After American swimmer Cody Miller lately Tweeted that he obtained a three-years-past-due ‘solidarity’ fee from the dormant Worldwide Swimming League, members from different league groups reached out to SwimSwam to inform them that they have been nonetheless owed plenty of cash by the league – together with prize cash.
“Not one of the athletes from Workforce Iron have obtained any cash from ISL” from the 2021 season, Finnish swimmer Ida Hulkko informed SwimSwam. “Not the primary half of the solidarity fee nor anything after that. Different groups and athletes obtained their first 4500$ of the solidarity fee already throughout 2022. This was even earlier than the struggle in Ukraine began and the funds have been frozen. Workforce Iron amongst just a few different groups was left unpaid and after, no cash was being given out till now.”
Hulkko says that features prize cash.
“We’re relieved to listen to that cash is lastly being paid to the athletes however in fact we see nice injustice within the order and the precedence of how the funds have been made,” she continued. “The athletes are solely hoping to shed some mild of the state of affairs and for a fast decision of those points.”
Different members of Workforce Iron echoed that that they had not obtained both prize cash or the $7,500 solidarity fee. Austria’s Bernard Reitshamer stated that “They mainly at all times inform us, as quickly as they’ve funds out there, they’ll pay. Different groups have already gotten the primary fee in 2022 and can now get a second fee.
“It’s at all times us reaching out and getting informed, they engaged on fixing that problem.”
When requested if he would do ISL once more if it did revive (there have at all times been whispers that there is likely to be curiosity in restarting the league), Reitshamer was not sure.
“I couldn’t inform you proper now. It was a tremendous time, most likely one of the best I had. However the cash was additionally promised, and for some it’s a years wage or extra.”
One other Iron athlete informed SwimSwam that they’ve obtained no communications since 2021. SwimSwam has not heard from each member of the Iron crew, however at the least 4 all concurred that amid ongoing conversations amongst members of the crew, so far as they have been conscious, none had been paid.
Iron athletes earned the Sixth-most prize cash out of the ten groups within the league in 2021 by SwimSwam’s calculations. Whereas the league by no means launched precisely how a lot cash athletes have been owed, based mostly on our calculations (which interprets how the crew bonuses are shared), Iron swimmers have been owed $552,000 for the 2021 season, plus the solidarity funds.
Whereas SwimSwam didn’t obtain a response from swimmers on the New York Breakers, members of the Iron crew informed us that these athletes are even be awaiting funds.
The league repeatedly had points with making funds on time, an issue that was exacerbated by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. The solidarity funds have been supposed to start in October 2021.
The league’s monetary backer Konstantin Grigorishin was born within the USSR and purchased Ukrainian citizenship in 2016. A lot of the billionaire’s enterprise holdings are positioned in Ukraine, and he has additionally made cash by way of the import of vitality and pure sources from Russia. In 2018, he was certainly one of 322 Ukrainian residents that the Russian Federation imposed sanctions towards.
At the least certainly one of Grigorishin’s corporations was seized by the Ukrainian authorities as a “strategically vital enterprise,” a transfer that the federal government stated was made “in reference to navy necessity.”
Earlier this 12 months, one swimmer informed SwimSwam that they obtained a textual content message from ISL commissioner Ben Allen that the Tokyo Frog Kings’ solidarity fee had been despatched to the crew and {that a} plan was in place to make remaining funds. That swimmer, who’s on one other crew, stated on the time that they nonetheless had not been paid.
The invasion of Ukraine additionally cancelled the deliberate 4th season of the ISL, which was initially postponed to 2023. Whereas individuals near the league say that organizers haven’t given up hope of a revival, the league workplace has been quiet for a number of years and a lot of the groups’ prior basic managers have moved on to different enterprises.
Athletes mulled a league boycott over non-payment within the 2021 season. Jean-François Salessy, the ex-general supervisor of the Power Commonplace crew, and Hubert Montcoudiol, the ex-commercial director of the Worldwide Swimming League, accused ISL of monetary mismanagement in a letter despatched to SwimSwam in September 2021. Salessy and Montcoudiol wrote that ISL has allegedly uncared for to correctly pay supporting distributors and other people, like press officers, site owners, crew managers, and even some elite swimmers. Salessy and Montcoudiol didn’t identify anybody particularly that has been sufferer to the alleged practices, however they wrote that what they’ve witnessed immediately contradicts ISL’s promise to honor all obligations to suppliers forward of season three.
The league additionally launched a press release in 2020 that it has confronted monetary challenges, however that it needed to maneuver on regardless of stated challenges. At the moment, SwimSwam reported that a number of season one distributors hadn’t been paid their full quantity owed, however the league vowed to pay all cash owed earlier than Season 3. The league additionally added that it was working for the better good of the game.
Power Commonplace gained the titles within the 8-team league in 2019 and 2021, whereas the Caeleb Dressel-led Cali Condors gained the 2020 season.
Workforce Iron is co-owned by swimming famous person Katinka Hosszu. Different huge names on the crew in 2021 included Ranomi Kromowidjojo, who completed the season ranked thirteenth in prize cash.
2021 Prize Cash Earned by Workforce Iron Athletes
Unofficial, calculated by SwimSwam in response to the league guidelines.
rank | identify | crew | factors | indiv | relay | skins | mvp | team_bonus | complete | stolen |
13 | KROMOWIDJOJO Ranomi | IRO | 285 | $34,000 | $8,750 | $23,000 | $8,000 | $1,800 | $75,550 | $200 |
31 | GLINTA Robert | IRO | 224.5 | $24,000 | $6,400 | $18,000 | $ – | $1,800 | $50,200 | $100 |
32 | de BOER Thom | IRO | 164.8 | $9,950 | $3,325 | $34,800 | $ – | $1,800 | $49,875 | $175 |
36 | SEEMANOVA Barbora | IRO | 245.5 | $37,700 | $7,125 | $ – | $ – | $1,800 | $46,625 | $175 |
48 | SANTOS Nicholas | IRO | 211 | $25,700 | $2,050 | $6,600 | $ – | $1,800 | $36,150 | $1,300 |
70 | ORSI Marco | IRO | 123.5 | $17,400 | $2,025 | $5,000 | $ – | $1,800 | $26,225 | -$225 |
84 | HULKKO Ida | IRO | 130 | $13,150 | $3,250 | $5,600 | $ – | $1,800 | $23,800 | -$50 |
98 | PERSSON Erik | IRO | 137.5 | $19,950 | $400 | $ – | $ – | $1,800 | $22,150 | -$150 |
122 | SANTOS Leonardo | IRO | 126.5 | $16,200 | $250 | $ – | $ – | $1,800 | $18,250 | -$150 |
135 | THOMAS Alys | IRO | 85 | $12,350 | $2,450 | $ – | $ – | $1,800 | $16,600 | -$50 |
137 | MELO Luiz Altamir | IRO | 115.5 | $14,400 | $25 | $ – | $ – | $1,800 | $16,225 | -$25 |
138 | MORA Lorenzo | IRO | 102.5 | $12,750 | $1,525 | $ – | $ – | $1,800 | $16,075 | -$175 |
145 | REITSHAMMER Bernhard | IRO | 137.5 | $8,850 | $4,900 | $ – | $ – | $1,800 | $15,550 | -$150 |
154 | HENIQUE Melanie | IRO | 90.8 | $8,700 | $ – | $4,300 | $ – | $1,600 | $14,600 | -$500 |
159 | UGOLKOVA Maria | IRO | 122 | $11,650 | $475 | $ – | $ – | $1,800 | $13,925 | -$75 |
166 | BASSETO Guilherme | IRO | 76 | $8,400 | $1,325 | $1,400 | $ – | $1,800 | $12,925 | -$25 |
174 | BECKMANN Emilie | IRO | 65 | $2,700 | $5,950 | $1,600 | $ – | $1,800 | $12,050 | $ – |
178 | LOYNING Ingeborg | IRO | 70 | $7,600 | $3,050 | $ – | $ – | $1,200 | $11,850 | -$100 |
179 | COCCONCELLI Costanza | IRO | 94 | $5,900 | $4,050 | $ – | $ – | $1,800 | $11,750 | $ – |
185 | STRAUCH Jenna | IRO | 80.2 | $7,000 | $425 | $1,400 | $ – | $1,800 | $10,625 | -$325 |
218 | ANDRUSENKO Veronika | IRO | 51 | $3,500 | $2,600 | $ – | $ – | $1,200 | $7,300 | -$200 |
223 | RICHARDS Matt | IRO | 64 | $3,100 | $2,600 | $ – | $ – | $1,200 | $6,900 | $ – |
223 | LOBANOVSZKIJ Maxim | IRO | 35.5 | $1,400 | $2,100 | $1,600 | $ – | $1,800 | $6,900 | $ – |
230 | VEKOVISHCHEV Mikhail | IRO | 56.5 | $2,200 | $2,025 | $ – | $ – | $1,800 | $6,025 | -$225 |
238 | STRELNIKOV Kirill | IRO | 29.5 | $3,000 | $1,650 | $ – | $ – | $1,000 | $5,650 | $ – |
239 | ZAMORANO Africa | IRO | 54 | $4,250 | $ – | $ – | $ – | $1,200 | $5,450 | -$250 |
244 | SAKCI Emre | IRO | 24 | $3,800 | $900 | $ – | $ – | $200 | $4,900 | -$200 |
264 | SCALIA Silvia | IRO | 31.5 | $550 | $550 | $800 | $ – | $1,800 | $3,700 | -$200 |
273 | HILL Danielle | IRO | 11.5 | $50 | $1,325 | $ – | $ – | $1,800 | $3,175 | -$75 |
297 | FANZ Casey | IRO | 1 | $ – | $400 | $ – | $ – | $600 | $1,000 | $ – |