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Open water swimmers lead NZ campaign at FINA World Championships

Rotorua’s Kane Radford and Taranaki’s Charlotte Webby lead the New Zealand campaign at the FINA World Championships in Russia on Monday (local time).

The pair will compete in the all-important 10km Open Water World Championship, which is also the first of two qualifying events for the 2016 Rio Olympics.

The championships begin with the 5km Open Water event at the weekend but the two Kiwis have their sights firmly fixed on the 10km swim on Monday for men and Tuesday for women, in Kazan, Tatarstan.

The top 10 swimmers in both races will qualify for Rio with a further nine places to be decided at a second event in Portugal next year.

With Olympic qualification at stake, the championships have naturally drawn remarkably strong fields.

The 73-strong men’s line-up includes the London Olympic champion Ous Mellouli (Tunisia), current World Cup leader Jack Burnell (Great Britain), last year’s overall series winner Allan do Carmo (Brazil) and defending world champion Spyridon Gianniotis (Greece).

Radford has prepared with two World Cup races and he will be hoping it is a much cleaner race on Monday after suffering cuts to his eye and a sprained finger after an over-physical race at the recent World University Games in Korea where he finished eighth.  The Pan Pacific Championship bronze medallist had a 16th and 11th placings in two World Cups in Europe.

The Rotorua swimmer has also been selected as the flagbearer for the New Zealand team for the opening ceremony.


There are 61 entered the women’s race with favourites including London champion Eva Risztov (Hungary), defending world champion Poliana Okimoto (Brazil), the Olympic medallist and current Pan Pacific winner Haley Anderson (USA), World Cup leaders Ana Marcela Cunha (Brazil) and Rachele Bruni (Italy) and European champion Sharon van Rousendaal (Netherlands).

Webby also had two lead-up swims in Europe with an 11th placing at Setubal in Portugal, with a key to hold on to the lead pack who will set a fast pace but then turn up the wick in the final lap.

The course, used for the World University Games two years ago, is in the Kazanka River with the city located on the confluence on the Kazanka and Volga rivers.

The rest of the New Zealand team are at their staging camp in Barcelona with the pool competition to start on 2 August.