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Lochte Hits 1:58.90 200 IM On Day 2 Of Mel Zajac Jr. International

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By James Sutherland on SwimSwam

2018 MEL ZAJAC JR. INTERNATIONAL

12-time Olympic medalist Ryan Lochte made some noise on day 1 of the Mel Zajac Jr. International meet with his performance in the 400 IM, clocking 4:15.80 and showing his best form since the 2016 Olympic Games. He continued the momentum on day 2, winning the 200 IM in a time of 1:58.90.

With solid splits all-around of 25.99(29.79)(34.63)(28.49), the 33-year-old is now the 2nd fastest American this year in both IM events, trailing only Chase Kalisz (who is the reigning world champion in both events). In fact, between Kalisz and Lochte, they’ve won the last five World titles in the event (Lochte had a record four straight from 2009 to 2015). Lochte’s Gator teammate Mark Szaranek took 2nd in 2:03.29, and U.S. junior team member Jake Foster was 3rd in 2:03.66. Foster had a win of his own in the 200 breast, going wire-to-wire in 2:16.55.

Lochte was also in action in the 100 fly, where he finished 4th in 53.71. Caeleb Dresselwho won two events on day 1, won the race in 52.45, making him the 3rd fastest American this year behind Jack Conger and Tripp Cooper. For comparison, Dressel was 52.29 exactly one year ago at the 2017 Santa Clara Pro Swim. U.S. junior Gianluca Urlando scored his second PB in the event for 2nd in 53.21, and Maxime Rooney was .01 off his season best for 3rd in 53.69. Szaranek, who was a sluggish 58.0 in the heats, dropped a 54.89 from the C-final.

Dressel also won the 50 free, making him 4/4 so far in the meet in terms of victories, with his first sub-23 of the year in 22.15. Noticeably wearing a Speedo suit after yesterday’s Mizuno, he’s now also 3rd among Americans in this event, trailing Michael Andrew and Nathan AdrianYuri Kisil (22.52), Sid Farber (22.61) and Alex Loginov (22.79) also cracked 23 for 2nd, 3rd and 4th.

Penny Oleksiak matched her performances from Friday, winning a butterfly event and also winning a freestyle B-final. She won the 100 fly in a very solid 59.12, well under her 1:00.92 from the Atlanta Classic, and went 25.80 in the 50 free B-final. Heidi Bradley (1:01.07) took 2nd in the 100 fly, and Phoebe Bacon (1:01.63) and Gretchen Walsh (1:01.64) both hit personal bests for 3rd and 4th.

Walsh also established a best on the day in the 50 free, when she went 25.46 in the prelims. She just missed that time tonight in 25.50, but still won comfortably over Sarah Fournier (25.80).

Like Dressel, Mackenzie Padington stood out with a pair of wins in the women’s 400 free and 200 IM. Her 400 of 4:10.63 was a season best, and just over a second off her lifetime best. Molly Gowans (4:16.46) was 2nd, and Savanna Faulconer (4:17.02) earned a PB for 3rd.

In the 200 IM, Padington out-sprinted breaststroker Kelsey Wog for the victory, touching in 2:15.25 to Wog’s 2:15.50. Kelly Fertel (2:16.58) was 3rd, as the top-3 all had their second fastest performance ever, and 15-year-old Bailey Herbert (2:16.66) posted a new lifetime best for 4th.

OTHER EVENTS

  • Last night’s 200 back winner Isabelle Stadden of the U.S. junior team won the 50 tonight in 28.17, a new best time, moving into a tie for 3rd among Americans this year with Ali Deloof. Her teammate Katharine Berkoff (28.38) tied her best from prelims for 2nd, and Gator’s Emma Ball (28.47) also went a PB for 3rd.
  • Markus Thormeyer cracked 26 for the first time in the men’s race, clocking 25.81 for the gold, while Wyatt Davis (26.28) got under his best by .02 for 2nd.
  • Rachel Nicol of Calgary won the women’s 200 breast in a season best of 2:28.98, while the youngster Herbert continued her onslaught of personal best times for 2nd in 2:29.95.
  • Mitch D’Arrigo crushed his season best to win the men’s 400 free in 3:51.93, with Ben Lawless (3:54.99) and Mikey Calvillo (3:55.54) narrowly missing their PBs for 2nd and 3rd.
  • In the women’s 800 free relay, the U.S. juniors (8:18.97) had an epic battle with the Canadian juniors, as Kyla Leibel (2:01.36) nearly ran down Walsh (2:02.33) on the anchor leg. Berkoff was the main difference between the two teams, leading off in 2:03.93.
  • For the men, the U.S. juniors won in 7:36.14, followed by Cascade (7:44.93) and Hyack (7:48.80).

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Lochte Hits 1:58.90 200 IM On Day 2 Of Mel Zajac Jr. International


US Schwimmstar Lochte auf dem Weg zurück zu alter Form

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By Daniela Kapser on SwimSwam

Seit den Olympischen Spielen 2016 in Rio ist Ryan Lochte nur bei wenigen, eher unwichtigeren Wettkämpfen, ins Wasser gesprungen. Seit Olympia ist im Leben des 33-Jährigen viel passiert: 2017 kam Sohn Caiden Zane auf die Welt, Anfang 2018 wurde geheiratet. Lochte lebte zeitweise in Los Angeles, entschloss sich aber, zu seinem Erfolgscoach Gregg Troy nach Florida zurückzukehren, zur Zeit trainiert er wieder an der University of Florida in Gainesville, seiner Alma Mater.

Ryan Lochte hat bei vier Olympischen Spielen immerhin 12 Medaillen gewonnen, davon sechs Goldmedaillen. Er ist seit mehr als 10 Jahren eine feste Größe in der US 4×200 m Freistilstaffel und war weltweit der einzige Schwimmer, der Michael Phelps über die 200 m und 400 m Lagen besiegen konnte. Lochte hält den Weltrekord über 200 m Lagen auf der Kurz- und Langbahn und über 400 m Lagen auf der 25-m Bahn. Einen absoluten Höhenflug hatte er bei den Weltmeisterschaften 2011 in Shanghai, dort gewann er die 200 m Rücken, 200 m Lagen, 400 m Lagen UND 200 m Freistil und ebenfalls Gold mit der US 4 x 200 m Freistilstaffel.

So ähnlich hatte er sich das dann auch bei den Olympischen Spielen in London 2012 vorgestellt, wo er dann (aus seiner Sicht) “nur” Gold über die 400 m Lagen gewann – in der schnellsten Zeit, die jemals in einer “normalen” Badehose geschwommen wurde. In London gewann er noch Gold mit der US 4 x 200 m Freistilstaffel, Silber über 200 m Lagen und mit der 4 x 100 m Freistilstaffel sowie Bronze über 200 m Rücken. Zwischen dem Finale über 200 m Lagen und 200 m Rücken lagen vielleicht 30 Minuten.

Im Gegensatz zu Michael Phelps, startete Ryan Lochte häufig bei Kurzbahn-Weltmeisterschaften, seine Ausbeute: 21 Gold-, 10 Silber- und 7 Bronzemedaillen, so viel wie kein anderer Schwimmer weltweit.

Die Rückkehr auf die große Schwimmbühne wird schrittweise vorbereitet, das Ziel von Lochte ist eine Teilnahme an seinen 5. Olympischen Spielen in Tokio 2020.

Beim Mel Zajac Jr. International in den USA schwamm Lochte am ersten Tag die 400 m Lagen und schlug nach 4:15,80 Minuten an. für den Rückkehrer eine respektable Zeit. Am zweiten Wettkampftag gewann er die 200 m Lagen in 1:58,90 Sekunden, damit ist er der zweitschnellste Amerikaner hinter Weltmeister Chase Kalisz in diesem Jahr. in der aktuellen Weltrangliste steht er auf Platz 16. Kalisz trat 2017 in Budapest die Nachfolge von Lochte über die 200 m Lagen an – diesen Wettkampf konnte Lochte von 2009 bis 2015 viermal gewinnen und er hält auch den Weltrekkord in 1:54,00 Minuten.

Der wichtigste Wettkampf für die Amerikaner sind international in diesem Jahr die Pan Pacific Championships in Tokio vom 9. bis 14.8.2018. Die PanPacs finden alle vier Jahre statt und werden zwischen den Gründungsnationen USA, Kanada, Australien und Japan ausgetragen.  Es werden jedoch reglmäßig andere nicht-europäische Nationen wie China oder Südafrika eingeladen.

Qualifizieren können sich die Amerikaner bei den Pillips 66 National Championships vom 25. bis 29. Juli.

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: US Schwimmstar Lochte auf dem Weg zurück zu alter Form

German Jacob Heidtmann Joins Team Elite – West for Training Block

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

Team Elite – San Diego is into its full summer rhythm, with some new faces arriving in the last few weeks.

Among the swimmers currently training with the group under 2016 U.S. Olympic team women’s head coach David Marsh are

  • U.S. National Team member Helen Moffit,
  • U.S. National Team member Caroline Baldwin
  • U.S. National Team member Michael Chadwick
  • 2000 and 2016 Olympic gold medalist in the 50 free Anthony Ervin
  • 2017 World Championships silver medalist Katie Meili on a summer break from Georgetown law
  • 2017 NCAA Division I Swimmer of the Year Kathleen Baker, who is training with her youth coach (albeit previously in Charlotte) Marsh for the summer, as she has each summer of her college career
  • A newcomer, German 400 IM’er Jacob Heidtmann, who Marsh says is training with the club for “a few weeks.”

The freshest of those faces is the 23-year old Heidtmann, who is his country’s National Record holder in the 400 IM in long course. He swam that record-breaking time at the 2015 World Championships in 4:12.08. Even as his best times in other events have improved (including a 1:01.3 breaststroke and a 2:00.5 200 IM last year in long course, and a new best time of 4:07.20 in the 400 IM short course as well), he hasn’t been better than 4:13 in the 400 IM since his record-breaking swim. His 2017 best was just 4:15.37, and he was a 4:17.68 at the World Championships.

Below, check out a clip from one of the team’s famous circuit days with the club, narrated by Marsh:

Read the full story on SwimSwam: German Jacob Heidtmann Joins Team Elite – West for Training Block

Efimova, Peaty, and Charlotte Bonnet Will Race at Canet Mare Nostrum

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

The next big date circled on the European swimming calendar is the upcoming Mare Nostrum series, which takes athletes to 3 major Mediterranean meets in 9 days as a major benchmarker ahead of the upcoming European Championships.

This year’s series starts in Canet, France, before moving on to Barcelona and then Monaco.

2018 Mare Nostrum Tour Stops:

  • June 9th-10th: Canet en Roussillon, France
  • June 13th-14th: Barcelona, Spain
  • June 16th-17th: Monaco

When the tour kicks off in Canet, the meet will have a new setting thanks to the new Europa complex.

Among the names being touted for participation in the series opener in Canet (official psych sheets still to come):

  • 5-time World breaststroke champion and former World Record holder Yulia Efimova
  • World Record holder (50LCM, 100LCM breaststroke), 2016 Olympic Champion, Adam Peaty
  • 2017 Worlds 50 free silver medalist Bruno Fratus
  • Jeremy StraviusMedhy Metella, and new National 100 free Record holder Charlotte Bonnet from France

Organizers also are hyping a roster of swimmers from 29 countries counted among the 400+ participants in Canet: Germany, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, China, Croatia, Denmark, Scotland, Spain, France, Great Britain, Hong Kong, Hungary, Ireland, Iceland, Japan, Lithuania, Norway, Kyrgystan, Uzbekistan, USA, Brazil, Paraguay, Russia, Sweden, Ukraine and Zambia.

 

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Efimova, Peaty, and Charlotte Bonnet Will Race at Canet Mare Nostrum

Walsh, Berkoff Blast Bests, Dressel Goes 28.8 50 BR At Mel Zajac Day 3

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By James Sutherland on SwimSwam

Caeleb Dressel Mike Lewis

2018 MEL ZAJAC JR. INTERNATIONAL

The third and final preliminary session from the Mel Zajac Jr. International meet in Vancouver saw some more impressive performances from the U.S. junior national team, along with Caeleb Dressel and Ryan Lochte in action in their final two events of the competition.

The U.S. juniors established a few more PBs this morning, including Zoie Hartman knocking half a second off her 50 breast to take the top seed in 32.17. Calgary’s Rachel Nicol (32.22) and Hartman’s teammate Ema Rajic (32.38) are close behind.

Gretchen Walsh and Katharine Berkoff both hit best times on Saturday morning, and did so again on Sunday. Walsh took the top seed in the women’s 100 free, clocking 55.50 to lower her PB of 56.12 from the 2017 U.S. Open. Mackenzie Padington, who has been on a tear here, qualified 2nd in 56.52, and Penny Oleksiak avoided a third straight freestyle B-final by taking 9th in 57.97 (10-person final).

Berkoff dropped her 100 back best by nearly a second in 1:00.69, qualifying 2nd behind teammate Isabelle Stadden (1:00.41). Phoebe Bacon (1:02.15) made it a 1-2-3 prelim for the U.S. juniors.

Dressel was in action in the men’s 50 breast and 100 free, taking 1st and 2nd overall respectively. In the 50 breast, he clocked in at 28.85, an official best time, though he opened his 100 breast at the 2015 Nationals in 28.53. Previously, he had been a 31.56 from back in 2012. Jake Foster (29.22) sits 2nd and Liam Johnston (29.27) is 3rd. After dropping over a second from prelims to the final yesterday in the 50 free, it will be interesting to see what kind of time Dressel can drop tonight. So far this year, five Americans have been sub-28.

In the 100 free he cruised to the 2nd seed in 50.68, following Olympic semi-finalist Yuri Kisil (50.07). Maxime Rooney (51.26) qualified for the final in 6th, while Lochte missed out on the A-final in 11th (51.95). He did qualify in the 100 back, where he negative split his way to the 5th spot in 57.63 (out in 29.43, back in 28.20). Clark Beach leads the field there in 56.21.

OTHER EVENTS

  • Canadian junior Bailey Herbet continued her sensational performance at the meet with the top seed in the women’s 200 fly, going 2:18.20 to come within four tenths of her PB. Oleksiak qualified 3rd overall in 2:19.00.
  • U.S. junior Gianluca Urlando leads the men’s event in 2:01.20, with Gator Mark Szaranek having one of his better prelim swims here for 2nd in 2:02.84.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Walsh, Berkoff Blast Bests, Dressel Goes 28.8 50 BR At Mel Zajac Day 3

Schmidt, Auboeck Close Eric Namesnik Memorial Open With Distance Wins

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By James Sutherland on SwimSwam

2018 ERIC NAMESNIK MEMORIAL OPEN

  • June 1st-3rd, 2018
  • Canham Natatorium, Ann Arbor, Michigan
  • 50m (LCM)
  • Psych Sheets
  • Results on Meet Mobile

The final day of the 2018 Eric Namesnik Memorial Open saw Club Wolverine teammates Sierra Schmidt and Felix Auboeck produce some impressive in-season swims in the distance events, along with some exciting races across the board.

In the women’s 800, Schmidt clocked in at 8:36.48, dropping her season best from the Indy Pro Swim by nearly two seconds and swimming her fastest time since 2016. Her teammate Katie Duggan took 2nd in 9:00.57.

In the men’s mile, Auboeck chopped over 26 seconds off his season best from Indianapolis in 15:17.72, putting him three seconds ahead of where he was at this meet last year. Will Roberts had the second fastest swim of his life for 2nd in 15:50.36.

A few other best times came in the 200 back, as 15-year-old Club Wolverine member Sophia Tuinman got under 2:15 for the first time in 2:14.96, winning the women’s event. For the men, Kai Williams dropped from a 2:06.60 all the way down to 2:03.98 for the victory, with Alex King (2:06.89) 2nd and Charlie Swanson (2:08.10) 3rd.

James Jones established a PB in winning the men’s 100 free in 50.40, beating out his 50.54 from this meet last year, with German Poul Zellmann (50.83) 2nd and Auboeck (51.53) back in 5th.

OTHER EVENTS

  • China’s Huiyan Ye (2:14.90) won the 200 IM, two seconds faster than she was at the 2017 World Juniors, with CW’s Yirong Bi (2:15.67) 2nd in a new best time.
  • Tommy Cope swam to a season best for the men’s win in 2:03.63, just over three tenths off of his fastest ever.
  • China’s 15-year-old Wu Qingfeng won the women’s 100 free by nearly two seconds in 55.53 over Wolverine Emma Cleason (57.37).

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Schmidt, Auboeck Close Eric Namesnik Memorial Open With Distance Wins

Missy Franklin Entered in 2018 Mare Nostrum Series

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

American swimmer Missy Franklin, who hasn’t raced since undergoing double shoulder surgery in early 2017, is entered to swim at the Mare Nostrum series stop in Barcelona, Spain from June 13th to 14th.

Franklin, who is now attending classes and training as a pro at the University of Georgia, is listed on the preliminary entry list for Barcelona: the middle stop of the three-meet series. Full start lists for the opener in Canet, France have not been released, and Franklin is not listed on the psych sheets for the meet closer in Monaco.

Franklin’s schedule in Barcelona includes entries in the 50/100/200 back and the 100/200 free – her traditional international schedule. The meets will be a good spot for her to test her new training, as it includes a world-class field with the likes of Kathleen Baker, Taylor Ruck, Katinka Hosszu, Jenny Mensing, Anastasia Fesikova, Daria Ustinova, Mie Nielsen, Veronika Andrusenko, Brooke Forde, Holly Hibbott, Rikako Ikee, Pernille Blume, and Ranomi Kromowidjojo entered in the same events as Franklin, along with many other big names.

The Monaco stop will include names like Cate and Bronte Campbell and Sarah Sjostrom, though most of the Americans will have gone home by then.

Franklin’s entries come as part of a mentorship role with USA Swimming’s national junior travel squad, where a group of 10 athletes, including Brooke Forde, Cassidy Bayer, and Michael Andrew, will race at the series’ first two stops. For those reasons, we can assume that Franklin is at least provisionally entered in Canet as well.

We have reached out to Franklin’s representation to confirm her intent to compete, but have not heard back.

Franklin missed last summer’s major meets after her surgery, including U.S. Nationals. At the 2016 Summer Olympic Games, her first as a professional swimmer and her most recent official races, she finished 13th in the 200 free, 7th in the 200 back, and won a gold as a heats-only swimmer in the 800 free relay. Franklin has said that at the time, she felt like she was in the best physical shape of his life, but that mentally she was not prepared to be at her best.

At the 2012 Olympic Games, she won 4 golds and a bronze medal. She also owns 11 long course World Championships, and is the current World Record holder in the 200 long course meter backstroke.

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Missy Franklin Entered in 2018 Mare Nostrum Series

Swimming’s TopTenTweets: The Indy 1500

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By Torrey Hart on SwimSwam

We’re back with swimming’s TopTenTweets, where we round up the best of the swimming Twitterverse. We’ve got two week’s worth of content below, so from from Lilly King shenanigans to some great meme use, scroll to see what made the cut.


#10

#real.

#9


Oleksiak Doubles Up, Thormeyer Upsets Dressel To Close Mel Zajac

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By James Sutherland on SwimSwam

2018 MEL ZAJAC JR. INTERNATIONAL

The final session of the 2018 Mel Zajac Jr. International saw U.S. stars Caeleb Dressel and Ryan Lochte each in action in two events, but it was Canadian Penny Oleksiak who stole the show with two big victories.

Oleksiak, who will turn 18 in just over a week, won both the 200 fly and 100 free on the night, her first day with multiple wins after competing in the B-final of both the 50 and 200 free on days 1 and 2.

In the 200 fly, Oleksiak was aggressive opening up, establishing a big lead early and turning in 1:01.76 at the 100. She held strong coming back, and touched in 2:09.96 to drop over a second off her previous best done recently at the Atlanta Classic (2:11.22). 15-year-old Canadian junior teamer Bailey Herbert was 2nd in 2:14.93, dropping nearly three seconds for yet another best time.

The 100 free was the next event, and despite swimming out in lane 0, Oleksiak was not fazed. She flipped just behind U.S. junior Gretchen Walsh at the 50, and charged home in 27.95 to win by over a second in 54.50. While her season best was done with a full taper at the Commonwealth Games (53.85), the time is much better than the 55.11 she was at the Atlanta Classic.

After a 55.50 PB in prelims, Walsh took 2nd in 55.77, and Mackenzie Padington was just .04 off her best time for 3rd in 56.81.

In search of a perfect 6-for-6 meet, Dressel fell just shy in his final race of the competition. However, he did start the night out with a big performance, chopping almost a full second off his PB from prelims in the 50 breast in 27.89. Liam Johnston (29.21) scored a best time himself for 2nd, and Jake Foster (29.42) was 3rd, as Dressel is now the 5th fastest American this season.

Dressel, rocking a TYR racing suit (his third different brand in three days), then took on the 100 freestyle. He got locked in a battle with Canada’s best in the event, Yuri Kisil and Markus Thormeyer, flipping .01 ahead of Kisil in 23.79. However, it was Thormeyer who stormed back in 25.53, edging Dressel at the touch in 49.54 for his fastest ever swim in-season. The 2017 world champ was 2nd in 49.58, under his season best from the Atlanta Classic (49.65), and Kisil (49.69) was 3rd.  Maxime Rooney (50.14) was 5th and Lochte (50.76) was 6th.

The 33-year-old Lochte won his third event of the meet in the next event, the men’s 100 back, clocking 54.75 for his fastest performance since 2014. Clark Beach was 2nd in 55.65, and Thormeyer, fresh off his win in the 100 free, was faster than Lochte (54.49) to win the B-final. That swim is his 3rd fastest ever, trailing only his semi-final and final performances from the Commonwealth Games in April.

In the women’s 100 back, U.S. junior Isabelle Stadden won her third backstroke race in 1:00.10, missing her best time by just .04. Katharine Berkoff dropped her prelim best time by the same margin for 2nd (1:00.65), and Phoebe Bacon (1:01.65) made it a U.S. junior national 1-2-3.

OTHER EVENTS

  • Padington easily won the women’s 800 freestyle, her third title of the meet, in 8:37.61 for a new season best. Molly Gowans (8:50.09) was 2nd, and Savanna Faulconer cracked 9:00 for the first time in 3rd (8:51.27).
  • Rachel Nicol completed the breaststroke sweep in the 50, touching in 31.69 ahead of U.S. juniors Zoie Hartman (32.08) and Ema Rajic (32.24). Hartman lowers her prelim best of 32.17.
  • Gianluca Urlando finished off his spectacular meet with a big win in the men’s 200 fly, going 1:59.12 to come within two tenths of his all-time best. Mark Szaranek (2:01.04) went a season best for the runner-up spot.
  • Gator Ben Lawless (15:29.75) held off Eric Hedlin (15:31.06) of the University of Victoria to win the men’s 1500 freestyle.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Oleksiak Doubles Up, Thormeyer Upsets Dressel To Close Mel Zajac

Florida Contingent, Bay Area Stars to Converge at PSS Santa Clara

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By Karl Ortegon on SwimSwam

2018 TYR PRO SWIM SERIES – SANTA CLARA

  • Santa Clara, CA
  • June 7-10, 2018
  • Meet page
  • Results TBD

The psych sheet for the Santa Clara stop of the 2018 TYR Pro Swim Series have been released from the USA Swimming website.

PSYCH SHEET

There are a ton of big names, between Olympians, collegiate standouts, and age group stars, expected to swim in Santa Clara next week. Notably, the Florida elite group along with several big names training in the Bay Area will clash for some great racing at the George F. Haines International Swim Center.

Representing Gator Swim Club will be recent grad Caeleb Dressel and not-so-recent grad Ryan Lochte, along with Canadian Olympic champion Penny Oleksiak— all three just finished up a weekend of racing at the 2018 Mel Zajac Jr. Meet. Besides the 50/100 free and 50/100 fly, which are the expected races for Dressel, he is again entered in the 200 free, 50 breast, and 200 IM.

Ella EastinSimone ManuelLia Neal, and Katie Ledecky head up the group racing from Stanford, while Cal will bring Nathan AdrianRyan MurphyJosh Prenot, Tom ShieldsAndrew SeliskarFarida OsmanAbbey Weitzeil, and Katie McLaughlin, among others.

If that wasn’t enough talent, Team Elite is showing up with names like Kendyl StewartCaroline BaldwinHellen MoffittMichael Chadwick, and Anthony Ervin.

Plenty of other big-time swimmers from pockets around the USA are entered to race, like world record holder Lilly King and Olympians Matt Grevers, KelsiDahliaMelanie MargalisChase KaliszLeah SmithOlivia Smoliga, and Zach Apple. Meanwhile, international standouts like Japan’s Ryosuke Irie and Canada’s Kylie Masse are expected to race, too.

The biggest age grouper to watch will be Riptide’s Regan Smith, who will race the 100/200 back, 100/200 fly, and 400 free. Another fast-rising American backstroker, though, is Isabelle Stadden, from nearby Aquajets, also in Minnesota. Stadden threw down a lifetime best 2:08.37 in the 200 back at the Mel Zajac meet and added another 1:00-low showing in the 100– the 15-year-old is one of several teenagers in American backstroke on the verge of breaking out.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Florida Contingent, Bay Area Stars to Converge at PSS Santa Clara

Shouts From The Stands: The Heart Behind the Swim Coach

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By Wendy Mayer on SwimSwam

SwimSwam welcomes reader submissions about all topics aquatic, and if it’s well-written and well-thought, we might just post it under our “Shouts from the Stands” series. We don’t necessarily endorse the content of the Shouts from the Stands posts, and the opinions remain those of their authors. If you have thoughts to share, please send themtoshare@swimswam.com.

This “Shouts from the Stands” submission comes from Kelly Call:

Coaching- we do it out of love, out of passion and sacrifice many things for the belief that we are making a difference. Sometimes making a difference doesn’t mean that we are always kind no matter the situation. Sometimes we are strict and truthful and raw… and that is something that kids do not always experience until the harsh reality of life takes hold. Sometimes it’s hard for parents to understand us too.

We can be supportive and try to find the silver lining in every dark moment of your child’s swim career. Other times we shed light on the situation and guide your swimmer to take ownership on their results based on their choices. We are a swimmer’s biggest fan and harshest critic. We celebrate with them during their biggest accomplishments and hide our disappointments in their failures and sometimes our own.

We can be demanding and understanding, most times we are both. We demand the best effort on their bad days and push them out of their comfort zone on their good days. We also understand that effort and attitude carries a swimmer farther than talent. We demand respect but understand imperfection.

Coaches are also imperfect. We make mistakes. We replay conversations in our minds and hope that we gave the very best to your swimmer; as each one is different. We have our own families who don’t always understand our passion and don’t always support the sacrifice. We miss birthdays, anniversaries, funerals, weddings and lose relationships for the greater good i.e. the team and swimmers. Despite trying to hide it, we have bad days too.

We want the parents and swimmers to trust us and we want to offer the best level of coaching we can give. We want your swimmer to succeed in all areas and care about them all. Sometimes we will make the wrong decision and sometimes we will say the wrong thing. We certainly want to be the best. Sometimes our brain blesses us with the perfect thing to say and other times we wish we could remove the foot from our mouths…but tomorrow we will try again.

We lay in bed at night and think about the team and the kids and the program. We have butterflies before big meets and pray that we prepared the swimmers to the best of our abilities. We want the kids to meet their goals because we know how hard they have been working and love to give them the speech about “hard work pays off”. We also prepare speeches for the disappointments and losses (which is a lot harder to do). Dropping time is the common goal between all involved and inevitably the measure we use to rate our value and success. But at the end of the day, the true measure is based on the kind of person your child becomes and we all play a role in that.

From birth, parents keep their child close and try to protect them from every and any pain. But eventually they must slowly release them into the world  and the world is not free from bumps and bruises. Each person who touches your child’s life will play a role in who they will be. Hopefully they become a kind, smart, strong, brave, respectful person who is resourceful and resilient.

Swimming/Coaches can mold the the areas that most teachers and parents can’t reach. To teach young athletes about strength they must also understand and experience weakness. For a swimmer to become brave, they must be faced with challenges and  to become resilient they must fail. And throughout their journey a strong level of respect for themselves and others is formed.

Each coach has their “style” and each personality puts another puzzle piece into the building of your human. Coaches vary in age, experience, intelligence, race, gender and come in all sizes. Each have something to offer your child. In my 20 years of coaching I have been on deck with every kind of coach. There is always the young fun coach who can be found with crazy socks on and is running the deck with exploding enthusiasm. Beside him (usually in a chair) is the older coach who is at his 1,500th swim meet in his career and he only stands up when the pizza arrives. And just like the swimmers, each coach I work with adds to the kind of coach I want to be. A swimmer will be blessed if they are able to work with every style of coach. Have fun with the new coaches, learn discipline from the strict coach, push yourself to the next level with the tough coach and enjoy the whole experience.

Sometimes I sit at a meet with all of my fellow coaches and smile to myself because we are such a motley crew. And even though we are all very different, our goal is the same. We share our passion, we share the love of the sport and we all want to challenge your swimmer to live up to their potential and be the best that they can be (not just in the pool), because if we can do that..every sacrifice was more than worth it and more.

 

About Kelly Call

I am going on my 20th year of coaching USA Swimming. The last five have been with Occoquan Swimming (OCCS) in Northern Virginia. I grew up a swimmer and started coaching in Southern California throughout Orange County. I LOVE to coach and have dedicated myself to developmental swimmers but am also active in planning social events, team building activities and volunteer opportunities for OCCS.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Shouts From The Stands: The Heart Behind the Swim Coach

You’re Stronger than You Think You Are

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By Will jonathan on SwimSwam

Being human is such a complex experience. It’s by no means simple. There are times when you feel like you’re on top of the world and where you feel totally invincible. There are other times when you feel like you’re stuck at the bottom and where you feel completely vulnerable.

Swimming is also a really complex experience. Again, it’s by no means simple. There are times when you feel like you’re a fantastic swimmer who can take on anyone who steps up next to you. There are other times when you like you’re never good enough and everyone else around you is and will always be superior to you.

Swimming can lift you up and make you feel incredible things. It can show you sides of yourself that you love and give you a sense of self-worth and meaning. Swimming can also throw you down and make you feel horrible things. It can expose aspects of yourself that you hate to see and give you a sense of self-loathing and hopelessness.

No matter what you experience in swimming, it’s important to understand this: You’re stronger than you think you are.

You’ve had bad races before, haven’t you? You’ve swam races that were dreadful. You’ve performed really poorly and gotten some pretty awful times. However, no matter how badly you managed to swim a race, what happened each time you swam one of those bad races? You got back up on the block for your next race and you decided to go again.

You’ve had some really bad training sessions before too, haven’t you? You’ve had some practices where you were basically worthless and couldn’t accomplish a thing. You couldn’t hold your pace at all and seemed to miss every single turn off the wall. However, no matter how bad a practice or training session was, what did you always do? You showed up the next day and went back at it some more.

You’ve also had some really painful races, haven’t you? You’ve had some swims where the physical and mental pain and exhaustion just felt like it was swallowing you up. Your legs were burning, your arms numb, and your lungs felt like they were on the verge of collapsing. However, no matter how painful a race may have been, what were you always able to do? You were able to finish that race and get your hand to the wall.

Lastly, I’m sure you’ve experienced some miserable failures during your time as a swimmer. I’m sure you’ve gone through some excruciating losses and moments of unbelievable heartache. You somehow managed to lose a race you weren’t supposed to lose or just barely missed getting that time cut you desperately wanted to get and worked hard for. However, no matter how much you’ve failed or how painful an experience has been for you in swimming, what have you always managed to do? You’ve always managed to stick with it, believe in yourself, continue to show up, and not give it up.

There’s a real power in recognizing small feats of strength and resilience. Many times, success and accomplishment isn’t the act of holding a trophy in your hand or grasping a medal that’s been placed around your neck. More of than not, success and accomplishment is simply the small act of showing up the next day. It’s having the eagerness and the willingness to suit back up, strap on your goggles, squeeze on your cap, and jump into the water despite the disappointment and pain you’ve experienced.

Perhaps you’ve just swam the worst race you’ve ever swam in your life and you still have 3 more events to go today. Perhaps that bad race has caused you to lose confidence in yourself and doubt whether or not you can swim your best in your next event. If so, just remember that you’ve always managed to bounce back from a bad race before and climb back up onto the block to go again. You’re stronger than you think you are.

Perhaps you’ve just had the worst meet you’ve ever had, where every single event you swam was really poor and the times were equally as awful. Perhaps that bad meet has caused you to doubt yourself, to think that something must be wrong, and to think that you’re going to have a bad remainder of the season. If so, just remember that you’ve had bad meets before and have always been able to get through them and turn things around. You’re stronger than you think you are.

Perhaps you’re coming off of the worst season you’ve ever had where you weren’t able to drop time in any of your events and it feels like you’ve done nothing except manage to go backwards. Perhaps this past season has caused you to question yourself; to lose the desire and determination to continue on. If so, just remember that you’ve had a bad season before at some point, and yet you still managed to continue on, to not give up, and keep pursuing your dreams. You’re stronger than you think you are.

The strength to keep going despite the pain, both physical and mental, is no small thing. The perseverance to continue onwards and stay the course despite your setbacks is not at all insignificant. It takes great courage and great bravery to WANT to keep going and push on despite everything you’ve been through. It takes real heartiness and real guts to wake up each day and keep moving forward. It takes true fearlessness to walk out of your front door and face the world. Each time you do, you’re proving to everyone around you, and most importantly to yourself, that you DO have great inner strength.

The fact that you’re still here, the fact that you’re still swimming, and the fact that you’ve managed to continue moving forward and following your path despite what you’ve been through proves without a shadow of a doubt that you do indeed have great inner strength. If you didn’t, you would have walked away a long time ago. You would have given up after the first painful swim, the first bad race, the first bad meet, or first bad season. Yet, you didn’t.

Swimming will always be complex. It will always hurt, both physically and mentally. It will always place challenges and obstacles in front of you. It will always present you with setbacks and roadblocks. It will always give you moments of disappointment and experiences of heartache. You’re always going to swim a bad race, get a bad time, have a bad meet, or have a bad season at some point. However, no matter what happens, and whenever you start to doubt yourself, just always remember this:

You’re stronger than you think you are.

 

About Will Jonathan

Will Jonathan is a sports mental coach from Fort Myers, Florida. His clients include athletes on the PGA Tour, the Web.com Tour, Major League Baseball, the UFC, the Primera Liga, the Olympics, and the NCAA, as well as providing numerous talks and presentations on the mental aspect of sport and peak performance to various sports programs and organizations across the country. He’s currently the official mental coach for the Florida State University Swimming & Diving team. He provides private, 1-to-1 mental coaching sessions for swimmers on location or through Skype, as well as providing talks and presentations to swim teams on the mental aspects of swimming.

Website – https://willjonathan.com/

YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC33_eUb7wjnlB1AGw4sDSfQ

Twitter – https://twitter.com/_WillJonathan_

Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/WillJonathanMC/

Read the full story on SwimSwam: You’re Stronger than You Think You Are

Fannon & Clogg Replace Simmonds & Hattersley On British Euros Squad

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By Loretta Race on SwimSwam

With the conclusion of the 2018 Commonwealth Games, British Swimming officially announced its roster of 43 athletes headed to Glasgow in August to compete at the 2018 European Championships. At the time it was noted that selected athletes Lizzie Simmonds and Camilla Hattersley would not be able to attend, but their replacements had yet to be announced.

Now British Swimming has revealed the two athletes filling in those remaining slots, however, as Tom Fannon of Plymouth Leander and Elliot Clogg of Sheffield will both be heading to Glasgow this summer.

Chris Spice, National Performance Director for British Swimming, said: “Tom and Elliot both add something new to the squad, not only as we head to our benchmark meet of the year, but also as part of our development plan for Tokyo 2020.
“Glasgow 2018 will give our entire squad the opportunity to perform on the international stage in front of a home crowd, which will test not only their ability in the pool but in the arena too.”
Fannon has international racing experience under his belt, having won the 50m freestyle title at the 2016 European Junior Championships. Clogg, just 19 years of age, is a backstroke specialist coached by Mel Marshall at Loughborough. He was the 2014 Bruitish National Age Champion in the 100m backstroke and made his Commonwealth Games debut this year in Australia, finishing 12th in the 100m back (55.42) .

The full squad selection is:

Freya Anderson (England)

Charlotte Atkinson (Isle of Man)

Imogen Clark (England)

Elliot Clogg (England)

David Cumberlidge (England)

Georgia Davies (Wales)

Kathleen Dawson (Scotland)

Tom Dean (England)

Tom Derbyshire (England)

Ellie Faulkner (England)

Tom Fannon (England)

Jessica Fullalove (England)

Luke Greenbank (England)

Kat Greenslade (Wales)

James Guy (England)

Holly Hibbott (England)

Lucy Hope (Scotland)

Anna Hopkin (England)

Calum Jarvis (Wales)

Dan Jervis (Wales)

Cameron Kurle (England)

Emily Large (England)

Jay Lelliott (England)

Max Litchfield (England)

Craig McNally (Scotland)

Craig McLean (Scotland)

Hannah Miley (Scotland)

Stephen Milne (Scotland)

Ross Murdoch (Scotland)

Siobhan-Marie O’Connor (England)

Adam Peaty (England)

Jacob Peters (England)

Ben Proud (England)

Nick Pyle (England)

Molly Renshaw (England)

Duncan Scott (Scotland)

Mark Szaranek (Scotland)

Alys Thomas (Wales)

Chloe Tutton (Wales)

Sarah Vasey (England)

James Wilby (England)

Cassie Wild (Scotland)

Brodie Williams (England)

Aimee Willmott (England)

Abbie Wood (England)

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Fannon & Clogg Replace Simmonds & Hattersley On British Euros Squad

Giornata del Nuoto e Della Sicurezza-Per Evitare Un Mare Di Guai

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By Giusy Cisale on SwimSwam

Per evitare un mare di guai

E’ il progetto della Federazione Italiana Nuoto per salvaguardare la vita umana attraverso la diffusione della “cultura acquatica”

Nell’ambito di tale progetto, domani, a Gaeta, verrà celebrata la “giornata del nuoto e della sicurezza“.

Location della manifestazione sarà la spiaggia di Serapo.

Dalle 11.30 alle 13.00 si simuleranno azioni di soccorso in acqua con mezzi aerei e navali ed unità conofile.

L’iniziativa nasce dalla necessità di informare ed educare la popolazione sui rischi in cui può incorrere. Soprattutto con l’inizio della stagione balneare, la Federazione è sensibile alle problematiche relative la sicurezza dei bagnanti.

Il presidente della Federazione Italiana Nuoto, Paolo Barelli, ha dichiarato:

“In Italia ci sono 70.000 assistenti bagnanti per 7.500 km di costa e 5 milioni di praticanti. Il tema della sicurezza acquatica è primario per la federazione. Noi sappiamo come formare gli assistente bagnanti, ma il nostro compito è anche educare la cittadinanza. Bisogna avere rispetto e fiducia del mare e degli specchi d’acqua. Nel contempo alimentare la percezione del pericolo e la prevenzione assicurando la diffusione di strumenti al servizio della sicurezza. Con questa manifestazione desideriamo sensibilizzare le istituzioni, affinché ogni specchio d’acqua sia controllato da professionisti ben addestrati. La nostra è una funzione educativa, è il cosiddetto salvamento didattico. Mettiamo a disposizione della collettività la nostra professionalità con l’obiettivo di vivere con serenità e coscienza ogni attività in acqua”.

Il nuoto Per Salvamento

In una penisola come l’Italia, circondata da coste affascinanti e meta di milioni di turisti provenienti da tutto il mondo, centrale è l’attività di Nuoto per Salvamento.

La tutela dell’individuo e del territorio si esplica attraverso la professionalità degli operatori e l’informazione degli utenti.

La sezione salvamento opera in sinergia con la Protezione civile, la Guardia Costiera, i Vigili del Fuoco, la Croce Rossa Italiana, Regioni, Province e Comuni. In questo modo si è riusciti ad ottenere la riduzione delle morti per annegamento e a rendere l’Italia più sicura per gli utenti.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Giornata del Nuoto e Della Sicurezza-Per Evitare Un Mare Di Guai

Sei Più Forte Di Quanto Pensi DI Essere

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By Giusy Cisale on SwimSwam

Ci sono momenti in cui ti senti come se fossi in cima al mondo, ti senti totalmente invincibile.

Altre volte ti senti come se fossi bloccato in fondo e completamente vulnerabile.

Anche il nuoto è un’esperienza davvero complessa. Non è affatto semplice.

A volte ti senti un nuotatore fantastico, altre vedi tutti gli altri come migliori di te.

Nuotare può sollevarti e farti sentire cose incredibili. Può mostrarti parti di te stesso che ami e darti un senso di autostima.

Nuotare può anche buttarti giù e farti sentire cose orribili. Può esporre aspetti di te stesso che odi, può portare a galla tutta la tua vulnerabilità

Non importa cosa provi nel nuoto, è importante capire questo:

Tu sei più forte di quanto pensi di essere.

Hai nuotato gare terribili. Hai sbagliato tutto o anche solo una minima cosa ed hai ottenuto tempi davvero orribili. Tuttavia, non importa quanto sei riuscito a nuotare in una gara. Cosa è successo dopo? Sei tornato sul blocco e hai deciso di riprovarci. Lo hai fatto anche quando durante una gara avevi le braccia intorpidite e le gambe morte. E cosa hai fatto? Hai toccato sempre la piastra.

Anche in passato hai avuto delle cattive sessioni di allenamento, vero? Ci sono stati giorni in cui ti sentivi inutile. Non riuscivi a tenere il passo e ti mancava il fiato dopo la prima serie. Tuttavia, indipendentemente da quanto una sessione di allenamento sia andata male, cosa hai sempre fatto? Ti sei presentato il giorno dopo ed hai continuato ad allenarti.

C’è un vero potere nel riconoscere piccole imprese di forza e resilienza. Molte volte, il successo e la realizzazione non sono l’atto di tenere un trofeo in mano o di afferrare una medaglia.

Il successo e la realizzazione è semplicemente il piccolo atto di presentarsi il giorno successivo.

Mettere la cuffia, stringere gli occhialini e tuffarsi nonostante il dolore e la delusione.

Quando una gara ti farà dubitare di stesso, ricorda che sei sempre riuscito a riprenderti e risalire sul blocco.

La forza di andare avanti nonostante tutto

Forse stai venendo fuori dalla peggior stagione che tu abbia mai avuto. Stai perdendo il desiderio e la determinazione per continuare. Se è così, ricorda che a un certo punto hai avuto una brutto periodo, eppure sei ancora riuscito a continuare, a non mollare, a inseguire i tuoi sogni.

La forza di andare avanti nonostante il dolore, sia fisico che mentale, non è poca cosa. La perseveranza di continuare e rimanere in corsa nonostante le battute d’arresto non è affatto insignificante.

Ci vuole un grande coraggio per dire “voglio continuare e andare avanti nonostante tutto”.

Audacia, forza, coraggio nello svegliarsi ogni giorno e andare avanti. Ogni volta che lo fai, stai dimostrando a tutti intorno a te, e soprattutto a te stesso, che hai una grande forza interiore.

Il fatto che tu sia ancora qui, il fatto che tu stia ancora nuotando, e il fatto che sei riuscito a continuare ad avanzare e seguire il tuo percorso nonostante quello che hai passato, dimostra senza ombra di dubbio che tu hai davvero una grande forza interiore.

Il nuoto sarà sempre complesso

Farà sempre del male, sia fisicamente che mentalmente.

Metterà sempre sfide e ostacoli di fronte. Ti presenterà momenti di delusione ed esperienze di angoscia. Ma andrai sempre a nuotare. Dopo una brutta gara, un pessimo allenamento o una stagione da dimenticare.

Sei più forte di quanto pensi di essere.

Ispirata da “You are stronger than you think you are” di Will Jonathan

Riguardo a Will Jonathan

Will Jonathan è un allenatore mentale sportivo di Fort Myers, in Florida. Tra i suoi clienti figurano gli atleti nel PGA Tour, il Web.com Tour, la Major League Baseball, l’UFC, la Primera Liga, le Olimpiadi e la NCAA, oltre a numerosi discorsi e presentazioni sull’aspetto mentale dello sport e le massime prestazioni. a vari programmi sportivi e organizzazioni in tutto il paese. Lavora anche come Allenatore mentale ufficiale per il team di nuoto e immersioni della Florida Gulf Coast University.

Se sei interessato a saperne di più su Will e il suo lavoro, vai al suo sito web  www.willjonathan.com  o connettiti con lui su Twitter all’indirizzo https://twitter.com/_WillJonathan_

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Sei Più Forte Di Quanto Pensi DI Essere


SwimMom Musings: Why I Miss Summer Swim

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By SwimSwam on SwimSwam

swimming photo Mike Lewis

For more than 90 Saturday’s between June and late July, I always knew where I would be —  on a 14 -year journey that showed me what community and compassionate mean in the busy rush of our 21st Century lives.   This summer I am  former summer swim parent.  My swimmer girl just returned from college, where she did earn a swimming athletic scholarship, but there are no more outdoor, community swim races left. No more timing, score keep, marshaling, or announcing. Most of all there is no more cheering and cheering  Summer swim is just a memory and leaving a void that is hard to comprehend.   The season has not started.  But I miss it. Here is what I miss the most.

1. Summer swim creates a sense of community in a runaway train kind of world. You get to know your neighbors at meets, pep rallies and pasta dinners.  For a few short months, you get a taste of life in the slow lane.

2.  Summer swim connects the little kids just learning to swim with the competitors in their last season. Little kids and teens are together as a team. And the older ones learn just as much as those starting out.  Swim fans cheer as loudly for the nail biter races so common in swimming short distances as they do for the six-year old finishing their first 25 fly. It’s the perfect storm of possibilities and memories.

3. Swimmers learn what team means. Because of the way these meets are scored, swimmers are challenged outside of their comfort zone for the good of the team. My daughter, a lifelong flyer, swam back in her last relay carnival because it was what the team needed.  This teaches our children to be flexible, brave, and determined.  These are some of best life lessons.

4. Spirit is the heart of summer swim.  Cars are decorated. Coaches dress up as super heroes. Parents caravan to away meets and gather for lunch when the meet is over.  The sport provides both competition as well as development. The cheering when the meet comes  down to the very last mixed age relay can be heard for a mile. Even if you’re not in pool, everyone is caught up in the moment.

5. Most of all, I’ll miss making memories. My home and heart are filled with summer swim moments. Perhaps, my favorite is the one I only saw on video when my daughter just barely out-touched an opponent in fly the morning after her grandma died.  Because swim parents are the very best, I was immediately sent the footage. Swimming with the wings of angels. When I watched her last NVSL race last summer and tried to tape it, I got a lot of pool pavement. I knew something special was ending. So I guess savoring the moment took over.

Summer Swim, I will miss you.  But am grateful for those 90 plus Saturdays of wonder.

 

About Donna Hale
Donna Hale has been a swim mom for 15 years. Her daughter Hannah swims for the Davis and Elkins Senators.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: SwimMom Musings: Why I Miss Summer Swim

SEC Freshman of Year Hugo Gonzalez To Transfer To Virginia Tech

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

Star Auburn freshman Hugo Gonzalez will follow coach Sergio Lopez to his new position at Virginia Tech, transferring for the upcoming season.

Lopez was an associate head coach at Auburn, but moved on to take the head coaching job at Virginia Tech when Auburn head coach Brett Hawke resigned this offseason. Gonzalez, one of the top freshmen in the nation this past season, will make the same move, joining Virginia Tech for his sophomore campaign, the school announced in a press release.

Gonzalez had an incredible rookie year, winning an SEC title in the 400 IM (3:35.76), placing second in the 200 IM (1:40.67, behind only American record-setter Caeleb Dressel) and third in the 200 back (1:40.82). He didn’t swim best times at NCAAs, but did still score points in the 200 IM. His times from the conference round would have placed him second in the NCAA 400 IM final and fifth in the 200 IM.

Gonzalez is a massive pickup for Virginia Tech. He would have won ACC titles in the 200 IM by almost two seconds and the 400 IM by almost five. He should be a massive addition to a Virginia Tech program that was 6th in the ACC last season. Just adding in individual swims from Gonzalez, VT would have added about 90 points at the conference level last year. He’s also a 2016 Olympian for Spain, and should be in the mix for a 2020 Olympic bid. He’s a former multi-time World Junior Championships gold medalist.

He’s also the second major name to transfer out of Auburn this offseason, leaving a bit of a bare cupboard for new Auburn skipper Gary TaylorSprint sensation Zach Apple announced earlier this spring that he would be transferring out to Indiana next season. Between Gonzalez and Apple, Auburn has now lost 172 SEC points, two SEC event titles and 8 relay legs from its 2018 squad.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: SEC Freshman of Year Hugo Gonzalez To Transfer To Virginia Tech

Watch: Podium Celebration from Red Bull Cliff Diving World Series

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By Coleman Hodges on SwimSwam

Press release courtesy of Red Bull. 

POSSUM KINGDOM LAKE, TEXAS – June 2, 2018 – Mexico’s Adriana Jimenez managed to hold off British wildcard competitor Jessica Macaulay to take her second ever win by just 0.1 points in what was the closest women’s final ever. Germany’s Anna Bader completed the podium as temperatures reached 100 degrees at a packed Possum Kingdom Lake, where 12,500 fans gathered on boats, kayaks and paddleboards to watch the world’s most daring divers execute dives from heights of up to 90 feet.

In the men’s competiton, Poland’s Kris Kolanus kicked off Red Bull Cliff Diving’s tenth anniversary with an exceptional display of diving to take his maiden victory at Hell’s Gate in Texas, powering past Michal Navratil of the Czech Republic in second and Blake Aldridge (GBR) who finished in third. Kolanus’s dive in the Final Round was the highest scored dive since the format was changed at the start of the 2017 season.

Neither the men’s nor women’s victories came easy, as Jimenez’s win was the closest margin in the five year history of the Women’s World Series thanks to a series of high-scoring efforts from the 33-year-old’s competitors who left only 0.60 points separating the top four women. For the two-time Texas and Women’s World Series Champion, Rhiannan Iffland (AUS), her fourth place finish was only the second time she’s found herself off the podium in 13 events and the first time she’s started a season without a victory.

Wildcard diver Macaulay was the biggest surprise of the US leg, securing the first ever podium for a female British diver in the World Series in only her second appearance. After her second round stunner from 69 feet, a back-3-somersaults, which broke the record for the highest scoring women’s dive, the 25-year-old completed the 20th women’s event in second place only 0.30 points behind, Germany’s Anna Bader.

In a day full of surprises, the 31-year-old Kolanus opened the season with a sensational victory and added his name to the elite list of event winners to make it 13. Navratil grabbed his second straight podium after the 2017 season final in Chile, while Aldridge made it three podiums in a row at Possum Kingdom Lake.

Quotes from the winners

Adriana Jimenez, MEX

“It was a big surprise and a big challenge as well. I enjoyed it so much and wanted to finish the competition, enjoy the last dive. I didn’t expect the results, because all the girls did amazing. If you look at the scores, there’s nothing in between each other. Anna is my idol since I became a high diver; her style is simply unique. Jessica is very strong and very brave. More girls are coming and they’ll step it up.”

Kris Kolanus, POL

“That was the plan! I came here with my difficult dive list and stuck to my plan. Everything turned out perfectly. It’s the highest score, so that’s nice to hear that but I can still do slightly better, but I’m happy if every competition turns out like this one. I think I have one of the most difficult diving lists, only David has more DD, so if he performs his difficult dives well, then he’ll be ahead. So that’s the recipe.”

Results – Stop #1, Texas | USA

WOMEN

1- Adriana Jimenez (MEX) – 302.20pts

2- Jessica Macaulay (W) (GBR) – 302.10

3- Anna Bader (GER) – 301.80

4- Rhiannan Iffland (AUS) – 301.60

5- Lysanne Richard (CAN) – 264.90

6- Yana Nestsiarava (BLR) – 258.05

7- Ginger Huber (USA) – 250.15

8- Maria Paula Quintero (W) (COL) – 224.60

9- Eleanor Townsend Smart (W) (USA) – 198.20

10- Irlanda Valdez (W) (MEX) – 183.85

 

MEN

1- Kris Kolanus POL – 424.85pts

2- Michal Navratil CZE – 394.90

3- Blake Aldridge GBR – 389.25

4- Andy Jones USA – 384.35

5- Sergio Guzman (W) MEX – 383.00

6- Steven LoBue USA – 379.35

7- Alessandro De Rose ITA – 373.20

8- Gary Hunt GBR – 370.50

9- David Colturi USA – 356.60

10- Jonathan Paredes MEX – 356.05

11- Orlando Duque COL – 338.20

12- Miguel Garcia (W) COL – 338.05

13- Nikita Fedotov (W) RUS – 331.20

14- Kyle Mitrione (W) USA – 259.25

Standings WOMEN (after 1 of 5 stops)

1- Adriana Jimenez (MEX) – 200pts

2- Jessica Macaulay (W) (GBR) – 160

3- Anna Bader (GER) – 130

4- Rhiannan Iffland (AUS) – 110

5- Lysanne Richard (CAN) – 90

6- Yana Nestsiarava (BLR) – 70

7- Ginger Huber (USA) – 60

8- Maria Paula Quintero (W) (COL) – 50

9- Eleanor Townsend Smart (W) (USA) – 40

10- Irlanda Valdez (W) (MEX) – 30

 

Standings MEN (after 1 of 7 stops)

1- Kris Kolanus POL – 200pts

2- Michal Navratil CZE – 160

3- Blake Aldridge GBR – 130

4- Andy Jones USA – 110

5- Sergio Guzman (W) MEX – 90

6- Steven LoBue USA – 70

7- Alessandro De Rose ITA – 60

8- Gary Hunt GBR – 50

9- David Colturi USA – 40

10- Jonathan Paredes MEX – 30

11- Orlando Duque COL – 20

12- Miguel Garcia (W) COL – 10

13- Nikita Fedotov (W) RUS – 9

14- Kyle Mitrione (W) USA – 8

 

Red Bull Cliff Diving World Series

Since 2009, the Red Bull Cliff Diving World Series has provided a platform for aesthetic free-falls and dives of ever growing complexity, spotlighting the sport’s finest athletes as well as the most promising talents and in 2014 it introduced a Women’s World Series. Celebrating its 10thseason in 2018, this rapidly progressing sport will crown two new champions during seven demanding competitions for the men and five for the women. Between June and September, this pure extreme sport will hit waters in natural and urban environments as well as remote and iconic venues of World Series classics.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Watch: Podium Celebration from Red Bull Cliff Diving World Series

Florida Splits Program, Nesty & Poppell To Take Head Coaching Roles

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

The University of Florida has split its men’s and women’s swim & dive programs, promoting former assistants Anthony Nesty and Jeff Poppell to head the men’s and women’s programs, respectively.

Nesty and Poppell were both associate head coaches under former men’s and women’s head coach Gregg Troy.Troy retired earlier this spring  after 20 years with the Gators. At the time, we reported the likelihood of a split program led by Nesty and Poppell, though the more than a month between Troy’s retirement and the new hires had started to suggest that Florida was instead looking at an outside hire. As it turns out, the Gators announced Nesty and Poppell as head coaches on Monday.

The split programs goes against the current of NCAA programs, which have seen far more teams combining previously single-gender programs than splitting previously combined programs. Florida had years of great success for men and women under Troy, but recently, the men had surged while the women fell off.

 

Florida’s full press release is below:

Gators Name Anthony Nesty and Jeff Poppell as Head Coaches
Nesty to head up men’s swimming, Poppell to lead women

 

GAINESVILLE, Fla. – Florida announced Monday replacements for long-time head swimming and diving coach Gregg Troy, promoting Associate Head Coach Anthony Nesty to lead the men’s program and Associate Head Coach Jeff Poppell (Pa-PELL) to lead the women’s program.

 

Both men have more than 20-plus years of coaching experience, are internationally acclaimed, having both coached and competed at the highest levels abroad and in the Southeastern Conference. Both have tutored multiple Olympians during their coaching careers and have guided athletes to both national championships and numerous All-America honors.

 

“We are fortunate to have two outstanding coaches, who are already heavily invested in the Florida swim programs, in a position to step up and provide leadership and continuity for our student-athletes going forward,” Athletic Director Scott Stricklin said. “The more we studied potential candidates to replace Coach Troy, it became obvious that the best choice was to provide Anthony and Jeff the opportunity to lead the Gators.

 

“Having won six-straight SEC championships, our men have had a run of high-level success, and I’m confident Anthony can continue putting them in position to compete with the best. Meanwhile, our women have developed some momentum in the last couple years, both in the pool and in recruiting, that Jeff has been an important part of creating. I’m looking forward to seeing him build off that momentum and get the Gators women back to a championship level.

 

“Restructuring the programs under Jeff’s and Anthony’s leadership will ensure our athletes receive the attention and coaching they deserve to enable them to enjoy an unbelievable experience during their time competing for the Gators.”

 

Anthony Nesty

Nesty is entering his 21st season as a coach at Florida and it is his 25th season involved with the Gators after finishing one of the most decorated swimming careers at UF from 1989-92.

Under Nesty’s tutelage, Florida athletes have garnered 1,148 All-America honors and won 43 individual national championships. He has coached eight SEC Championship teams and UF athletes have accumulated 177 SEC titles during his tenure.

 

“It is with tremendous humility that I accept the position of Head Coach for the men’s swimming & diving team at the University of the Florida,” said Nesty. “This day is very special to me, as I am a Florida alumni.

 

“I would like to thank Scott Stricklin and the entire administrative staff for having the confidence in me to lead our men. The administration has been extremely supportive and I greatly appreciate all of their efforts on my behalf and that of the program’s.”

 

The Paramaribo, Suriname, native has coached the men’s team to a top-10 finish at NCAAs for the last 19 seasons, including a fifth-place finish in 2018. Nesty has guided the men’s team to two top-3 finishes over the last 20 seasons as well.

 

“I am fervently passionate about continuing the Florida tradition of excellence in our sport,” said Nesty. “It is my goal to maintain and surpass the standard Gregg Troy and others before him set for the premium program in the country.”

 

Not only has Nesty coached the highest caliber athletes to NCAA and SEC Championships, but also to Olympic medals. While at Florida, he has coached 42 Olympians who have won a total of 23 medals, including 11 gold. Nesty has served as the head coach of the Suriname Olympic team three times throughout his career (2008, 2012, 2016).

 

Nesty has coached Florida athletes to five CSCAA Male Swimmer of the Year Awards (Caeleb Dressel – 2016-18; Ryan Lochte – 2005-06). He has served as the UF men’s swimming team recruiting coordinator with extensive international and club swimming recruiting ties. The incoming freshman class is ranked second in the nation by SwimSwam, and includes the country’s top recruit, Trey Freeman.

 

Nesty was a two-time Olympian who won the first gold medal for his country of Suriname in the 1988 Olympics. Nesty captured five NCAA titles for UF, the most in school history at the time. The only two Gators to have passed that mark of five national championships are Caeleb Dressel and Ryan Lochte. For all his successes as a Florida Gator, Nesty was inducted into the Athletic Hall of Fame in April 2002.

 

“I am extremely grateful for this prestigious opportunity and I look forward to leading this very talented team,” said Nesty. “It is great to be a Florida Gator!”

 

Jeff Poppell

Poppell joined the Gator staff in 2016 after 23 years coaching at various elite places around the country. He now enters his 26th season coaching and third with the Gator program. While with UF, athletes have won nine individual national titles, 19 SEC titles and garnered 67 All-American honors. Poppell has also served as the recruiting coordinator for the women’s team, whose incoming class is ranked third in the nation by SwimSwam.

 

“I am deeply honored to have been named the next head women’s swimming coach at the University of Florida,” said Poppell. “I would like to thank Director of Athletics Scott Stricklin and Senior Associate Athletic Director Mike Spiegler for their trust in allowing me to lead this program.”

 

During his 15 years of head coaching experience, he has coached athletes at the club, high school and the Southeastern Conference level. Poppell has coached Olympians, SEC champions, as well as national and state championships.

 

“I truly appreciate Gregg Troy providing me with the opportunity two years ago to join his staff here at UF.

 

“With the addition of two nationally ranked recruiting classes and the continued development of our current group of student-athletes, I feel that the future of this women’s team is bright as we strive to compete for championships against the very best in the SEC and NCAA.”

 

The Jacksonville, Fla., native served as a head women’s coach at the University of Arkansas from 2006-12. While there, Poppell helped the Razorback women’s program reach new heights after guiding 16 athletes to qualify individually for NCAA Championships, with 10 of these women earning 10 NCAA All-America honors under his tutelage. Arkansas’ fifth-place finish at the 2009 SEC Championships was the highest finish in program history.

 

Prior to the University of Arkansas, Poppell spent 13 years with the Bolles School and Bolles Sharks, one of the country’s most prominent high school and club swimming programs. At the 2006 Spring U.S. Championships, he led the Bolles Sharks to a top-5 team finish. During his time at Bolles, he coached four swimmers in the top-25 in the world, an additional seven swimmers ranked among the top-100 in the world and 17 current/former Bolles Sharks that competed at the 2004 Olympic Games. He was also recognized as the National High School Coach of the Year after leading the women’s team to a high school national championship in the 2003-04 season.

 

Before coming to Florida, he served as head coach of Gulliver Preparatory School and Gulliver Swim Club from 2012-16. There, he guided the Swim Club to its first-ever Silver Medal award, a prestigious honor which recognizes the top 100 swimming clubs in the United States.

 

Poppell has not only coached in the SEC, but also was a decorated collegiate swimmer and former captain at Georgia. To this day, the Bulldog program remembers his contributions to the team with the annual presentation of the Jeff Poppell Award for Leadership.

 

Anthony Nesty File
Hometown: 
Paramaribo, Suriname
Education: 
B.A. in Communications, University of Florida, 1994
Birth Date: November 25, 1967
Coaching Career

–        Head Coach, University of Florida Men, 2018

–        Head Coach, Suriname Summer Olympic Team, 2016

–        Head Coach, Suriname Summer Olympic Team, 2012

–        Assistant Coach, United States National Team, 2011 World University Games

–        Associate Head Coach, University of Florida, 2006-present

–        Assistant Coach, Cayman Islands National Team, 2010

–        Assistant Coach, Cayman Islands National Team, 2009

–        Head Coach, Suriname Summer Olympic Team, 2008

–        Assistant Coach, Suriname National Swim Team, 2004

–        Assistant Coach, University of Florida, 1999-2006

–        Assistant Men’s Coach, University of Florida, 1998-99

–        Club Coach, Swim Florida, 1996-98

Career Highlights

–        Celebrated the 20th anniversary of his Olympic gold medal as Suriname’s flag bearer at the 2008 Olympics Games

–        During his tenure at Florida, he has coached 42 Florida Gators Olympians

o   23 total medals: 11 gold, five silver, seven bronze

–        Eight SEC Championships (Men’s: 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018; Women’s: 2002, 2009)

–        Coached five CSCAA Swimmers of the Year (Caeleb Dressel – 2016-18; Ryan Lochte – 2005-06)

–        Under his direction, UF athletes have won 43 individual national championships, 177 SEC titles and garnered 1,148 honors

–        Inducted into the University of Florida Hall of Fame (2002)

–        Olympic Bronze medalist in the 100 fly (1992)

–        Three-time NCAA champion in the 100 fly (1990-92)

–        World champion in the 100 fly (1991)

–        Member of the NCAA champion 400 MR team (1991)

–        NCAA champion in the 200 fly (1990)

–        Goodwill Games Gold medalist in the 100 fly (1990)

–        Olympic Gold medalist in the 100 fly (1988)

o   Only gold medalist in the history of Suriname

Jeff Poppell File
Hometown: 
Jacksonville, Fla. 
Education: 
Bachelor’s in Business Administration, University of Georgia, 1993
Birth Date: February 7, 1970
Coaching Career

–        Head Coach, University of Florida Women, 2018

–        Coach, USA Swimming National Team, 2017-18

–        Assistant Coach, Team USA (Men), World University Games, 2017

–        Associate Head Coach, University of Florida, 2016-2018

–        Head Coach, Gulliver Preparatory School and Gulliver Swim Club, 2012-16

–        Head Coach, University of Arkansas Women, 2006-12

–        Head Women’s Coach for Team USA at the World Maccabiah Games in Israel, 2009

–        Coach, USA Swimming National Team, 2005-08

–        Head Coach, The Bolles School and Bolles Sharks, 2002-06

–        Assistant Coach, The Bolles School and Bolles Sharks, 1993-2002

Career Highlights

–        During his two season as an Associate Head Coach at Florida, UF athletes have won nine individual national titles, 19 SEC titles and have garnered 67 All-American honors

–        Coached three Olympians while at Florida

–        Named assistant head coach of the men’s team at the World University Games in 2017

–        Two SEC Championships (Men’s: 2017, 2018)

–        Coached Gulliver Swim Club to its first-ever Silver Medal Award

–        At Gulliver, he coached four U.S. Olympic Trial qualifiers, three finalists at the U.S. Summer Junior National Championships, and 10 swimmers who were ranked among the top 25 nationally in their respective age groups

–        Three-time Florida Dairy Farmers Florida High School Coach of the Year (2004, 2014, 2015)

–        Two-time Miami Herald All-Dade Coach of the Year (2014, 2015)

–        2005 NFHS Florida High School Coach of the Year

–        2004 NHSCA National High School Coach of the Year

–        Guided 16 women to NCAA Championships at Arkansas

–        Arkansas women’s program had the fourth highest GPA in all of collegiate swimming in 2008 and the program ranked among the top-10 nationally in GPA for four straight years

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Florida Splits Program, Nesty & Poppell To Take Head Coaching Roles

Northwestern Hires Meghan Hawthorne as New Assistant Coach

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

Jeremy Kipp has announced his first hire since taking over the newly-combined men’s and women’s swimming & diving program at Northwestern. He will bring in former two-time NCAA All-American swimmer Meghan Hawthorne as his first-announced assistant coach. Hawthorne was Kipp’s assistant at the pair’s prior stop at Boise State, and also swam for him while Kipp was an assistant at USC.

The two had a successful run at Boise State: after finishing 2nd at the Mountain West Conference Championships in 2016, their first season, the team won two straight conference titles. They won 13 individual and 13 relay titles in those 3 seasons and sent 9 swimmers and 1 diver to the NCAA Women’s National Championship meet.

After graduating USC and before her hiring at Boise State, Hawthorne was a coach with the Rattler Swim Club in San Fernando, California from 2009 through 2015, and swam with the club from 2001 through 2014. She also served as an assistant with the Viewpoint School.

As an athlete, Hawthorne spent 2 years as a member of the USA Swimming National Team in the 2012-2013 and 2013-2014 seasons, inicluding finishing 6th in the 400 IM at the 2012 Olympic Trials. She earned a silver medal in that event at the 2013 World University Games.

Hawthorne graduated from USC in 2014 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in human biology and a minor in occupational science and earned her Masters in educational leadership from Boise State in May 2018.

SwimSwam’s Swimulator tool shows that last year, Boise State would have been projected to win an all-events, swimming-only dual meet against Northwestern by a slim margin based on season-best times. Northwestern finished 22nd at last year’s NCAA Women’s Championships, with all 40 points coming from diver Olivia Rosendahl, who won her second-straight NCAA title on platform. She and Northwestern’s other NCAA qualifier, Calypso Sheridan, were both underclassment last season. The women finished 7th out of 13 teams at the Big Ten Championships, while the men were 9th out of 10 teams, beating out Michigan State by 12.5 points.

“Meghan played an integral role in the success we had at Boise State,” Kipp said. “She is an outstanding recruiter and remarkably well organized, but what makes her so special is her ability to connect with the student-athletes. She was a tremendous swimmer as an All-American and U.S. National team member, but not all great swimmers can make the jump to great mentor and coach like she has in her career. The student-athletes she has worked with know she cares deeply about their goals and I have seen them achieve great things because of the relationship and energy Meghan brings to every training session.”

“I am incredibly honored and humbled to be joining the Northwestern family,” Hawthorne said. “From the moment I walked on campus I felt right at home. Northwestern has a rich history in both academics and athletics that I’m very excited to be a part of. I am so grateful for the opportunity to continue to work alongside Jeremy and am looking forward to this new journey as a Wildcat. Go ‘Cats!”

Alik Sarkisian has been retained as the school’s diving coach, meaning that the on-deck staff has now grown to 3 for the swimming & diving programs.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Northwestern Hires Meghan Hawthorne as New Assistant Coach

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