Tempo

4 swimmers determined to gain Tokyo slots

- By KRISTEL SATUMBAGA

Despite the altered preparatio­n, the Philippine Swimming Inc. is upbeat of its athletes’ chances to qualify to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics that was reschedule­d next year due to the coronaviru­s (COVID-19) pandemic.

PSI President Lani Velasco said five of the 11 national swimmers who are based abroad are now back training after restrictio­ns were eased in their respective areas.

Only Luke Gebbie has been training the whole time in Australian as he lives near a house with a swimming pool.

Remedy Rule started trainining only last May 18 while James Deiparine will resume pool training on June 1 at the University of Southern California.

The three athletes, along with Jasmine Alkhaldi, have the best chances of earning Olympic slots after making the Olympic Qualifying Time (OQT) B in their events at the 2019 Southeast Asian Games held in Manila.

But they have to improve their times in their pet events in the OQT A if they are to advance to next year’s quadrennia­l event.

Gebbie clocked 49.94 seconds in men’s 100-meter freestyle and 22.62sec in 50 free, more than a second slower than the 48.57sec and 22.01sec OQT-A times.

Rule’s 2:10.99 in women’s 200 free also closes in on the 2:08.43 Olympic cut, as well as her 100m record of 55.80sec (54.38sec, OQT-A).

Deiparine needs to meet the 59.93sec standard in men’s 100m breaststro­ke a er timing 1:01.46, while Alkhaldi, who compete in the previous two Olympics via the universali­ty rule, is 0.81 seconds off the OQT-A time in women’s 50m free with her time of 25.48sec.

 ??  ?? LUKE Gebbie
REMEDY Rule
LUKE Gebbie REMEDY Rule
 ??  ?? JAMES Deiparine
JAMES Deiparine

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