Alia Atkinson On ISL Jackpot Rules: ‘It’s Really Difficult As An Athlete’

2020 INTERNATIONAL SWIMMING LEAGUE: MATCH 2

London Roar’s breaststroke standout Alia Atkinson echoed very conflicted fan sentiment about the ISL’s skins-and-jackpot combination.

The ISL’s new jackpot rule allows winning athletes to steal the points of other swimmers if they win by a large enough margin. The rule has added drama to the league – but it’s also led to some illogical outcomes, like New York Breaker Joe Litchfield making it all the way to round 3 of the multi-round skins race, but scoring less than the two Cali Condors he eliminated head-to-head in round 2.

“It’s really difficult as an athlete to give your best for your team… and then all your points are stolen,” Atkinson said. “And you just swam that race for no reason.”

“But I’m sure there’s a reason,” she continued. “I’m sure it creates excitement and a fire in the other athletes to keep on going.”

That’s not just sour grapes from Atkinson, who hasn’t been jackpotted yet this year. (In fact, Atkinson has actually benefited in both points and prize money from the new format, jackpotting one swimmer in her 50 breast win, another in her 100 breast win, and earning jackpot points off another team’s disqualification in the women’s medley relay.) If anything, Atkinson’s critique of the format is a strong indicator of athlete sentiment, when even a high-profile beneficiary of the rule is pointing out its flaws.

Still, Atkinson was measured in her critique, acknowledging the fan-excitement benefits of the jackpots and suggesting we’d continue to see how the rule plays out as the season progresses.

Reported by Retta Race.

WOMEN’S 100 IM

London goes 1-2 for a second-straight race as this second meet is looking more and more lopsided. Kameneva is a new addition for London, and won this race by a tenth over breaststroke star Atkinson. But the field was definitely weaker than in match 1, where Kameneva would have only been 6th overall. It was a pretty breaststroke-heavy field, with a good number of primary breaststrokers added, to mixed results. That may have to do with the event lineup – breaststroke is the only stroke without an individual event in this session, and that might make breaststrokers a popular 100 IM entry for much of this season.

WOMEN’S 100 BREAST

Atkinson has been dominant in sprint breaststroke, and she pulled this one out even coming off the 100 IM not too long ago. Atkinson was 1:04.21, timing her finish perfectly even as the field closed on her late. The Aqua Centurions have been able to rely on their breaststrokers, and they go 2-3 here with Carraro almost running down Atkinson.

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sscommentor
3 years ago

too gimicky of a concept. as a fan -I just want to see fast swims, good races, and athletes throwing in off events to show their dexterity in the sport or to win points for their team victory (like in a college/high school meet)

-let me gamble on ISL and i’ll tune in

Verram
3 years ago

ISL is more like a novelty event now or a “party game” than a serious sporting competition with all the jackpot stealing thing .. I still prefer normal swimming competition with simpler rules to follow

Hmmmm
3 years ago

I appreciate the ISL needs to find ways to interest a wider fan base, but simply making the rules more complicated is not going to solve the problem. You don’t see Julio Jones getting extra points for insane touchdown receptions.

They need a truly clear cut meet format. There has to be size limits on rosters to create an element of strategy, and a points system that is accessible for the average viewer. Right now they’re trending toward what FINA has created with the world cups and champions series: the top athletes rake in the points and prizes, and the lower tier athletes get stiffed.

Bob
3 years ago

Can’t understand anything she’s saying

Last edited 3 years ago by Bob
Coach Mike 1952
Reply to  Bob
3 years ago

If you use the variable speed playback on YouTube, you can slow it down & hear her better.

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 …

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