Jump to content

European U-23 Swimming Championships

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The European Under 23 (or "U-23") Swimming Championships (50 m) is a biennial swimming competition for European swimmers organized by the Ligue Européenne de Natation and held over three days.[1] The competitor age range is from 19 to 23, and the event is designed to be a development event to aid the transition from junior to senior competition.[2] The inaugural edition in 2023 was awarded to Dublin, Ireland.[2][3]

Format

[edit]

Competition in the Under-23 championships will be held across three days, much shorter than a traditional continental championships which usually last a week. A special Skins event will be held for freestyle sprinters, as the event proved popular in the International Swimming League. Certain standard relays will not be held.[4]

In addition to European nations, the Under 23 Championship rules allow non-European guest nations to be invited to increase competitiveness, at a maximum of one per continent. Swimmers from these nations will be able to win 'commemorative' medals reflecting their position in the physical race as if it was a standard non-championship meet, while the top three European swimmers will receive the championship gold, silver and bronze. As such, some events will award two silver medals, for example, one for a guest who finished second in a final, and one for the second placed European swimmer in the same race. The European swimmer is always taken to be competing in the European Championships, so does not win the lower medal they might receive in the virtual 'open' meet.

In the first edition, United States, Zimbabwe and South Africa accepted invitations to the championships.

The Championships will be scheduled every two years, immediately after or before the World Aquatics Championships. From 2025, no one eligible for junior competition may compete in the Championships.

Championships

[edit]
Number Year Host City Host Country Date Events Leading nation Guests
1 2023 Dublin  Ireland 11-13 August 38  Ireland  South Africa
 United States
 Zimbabwe
2 2025 Šamorín  Slovakia 26-28 June

All-time medal table

[edit]

After the 2023 championships :

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Ireland (IRL)6309
2 Great Britain (GBR)54413
3 Germany (GER)54211
4 Poland (POL)53311
5 Slovenia (SLO)4015
6 Greece (GRE)3126
7 Netherlands (NED)26311
8 France (FRA)2259
9 Israel (ISR)2046
10 Italy (ITA)1236
11 Austria (AUT)1102
12 Ukraine (UKR)1023
13 Bulgaria (BUL)1001
14 Hungary (HUN)0325
15 Serbia (SRB)0213
16 Portugal (POR)0123
17 Croatia (CRO)0112
 Norway (NOR)0112
 Slovakia (SVK)0112
20 Luxembourg (LUX)0101
 Sweden (SWE)0101
 Turkey (TUR)0101
23 Denmark (DEN)0022
24 Czech Republic (CZE)0011
Totals (24 entries)383840116

References

[edit]
  1. ^ LEN Swimming Rules 13: European Junior Championships Archived 1 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine, posted 28 September 2008 by LEN. Retrieved 13 July 2010.
  2. ^ a b "Dublin 2023 can "inspire a generation" of Irish swimmers". www.len.eu. 9 August 2023. Retrieved 13 August 2023.
  3. ^ "Ireland Announced as Host of Inaugural European U23 Swimming Championships". Sport Ireland. Retrieved 13 August 2023.
  4. ^ "Eighteen swimmers set for inaugural European U23 Championships". British Swimming. Retrieved 13 August 2023.