From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Swedish swimmer
Patrik Isaksson (born 8 April 1973 in
Västerås) is a former
breaststroke
swimmer from
Sweden, who won several titles in the short course championships.
[1] A member of Swedish club
Västerås SS, he competed for his native country at the
2000 Summer Olympics in
Sydney,
Australia, where he finished in 26th position in the
100 m breaststroke.
High performances
- 8th 100m breaststroke (1:01.72)
- 11th 200m breaststroke (2:15.19)
- 1st 50m breaststroke (27.76)
- 2nd 100m breaststroke (1:00.45)
- 1st 100m breaststroke (59.99)
- 5th 4×100m medley relay
- 1st 100m breaststroke (59.22)
- 2nd 50m breaststroke (27.21)
- 1st 100m breaststroke (59.69)
- 2nd 50m breaststroke (27.57)
- 2nd 4×100m medley relay
- 2nd 100m breaststroke (59.32)
- 4th 50m breaststroke (27.59)
- 1st 4×50m medley relay
- 26th 100m breaststroke (1:03.05)
- 14th 50m breaststroke (28.59)
- 7th 50m breaststroke (27.31)
- 3rd 4×50m medley relay (1:35.68)
Clubs
References
External links
|
---|
- 1996: Germany (
Theloke,
Kruppa,
Hieronimus,
Conrad)
- 1998: Germany (
Rupprath,
Warnecke,
Kunzelmann,
Lüderitz) and Sweden (
Carlsson,
Isaksson,
Åkesson,
Frölander)
- 1999: Sweden (
Carlsson,
Isaksson,
Frölander,
Nystrand)
- 2000: Germany (
Halgasch,
Warnecke,
Rupprath,
Winkler)
- 2001: Germany (
Theloke,
Warnecke,
Rupprath,
Dehmlow)
- 2002: Germany (
Theloke,
Kruppa,
Rupprath,
Dehmlow)
- 2003: Germany (
Rupprath,
Warnecke,
Friedrich,
Dehmlow)
- 2004: Germany (
Rupprath,
Warnecke,
Friedrich,
Dehmlow)
- 2005: Germany (
Rupprath,
Warnecke,
Dietrich,
S. Deibler)
- 2006: Germany (
Meeuw,
Neumann,
Rupprath,
Schreiber)
- 2007: Germany (
Rupprath,
M. Deibler,
Dietrich,
S. Deibler)
- 2008: Italy (
Di Tora,
Terrin,
Belotti,
Magnini)
- 2009: Russia (
Donets,
Geybel,
Korotyshkin,
Fesikov)
- 2010: Germany (
Herbst,
Feldwehr,
S. Deibler,
M. Deibler)
- 2011: Italy (
Di Tora,
Scozzoli,
Facchinelli,
Orsi)
- 2012: France (
Stravius,
d'Ortona,
Bousquet,
Manaudou)
- 2013: Italy (
Pizzamiglio,
Di Lecce,
Codia,
Orsi)
- 2015: Italy (
Sabbioni,
Scozzoli,
Rivolta,
Orsi)
- 2017: Russia (
Kolesnikov,
Prigoda,
Popkov,
Morozov)
- 2019: Russia (
Kolesnikov,
Morozov,
Kostin,
Grinev)
- 2021: Italy (
Lamberti,
Martinenghi,
Orsi,
Zazzeri)
|
|
---|
Men's competitions | | |
---|
Women's competitions | |
---|