European Short Course Swimming Championships

European Short Course Swimming Championships
Status active
Genre sports event
Date(s) varying
Frequency annual
Location(s) various
Inaugurated 1991 (1991)
Organised by LEN

The European Short Course Swimming Championships (variously referred to informally as the "Short Course Europeans" or "European 25m Championships") are a swimming meet, organized by LEN. The meet features swimmers from Europe, competing in events in a short course (25-meter) pool. The meet has traditionally been held in the beginning of December. Annual until 2013, the event now occurs in odd years.

History

The Championships were first held in 1996, and were preceded by the "European Sprint Swimming Championships" which were held from 1991–1994. The Sprint meet featured 14 events: the 50s of the strokes, the 100 Individual Medley, and 4x50 relays (free and medley).

In 1996, the meet expanded to 38 events, adding the 100s and 200s of stroke, the 400 and 800/1500 frees, and the 200 and 400 IMs; and the name was changed to "Short Course". LEN also started numbering the championships again, such that 2011's meet was the 15th edition.[1]

In 2012, the meet expanded to 40 events: 19 for men, 19 for women, and two mixed. Of each 19, 17 are individual and 2 are relays.

Editions

Sprint championships

Number Year Host City Country Date Winner of the medal table Second in the medal table Third in the medal table
11991Gelsenkirchen Germany6–8 December Germany Soviet Union Sweden
21992Espoo Finland21–22 December Germany Sweden Finland
31993Gateshead Great Britain11–13 November Germany Sweden Great Britain
41994Stavanger Norway3–4 December Germany Sweden Netherlands

Short Course championships

Number Year Host City Country Date Winner of the medal table Second in the medal table Third in the medal table
11996Rostock Germany13–15 December Germany Great Britain Netherlands
21998Sheffield Great Britain11–13 December Germany Great Britain Netherlands
31999Lisbon Portugal9–12 December Sweden Germany Ukraine
42000Valencia Spain14–17 December Sweden Italy Germany
52001Antwerpen Belgium13–16 December Germany Sweden Ukraine
62002Riesa Germany12–15 December Germany Italy Sweden
72003Dublin Ireland11–14 December Germany Great Britain Netherlands
82004Vienna Austria9–12 December Germany Russia Great Britain
92005Trieste Italy8–11 December Germany Poland Netherlands
102006Helsinki Finland7–10 December Germany France Italy
112007Debrecen Hungary13–16 December Germany Russia France
122008Rijeka Croatia11–14 December Russia France Italy
132009Istanbul Turkey10–13 December Netherlands Russia France
142010Eindhoven Netherlands25–28 November Germany Netherlands Hungary
152011Szczecin Poland8–11 December Germany Denmark Spain
162012Chartres France22–25 November France Denmark Hungary
172013Herning Denmark12–15 December Russia Hungary Denmark
182015Netanya Israel2–6 December Hungary Italy Germany
192017Copenhagen Denmark13–17 December Russia Hungary Italy
202019Glasgow Great Britain4–7 DecemberTBDTBDTBD

Medal table (1991–2017)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Germany (GER)140131109380
2 Sweden (SWE)776443184
3 Russia (RUS)767174221
4 Netherlands (NED)714642159
5 Italy (ITA)616266189
6 Hungary (HUN)613527123
7 France (FRA)473944130
8 Great Britain (GBR)416778186
9 Ukraine (UKR)39312898
10 Poland (POL)31282382
11 Denmark (DEN)21383190
12 Spain (ESP)20252570
13 Slovakia (SVK)197733
14 Slovenia (SLO)18172257
15 Finland (FIN)15131543
16 Croatia (CRO)12151239
17 Austria (AUT)11161340
18 Czech Republic (CZE)11141944
19 Serbia/ Serbia and Montenegro64414
20 Iceland (ISL)62412
21 Lithuania (LTU)58821
22 Belarus (BLR)482234
23  Switzerland (SUI)46818
24 Norway (NOR)371626
25 Belgium (BEL)37818
26 Soviet Union3227
27 Bulgaria (BUL)1034
28 Estonia (EST)06612
29 Israel (ISR)051116
30 Greece (GRE)0369
 Romania (ROU)0369
32 Ireland (IRL)0167
33 Portugal (POR)0134
34 Turkey (TUR)0123
35 Faroe Islands (FRO)0101
36 Liechtenstein (LIE)0011
Totals (36 nations)8067847942384

See also

References

  1. The most successful European short course swimmers. Press release published by LEN on 2012-12-07, retrieved 2012-03-20. (Note: The release was before the start of the 2011 meet, and references tallies for the 14 previous editions.)
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