List of New European Championships Medal Winners After Efimova’s Suspension

After the FINA Doping Panel Announced a suspension of 2013 European Champion and World Record holder Yulia Efimova, there will be a lot of shifting of results to happen.

Among the most significant shifts will be those medals and prizes won at the 2013 European Short Course Championships, where Efimova won four golds and a silver.

In total, her prizes sacrificed will be:

  • gold medal, 2013 Euro SC Championships, 50 breaststroke
  • gold medal, 2013 Euro SC Championships, 200 breaststroke
  • gold medal, 2013 Euro SC Championships, 200 medley relay (along with Daria Ustinaova, Svetlana Chimrova, and Rozaliya Nastretdinova)
  • gold medal, 2013 Euro SC Championships, 200 mixed medley relay (along with Vialy Melnikov, Svetlana Chimrova, and Vlad Morozov)
  • silver medal, 2013 Euro SC Championships, 100 breaststroke.

Some of these lost medals will bring great frustration to her European teammates, given that Efimova was notified of the adverse finding prior to the meet. The mixed medley, for example, had such a huge cushion over runners-up Germany that it likely could have won gold with a different breaststroker on the relay.

This means that a waterfall of results will be changed as swimmers are promoted in the standings. New medal winners will be:

(Note: all changes must be confirmed by FINA before official).

50 breaststroke:

  1. Ruta Meilutyte, Lithuania, gold, 29.10 (she will also get the Championship Record)
  2. Monike Nijhuis, Netherlands, silver, 29.79
  3. Jennie Johansson, Sweden, bronze, 29.80

200 breaststroke:

  1. Rikke Moeller-Pedersen, Denmark, 2:15.21 (this will also be the European Record)
  2. Vitalina Simonova, Russia, 2:18.88
  3. Giulia de Ascentis, Italy, 2:20.93

100 breaststroke:

  1. Ruta Meilutyte, Lithuania, 1:02.92 (this is unchanged)
  2. Rikke Moeller-Pedersen, Denmark, 1:04.39
  3. Jennie Johansson, Sweden, 1:05.13

200 medley relay – women’s

  1. Denmark (Nielsen, Moeller-Pedersen, Ottesen, Blume) – 1:44.81. This should also be the World Record.
  2. Sweden (Coleman, Johansson, Sjostrom, Hansson) – 1:46.08
  3. Great Britain (Halsall, Allen, Lowe, O’Connor) – 1:46.55

200 medley relay – mixed

  1. Germany (Diener, Runhau, Steffen Deibler, Brandt) – 1:39.32
  2. Czech Republic (Baumrtova, Brtunek, Svecena, Plevko) – 1:39.54
  3. Italy (Bonacchi, Di Lecce, Bianchi, Gerraioli) – 1:39.68

The biggest winner of the shifting was perhaps Sweden’s Jennie Johansson, who picked up two new bronze medals and a new silver medal after Efimova’s loss-of-results.

In addition, Efimova will lose her results from the Singapore and Tokyo stops on the World Cup circuit. While she will still have several points from the second leg (Moscow, Dubai, Doha) of the trip, she will lose her Asia cluster prize money of $8,000, as well as a $10,000 World Record bonus and several thousand dollars in event prize money.

With a lot of shifting possible because of how many different rankings FINA keeps at these World Cup meets, we’ll save all of the details, but the wins that Efimova will be stripped of include:

Tokyo, 50 breaststroke, 28.71 (World Record)
Singapore, 200 breaststroke, 2:18.33
Tokyo, 200 breaststroke, 2:17.37

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jiggs
10 years ago

How not glad is Vlad?

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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