Abeysinghe and Gaffoor of Sri Lanka Nominated for Tokyo Olympics

Matthew Abeysinghe and Aniqah Gaffoor of Sri Lanka have been nominated for the country’s Universality places for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games, pending FINA’s approval which will be announced by July 1st.

Abeysinghe, an Ohio State graduate, represented Sri Lanka at the 2016 Rio Olympics in the 100 free. That year, he was the first Sri Lankan swimmer to qualify under an Olympic Selection Time.

He is one of three Ohio State swimmers set to compete in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics this year, including Team USA’s Hunter Armstrong and Canada’s Ruslan Gaziev.

25-year-old Abeysinghe is set to compete in the 100 free again in Tokyo. His National Record in the event stands at 49.11 from the 2018 Commonwealth Games. That meet, however, was from before the Olympic qualifying period opened. His best time during the qualifying period is a 50.31, which is short of the FINA “B” standard.

He holds 7 individual Sri Lankan National Records (in the 50 free, 100 free, 200 free, 400 free, 1500 free, 200 IM and 400 IM) and 2 relay national records.

This would be 17-year-old Gaffoor’s Olympic debut. She also did not crack the OST time this year and would be competing in the 100 fly as one of Sri Lanka’s Universality nominees. 

Gaffoor holds the Sri Lankan National Records in both the 50 fly and 100 fly. She set them at the 2019 Singapore National Age Group Swimming Championships.

Her 100 fly National Record stands at 1:04.58, about 5 seconds off the OST. She aims to go 1:03 at the Olympics to crush her own National Record, according to the Sunday Observer.

2016 Sri Lankan Olympian Kimiko Raheem, has opted out of this Olympic Games due to injury issues, as reported by Daily News. She competed in the 100 backstroke in Rio as a teenager, finishing 28th.

As a reminder, here are FINA’s list of priorities for Olympic selection:

  1. All athletes with Olympic Qualifying Times (OQT / “A” Time)
  2. Athletes in relays
  3. Universality Places
  4. Invited athletes who have achieved an Olympic Selection Time (OST / “B” time)s

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About Annika Johnson

Annika Johnson

Annika came into the sport competitively at age eight, following in the footsteps of her twin sister and older brother. The sibling rivalry was further fueled when all three began focusing on distance freestyle, forcing the family to buy two lap counters. Annika is a three-time Futures finalist in the 200 …

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