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Bovell's 100 IM Takes Top Honors in Stockholm, Pushes Him Into the Money

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After three stops at the 2012 World Cup Series, there has been quite a little bit of shifting at the top of the standings, but the same two swimmers remain in the lead.

By FINA points, on the men's side, top points went to George Bovell and Kenneth To thanks to their number-one and number-two finishes in the 100 IM, but under 52 seconds. For Bovell, that jumped him into the top three, ahead of the idle Chad le Clos, and into position to earn some big series money after all is said and done.

If Bovell, To, andDaiya Setoswim out the series, it would be hard for anybody to bump them out of the top three, especially with the defending champion le Clos seemingly done for the season.

Laszlo Cseh has a chance. Stockholm was the first meet where he scored, though he's participated in each of them so far, thanks to a great time chasing Seto in the 400 IM.

On the women's side, with Daryna Zevina sitting the meet out, Katinka Hosszu again roared into the series lead thanks to her top-scoring 400 IM. With how well she's swimming, it would be tough for anybody to catch her for the overall series victory. Therese Alshammar, Zsu Jakabos, and Britta Steffen all tightened up the battle with Zevina for 2nd place.

HOW THE SCORING SYSTEM WORKS

At each meet of the World Cup, athletes will be ranked by their single best performance, according to the FINA Points Table (which is a cross-event power points system). The top 10 men and top 10 women receive points for that meet, which go to their overall series score. At the end of the series, the three men and three women with the most combined World Cup Points (not to be confused with FINA points – it doesn’t matter what the margin of FINA points is) will receive the prize money.

Keep in mind that there are bonuses for any World Records set (20), and points for the final meet of the season in Singapore will be doubled, meaning that it would be a challenge for anyone who didn’t swim the final meet to finish in the money. There are 7 total meets in the series, and so plenty of time left to make up ground on the leaders as the meet gets deeper in Stockholm next weekend.

The Prizes

The overall series standings will award prizes as follows to the highest scoring man and woman in the series:

1st – $100,000
2nd – $50,000
3rd – $30,000

The Standings
 Men
#AthleteUAEQATSWERUSGERCHNJPNSINTotal
1Kenneth To (AUS)25252070
2Daiya Seto (JPN)16201652
3George Bovell (TRI)13132551
4Chad Le Clos (RSA)201636
5Darian Townsend (RSA)102315
6Stanislav Donets (RUS)73515
7Robert Hurley (AUS)17715
8Laszlo Cseh (HUN)1313
9Roland Schoeman (RSA)1010
10Kazuya Kaneda (JPN)1010
11Cameron van der Burgh (RSA)55
12Kosuke Hagino (JPN)55
13Anthony Ervin (USA)33
14Marco Koch (GER)22
15Matthew Targett (AUS)22
16Thomas Shields (USA)11
17Tom Shields (USA)11
Women
#AthleteUAEQATSWERUSGERCHNJPNSINTotal
1Katinka Hosszu (HUN)25202570
2Daryna Zevina (UKR)202545
3Therese Alshammar (SWE)7131636
4Britta Steffen (GER)1052035
5Zsuzsanna Jakabos (HUN)3161332
6Melissa Ingram (NZL)1610228
7Rachel Goh (AUS)13114
8Sophie Allen (GBR)11011
9Hang Yu Sze (HKG)538
10Ruta Meilutyte (LTU)178
11Michelle Coleman (SWE)77
12Hannah Miley (GBR)156
13Therese Michalak (GER)134
14Tanja Smid (SLO)22
15Jennie Johansson (SWE)22
16Inge Dekker (NED)11
17Anna Dzerkal (UKR)11

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