Saturday, April 20, 2024

Vertical Blue 2022: Day 2 – Alice Modolo Grabs A New World Record, Plus 6 National Records Set

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Day 2 of the Vertical Blue 2022 freediving competition at Dean’s Blue Hole in the Bahamas saw six new national records set, while several other athletes came up short.  We also saw a new AIDA World Record set by France’s Alice Modolo.

RELATED: Vertical Blue 2022: Everything You Need To Know

Six National Records Set

On the women’s side, South Korea’s Jung A Kim set a new Free Immersion (FIM) national record with an 89m/292ft dive, while Belgium’s Marine Simonis dove to 56m/184ft in the Constant Weight No Fins (CNF) discipline.

The men’s side saw four new national records: Taiwan’s Yun-Chieh Ku dove to 106m/348ft in the FIM discipline for a continental record as well, while Colombia’s John Munoz completed an 89m/292ft FIM dive. Mexico’s Pepe Salcedo dove to 105m/344ft in the Constant Weight with Monofin (CWT) discipline, and Peru’s Juan Valdivia completed a 65m/213ft Constant Weight with Bifins (CWTB) dive.

RELATED: Freediving Disciplines Explained

AIDA World Record Constant Weight Bi-Fins (CWTB) by Alice Modolo

We saw a Women’s Constant Weight Bi-Fins (CWTB) World Record fall yesterday with Alice Modolo (France) diving to 96m, which furthered the record by 2m.

Like Arnaud Jerald yesterday, the official results do not show it as a World Record as it is not an absolute depth record, with the CMAS record being deeper.

Troubled Waters

It wasn’t smooth sailing for everyone vying for a national record, though.

For the women, Spain’s Isabel Sanchez-Aran attempted a 54m/177ft CNF dive but drew a red card for pulling. Hungary’s Fatima Korok was gunning for a 99m/325ft FIM record but only managed to get to 93m/305ft, the USA’s Enchante Gallardo — who the day before set a new US CWTB national record — tried a 90m/295ft FIM dive but was only able to get to 77m/253ft, and Japan’s Junko Kitahama sought to do a 56m/184ft CWT dive but only managed 40m/131ft.

In an Instagram post, Korok wrote:

“Unfortunately, today’s dive was unsuccessful… The target was 99 meters, a few meters before, I turned at 93 meters, because of which I admit, I am very sad. At the beginning of the dive, I messed up the equalization technique, which made me uncomfortable to turn around, I could not equalize the pressure in my ears and of course I did not want to force it because it could have caused a major accident, for example, my eardrum burst. This is also racing and a part of life. Sometimes you didn’t succeed the first or the second time, even the hundredth time, but you shouldn’t give up on what you really want to achieve. It has rarely happened to me that I had to turn around because of the equation, but now I am in depths where tiny mistakes can be measured in meters. This is a new obstacle for me, a challenge, I only learned from this. Man, it’s too far! I know I can do it. Now I rest and then I will try again. Thanks for the support and help everyone. It means a lot that you are by my side even from afar.”

On the men’s side, Taiwan’s Mingchun Huang attempted a 100m/328ft CWT dive but only got to 97m/318ft. His countryman Michael Zhi-Da Ko also came up short; his CWTB record attempt of 93m/305ft fell short at 90m/295ft.

Full Day 2 Results & Day 3 Start List

Check out the full results from Vertical Blue Day 2 below:

Vertical Blue Day 2 Results
Vertical Blue Day 2 Results

The start list for Day 3 has an equally impressive slate, with another 8 National Record attempts and 3 Continental Records looking to be set!

Vertical Blue Day 3 - Start List
Vertical Blue Day 3 – Start List

Photos of Day 2

You can check out our gallery of photos courtesy of Daan Verhoeven below.

Vertical Blue 2022 Coverage

If you want to find out the highlights and details from every day of the competition, then check back with DeeperBlue.com as our team provides daily updates and wrap up’s throughout the competition. You should also keep an eye out on our socials for highlights from the competition.

We’ve covered every year of the competition since 2008, so you can check out this year’s coverage and all previous years in our Vertical Blue archive.

Vertical Blue is always an exciting event to watch, so stay tuned to DeeperBlue.com and our social media feeds for updates, and sign up for the live feed from Diveye on the Vertical Blue website to watch in real-time.

DeeperBlue.com - Vertical Blue 2022 Coverage

Feature Photo by Daan Verhoeven

With on-site reporting from Francesca Koe and additional reporting by Stephan Whelan.

John Liang
John Lianghttps://www.deeperblue.com/
John Liang is the News Editor at DeeperBlue.com. He first got the diving bug while in High School in Cairo, Egypt, where he earned his PADI Open Water Diver certification in the Red Sea off the Sinai Peninsula. Since then, John has dived in a volcanic lake in Guatemala, among white-tipped sharks off the Pacific Coast of Costa Rica, and other places including a pool in Las Vegas helping to break the world record for the largest underwater press conference.

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