also known as ) File:Flag of New Zealand.svg, 17th), Yanel Pinto (Venezuela (also known as ) Image:Flag of Venezuela.svg, 18th), Heidi Gan (Malaysia (also known as ) File:Flag of Malaysia.svg, 28th), and Jessica Roux (South Africa (also known as ) File:Flag of South Africa.svg, 31st). The men’s race will take place this Sunday, with more than 60 swimmers on the start list. Like in the women’s race, the show will comprise acrobatic figures by planes in the air above the athletes and hundreds of spectators on site will follow the effort of the competitors. The complete list of 25 swimmers qualified for London 2012 Olympic Games is as follows (10 from Shanghai and 15 from Setúbal):
Alternative Linked Data Views: ODE     Raw Data in: CXML | CSV | RDF ( N-Triples N3/Turtle JSON XML ) | OData ( Atom JSON ) | Microdata ( JSON HTML) | JSON-LD    About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data] Valid XHTML + RDFa
OpenLink Virtuoso version 07.20.3217, on Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu), Standard Edition
Data on this page belongs to its respective rights holders.
Virtuoso Faceted Browser Copyright © 2009-2012 OpenLink Software