London Roar

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London Roar
First season2019
AssociationInternational Swimming League
Based inLondon
Head coachSteven Tigg
General managerRob Woodhouse
CaptainAdam Peaty, Sydney Pickrem, Alia Atkinson, Guilherme Guido

London Roar is a professional swimming club based in London and one of the first clubs of the International Swimming League (ISL) to be formed.[1] It was formed in March 2019,[2] with an international roster of swimmers including Adam Peaty who was among the first to support the formation of ISL independent of FINA.[3] It is run by its general manager Rob Woodhouse. London hosted the sixth of the seven meets in ISL's inaugural season in 2019.[4] The team finished second in 2019 and third in 2020.[5]

Team roster

Six swimmers were named as co-captains in seasons one: Sydney Pickrem, Kyle Chalmers, Adam Peaty, Mireia Belmonte, Cate Campbell and James Guy.[6] Peaty and Pickrem were initially announced as captains in the second season,[7] followed by Alia Atkinson and Guilherme Guido.[8] The team roster changes from year to year, ranging in number 32 to 36 swimmers,[9] although only 28, 12 men and 12 women plus 2 men and 2 women for the relay, competed in ISL events.[10][11] As of 2020, the team roster is:

United Kingdom London Roar[12]
Men Women
United Kingdom Adam Peaty (C) United Kingdom Aimee Willmott
France Amaury Leveaux Jamaica Alia Atkinson
Greece Andreas Vazaios United Kingdom Anna Hopkin
Germany Christian Diener United States Annie Lazor
Republic of Ireland Darragh Greene United Kingdom Emily Large
United Kingdom Duncan Scott United Kingdom Freya Anderson
United Kingdom Elliot Clogg United Kingdom Harriet West
Brazil Guilherme Guido United Kingdom Holly Hibbott
United Kingdom James Guy United Kingdom Kathleen Dawson
Japan Katsumi Nakamura Netherlands Kira Toussaint
Russia Kirill Prigoda Russia Mariia Kameneva
United Kingdom Luke Greenbank France Marie Wattel
Germany Marius Kusch United Kingdom Siobhan-Marie O'Connor
Russia Mikhail Vekovishchev Canada Sydney Pickrem (C)
United Kingdom Scott McLay Australia Minna Atherton
United Kingdom Tom Dean Australia Emma McKeon
Brazil Vinicius Lanza Australia Cate Campbell
Australia Kyle Chalmers Australia Bronte Campbell

Competition history

London Roar reached the final of the first season of the International Swimming League in 2019 in Las Vegas, and finished second behind Energy Standard.

The 2020 International Swimming League was held in Budapest at the Duna Arena,[13] which was used throughout the tournament. London Roar finished third in the final.[5]

Team member Adam Peaty broke the short-course 100m breaststroke world record twice.[14][15] Kira Toussaint broke the short-course 50m backstroke world record in the semi-finals.[16]

References

  1. ^ Anderson, Jared (6 March 2019). "London ISL Team Announces Roster of Peaty, Chalmers, Campbell Sisters". SwimSwam.
  2. ^ Race, Retta (22 March 2019). "Adam Peaty's ISL Squad Now Named London Roar". SwimSwam.
  3. ^ Hope, Nick (19 December 2018). "Adam Peaty: World record holder challenges Fina to ban him". BBC Sport.
  4. ^ Jenkins, Tom (25 November 2019). "Backstroke and beats: The International Swimming League hits town - a photo essay". The Guardian.
  5. ^ a b Levy, Leighton (23 November 2020). "Alia Atkinson closes strong as London Roar finishes third in 2020 ISL". Sports Max.
  6. ^ Braden, Keith (18 September 2019). "London Roar of ISL name coaching team, captains for 2019 season". SwimSwam.
  7. ^ Miller, Nicole (6 October 2020). "8 ISL Teams Announce Captains for the 2020 Season". SwimSwam.
  8. ^ Levy, Leighton (29 October 2020). "Alia Atkinson named co-captain for London Roar's second ISL clash". Sports Max.
  9. ^ "International Swimming League 2020: London Roar". SwimSwam.
  10. ^ Braden, Keith (16 December 2019). "London Roar finalize roster for 2019 ISL finale in Las Vegas". SwimSwam.
  11. ^ "London Roar of ISL Name Coaching Team, Captains for 2019 Season". SwimSwam. 2019-09-18. Retrieved 2020-11-30.
  12. ^ "Team Roster: London Roar". ISL.
  13. ^ Anderson, Jared (September 2020). "ISL Confirms Budapest as location for season 2; Tokyo could host finale". SwimSwam.
  14. ^ "'He's done it!' Peaty breaks 100m breaststroke world record". BBC Sport. 15 November 2020.
  15. ^ "What a race! Peaty breaks own 100m breaststroke world record". BBC Sport. 22 November 2020.
  16. ^ Lohn, John (14 November 2020). "Kira Toussaint Takes Down World Record in 50 Backstroke in ISL Semifinal". Swimming World.

External links