Europeans in world record swim frenzy

AAP - March 26, 2008, 12:57 pm

Frenchman Alain Bernard led the charge as Europe threw down its challenge for the Beijing Olympics with six world records in seven days of championship swimming.

The 24-year-old provided the lasting image of the European championships with swims of awesome power which left Italian world champion Filippo Magnini and rapid Swede Stefan Nystrand trailing in his wake.

Bernard, bulging with muscle, stormed away with three world marks, annihilating Pieter van den Hoogenband's 47.84 seconds 100m freestyle standard in 47.60 and next day lowering the record to 47.50 before dispossessing Australia's Eamon Sullivan of the 50m freestyle world record in 21.50.

Marleen Veldhuis started the world record rush with her Dutch team mates, slicing a substantial 1.6 seconds from Germany's women's 4x100m freestyle relay mark, and trimmed 0.04 seconds from Inge de Bruijn's 50m freestyle record with a time of 24.09.

Italy's Federica Pellegrini, disqualified for a false start in the 200m freestyle heats, provided the sixth and least awaited world mark, turning on the pace in the second half of the 400m freestyle to win in 4:01.53 and grab the record from Olympic champion Laure Manaudou.

The Frenchwoman, wanting to catch up on Olympic training after a disrupted year, had left early with gold medals from the 200m backstroke and 4x200m freestyle relay and a silver from her 100m backstroke title defence in which, to her evident displeasure, she was beaten and deprived of her European record by 17-year-old Russian Anastasia Zueva.

Zueva was one of several promising new champions to emerge from Eindhoven along with 15-year-old Russian Yulia Efimova (200m breaststroke), 14-year-old Swede Sarah Sjoestroem (100m butterfly) and 19-year-old Slovenian Sara Isakovic, who upstaged Olympic champion Camelia Potec in the 200m freestyle.

Hungary's Laszlo Cseh, faced with Olympic swimming's toughest task of taking on Michael Phelps, retained his 200m and 400m individual medley crowns, breaking his own European record in the 400m in 4:09.59 but still remaining more than three seconds adrift of the American master.

Yuri Prilukov won the 1500m freestyle for the fourth time and completed his second 400m/1500m double as Russia's topped the medal table with 12 titles.

Serbia's Milorad Cavic twice lowered the European 50m butterfly record but was denied his ambition of approaching the sub-50-second times of Ian Crocker and Phelps in the 100m butterfly when he was banned for wearing a T-shirt with a political slogan at his victory ceremony for the 50m.

The championships did not provide a complete picture of what to expect from Europe at August's Beijing Olympics.

Germany, the most successful nation in the 82-year history of these championships, brought a team of only nine swimmers, reduced by illness, injury and absentees pre-occupied with Olympic selection at next month's national championships.

That deprived Eindhoven of Britta Steffen, who demolished the 100m freestyle world record last time, and Annika Lurz (nee Liebs), who joined Steffen in world record breaking 4x100m and 4x200m freestyle relays at the last European championships in 2006.</p>