ISL Depth Charts 2020: Loaded Energy Standard Favored To Repeat

INTERNATIONAL SWIMMING LEAGUE 2020: ENERGY STANDARD

Full Roster

Women Men
1 Sarah Sjostrom Chad le Clos
2 Femke Heemskerk Florent Manaudou
3 Emily Seebohm Ilya Shymanovich
4 Siobhan Haughey Kliment Kolesnikov
5 Georgia Davies Evgeny Rylov
6 Breeja Larson Felipe Lima
7 Mary-Sophie Harvey Ben Proud
8 Anastasia Shkurdai Sergii Shevtsov
9 Zsuzsanna Jakabos Simonas Bilis
10 Imogen Clark Kregor Zirk
11 Pernille Blume Max Litchfield
12 Viktoria Gunes Maxim Stupin
13 Tamara van Vliet Danas Rapsys
14 Maddy Banic Andrius Sidlauskas
15 Lucy Hope Matt Grevers
16 Benedetta Pilato Andrey Zhilkin

2020 Depth Charts

Our depth charts are equal parts research and prognostication. While most of our ordering is based around best times on record, we’ve also done some guesswork based on time conversions from short course yards and/or long course meters, or in cases where athletes don’t have recent results in a specific event. These depth charts are intended to show the top options for each event, even if the specific event lineup may prevent a top swimmer from entering all of the events where they rank in the top two.

Potential skin races are shown in blue, and the events with relay considerations in red.

Strengths

What isn’t a strength for the defending champs? Energy Standard really only lost a couple of important free agents. It would have been hard to keep Daiya Seto with an expansion franchise opening up in his home country of Japan. Same for Kayla Sanchez. (Sanchez and Anton Chupkov were two of the top free agents to leave Energy Standard, and neither are ultimately competing in the ISL this year).

Meanwhile they added plenty of elite free agents, including DC Trident MVP Siobhan Haughey.

Adding Haughey and NY Breakers free agent Pernille Blume only beefs up the league’s best sprint corps. Sjostrom was the league MVP last year and won three of her four skin races. She’s probably the swimmer to beat in both fly and free, with the exception of maybe Iron’s Ranomi Kromowidjojo in freestyle.

The sprint free prowess extends to the men’s side, where Florent Manaudou and Ben Proud are elite talents. And the key that really won Energy Standard the title last year was that every top swimmer could hit a big-time 100 free for relays. The men’s relay depth remains extremely strong, with at least seven men legitimate contenders to split 45-something (Manaudou, le Clos, Rylov, Kolesnikov, Bilis, Shevtsov, Proud).

The men’s backstrokes are loaded up. Russian duo Evgeny Rylov and Kliment Kolesnikov are so good that free agent additions Matt Grevers and Danas Rapsys are almost superfluous. But having that depth allows Energy Standard to lighten everyone’s event load a little.

One of the winning strategic moves ENS pulled last year was regularly sitting Kolesnikov out of the 200 back to keep him fresh for the medley relay, sitting Rylov out of the 50 back to keep him fresh for the 400 free relay, and then often sitting one of the two out of the 100 back to stay fresh for the mixed free relay. Not every team has enough of a built-in personnel advantage to do that (OK, no other team does), but it was a key in the fast-paced ISL format, and Energy Standard is set to do it again this year.

Breaststroke is strong on both sides, which is a key counter to the greatest strength of the London Roar, last year’s foremost challengers to Energy Standard. Ilya Shymanovich is a great three-distance breaststroker who will be a key skin entrant this year. Energy added young Italian star Benedetta Pilato and Breakers free agent Breeja Larson to load up the women’s events this year.

Weaknesses

The most notable weakness for Energy Standard will be the women’s free relay depth. That’s notable because, as we mentioned above, relay depth was the key to ENS’s title run last year. Of the 8 women to swim on a 4×100 free relay in last year’s finale, half are gone (Sanchez, Oleksiak, Bonnet, Smith). And while the heavy hitters (Sjostrom, Heemskerk) remain, the depth is much more shaky, and Energy Standard will need some big swims from deeper in its roster to keep raking in those B relay points.

Butterfly depth is a bit of an issue all around. We made the same observation about Cali’s men’s freestyles: when you have a superstar at the top (Dressel for Cali, Sjostrom and Chad le Clos for Energy), a lack of depth isn’t quite so devastating. But it’s worth noting that Energy doesn’t have a ton behind Sjostrom, and is really thin in the 200 fly, where Sjostrom’s brilliance doesn’t cover the holes so much.

The men are also very thin after le Clos. Rapsys projects as perhaps the team’s #2 entrant in the 100 and 200 fly, and it’s probably not worth wasting his energies there when he’s also the team’s top 200/400 freestyler. ENS might have to get creative to find another flyer who can avoid getting jackpotted.

Skins

Free: the freestyle skin races were very good for Energy Standard last year. Sjostrom won three of her four entries there. Florent Manaudou and Ben Proud made the second round in three of four meets. Manaudou won once, when ENS packed the final with both men.

Back: Manaudou is the world record-holder in the short course 50 back, but Kolesnikov (the long course world record-holder) might be the better three-round threat. Either way, ENS has a shot to have two finalists again here, with the right field. The women’s side is a little less strong. Emily Seebohm can probably make the first round of cuts, but won’t be a favorite to win.

Breast: Pilato is an extremely intriguing addition here. She was the long course World Champs runner-up in the 50 breast and seems to be rising fast. For the men, Shymanovich and Felipe Lima are both in the select group who can go sub-26.

Fly: While butterfly depth is an issue, top-end skin speed is not. Le Clos should be a great option, with awesome 50 speed but also top-end endurance up to the 200. Sjostrom has been very hard to beat in the 50 fly over her career.

Outlook

There’s no doubt that Energy Standard is the heavy favorite to repeat as ISL champions, and there haven’t really been any breaks that haven’t gone their way so far. When expansion teams rose up, ENS was able to retain the vast majority of their stars. They pulled a couple of top-end free agents. When almost all Australian athletes withdrew amid that country’s coronavirus travel bans, ENS’s top Australian, Emily Seebohm, did not. And to top things off, Energy Standard got the league’s softest schedule, with no regular-season matchup with last year’s runners-up in London.

The ISL regular season looks an awful lot like a five-week coronation parade for Energy Standard. That’s not to say there won’t be issues to overcome. The women’s relay depth is going to cause a lot more problems than it did last year, when Energy Standard won the women’s 4×100 free relay at every meet and the mixed 4×100 free relay at three of four. They’ll have to figure out some butterfly workarounds, and of course, avoid any coronavirus outbreaks that might thin out depth further.

That said, Energy Standard still has a great chance to be the #1-scoring men’s team like they were last year. That scoring title included two costly relay DQs during the regular season, so the final tallies could have been even more lopsided. Energy Standard can pretty much hold serve in a skin race of any stroke, and they should get to choose the stroke to maximize their advantages often.

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Full Panic
3 years ago

Hot Take: Grevers should be on 50 BR and 100 IM Depth Chart

Olympian
3 years ago

Some has to review the drafting process and the absurd jackpot rule.
I don’t wanna believe that the whole thing is rigged to allow the boss’ favorites to succeed, but it sure looks like it

Aquajosh
3 years ago

Heemskerk is out. Positive for COVID. That hurts their relays and freestyle depth greatly.

Admin
Reply to  Aquajosh
3 years ago

She is out at the start, but has indicated that she plans to join the team when she clears quarantines.

Khachaturian
3 years ago

Energy standard is literally that guy she tells you not to worry about.

Swammer
3 years ago

Boooooring. That Konstantin guy is trying to do everything so that his favorites earn more money than they already have and that energy standard wins….No non swimmer will watch this

Brownish
Reply to  Swammer
3 years ago

You’re dead wrong.

whever
3 years ago

Is there a start list for today?

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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