Wiffen Leads Twelve Strong Team for World Swimming Championships

Ireland Teams Announced for Summer Internationals

World Number 1 Daniel Wiffen will lead a 12-strong Ireland swimming team into this July’s World Aquatics Championships in Fukuoka, Japan. Wiffen’s recent performances at the Stockholm Open see him as the current world leader in both the 1500m and 800m Freestyle, with his 1500m performance making him one of the four fastest men to ever compete over the distance. The Ireland selections come as part of a multi-Championships announcement for the summer, with 36 athletes named to five separate National teams, with the swimming teams for the European Youth Olympic Festival and the Commonwealth Youth Games to be confirmed in the days to come.

Joining Wiffen on the Fukuoka-bound team will be Mona McSharry, the Tokyo 2020 Olympic finalist, Ellen Walshe, a World short course Championships medallist and the exciting talent that is John Shortt, at only 16 years of age, recently wowing the crowd at the Irish Open Championships.

Wiffen said, “Going into the World Championships, I’m definitely hoping to come out with a personal best and I think I can say after my swims at the weekend, being world ranked number one in the 1500m Freestyle, that I would be a World Championship medal hopeful. I guess that as a medal has never been won by an Irish athlete at a World Long Course Championships that I’d like to be the first to do that. I’m really looking forward to the team that’s going to Fukuoka, it’s going to be a great pre-camp and I can say that my Youtube videos (@WiffenTwins) are going to be very cool, we’ll get everyone involved; a big team will definitely boost the atmosphere and we’ll all be ready to race fast in Japan.’

The team for Fukuoka consists of 7 men and 5 women, with six of the team making a World Championships debut, two of whom are making their first ever senior National Team appearance for their nation. Ireland will also enter teams into three key relay events in Japan – the Male and Female 400m Medley Relays and the Female 400m Freestyle relay, with this Championships providing one of only two opportunities by which nations can qualify relays for next year’s Olympic Games in Paris.

In addition to Fukuoka beckoning, a home European Championships in front of what will be a packed crowd in Dublin will be all the more exciting now that 19 athletes have been named to the Irish team for the LEN European Under 23 Championships, consisting of three days of racing at the National Aquatic Centre in August. Several of those athletes named are also nominated to Commonwealth Games Northern Ireland for the Commonwealth Youth Games in Trinidad, and with both events taking place at the same time, such athletes will have decisions to make as to which of the two competitions they will feature in. With five of the World Championships team travelling back from Japan to compete in Dublin, Irish swimming fans will have a whole host of racing to look forward to right on their own doorstep.

A team of 13 is confirmed for the LEN European Junior Championships in Belgrade, Serbia, and with 18 year old females added to the programme from 2023 onwards, some athletes will have an additional opportunity to race at this event having felt that last year would have been their last venture at this level. Eyes will be on rising Irish talent such as Ellie McCartney, Grace Davison and Evan Bailey, with male and female relays again part of the focus in the selector’s decision making.

Following on from an initial venture back into Open Water racing in 2022, eight athletes will race at the LEN European Junior Open Water Championships in Corfu, Greece later this year, with four such athletes also benefitting from international Open Water racing as part of the LEN Open Water Cup in Piombino, Italy.

Jon Rudd, Swim Ireland’s Performance Director believes that Irish swimming is in a very good place for a productive summer this year. “We had a very successful and uplifting Trials at the Irish Open Championships in Dublin this month and to be able to name such a long list of athletes to our National Teams this summer is extremely pleasing and encouraging. The World Championships is an important step in qualifying for and preparing for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games and we have a number of names on that roster who can make it through the rounds of racing and feature in the finals where the medals are decided. That is really something to look forward to. For all of our athletes, across all teams, the challenge is to be faster again in whatever event or events they have been selected for in a few weeks’ time. When we get to July and August, it won’t be long until the second Olympic qualification event is upon us, the 2024 World Aquatics Championships in February – so every event is an end in itself as well as a means to another end. Congratulations to the athletes selected and to the coaches and home programmes that aided them to this point – and whether it’s Fukuoka, Dublin, Belgrade, Maribor, Trinidad, Crete or Piombino, there will be plenty to keep Irish swimming fans happy this summer”.

2023 World Aquatics Championships (50m)

Fukuoka, Japan

Name

Home Programme

Home Programme Coach

Victoria Catterson

National Centre (Ulster)

Kevin Anderson

Tom Fannon

National Centre (Dublin)

Steven Beckerleg

Conor Ferguson

Loughborough University, England

Ian Hulme

Darragh Greene

National Centre (Dublin)

Steven Beckerleg

Danielle Hill

Larne SC

Peter Hill

Max McCusker

Arizona State University, USA

Herbie Behm

Mona McSharry

University of Tennessee, USA

Matt Kredich

Erin Riordan

National Centre (Dublin)

Steven Beckerleg

Shane Ryan

National Centre (Dublin)

Steven Beckerleg

John Shortt

National Centre (Limerick)

John Szaranek

Ian Claxton

Ellen Walshe

Templeogue SC, Dublin

Brian Sweeney

Daniel Wiffen

Loughborough University, England

Andi Manley

2023 LEN European Under 23 Championships

Dublin, Ireland

Name

Home Programme

Home Programme Coach

Evan Bailey

New Ross SC

Fran Ronan

Alana Burns-Atkin

Banbridge SC

Davy Wilson

Jack Cassin

National Centre (Limerick)

John Szaranek

Victoria Catterson

National Centre (Ulster)

Kevin Anderson

Eoin Corby

National Centre (Limerick)

John Szaranek

Grace Davison

Ards SC,

Newtownards

Curtis Coulter

Maria Godden

National Centre (Limerick)

John Szaranek

Grace Hodgins

Trojan SC,

Dublin

Jonathan Preston

Molly Mayne

Hamilton Aquatics, UAE

Stuart Sant

Ellie McCartney

National Centre (Ulster)

Kevin Anderson

Mona McSharry

University of Tennessee, USA

Matt Kredich

Liam O’Connor

Project 28,

Dublin

Andrew Addison

Lachlan Reed *

Club Natacio Sabadell, Spain

Antonio Jimenez

Dylan Registe

Lisburn City SC

Stan Sheppard

John Shortt

National Centre (Limerick)

John Szaranek

Ian Claxton

Oisin Tebite

Project 28,

Dublin

Andrew Addison

Ellen Walshe

Templeogue SC, Dublin

Brian Sweeney

Matthew Walsh-Hussey

NAC SC,

Dublin

Dave Malone

Daniel Wiffen

Loughborough University, England

Andi Manley

2023 LEN European Junior Championships

Belgrade, Serbia

Name

Home Programme

Home Programme Coach

Evan Bailey

New Ross SC

Fran Ronan

Alana Burns-Atkin

Banbridge SC

Davy Wilson

Adam Colgan

Lisburn City

Stan Sheppard

Grace Davison

Ards SC,

Newtownards

Curtis Coulter

Conor Fitzgerald

National Centre (Limerick)

John Szaranek

Molly Mayne

Hamilton Aquatics, UAE

Stuart Sant

Ellie McCartney

National Centre (Ulster)

Kevin Anderson

Liam O’Connor

Project 28,

Dublin

Andrew Addison

Lachlan Reed *

Club Natacio Sabadell, Spain

Antonio Jimenez

Dylan Registe

Lisburn City SC

Stan Sheppard

Cora Rooney

Enniskillen Lakelanders

Sinead Donagher

John Shortt

National Centre (Limerick)

John Szaranek

Ian Claxton

Oisin Tebite

Project 28,

Dublin

Andrew Addison

2023 LEN Open Water Cup

Piombino, Italy

Name

Home Programme

Home Programme Coach

Ella Carroll

National Centre (Limerick)

John Szaranek

Sean Donnellan

Glenalbyn SC,

Dublin

Nickey Burke

Ronan Fahey

Trojan SC,

Dublin

Jonathan Preston

Denis O’Brien

National Centre (Limerick)

Mikey McCarthy

2023 LEN European Junior Open Water Championships

Corfu, Greece

Name

Home Programme

Home Programme Coach

Ella Carroll

National Centre (Limerick)

John Szaranek

Sean Donnellan

Glenalbyn SC,

Dublin

Nickey Burke

Ronan Fahey

Trojan SC,

Dublin

Jonathan Preston

Darragh Horgan

Limerick SC

Mikey McCarthy

Ian Middleton

Glenalbyn SC,

Dublin

Nickey Burke

Ben Moran

Aer Lingus SC,

Dublin

Alan Turner

Denis O’Brien

National Centre (Limerick)

Mikey McCarthy

Jessica Purcell

Aer Lingus SC,

Dublin

Alan Turner

‘*’ – subject to Nationality clarification