Siobhan Haughey Swims 24.9 and 53.4 Freestyles (LCM) at Hong Kong Time Trial

Hong Kong Swimming Time Trial

  • Saturday, July 11
  • Hong Kong Sport Institute, Hong Kong, China
  • Results PDF (in Chinese)

The Hong Kong Amateur Swimming Association (HKASA) held a time trial on Saturday that featured its top swimmers suiting up and racing off the blocks.

Among the highlights were near-lifetime bests from the country’s best swimmer, Siobhan Haughey.

Haughey, who competed for the University of Michigan in the US from 2015 through 2019 swam 24.92 in the 50 free and 53.44 in the 100 free. Those are just off her best times of 24.85 and 53.30, respectively.

Her 53.30 best time in the 100 free came in early March at the TYR Pro Swim Series in Des Moines, Iowa. That time is also the Hong Kong National Record. Shortly after that meet, as travel restrictions fell into pace around the world related to the ongoing global coronavirus pandemic, Haughey returned home to her native Hong Kong.

Haughey also swam 59.92 in the 100 fly.

At last summer’s World Championships in Gwangju, Haughey finished tied for 10th in the 100 free and 4th in the 200 free. She followed that up with Hong Kong Records in the 50 free, 100 free, 200 free, 50 breast, and 200 breast during the International Swimming League season. She also cleared the National Record in the 200 IM, but that result wasn’t ratified.

Also at the meet, her University of Michigan teammate Jamie Yeung swam 1:10.94 in the 100 breaststroke.

Rick Bishop, an associate head coach at the University of Michigan, has been coaching the pair remotely, writing workouts and reviewing training videos while they are in Hong Kong. Prior to the total shutdown, they were doing dryland training and lake swims in wetsuits in Michigan. Bishop expects that they’ll both be back in Ann Arbor training in mid-August.

Watch Siobhan Haughey‘s 100 free race video below:

Watch Jamie Yeung‘s 100 breast race video below:

Other Noteworthy Results:

  • 2016 Olympian and 5-time Asian Games medalist Camille Cheng swam 56.45 in the 100 free.
  • Rising Michigan sophomore Katii Tang swam 58.22 in the 100 free
  • Incoming Michigan freshman Cheuk Tung Natalie Kan swam 57.23 in the 100 free and 1:00.85 in the 100 fly
  • Former Virginia Tech swimmer Ian Ho swam 51.20 in the 100 free and 22.92 on a relay leadoff in the 50 free. Those times are almost as fast as the 22.59 and 50.38 that he swam at last summer’s World Championships.
  • Markus Mok, a Northwestern Wildcat, won the men’s 100 breaststroke in 1:04.08 (video). That’s faster than the time swum by Michael Ng representing Hong Kong at last summer’s World Championships.
  • Nicholas Lim, a sophomore at Princeton, swam a 52.99 in the 100 free and 56.53 in the 100 fly.

 

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No spot cream used
3 years ago

Wish she would swim for Ireland .need a clean swimmer not touched by Dr rudd

Corn Pop
Reply to  No spot cream used
3 years ago

If HK ceases to be , she could . What is ironic is that HK was a s safe place to be , precisely because of its partial lockdown & political boundaries already in place from riots & subsequent clampdown . There has only been about 10 dead from protests & covid 19 combined.

#MFan
3 years ago

Great to see! Go Blue!

swimfan210_
3 years ago

That’s awesome! Another swimmer on a hot streak. With more training and progress, she might have a 52 in sight.

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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