Russia Earns Two Olympic Berths At LEN Synchronized Swimming Champions Cup

Svetlana Kolesnichenko and Svetlana Romashina; Photo Courtesy: Joao Marc Bosch

Russia was the first to ‘arrive’ to Tokyo among the European synchro swimmers by winning the team event at the LEN Synchronized Swimming Champions Cup in St. Petersburg. Since this feat secured an automatic Olympic berth for their duet too, the silver medallist Ukrainian pair also qualified for 2020. The last day saw another golden triple for the hosts.

Medallists, Day 3

Team free

  1. Russia 97.4000, 2. Spain 91.8667, 3. Greece 85.5333

Duet free

  1. Svetlana Romashina, Svetlana Kolesnichenko (RUS) 97.4667, 2. Marta Fiedina, Anastasiya Savchuk (UKR) 93.1667, 3. Sara Saldana, Ona Carbonell (ESP) 91.5667

Mixed duet free

  1. Kristina Averina, Mikhail Vasilev (RUS) 87.6667, 2. Emma Garcia, Pau Ribes (ESP) 85.4000, 3. Federica Sala, Nicolo Ogliari (ITA) 78.8333

Despite the morning start, the stands were filled once more in St. Petersburg and the local fans were cheering loudly right at the beginning when the Russian team, starting first, offered another majestic show.

The judges were thrilled too, 9.7s and 9.8s were flying all over the place, even a perfect 10 flashed on the scoreboard. However, soon we could witness in the mixed zone one of the drives behind the Russian successes. The head coach – and chief magician in the centre of their golden age – Tatiana Pokrovskaya was all but happy. She seemed to care less of the marks, rather believed to her eyes and she was not really satisfied what she saw from the girls, so further improvements are due before the World Championships this summer, for sure.

Still, the quality of the current performance was more than enough to secure another gold as well as to book their spot at the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo. Spain came second with a truly outstanding and impressive choreography while the Greeks edged out the Italians for the bronze by 0.1 points.

The afternoon session produced the highest mark of the meet with all the good reasons as Svetlana Kolesnichenko and Svetlana Romashina offered a breath-taking performance. At times it seemed they had come from a different universe – despite no 10s this time, they still accumulated 97.4667 points, a visible sign of Romashina’s return to the pool after three years.

The 5-time Olympic, 18-time world and 10-time European champion, who was on ‘maternity leave’ since 2016, was in upbeat mood after the final. “I’m quite happy with this result and the way we performed” she said. “I thought it was going to be harder but it felt really good. Of course, we face a long road but it’s awesome to return to the competitions.”

With the Russian team having already been qualified, according to the rules it secured an automatic berth for their duet too, so the race for the second place was also important. At the end, the second Olympic spot went to the Ukrainians, they bettered the Spaniards by 1.6 points for the silver.

The outcome of the mixed duet free final sealed a golden finish for the Russians, their young duet clinched this title too, ahead of the Spaniards and the Italians.

The Championship Trophy remained in the hands of the hosts and the crowd was also delighted to see Svetlana Kolesnichenko receiving the LEN Award for her 2018 merits.

Championship Trophy (top three)

  1. Russia 913.3953
  2. Italy 666.3940
  3. Spain 618.6709

Medal table

Russia 7 1 1
Spain 1 4 1
Ukraine 0 2 0
Italy 0 1 1
Greece 0 0 2
Israel 0 0 2

For detailed results visit www.len.eu         

— The above press release was posted by Swimming World in conjunction with LEN. For press releases and advertising inquiries please contact Advertising@SwimmingWorld.com.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

Welcome to our community. We invite you to join our discussion. Our community guidelines are simple: be respectful and constructive, keep on topic, and support your fellow commenters. Commenting signifies that you agree to our Terms of Use

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x