 Top Trinidad and Tobago Open Water swimmer Christian Marsden smashed  the course record on his way to a convincing victory yesterday in the  11th Kia Around Gasparee Open Water swim.
Top Trinidad and Tobago Open Water swimmer Christian Marsden smashed  the course record on his way to a convincing victory yesterday in the  11th Kia Around Gasparee Open Water swim.
Marsden,  who became the youngest qualifier for the Pan Am Games  Men’s 10k at last November’s Central American and Caribbean Games in  Veracruz,  México,  splashed to a one hour 15 minute and 27 second  clocking for the 5.6k event to eclipse  Ryan Mendes’ one hour, 18 minute  standard set in calmer conditions back in 2009.
The win represented back-to-back wins for the top T&T marathon swimmer after his win in one hour, 24 minutes last year.
The swell and rough current conditions that obtained in 2014 were less a factor in this year’s edition.
But strong currents still persisted on the southern side of the  island as Marsden ploughed his way through the water with teammate  Graham Chatoor in tow and Tidal Wave Aquatics’ Gabriel Bynoe and UTT’s  Aleem Mohammed  a few metres back.
Marsden would soon drop Chatoor and establish an unassailable lead  in a race against the clock, passing Winn’s Bay and Border Bay.
By the time the 16-year old reached Point Baleine,  he had  overhauled the top swimmers in the first wave.  Marsden and fellow  Carifta-aspiring swimmers had left in the fifth wave, 25 minutes after  the first.
Marsden  was greeted by calmer waters on the coast side of the Isla  D and stroked powerfully through, past St Madeleine before making the  round past Goodwill’s Bay.
There he and the other swimmers encountered the toughest conditions  of the race,  including choppy waters and swirling currents.  But  Marsden dug in and weathered the rough seas before angling into  Bombshell Bay for the finish.
Marsden was followed home by the plucky Bynoe who had surpassed  Chatoor who finished third.  Mohammed and Bynoe’s teammate Sebastián  Marchand competed stroke for stroke over the last 800m and could not be  separated at the finish,  both swimmers being declared as tied for  fourth place.
Among the girls,  Shania David took advantage of her elder sister  Syriah’s absence to power to the win in one hour and 31 minutes.  She  was followed in by her TWA teammate Briana Patterson and Chisara  Santana.
And TWA girls rounded out the top five, with Toni Pierre and Sabrina David taking fourth and fifth respectively.
The Amateur Swimming Association of Trinidad and Tobago (ASATT) is  expected to use the Kia swim to select the T&T 2015 Carifta Open  Water squad for the Games scheduled to take place in Barbados from April  4-8.
 	