Pan Pacific Swimming Championships

The Pan Pacific Swimming Championships is a long course swimming event first held in 1985.[1] The meet was initially staged biennially (every odd year), to allow for an international championship-level meet in the non-Olympic and non-World Championships years.[1] However, beginning with the 2002 championships, due to the changing of the World Championships from every four years (even year between Olympics) to every two years (every odd year), the meet is a quadrennial event, held in the even year between Summer Olympics.[1]

History

The meet was founded by its four Charter nations: Australia, Canada, Japan, and the United States. As part of the Charter, hosting of the meet is to rotate among these four nations, with the meet being held in Japan every other championship.

The meet was founded as an alternative to the European Championships, for those countries that could not swim in those championships. Initially, the meet was open to all countries that border the Pacific Ocean, giving the meet its name. This since has been expanded/opened to include other non-European countries wishing to participate, such as Brazil and South Africa.

The meet is considered to be one of the toughest international swimming competitions outside the Olympic Games, World Championships and European Championships, due in part to the presence of swimming power-house nationals like the United States and Australia, the first and second most medals winners, respectively.

Unlike the World Championships and Olympic Games, nations can enter as many people as they like in the preliminaries of each event (in most international meets, only two swimmers from each nation are permitted). However, only two swimmers per nation can qualify for the Championships' semi-finals and finals. Prior to FINA's creation of semi-finals in the late 1990s, a total of 3 swimmers per country could qualify for the final and consolation heats of an event, with no more than 2 swimmers per country in a final or consolation.

List of championships

Edition Year Location Dates Medal table winners
I 1985 Tokyo, Japan 15–18 August  United States
II 1987 Brisbane, Australia 13–16 August  United States
III 1989 Tokyo, Japan 17–20 August  United States
IV 1991 Edmonton, Canada 22–25 August[2]  United States
V 1993 Kobe, Japan 12–15 August  United States
VI 1995 Atlanta, United States 10–13 August  United States
VII 1997 Fukuoka, Japan 10–13 August[3]  United States
VIII 1999 Sydney, Australia 22–29 August[4]  United States
IX 2002 Yokohama, Japan 24–29 August[5]  United States
X 2006 Victoria, Canada 17–20 August[6]  United States
XI 2010 Irvine, United States 18–22 August[7]  United States
XII 2014 Gold Coast, Australia 21–25 August[1]  United States
XIII 2018 Tokyo, [[pan 23–27 August

Note: The 1995 and 1999 editions served as the swimming test events for the Olympic venues, for the next year's Games.

Medal table (1985–2014)

All-time Pan Pacific Championships medal table (Updated after 2014 Championships)

 Rank  Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  United States 259 178 129 566
2  Australia 89 124 100 313
3  Japan 25 42 63 130
4  Canada 16 43 70 129
5  China 5 10 12 27
6  South Africa 5 5 6 16
7  New Zealand 4 6 16 26
8  South Korea 4 2 1 7
9  Costa Rica 3 2 4 9
10  Brazil 2 3 7 12
11  Puerto Rico 1 0 1 2
12  Suriname 1 0 0 1
13  Venezuela 0 1 0 1
14  Chile 0 0 1 1
Totals 414 416 410 1240

Medalists

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Queensland to host 2014 Pan Pacific Championships, published by Swimming Australia on 2012-05-11; retrieved 2012-05-11.
  2. For the Record: 1991 Pan Pacific Championships; result listing published by Swimming World Magazine, October 1991 edition, p.52-54.
  3. 1997 Pan Pacific Championships page from the USA Swimming website (usaswimming.org); retrieved 2012-05-11.
  4. 1999 Pan Pacific Championships page from the USA Swimming website (usaswimming.org); retrieved 2012-05-11.
  5. 2002 Pan Pacific Championships page from the USA Swimming website (usaswimming.org); retrieved 2012-05-11.
  6. 2006 Pan Pacs results page from Omega Timing. Retrieved 2012-05-11.
  7. 2010 Pan Pacs results page from Omega Timing. Retrieved 2012-05-11.
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