NCAA Champ Zalan Sarkany Hoping to Podium at Home SC World Champs, Loving Team at Indiana

While filming with the Indiana swim team, SwimSwam caught up with 2024 NCAA Champion in the 1,650, Zalan Sarkany, who transferred to IU this year from Arizona State.

Sarkany makes it clear that while IU’s midseason competition is coming up at Ohio State next week, he is focused more on a few weeks from now when the Short Course World Championships will be held in his home city of Budapest. Being such a special meet, the Hungarian is hoping to make a podium or two in his distance specialties.

Sarkany also compares his time at Arizona State to Indiana, saying both were good but as he’s in Bloomington now, he feels he’s adjusting well to the training, team, and city.

16
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

16 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Weinstein-Madden-Ledecky-Gemmell
5 hours ago

Anyone
But
Texas

MarkB
8 hours ago

One of the few people I’ve heard say, “I love the weather” when talking about the MidWest. It’s nice now . . . get back to me in January and February.

snailSpace
Reply to  MarkB
8 hours ago

Us Hungarians haven’t experienced proper winter in a decade. Maybe he will love it even more in January.

IU Swammer
Reply to  MarkB
7 hours ago

Northern Indiana gets lake-effect snow, but most of the state doesn’t get much. The last few years, we’ve had a handful of light snows, and temps get above freezing most days. It’s not Tempe, but it’s not Minnesota either.

MDS
Reply to  IU Swammer
5 hours ago

The climate in the Northern half of Indiana is classified as humid continental; the lower half, where Bloomington is located, is classified as humid sub-tropical. What it comes down to is that in the cooler months northern Indiana snow sticks and piles up; southern Indiana snow melts relatively quickly and mud is often the flavor of the day. Don’t know where Hungarian climate fits on the continuum.

Queens
8 hours ago

Hope he’s doing enough yards

Sorin
Reply to  Queens
3 hours ago

Given how well Ahmed Hafnaoui developed during his time at IU, I think the distance program there will be just fine for him.

Octavio Gupta
9 hours ago

I wish him well during his journey.

Glazer
10 hours ago

You guys should’ve asked him about the anime edits he watches before his races

Raches
11 hours ago

Glazing modge

Tree Man
11 hours ago

Hearing that Indiana is similar to his training in Hungary is very promising. It felt like most of his improvement last year was from his fall semester over there

snailSpace
12 hours ago

How deep will the distance fields be at SC Worlds?
They were very meh during the World Cup series.

Lifeguard
Reply to  snailSpace
11 hours ago

From watching US college swimming it seems those elites that aren’t retired or resting are going

MDS
Reply to  Lifeguard
5 hours ago

One of the distance swimmers on the US team is his former ASU teammate Daniel Matheson.

Mr._Magoo
Reply to  snailSpace
8 hours ago

Yeah, but when you see what they did in Paris… 800 free prelims was insane.

oxyswim
Reply to  snailSpace
8 hours ago

I think that’s a function of the WC format not being that friendly to distance swimmers and the fall typically being a time that distance athletes are doing a lot of higher volume, lower intensity weeks. Post-Olympics we’re definitely not going to see a full slate of elite distance swimmers, but it should be a lot better turnout than WCs (I hope).

About Coleman Hodges

Coleman Hodges

Coleman started his journey in the water at age 1, and although he actually has no memory of that, something must have stuck. A Missouri native, he joined the Columbia Swim Club at age 9, where he is still remembered for his stylish dragon swim trunks. After giving up on …

Read More »