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Sippy Woodhead’s Tips For SwimSwam Parents

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By SwimSwam Contributors on SwimSwam

Courtesy of Elizabeth Wickham

Legendary swimmer Cynthia SippyWoodhead broke her first world record at age 14 and won a silver medal in the 1984 Olympics six years later. She now enjoys life on deck as a swim parent. Her 13-14 NAG records in the 200m and 400m free (1:58.53 and 4:07.15) from 1978 are the longest-standing records on the books for girls. Her 500y (4:49.51) 11-12 age group record held for 40 years and was broken earlier this year. Sippys 11-12 and 13-14 age group times are as fast or faster than many womens times in college today. As a swim mom, I have fond memories from meets at the Sippy Woodhead Pool in Riverside, California.

I spoke with Sippy and discovered she has a great perspective as a swim parent. Here are some tips she shared:

Leave your kids alone. Let swimming be their thing as much as possible. Youre there to provide equipment and food and get out of the way. Swimmers put so much pressure on themselves,Sippy said. Its so much easier to be a parent than the swimmer. I dont mind going to meets, theres no pressure on me. I get to sit in my Tommy Bahama chair all day.

When Sippys kids were younger and their practices were an hour long, she could be found on deck watching practice. I was happy to sit at the pool and listen to the water. I love the sound of kids swimming, the splashing,she said.

I dont ask them how they feel. I dont ask them about their races. I dont ask them about practice. I dont ask about who they beat. I dont ask. If they want to talk about it, theyll talk about it. I dont debrief them. I think theyre pretty happy. I want them to be able to forget about swimming while they are home.”

She also explained that she doesn’t leave heat sheets around the kitchen or remind her kids that a meet is coming up. I never have given them time standards for meets. They know them, but Im not holding them up in front of them. They know how to look those things up. They know more than I think they do because theyve done it on their own.

Sippy talked about changes in the sport since she was a young swimmer. We did a lot more yardage. I swam with Chuck Riggs. We did a whole lot of swimming and not much race pace,she said. Also, I dont remember the parents being so wrapped around their kids. I honestly dont remember seeing my parents at a meet. I know they were there, but I dont think I ever communicated with them. It was more like a play date. I dont see that anymore. I see a lot more hovering and parents carrying towels, getting kids their heats and lanes. It didnt use to be that way.

I treat my kids the way I was treated. Swimming was my thing and I want this to be their thing. I dont want them to think Im taking credit. I dont want to hover and I dont want them to think that their swimming is because of me or something I did.

Sippy said she does a few things for her kids at meets. I give them their food bags and put $20 in them and leave them with the team. I check on their water bottles and refill them because I want to make sure theyre drinking, but they dont notice that I was even there. If I run into them on the deck Ill say something like, good job,but I dont hunt them down. I want them to be free. The most fun I had at meets was hanging out with my friends. You felt like your parents werent there. It was fun to be at meets, it wasnt stressful. I want them to have that same experience.

How do you keep the experience fun and not stressful at meets?

Elizabeth Wickham volunteered for 14 years on her kids’ club team as board member, fundraiser, newsletter editor and “Mrs. meet manager.” She’s a writer with a bachelor of arts degree in editorial journalism from the University of Washington with a long career in public relations, marketing and advertising. Her stories have appeared in newspapers and magazines including the Los Angeles Times, Orange County Parenting and Ladybug. You can read more parenting tips on her blog.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Sippy Woodhead’s Tips For SwimSwam Parents


Chalmers Returns To Full Racing Schedule At SA State Championships

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By Loretta Race on SwimSwam

2017 South Australia State Short Course Championships

One of three Swimming South Australia flagship events kicks off this week, as the 2017 South Australian Short Course Championships is set to get underway on Wednesday, July 19th at the SA Aquatic and Leisure Centre. The competition spans 5 days, with the final day encompassing the Club Relay Championships. The meet serves as a selection event for the South Australian State Team to compete in Canberra at the State Teams Short Course Championships in September.

Although the majority of big Australian aquatic players are currently in the Netherlands at the final training camp before heading off to Budapest for the World Championships, one major talent will be present in Oaklands Park this week. 100m freestyle Olympic champion Kyle Chalmers, who returned to competition quietly earlier this month, has opted out of the World Championships due to his heart surgery. As such, he’s sticking close to home and getting some training and racing underway out of the spotlight as he ramps back up to regular regimen.

Whereas Chalmers took to the pool in just one event in his post-surgery debut, look for 19-year-old Chalmers to take on a heavy schedule this week. The junior world record holder is set to take on the following events:

50 backstroke
50 freestyle
100 butterfly
200 IM
100 freestyle
50 butterfly

Chalmers enters as the top seed in the 100m butterfly, 50m butterfly and 100m freestyle and won’t be alone. Marion Swimming Club teammates Andrew Abood and fellow Olympian Travis Mahoney are also set to compete across multiple events.

Look for a full meet recap once the competition concludes in South Australia.

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Chalmers Returns To Full Racing Schedule At SA State Championships

YMCA National Champ Leah Braswell Verbally Commits to Gators

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By Anne Lepesant on SwimSwam

York And York County YMCA distance freestyler Leah Braswell has announced her verbal commitment to the University of Florida for 2018-19. She will join fellow commits Layla Black, Mabel Zavaros, Rosie Zavaros, and Vanessa Pearl in the class of 2022. Braswell revived her Instagram account to make the announcement:

Braswell has been one of the top distance freestylers in the YMCA universe since as a 14-year-old she placed second in the 1650, with 16:23.56, at 2015 YMCA Short Course Nationals. The following year she was again runner-up, this time with 16:18.71; she also won the 1000 free (9:35.71), took third in the 500 (4:46.42), and took fourth in the 200 free (1:48.62). At the 2017 version of the same meet she was national champion in the mile (16:17.01), runner-up to teammate CourtneyHarnish in the 500/1000, and added a fourth-place finish in the 400 IM (4:19.34) to her portfolio of accomplishments.

A homeschooled USA Swimming Scholastic All-American, Braswell will fit into the Gators’ lineup like a glove. With the graduation of Autumn Finke, the Florida distance crew will skew young. Incoming freshman Taylor Ault, SavannaFaulconer, and Kahra Williams will provide a strong training group for Braswell, as will IMers Hannah Burns, KellyFertel, and Makayla Sargent.

If you have a commitment to report, please send an email with a photo (landscape, or horizontal, looks best) and a quote to Recruits@swimswam.com.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: YMCA National Champ Leah Braswell Verbally Commits to Gators

Get The SwimSwam 2017 World Championships Preview Magazine

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By Gold Medal Mel Stewart on SwimSwam

2017 FINA World Championships start in less than a week, and you can get the SwimSwam Magazine World Championships Preview as a digital issue now if you subscribe.

With over 75 pages of features covering the 2017 World Championships, you will get everything you need to enjoy the biggest competition of the year.

With your yearly subscription you receive 600+ of pages of swimming’s highest quality print content, and another 1000+ pages of digital issues, going back to the first issue produced.

 See MAGAZINE DIGITAL ACCESS here to all issues.

SwimSwam Magazines are a big, coming in at nearly a pound per issue. We provide you four massive print issues designed to sit on your coffee table like a piece of artwork.  With your subscription today you get the:

  • 2015 Year in Review (Michael Phelps cover) as a digital magazine
  • 2016 Swimsuit Issue (Ryan Lochte cover) as a digital magazine
  • 2016 Olympic Preview (Michael Phelps cover) as a digital magazine
  • 2016 College Preview (Katie Ledecky cover) as a digital magazine
  • 2016 Olympic Year in Review (Michael Phelps cover) as a digital magazine
  • 2017 Swimsuit Issue (Anthony Ervin cover) as a digital magazine.
  • 2017 Superhero Issue + WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS PREVIEW(Nathan Adrian cover) as a digital issue.
  • 2017 College Preview (Simone Manuel cover) as a print magazine (See College Preview Mag details here)
  • 2017 Year In Review as a print magazine
  • 2018 Spring Issue (aka Swimsuit Issue) as a print magazine
  • 2018 Summer Preview as a print magazine.

If you are already a subscriber, go to swimswam.com/magazine/digital-access, type in your email/password and view the digital magazines.

For the 2017 World Championships Preview (75+ pages of coverage) look for this cover on the MAGAZINE DIGITAL ACCESS page.

Our magazines are massive. The 2016 Olympic Year in Review comes in at 172 pages. (That’s an increase of 40 pages over the 2015 Year in Review, which came in at 132 pages.)  The Tony Ervin cover issue is also 172 pages!

Our covers are ideal for your coffee table or nightstand. Make a statement, show your swimming love, show that your sport is great and worth the respect it deserves.  Adorn it with SwimSwam Magazine.

SwimSwam Magazine named one of the 30 Hottest Launches of 2016

Competitive Intelligence of Media Leaders (MIN/Mr. Magazine) named SwimSwam Magazine one of the 30 Hottest Launches of 2016. Criteria for making the 30 Hottest list included:

  • Design
  • Creativity
  • Audience reaction
  • Industry reaction

Many thanks to MIN for this honor.  See the complete list of the 30 Hottest Launcheshere.

OUR MAGAZINE MISSION

To knock you over with each issue, producing a must-have magazine that feels like a collector’s item.

To produce unique features never before seen in swimming media.

To present swimming like it should be, the greatest sport on earth.

At SwimSwam, we love the sport, and we love changing the paradigm of how it’s presented. For far too long swimming magazines have been the same, and it our goal to deliver something spectacular, a magazine you will be excited about getting every single time a new issue is released.

Subscribe to SWIMSWAM MAGAZINE here.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Get The SwimSwam 2017 World Championships Preview Magazine

Lochte Joins Team Shark, Says Phelps Has No Chance In Shark Week Race

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By Loretta Race on SwimSwam

Day 1 of the Discovery network’s annual ‘Shark Week’ kicks off on Sunday, July 23rd and by now we’re all aware that the most decorated Olympian of all-time, swimmer Michael Phelps,is headlining opening night. 

Entitled ‘Great Gold vs Great White’, 32-year-old Phelps is set to race against the ocean’s fiercest competitor in a battle for ocean supremacy. The trailer for the broadcast builds up the drama and hype, but former Olympic teammate Ryan Lochte isn’t buying it. When asked by TMZ over the weekend if the 2nd most decorated Olympic swimmer thinks Phelps has a chance against Carcharodon carcharias, Lochte said, “Hell no.”

As for what will transpire during Sunday’s broadcast, Phelps teased to Yahoo TV that “We were off the tip of Cape Town in South Africa and set up, almost, a lane where I was able to swim in a straight line. We were in open water, but we did not have a shark literally next to me swimming.”

With filming of the Phelps segments having been wrapped up last month, at least we know the GOAT lives!

 

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Lochte Joins Team Shark, Says Phelps Has No Chance In Shark Week Race

The U.S. Worlds Team Got Younger, But Not By as Much as We Thought

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

The United States’ team for the 2017 World Championships has gotten younger – but perhaps not by as much as you’d expect.

The average member of the U.S. team at the Olympic Games was 23.3 years old. This year’s team is younger, but maybe not by as much as you’d think – the average member of the 2017 team is 22 years, 204 days old. That’s a drop of about .7 years (about 9 months) per swimmer on average.

It feels like that gap should be bigger. There were 5 members of the 2016 U.S. Olympic Team who were at least 30 years old, and none of the 5 (Phelps, Lochte, Weir, Ervin, Plummer) are on this year’s World Championships team. Other veterans from Rio like Tom Shields, Dana Vollmer, Allison Schmitt, Jimmy Feigen, and Connor Jaeger are also not on this year’s team.

There are also far more teenagers on this year’s team, including 15-year old Regan Smith and 17-year olds Robert Finke and Dakota Luther.

What seems to have happen, in spite of the extremes on both ends getting younger, is that the ‘middle class’ of swimmers have been rewarded for prolonging their careers beyond college. Swimmers like Zane Grothe and Katie Meili and Melanie Margalis have brought up the average age. The median age of the team is 22 years and 100 days, which is fairly close to the mean age. The median age, which is one way to control for the effects of outliers (like the 15-year old Smith), being so close to the mean age indicates that it’s this group in the middle that has the biggest impact on the average age of the team, and that median lands where one would expect – right around the age of someone recently graduated from college. This year’s team is dense with swimmers in that category.

Also true is that in spite of a lot of turnover, there’s a large core of the team that remains the same from Rio, and that core is one year older than they were at the Olympics. If one compared the average age of this year’s Worlds team on August 5th, 2016 to the age of the Olympic Team on August 5th, 2016, that gap would be more like a year and 9 months, which is more what the perception of the shift is.

Happy Birthday….

  • …to Kelsi Worrell, who celebrated her 23rd birthday on Saturday, July 15th, at training camp in Ostia
  • …to Nic Fink, who will celebrate his 25th birthday in Budapest on the day after the conclusion of swimming, July 31st
  • …to Ryan Murphy (July 2nd) and Hali Flickinger (July 3rd), who got to celebrate their birthdays before leaving for camp

Superlatives…

  • …the youngest male member of the team is Robert Finke, who will be 17 years, 264 days old when the meet starts.
  • …the youngest female member of the team is Regan Smith, who will be 15 years, 168 days old when the meet starts.
  • …the oldest male member of the team is Matt Grevers, who will be 32 years, 127 days old when the meet starts.
  • …the oldest female member of the team is Katie Meili, who will be 26 years, 105 days old when the meet starts.

Other Stuff

  • The men’s team is on average older than the women’s team, as is usually the case. The average male swimmer is 23 years, 103 days old, while the average female swimmer is 21 years, 267 days old.
  • Both the male and female teams have dropped in age about evenly since Rio – the men’s team has gotten .7 years younger on average, while the women’s team has gotten about .9 years younger, on average.
  • There will be 6 teenagers swimming for Team USA in Budapest. That’s the same number as were in Rio, with the difference that in Rio – all 6 of them were 19.
  • Two of the three high school swimmers on the team, Robert Finke and Dakota Luther, were born 1 day apart.
  • The entire team combined has been on earth for just over 1,015 years. This is still a useless stat, but we still think it’s fun.

Each swimmer’s birthday and age

Men’s TeamBirthdateAgeZodiac Sign
Chase Kalisz3/7/199423 years, 144 daysPisces
Kevin Cordes8/13/199323 years, 350 daysLeo
Ryan Murphy7/2/199522 years, 27 daysCancer
Townley Haas12/13/199620 years, 227 daysSagittarius
Conor Dwyer1/10/198928 years, 201 daysCapricorn
Jack Conger9/26/199422 years, 306 daysLibran
Clark Smith4/17/199522 years, 103 daysAries
Nathan Adrian12/7/198828 years, 235 daysSagittarius
Caeleb Dressel8/16/199620 years, 346 daysLeo
Cody Miller1/9/199225 years, 202 daysCapricorn
Blake Pieroni11/15/199521 years, 256 daysScorpio
Jay Litherland8/24/199521 years, 339 daysVirgo
Jacob Pebley9/17/199323 years, 315 daysVirgo
Matt Grevers3/26/198532 years, 127 daysAries
Zach Apple4/23/199720 years, 96 days

SwimMAC’s Rachel Lee Verbally Commits to Swim at South Carolina

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By Anne Lepesant on SwimSwam

Waxhaw, North Carolina’s Rachel Lee, a rising senior at Charlotte Christian School, has announced via Instagram that she has verbally committed to the University of South Carolina’s class of 2022, where she will join fellow commit Mari Kraus of Illinois.

Lee was runner-up in the 100 breast (1:06.16) and placed third in the 200 IM (2:05.63) at the NCISAA State 3A Swimming Championships in February. She also contributed to CCS’s 8th-place 200 medley relay (30.87 breaststroke) and 7th-place 200 free relay (24.47 anchor). Lee kicked off her summer LCM season with a terrific meet at Athens Sectionals, updating her times in the 100m free, 100/200m back, 100m breast, and 200m IM.

Top SCY times:

  • 200 back – 1:59.11
  • 100 back – 55.59
  • 200 IM – 2:05.63
  • 200 free – 1:51.65
  • 100 breast – 1:06.02

If you have a commitment to report, please send an email with a photo (landscape, or horizontal, looks best) and a quote to Recruits@swimswam.com.

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: SwimMAC’s Rachel Lee Verbally Commits to Swim at South Carolina

Army West Point Names NC State Alum Jacob Siar to Coaching Staff

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By Karl Ortegon on SwimSwam

Army West Point has hired a new assistant coach in Jacob Siar, who will join head coach Mickey Wender’s program for the upcoming season. Siar just graduated from NC State this spring after swimming for Auburn for two years and then transferring to NC State to finish his collegiate career. As a member of the Wolfpack, Siar was part of the backstroke group, and was a two-event 2016 Olympic Trials qualifier in both backstrokes.

Siar worked most recently as a volunteer assistant with the NC State program during the 2016-17 season, as he had exhausted his NCAA athletic eligibility after the 2015-16 season but still was taking classes towards a Sports Management degree this past season.

ARMY WEST POINT PRESS RELEASE:

WEST POINT, N.Y. – The Army West Point swimming and diving program and head coach Mickey Wender have announced the hiring of Jacob Siar as an assistant coach.

Siar comes to West Point following a four-year college career at North Carolina State and Auburn. He graduated from N.C. State in the spring of 2017 with a degree in Sport Management.

He was a member of the Wolfpack that won back-to-back Atlantic Coast Conference Championships in 2015 and 2016, while also contributing to the men’s and women’s 2017 ACC title as a volunteer assistant coach. The 2016 squad also finished fourth at the NCAA Championships and eighth in 2015.

Siar also worked with U.S. Olympic Gold Medalist Cullen Jones, World Champion and Olympic qualifier Simonas Bilis of Lithuania, and Denmark Olympic qualifier Anton Ipsen while at N.C. State.

Individually, Siar competed at the U.S. Olympic Trials in 2012 and 2016. He competed in the 200 backstroke twice and finished 24th in the 100 backstroke in 2016.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Army West Point Names NC State Alum Jacob Siar to Coaching Staff


Correios Committed As CBDA Sponsor Through 2018 After Adjustments

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By James Sutherland on SwimSwam

Correios, the Brazilian national postal service, has recommitted as a sponsor of the CBDA with a few requested adjustments put in place after initially cutting ties with them after 26 years. After speaking with swimming legends Gustavo BorgesThiago Pereira and Cesar Cielo back in April, they decided to renew their deal.

After investigations led to a whole saga of funding cuts, lawsuits and the eventual arrest of long-time CBDA president Coarcy Nunes, Correios ended their sponsorship.

They have now renewed their sponsorship through 2018, with a few requests. Correios president Guilherme Campos requested the CBDA have more transparency and make some changes to the management model within 90 days, and the agreement was signed.

The contract has a total value of 11.4 million reais, about 3.6 million USD. Despite the deal being much lower than the one received during the last Olympic cycle, securing the sponsorship was seen as a victory given the current condition of the CBDA.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Correios Committed As CBDA Sponsor Through 2018 After Adjustments

Minneapolis Sectionals Take On High School Flavor (PSYCHS)

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

2017 Minneapolis Sectionals

Psych sheets for the 2017 Sectional Championships in Minneapolis have been posted. Bucking the national trend of Sectional meets toward college training meets, this year’s Minneapolis sectionals resemble more of the series’ historical focus as a significant meet for high school swimmers. There are a few college swimmers, from the University of Wisconsin and the University of Minnesota especially, entered, but they more highlight the meet than dominate it.

Included among those high school standouts are several Minnesota state champions, like Edina Swim Club’s Josh Withers. He enters the meet as the 3rd seed in the 100 fly, after having won that event in 48.25 (yards) for Eden Prarie at last year’s Minnesota AA State Championship meet. Jack Dahlgren, from the Aquajets Swim Team, was the 100 back state champion in AA last year for Chanhassen High School, and is now the top seed in the 100 back at Sectionals with a seed time of 57.49. Corey Lau (AA 100 breaststroke), Griffin Wolner (A 200 free, 500 free), Will Grassle (A 200 IM), Paul Sadergaski (A 50 free, 100 fly), and Will Brenton (A 100 back) will also represent Minnesota high school state champions on the boys’ side.

Girls’ state champions are more lightly represented, but a few will still make appearances. That includes Emma Lazer, the state 100 breaststroke champion last season as a freshman, who is the second seed behind only University of Minnesota’s Rae Bullinger in the same event this weekend. Raime Jones (AA 100 free), Kelly McCarthy (AA 500 free). Kasey Milstroh (A 200 free, 100 free), and Madison Potter (A 200 IM, 100 fly) will also be in attendance.

At least one Wisconsin state champion, Ben McDade, who won the 200 and 500 free at lest year’s Division 2 championship (the latter of which came in a new State Record of 4:28.83), will make the journey across the border for the meet.

Among the college swimmers that stand out are rising Wisconsin senior Anthony Lyons, who is seeded three seconds ahead of the field in the 200 free in 1:50.37.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Minneapolis Sectionals Take On High School Flavor (PSYCHS)

WATCH: U.S. Team Practice At Croatia Training Camp

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By James Sutherland on SwimSwam

Below, watch a video via USA Swimming on Facebook of the U.S. World Championship team practicing at their training camp in Opatija, Croatia. They went live on Monday morning, with about three and a half minutes of practice footage.

The team began training camp on July 12th, and will travel to Budapest tomorrow, Wednesday the 19th, with the World Championships set to get underway Sunday the 23rd.

Check out some of their Instagram posts from the trip here.

USA Swimming made a few posts of their own signifying the end of training camp.

Schooling World Record Predictions: GMM presented by SwimOutlet.com

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By Gold Medal Mel Stewart on SwimSwam

Gold Medal Minute presented by SwimOutlet.com

2016 Olympic champion Joseph Schooling is my kind of guy. Schooling let’s you know who he intends to beat and what records he wants to break.  Sports drama ensues.

Currently Michael Phelps‘ 100m butterfly world record is in Schooling’s crosshairs, but that “could” take a backseat to Schooling vs Dressel butterfly hype at 2017 FINA World Championships.  Frankly, I don’t know if Caeleb Dressel will even swim the race. 50m free conflicts with the 100m butterfly.   At this point, if Dressel finals and improves on his 100 butterfly U.S. World Trials swim from Indy, 50.8, that’s a success in my book.

The pressure’s on Schooling, however.  He’s on the record saying he wants Phelps’ 49.82 100m fly record from the 2009 World Championship in Rome–clocked in one of the greatest match-ups in history against Milorad Cavic.  In all fairness to Schooling, the 100m fly world record is a massive goal–almost pie-in-sky. Phelps ripped that swim in a rubberized floatation techsuit. Listening to Schooling explain his ambitions, it’s simply the next logical step in his career.

PREDICTIONS:

While I’d love to see a world record 100m fly from Schooling in Budapest, I don’t think it’s realistic right now. Phelps’ 49.82 was top-of-the-water-floated via tech and nearly six tenths faster than Schooling’s personal best–.57 to be precise.  Schooling’s PB is 50.39 flown in the finals of the 100 fly at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio. If Schooling can shave any time off his 50.39, I think he wins.  Moreover, following Olympic gold with a World Championship win is a step forward career-wise.   If Schooling is feeling great, I’d love to see a 50.09, and that’s my prediction.  It’s within range after his 50.9 unshaven 100 fly at ATX Sectionals.  Conversely, I could see Schooling beating the field in 50.6, but I’m banking on fast final pushing Schooling’s to a PB.

What do you think it will take to win, and what do you think Schooling will clock?

Follow Joe Schooling  on Twitter here.

Follow Joe Schooling on Instagram here. 

See Joe Schooling on Facebook here. 

RECENT EPISODES

This is a Gold Medal Media production presented by SwimOutlet.com. Host Gold Medal Mel Stewart is a 3-time Olympic medalist and the co-founder of SwimSwam.com, a Swimming News website.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Schooling World Record Predictions: GMM presented by SwimOutlet.com

Canyons Aquatic Club Hires David Kuck as New Head Coach

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

The Canyons Aquatic Club has hired David Kuck as their new head coach. He replaces Coely Stickels, who left the program to take a position as the associate head coach at Indiana.

Kuck previously worked as a the North Senior 2 Lead Coach and a Masters Coach at SwimMAC Carolina in Charlotte. The club has produced a number of Olympians and until recently had 2016 U.S. Women’s Olympic Team head coach David Marsh as its head coach and CEO.

Kuck has previous stops with the City of Dublin swim club and the Westerville Aquatic Club.

As an athlete, Kuck was a four-year Big Ten Championship finalists at Ohio State.

“My coaching philosophy and teaching style is rooted in technique, accountability, and the long-term development of the individual,” Kuck said of his methodology. He also said that he considers himself an IM coach, and prefers diverse swimmers who “have competence in all strokes.”

In a press release, Canyons says that Kuck’s “mission at Canyons will be to focus on homegrown athletes from our vast geographic area of northern Los Angeles County and to make sure all can progress as high up the ranks of Canyons program as their potential allows.”

Canyons previously has produced national-level athletes, including most notably 2016 U.S. Olympian Abbey Weitzeil, a home-grown product who delayed her enrollment in college to remain at Canyons and train with Stickels. Other home-grown names in the program’s history include National Age Group Record breaker Nikol Popov, three-time Olympic gold medalist Anthony Ervin, and Jennifer Parmenter, who won the 200 and 400 IM at the 1994 U.S. National Champions at just 14 years old.

Stickels’ reputation also drew senior-level swimmers from around the world, including Mexican Olympian Lili Ibanez, who trained there in the run-up to Rio, and Canadian Olympians Santo Condorelli and Coleman Allen.

Kuck will also be charged with growing the clubs Learn to Swim program, which he has experience with.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Canyons Aquatic Club Hires David Kuck as New Head Coach

Dartmouth Women’s Team Put on Probation, 3 Meets Cancelled

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

The Dartmouth women’s swim team has been put on institutional probation after violating the college’s hazing policy, the school announced on Monday. The team admitted to the violations and the probation was enacted after “an extensive series of interviews conducted by the Department of Safety and Security and senior staff in the Department of Athletics and Recreation.”

The school says that the matter was not pursued as a criminal violation, that no team members were found to have been physically harmed, and that no drugs or alcohol were involved. The specific action that caused the violation was when first-year team members were told to create and present a sexualized PowerPoint presentation for their teammates during their December 2016 winter break training trip.

As part of their probation, the team will have to participate in educational and team development activities. Further, while the team will be able to train during the fall, their first 3 meets of the season have been cancelled, and they will be allowed to resume training on December 1. Their winter training trip has also been cancelled.

“We hold our teams to high standards and our student-athletes understand their collective responsibility to the community,” says Director of Athletics and Recreation Harry Sheehy. “The members of the team have acknowledged that their behavior was unacceptable and that their actions have consequences.”

Organizational Adjudication Committee (OAC) hearing panels, who imposed the probation and educational and team development requirements, are composed of two faculty members, two administrators, and three students. The athletics sanctions, which include the cancellation of meets and the winter training trip, while informed by the OAC outcome, are independent of the OAC process.

In the 2016-2017 season, which was Jamie Holder’s first as head coach of Dartmouth, the women’s team finished in last place among 8 teams. They scored 358 points, which put them 295 points behind 7th-place Cornell. They are the second Ivy League team to have a portion of their season cancelled for conduct violations in the last year: Princeton suspended its men’s team midway through the 2016-2017 season, which included them not participating in the Ivy League Championships.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Dartmouth Women’s Team Put on Probation, 3 Meets Cancelled

PWSL Week 5

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Content and pictures provided by: Jim Riley, Ron Spink and Brenten Gilbert Editor’s Note: It happened this week that we

French Triumph In Mixed Diving, China Qualify 1-2 In Women’s Platform

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By James Sutherland on SwimSwam

2017 FINA WORLD AQUATICS CHAMPIONSHIPS

Day 5 of diving at the Danube Arena in Budapest started off with prelims and semis of the women’s 10m platform. The Chinese have been dominant thus far in diving, and the trend continued today.

After sitting 3rd after prelims, China’s Si Yajie qualified 1st overall for the final with a score of 382.80 in the semis. The 18-year-old won the world title in this event at the 2013 championships in Barcelona and also took silver in Rio. She already has a gold here in Budapest from the 10m platform synchro event.

Her teammate Ren Qian qualified 2nd overall with a score of 367.50 after posting the leading score of 376.65 in the prelims. Ren is the Olympic gold medalist in this event, and already has two golds here in Budapest. She won the 10m synchro event with Si, and was also on the winning mixed 10m synchro team with Lian Junjie.

Also qualifying for the final was Olympic bronze medalist Meaghan Benfeito (4th) and Australian veteran Melissa Wu (11th), who actually sat 2nd after the prelims.

Women’s 10m Platform Finalists

  1. Si Yajie, CHN, 382.80
  2. Ren Qian, CHN, 367.50
  3. Kim Kuk Hyang, PRK, 360.85
  4. Meaghan Benfeito, CAN, 355.15
  5. Kim Mie Rae, PRK, 346.00
  6. Carolina Murillo Urrea, COL, 325.75
  7. Cheong Jun Hoong, MAS, 325.50
  8. (T-8) Pandela Pamg, MAS, 322.75
  9. (T-8) Jessica Parratto, USA, 322.75
  10. Olivia Chamandy, CAN, 320.55
  11. Melissa Wu, AUS, 318.70
  12. Minami Itahashi, JPN, 313.70

The day closed with finals of the mixed 3m & 10m events, and it was the French who came out on top.

Matthieu Rosset and Laura Marino combined for 406.40 points, winning France’s first diving title of the championships. The two won the European title recently, and were 5th in Kazan.

Mexicans Rommel Pacheco and Viviana Del Angel Peniche, who held the lead heading into the final round, won silver with a score of 402.35. Pacheco, a veteran who won his first international medals at the 2003 Pan American Games, had a pair of 3m dives that scored over 90 points to put the team into the lead late before France came out on top.

Americans David Dinsmore and Krysta Palmer solidified the bronze medal with a score of 395.90, well ahead of the Germans who took 4th with 379.55.

Mixed Team Event

  1. France (Rosset, Marino), 406.40
  2. Mexico (Pacheco, Peniche), 402.35
  3. United States (Dinsmore, Palmer), 395.90
  4. Germany (Kurjo, Hausding), 379.55
  5. Malaysia (Leng Mun Yee, Azman), 356.75
  6. China (Qiu, Chen), 355.15
  7. Colombia (Villa Castaneda, Murillo Urrea), 354.90
  8. Venezuela (Liranzo, Betancourt), 349.75
  9. Italy (Batki, Tocci), 342.90
  10. Korea (Ri, Kim), 341.25

Read the full story on SwimSwam: French Triumph In Mixed Diving, China Qualify 1-2 In Women’s Platform

Russians Continue To Roll With Team Technical Gold Medal

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By James Sutherland on SwimSwam

2017 FINA WORLD AQUATICS CHAMPIONSHIPS

The Russian synchro contingent continued their dominance on day 5 at the World Championships, winning gold in the Team Technical final with a score of 96.0109. The Russians have now won this event at ten consecutive World Championships, with the U.S. in 1994 the last non-Russian squad to win.

China and Japan repeated as silver and bronze medalists respectively with scores of 94.2165 and 93.1590. The top three also finished in the exact same positions at the 2016 Olympic Games.

Team Technical Final

  1. Russia, 96.0109
  2. China, 94.2165
  3. Japan, 93.1590
  4. Ukraine, 92.3596
  5. Italy, 90.7617
  6. Spain, 88.4687
  7. Canada, 86.2044
  8. Mexico, 85.9664
  9. Greece, 83.9112
  10. Korea, 83.4354

Later on went the Duet Free prelims, where Russia once again led the way.

The duo of Alexandra Patskevich and Svetlana Kolesnichenko scored 96.6333 to qualify 1st overall. The two already have a pair of golds from the championships in the Solo Technical and Duet Technical routine, and Kolesnichenko was paired with legend Svetlana Romashina when she won the 2013 world title in this event. Romashina and Natalia Ishchenko won the title in 2015.

The Chinese pair of Jiang Wenwen and Jiang Tingting (94.93333) qualified 2nd overall, and Team Ukraine (Yelyzaveta Yakhno and Anna Voloshyna) were 3rd with a score of 92.8333.

Duet Free Finalists

  1. Russia (Patskevich, Kolesnichenko), 96.6333
  2. China (Jiang, Jiang), 94.9333
  3. Ukraine (Yakhno, Voloshyna), 92.8333
  4. Japan (Nakamaki, Inui), 92.6000
  5. Spain (Ramirez, Carbonell), 91.3667
  6. Italy (Cerruti, Ferro), 90.7000
  7. Canada (Holzner, Simoneau), 88.9667
  8. Greece (Papazoglou, Platanioti), 87.3000
  9. Austria (E.Alexandri, A.Alexandri), 86.6333
  10. Mexico (Ramirez, Garcia), 86.4333
  11. United States (Woroniecki, Alvarez), 84.3000
  12. Kazakhstan (A.Nemich, Y.Nemich), 84.2000

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Russians Continue To Roll With Team Technical Gold Medal

2017 Commonwealth Youth Games Aquatic Competition Kicks-off July 19th

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By Loretta Race on SwimSwam

2017 Commonwealth Youth Games

The 2017 Commonwealth Youth Games (CYG) is set to see its aquatic competition begin tomorrow, July 19th in Nassau, Bahamas. Occurring every 4 years, the competition has historically brought nearly 1,000 athletes from 65 nations to the host, with this year’s edition set to be the largest-ever. Athletes aged 14-18 comprise the competitive fields, whose sports include athletics, swimming, boxing and beach volleyball, among several others.

Swimming kicks off tomorrow, Wednesday, July 19th with the following events:

  • Boys & Girls 50 butterfly
  • Boys & Girls 200 freestyle
  • Boys & Girls 100 backstroke
  • Boys & Girls 200 breaststroke

The 2015 edition of the Games held in Samoa (2017 signals the change in global calendar for the event), saw Australia dominate with a total of 24 gold medals to runner-up South Africa’s 13. England was the 3rd place finisher overall with 12 gold medals.

In the past, budding stars from around the globe have been able to make their marks on the international swimming scene with an appearance at these Games. South African Zane Waddell won multiple events, including the 50 backstroke and 50 butterfly in 2015 and is now headed to the World Championships representing his nation in the 50m freestyle in Budapest. Australia’s Clyde Lewis was the 200 freestyle CYG champion and is now headed to Budapest to race the 400 IM.

We’ll be keeping tabs on the young talent and bringing a full meet recap once competition concludes.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: 2017 Commonwealth Youth Games Aquatic Competition Kicks-off July 19th

Prince-Mont Dual Meet Roundup!

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The Prince-Mont league completed their 5th week of dual meet competition July 15th, and each team is preparing for their

Kolesnichenko Wins 3rd Synchro Gold Of Championship In Solo Free Final

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By James Sutherland on SwimSwam

2017 FINA WORLD AQUATICS CHAMPIONSHIPS – SYNCHRONIZED SWIMMING

Another day and yet another Russian gold medal in synchro, as Svetlana Kolesnichenko scored 96.1333 to win the Solo Free final. She now has three golds at these World Championships, already winning the Solo Technical and Duet Technical events.

2015 World Championship bronze medalist Ona Carbonell from Spain moved up a step for silver with 95.0333 points, and Anna Voloshyna of the Ukraine snared bronze with 93.3000. Carbonell wins her second silver of the competition after taking 2nd in the Solo Technical event, and Voloshyna earned her third bronze already winning them in the Solo Technical and Duet Technical events.

2015 World Champ Natalia Ishchenko of Russia did not compete in the event.

Women’s Solo Free Final Results

  1. Svetlana Kolesnichenko, RUS, 96.1333
  2. Ona Carbonell, ESP, 95.0333
  3. Anna Voloshyna, UKR, 93.3000
  4. Yukiko Inui, JPN, 92.0667
  5. Linda Cerruti, ITA, 90.6000
  6. Jacqueline Simoneau, CAN, 90.1333

Later on were the prelims of the Team Free event, where the defending champ Russians qualified 1st easily with 96.8000 points. China and the Ukraine qualified 2nd and 3rd overall.

Team Free Finalists

  1. Russia, 96.8000
  2. China, 94.3667
  3. Ukraine, 92.9000
  4. Japan, 92.4667
  5. Italy, 90.4667
  6. Spain, 89.9333
  7. Canada, 88.2667
  8. Mexico, 87.9000
  9. Greece, 85.3667
  10. France, 85.0333
  11. Korea, 83.6000
  12. United States, 82.9667

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Kolesnichenko Wins 3rd Synchro Gold Of Championship In Solo Free Final

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