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How to Stay Hyper-Focused All Season

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By Olivier Poirier-Leroy on SwimSwam

by Olivier Poirier-Leroy. Join his weekly motivational newsletter for competitive swimmers by clicking here.

Ya smell that?

It’s the sweet, sweet smell of a new season…

And the chance to swim even faster than we did last year.

Maybe you want to take that big step and move up to the Senior group on the team. Or you want to qualify for Nationals. Or you want to take your personal best time and give it the drubbing that it deserves.

Whatever the case, the goal you have for the new season is big and awesome.

But while your goal still has that new car smell, there is still the nagging worry about whether or not you can stay focused all the way through the season.

There’s gonna be ups—the breakthroughs in training where you level up an interval, swim a near-PB at the end of a hard week of crushing swim workouts, and drop time in everything from your 200 kick-for-time to your bread-and-butter events in competition.

There’s also gonna be the prerequisite downs—the setbacks in training, the moments of doubt and uncertainty, the occasions where you add time when you think you should be dropping, the DQ’s, the injuries, and all the rest.

All the while, you are going to be struggling to stay focused and motivated. Some days the fire will be there, other days it will be a mighty struggle to get your butt out the door and down to the pool. 

If there’s one thing you can do this season to get and stay hyper-focused on swimming at an ever-improving level, it’s to keep it super simple. After all, your #1 job in the water isn’t necessarily to beat the competition or even to swim a specific time. Your job in the water is to swim however many laps you race as quickly as you can.

That’s it.

Nothing more.

Swim there and back as fast as you can.

How to stay super focused in training

Okay, simple is good. Makes sense. Check.

But how can we apply this to our day-to-day training, when it can feel overwhelming trying to improve the thousand different little things that make up our dream performance?

Before the season gets underway sit down and write out the 3-5 most important aspects of your performance in the water.

Take a few minutes and think about what five things, if you worked on them consistently and diligently, would produce a gong-show performance for you.

Just five?

Just five.

No more.

If you do sail past that limit and write out a list of 82 different things you need to work on, pick the top five and put the rest in a drawer. Simplicity is key because it keeps us from getting flustered and allows us to feel in control of our training (and performance).

Once you have your list of top five your job becomes profoundly simple: to do those five things to the best of your ability each day in training. Stay on top of this regularly evaluating yourself (grading with an A-F score is easy, so is a simple 1-10 grading).

Doing this regularly will serve as extra reminder of what to focus on, help give you some encouragement when you see improvement in your grades, and act as a barometer between you and your coach.

(For a next level process, ask your coach to write out a top five for you, while also giving you a grade on them. You will be surprised how even athletes who have trained for long periods of time together will have fundamentally different viewpoints on what is critical to performance).

Your top five is the priority in your training. Crushing your top five to the best of your ability each day, over and over.

Long to-do lists don’t work.

I live by lists. I have lists for just about everything in my life, from my work schedule to what I am doing in the pool. (No grocery list, though. I like to shop for food by the seat of my pants.)

And the only way that to do lists work for me is by keeping them short. Does this mean I have less stuff to do? Of course not. It simply means that the top of the to do list has total priority.

Here’s an example of how our to do lists can get away from us.

Let’s say we have a goal of swimming a :23 50 butterfly next year. What are some of the things you are gonna have to do to make this happen?

Are you getting a sense of how this list could literally go on forever?

And yet, these things are all important, and they all form a part of your overall performance.

But what happens when you try to focus on every one of them at once?

Two things:

1. We white-knuckle it for a few days before getting buried.

A huge master list of things to work on is overwhelming.

Change is hard enough, let alone trying to change 82 things.

Ya might get a couple days where you get everything done, but sweeping change—as I’ve told y’all a few times already—is rarely sustainable.

Change is easier when we tighten up our focus.

2. We prioritize the easy things to get that sense of doing something.

Crossing things off our to do list is a gratifying feeling. We are achieving things, after all. The fun of a to do list is in being able to draw a straight and satisfied line through something.

But here’s the problem: because it feels good to knock things off our list, we will naturally gravitate towards the easiest things on the list, almost always at the expense of the harder items.

The satisfaction we get from crossing something off our to do list doesn’t recognize the difference between things that are merely handy for our performance and the things that are like jet fuel for our performance.

For example, doing 500m of race pace work today will be far more beneficial for your performance than spending ten minutes of extra core work.

I’m not saying that those ten minutes doing core work isn’t important, but it’s not as important.

Because doing some core work is easier than swimming a set of brains-out race pace work on short rest, we are going to naturally drift towards the easier option of the two.

Keep the focus list short.

Keep it highest-impact.

Don’t worry about doing more, focus more instead.

One of the reasons we fight against this simplified kind of approach is that we get the sense we aren’t doing enough.

It feels too simple. Too easy. Logic dictates that if five is good, twenty is a kajillion times better.

Fight this urge and stick to five. There is nothing easy about giving a full effort on your five highest-impact things each day. Especially if you stick with it.

You can try the long list approach, but trying to focus on a list a mile long will give you watered-down results. Exceptional focus and clarity of focus on a few things delivers exceptional results.

Build the process

After sitting down and considering your top 5 things, you will have a starter blueprint for your very own process.

An individualized recipe for Hulk-smashing your goals. Which will feel motivating in itself. By staying focused on your specific top 5 you avoid the comparison-making that causes you to lose focus.

Your process keeps you dialed in when things are going well and when things are going not so well. And you have something you can rely on for those pesky days where you aren’t feeling too motivated.

The process doesn’t care how the competition is doing, how you feel in the water, or any of the other extraneous garbage that we lob at our effort.

One last thing…

Don’t think that everything else on your list will fall to the wayside just because you decide to focus on five things every day.

Success is infectious, and if experience has taught me anything it’s that as you master your highest priorities the other things on your list will start to fall into place.

So…

What are the five things that you are going to focus on exclusively each day in training this season?

ABOUT OLIVIER POIRIER-LEROY

Olivier Poirier-Leroy is a former national level swimmer. He’s the publisher of YourSwimBook, a ten-month log book for competitive swimmers.

Conquer the Pool Mental Training Book for SwimmersHe’s also the author of the recently published mental training workbook for competitive swimmers, Conquer the Pool: The Swimmer’s Ultimate Guide to a High Performance Mindset.

It combines sport psychology research, worksheets, and anecdotes and examples of Olympians past and present to give swimmers everything they need to conquer the mental side of the sport.

Ready to take your mindset to the next level?

Click here to learn more about Conquer the Pool.

COACHES & CLUBS: Yuppers–we do team orders of “Conquer the Pool” which includes a team discount as well as complimentary branding (your club logo on the cover of the book) at no additional charge.

Want more details? Click here for a free estimate on a team order of CTP.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: How to Stay Hyper-Focused All Season


Athletes Need Breathable Air for Peak Performance

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By SwimSwam Partner Content on SwimSwam

Courtesy of Air & Water Solutions

As every athlete knows, an infinite number of factors can make or break athletic performance. It’s why there is so much focus on crafting the perfect diet, or designing a training regimen to best build muscle and increase endurance. Or why athletes put such emphasis on things like mindset or finding the ideal training location. If there is anything that an athlete can do to gain even a slight competitive edge, it’s a no-brainer that they’ll do whatever it takes.

But there is one key factor in athletic performance that has seemed untouchable: the air.

The swimming community, whose athletes go to the ends of the earth to put themselves in the best possible shape, has struggled mightily to mitigate the unpleasant and unhealthy effects of chlorinated pool air. If you really step back and think about it, changes here or there can only go so far if an athlete is coughing his or her way through practice every day. Or if they’re racing in between inhaler puffs every weekend. High-quality air is essential for athletic success.

With the BioOx air-cleaning system, we’re taking aim at the overarching issue of air quality – and doing it at a price point that YMCAs and local swim clubs can afford. Teary eyes and coughing fits cannot just be par for the course when it comes to competitive swimming, and athletes – not to mention coaches and parents – deserve the reap the benefits that come from an optimal training environment.

Rob Busby, a head coach at Springfield YMCA in Illinois, knows this well. After approximately three months with the BioOx system, Busby has seen great improvements in what his swimmers are able to do during practice.

“They perform at a higher level for a longer period of time,” Busby said. “It used to be about 50/50 in terms of our athletes getting shut down during practice if they couldn’t breathe well, and now every kid is able to get through.”

Coaching athletes with the BioOx system in place has actually been a little bit of a mental adjustment for Busby – but in a good way.

“There was one day recently where I noticed where the ORP was and I was like, ‘Oh great, we’re not gonna be able to do what I want to do,” Busby said. “But the kids made it through, and if we had done that six weeks before I probably would have had to stop because of the air.”

“When the kids used to start coughing, I’d tell them to leave the pool deck, go get their inhaler and take a walk and see where they’re at,” he said. “And then of course I’d start wondering, ‘Should I be stopping practice because of air quality? Or is the kid sick?’”

Jim Peterfish, president of Youthletics Inc. swim club, understands this issue well because breathing problems were commonplace for athletes at his facility before he brought in BioOx. Parents of younger swimmers often watch while their athletes practice, and what they saw had a lot of them concerned.

“You get a couple kids coughing and then it’s an epidemic,” he said. “You know not all of it is real, but enough is. That’s a huge deal with parents because they look at it as they’re putting their kid in a hazardous environment.”

Busby’s Springfield YMCA conducted a survey after about a month with the BioOx system to see if patrons felt the difference. He said the results were so overwhelmingly positive that swimmers who use the leisure pool – which did not have BioOx units on the deck – started pushing for BioOx.

“We got complaints from patrons who were coming to us saying, “hey! Our pool is not as nice now!” Busby said. “So we actually ended up calling up BioOx again and adding a few more units.”

With BioOx, we’re improving the health of athletes, therefore giving coaches the freedom and assurance to train their athletes smarter and better. It’s for that reason that Busby said he can’t wait to train for a full season with BioOx.

“I’m excited to have a whole year where I can just coach,” he said. “I don’t have to think through every little thing anymore or worry that we’ll have issues the rest of practice if the first group does a kick set. That was a huge point of frustration, and now I don’t have to worry about it.”

For Peterfish, the lack of predictability when it came to air quality was a real impediment to getting the most out of his athletes.

“You can deal with something like a one-time electrical failure, but the air quality issue was so frustrating because it was chronic and you never knew whether or not the air would be acceptable,” he said. “What BioOx has done is given us consistency.”

That consistency has translated to more practice time. In previous years, Peterfish said his athletes would have to miss about a half dozen practices during the coldest months because opening the facility doors wasn’t feasible during an Ohio winter. After bringing in BioOx at the end of last year, Peterfish did not have to cancel a single 2018 practice due to air quality – a fact he suspects may have had an impact on his athletes’ performance.

“We had more age-group kids qualify for the Junior Olympic Championships, which is how we tend to judge the success of our age-group program,” he said. “Our head age-group coach deserves a ton of credit there, but you can certainly also correlate the lack of lost practice time.”

Any athlete will perform better under healthier practice conditions. With BioOx, we’re impacting not only the world of competitive swimming but also equine sports. The same revolutionary biotechnology that neutralizes the harmful toxins in pool air creates healthier conditions for horses. Horses housed at stables with BioOx improved their racing times and lessened their asthma symptoms.

“Whether we’re working with swimmers and coaches, or horses and trainers, we as a company are built on the idea that you can have a dramatic positive impact on an athlete’s performance if you can ensure them clean, healthy air,” said BioOx Sales Director Ken Schapiro.

See Air & Water Solutions here:

http://biooxswim.com/

http://biooxequine.com/

About Air & Water SolutionsAt Air & Water Solutions, we’re changing the way people think about the air they breathe. We’re leaving a positive impact on the health of the Earth, and making it a safer, more enjoyable place for the people who live here.

Swimming industry news is courtesy of Air & Water Solutions, a SwimSwam partner. 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Athletes Need Breathable Air for Peak Performance

Bradlee Ashby Takes 2 Titles, Ciara Smith Earns NAG In New Zealand

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By Loretta Race on SwimSwam

2018 NEW ZEALAND SHORT COURSE CHAMPIONSHIPS

The New Zealand Short Course Championships, which serves as the nation’s selection meet for this year’s Short Course World Championships, got underway tonight in Auckland. Although Commonwealth Games medalist Lewis Clareburt wasn’t among the competitors, several swimmers made their mark on the meet by earning FINA ‘B’ qualifying times to earn consideration for Hangzhou.

Among them was national record holder Bradlee Ashby, the 22-year-old North Shore athlete who nabbed two new personal bests to top the podium twice tonight. First, Ashby battled Howick Pakuranga’s Daniel Hunter in the men’s 200m free, where the pair were separated by just .11 when all was said and done. Ashby took gold in 1:45.87 with Hunter right behind in 1:45.98, with both men dipping under the 1:48.70 FINA B cut.

Ashby’s next victim was the men’s 50m fly event where he notched the only sub-24 second time of the field. Ashby, who missed the NZ Open and Pan Pacific Championships this year due to injury, clocked a new PB of 23.96 to clear the FINA B cut of 24.03 and take home his 2nd top prize. Behind him in the fly sprint were Jeremy Tasker who touched in 24.18, while Hunter and Sam Perry tied for bronze in 24.22.

A highlight on the women’s side was Ciara Smith‘s new national age group record in the women’s 100m breaststroke. In the AM heats, the 17-year-old stopped the clock at 1:07.85 to take the top seed.  That mark surpassed her own NAG by a monster 1.19 seconds and wound up falling just .5 shy of Bronagh Ryan’s national record. Smith was slightly slower in the final (1:07.91), but still beat out the field with the only sub-1:08 time of the night.

Additional Winners:

  • Matt Hyde took the men’s 800m freestyle in 8:04.93, winning by almost 9 seconds.
  • 24-year-old North Short swimmer Carina Doyle won the women’s 200m free in 1:57.40.
  • Hokitika’s George Schroder was tonight’s 100m breaststroke winner for the men, touching in 1:00.98.
  • 18-year-old Vannessa Ouwehand owned the women’s 50m fly, earning gold in 26.97.
  • National Shore’s Wilrich Coetzee struck FINA B cut gold in the men’s 400m IM, topping the podium in 4:14.70.

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Bradlee Ashby Takes 2 Titles, Ciara Smith Earns NAG In New Zealand

Goldfish Swim School Signs on as an Official Sponsor of the USA Swimming Foundation

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DETROIT - Goldfish Swim School Franchising, LLC has signed on as an official spo...

Swimnerd Releases New Podcast: The Swimnerd Show

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By SwimSwam Partner Content on SwimSwam

Episode 1: The Swimnerd Show: Coach Don Regenbogen

If you want to add to the story of Jeff Rouse or ask a question, please record a voice message on our website and we will choose a few to share in the next episode.

LISTEN ON…

Coach Don Regenbogen (currently with OCCS) was lured down from Pittsburgh in the 1980’s by Doug Fonder (who founded QDD). There he met a young age group swimmer named Jeff Rouse.

Coach Don and I got to talk about a lot of things including Sudley’s remarkable 94 meet summer league winning streak. How college swimming has helped sprinters but hurt distance swimmers in America. And, the plethora of QDD swimmers (7) that went on to represent the USA in the Olympics in several different sports.

But mainly we talked about Jeff Rouse.

We touch on…

…how Bill Ripol really taught him to train. Bill was the 1987 ACC Champion for UVA in the 400 IM

.
…how he broke his wrist 8 weeks before his first World Champs Trails meet

.
…how Coach Don rigged up a bucket to a 10 meter diving platform at the old Marines pool

.
…how David Berkoff inadvertently lit a fire under his butt at the 1988 Olympic Trials

.
…how Coach Don knew, after losing to Mark Tewksbury in 1992, that Jeff Rouse was prepared to go on a mental journey for the next 4 years

.
…how Pablo Morales got him pumped up for the 400 Medley Relay in 1992, where he broke his own World Record leading off in 53.86. This record lasted for 7 years, 24 days. Nobody has held the 100 LCM Back World Record longer than Jeff RouseRyan Murphy is 2 years, 1 month, and 6 days in…

1988 USA Olympic Trials Results

Jeff Rouse

100 Back, Prelims: 56.81 5th place

100 Back Finals: 57.12, 6th place

200 Back, Prelims: 2:06.10, 28th place

FAVORITE QUOTE

“I like to think Jeff helped make me the coach that I am versus me being the coach that helped make Jeff. He doesn’t agree with me, but, ya know, when you have talented swimmers especially like someone like that, if you’re not completely ignorant and just give them a certain level of work, they tend to keep getting better because you don’t have to motivate them, they’re motivated to want to do it.”

The Swimnerd Show is brought to you by the Swimnerd Pace Clock: the world’s most innovative, useful, and affordable digital pace clock. Please visit www.swimpractice.comto order yours today.

Swimming news courtesy of Swimnerd, a SwimSwam partner. 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Swimnerd Releases New Podcast: The Swimnerd Show

Zone Diving Locations & Allocations for 2019 NCAA Championships

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

Between conference championships and national championships, there is a 3rd rung of NCAA swimming & diving championship season: the zone diving qualifying events.

Unlike swimmers, where hitting a certain qualifying standard or a national rank earns an athlete a spot at the NCAA National Championship meet, divers have just one opportunity to qualify for the big meet: via one of 6 Zone Diving meets. That’s because diving scoring isn’t objective like swimming scoring, and so the closer they can come to standardizing the scoring, in this case by creating relatively-uniform judging by high-level judges.

To qualify for the zone meets, divers must hit the Diving Standards listed below.

Who qualifies from those zone meets forward to the NCAA Championships gets a little complicated. Basically, each zone is allocated a certain number of spots in each event, based on how well the zone performed at the prior year’s NCAA Championship meet. In short, each zone starts with a baseline of 5 women and 4 men in each discipline, and then are allocated an additional spot for each top 16 finisher they had at NCAAs the prior year. No Zone A men, for example, scored on platform at NCAAs last year, so they still only get 4 spots for that event. Zone C, which includes the powerhouse programs at Indiana and Purdue, had 7 men score at NCAAs last year on the 1-meter, so they get 11 spots (4+7) for this year.

Once a diver is qualified, he or she can dive in any of the other 2 events, so long as they finished in the top 12 in their zone in that event. A certain number of divers from each zone have their costs reimbursed, while other schools will have to pay their athletes’ way – part of new rules instituted in the last few years to expand the diving field at NCAAs.

2019 NCAA Championship Zone Diving Meets

  • Zone A – Lejeune Hall, Annapolis, Maryland – March 11th-13th
  • Zone B – James E. Martin Aquatic Center, Auburn, Alabama – March 11th-13th
  • Zone C – Morgan J. Burke Aquatic Center, West Lafayette, Indiana – March 14th-16th
  • Zone D – Lee & Joe Jamail Texas Swimming Center, Austin, Texas – March 11th-13th
  • Zone  E – Douglas J. Wall Aquatic Center, Flagstaff, Arizona – March 11th-13th

Qualifying Spots Per Zone

Women’s1m3mplatformMen’s1m3mplatform
Zone A655Zone A654
Zone B986Zone B679
Zone C9812Zone C1188
Zone D9129Zone D9119
Zone E889Zone E456

Zone Map

Editor’s note: this is the 2018 Zone Diving map. The 2019 map hasn’t been publicly released by the NCAA yet. If it changes, we will update this article at that time accordingly.

Click to Enlarge

The 2019 reimbursement schedule has also not yet been released.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Zone Diving Locations & Allocations for 2019 NCAA Championships

5 Ways Parents Can Help Handle Conflicts

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By SwimSwam Contributors on SwimSwam

Courtesy: Elizabeth Wickham

One thing I’ve learned through experience is that when there is an issue that involves our children—and I feel like they’ve been wronged—I need to take a deep breath. And, I let a few days pass. I ask how our kids can settle an issue themselves before getting involved. I’m not talking about something serious where they could be in danger, but other issues like being signed up for events they don’t like or not making it into a higher level group.

Here are five tips to use at the pool and in other areas of your life with coaches, teachers and other parents:

ONE
Listen to your kids but do some research. It is possible that there are two sides to the story. If you only listen to your child, you may not have the whole picture. Investigate and find out the other point of view. Then you’ll be in a better position to evaluate if you need to get involved. Often, our kids vent to us but may not want our help.

TWO
Take some deep breaths, let time go by and walk or exercise before making a phone call or writing that email. Sometimes things that seem so urgent at the moment won’t be so worrisome after a few days. In many cases, a new issue will take its place.

THREE
Don’t lose your temper or you’ve lost. Having an issue about our kids can turn a mild-mannered person into a mama or papa grizzly. Staying calm if you do get involved, will help you get the results you’re seeking.

FOUR
Have a solution in mind. What is the outcome you want? I had a boss once say that anyone can point out problems—it’s the people with solutions who are rare. I learned from serving on our team’s board that people complain a lot. After every decision our board made, we got complaints from someone. Sometimes, just listening made the person feel better because people like to be heard.

FIVE
Understand that you can make the situation worse. This is a sad truth that with our best intentions, we can escalate a small incident into something bigger. Also, by problem solving for our children, we are taking away opportunities for them to learn and grow into independent adults.

What is your best advice for parents when kids are facing a problem?

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: http://bleuwater.me/.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: 5 Ways Parents Can Help Handle Conflicts

96 Swimmers Finalized to 2018 National Select Camp Roster

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.– Ninety-six top male and female age-group swimmer...


If You Wanna Train Better, Swim with Faster Swimmers

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By Olivier Poirier-Leroy on SwimSwam

by Olivier Poirier-Leroy. Join his weekly motivational newsletter for competitive swimmers by clicking here.

Going up and down the black line we can forget about the other swimmers in the lane.

But they are there, sometimes leaving a little earlier than they should, sometimes causing an unnecessary amount of waves, quietly and largely unintentionally influencing our own effort in the water.

The way that our teammates influence us can be so subtle that you don’t even notice.

There are occasions where this can greatly benefit you:

  • When someone in your lane is pushing through the main set, you might be tempted to hop on and push the pace too.
  • When the swimmer in the next lane is looking at you, clearly racing you, it fires up your competitive spirit.
  • When the other swimmers in the lane don’t complain about how hard the set is, it makes you not want to complain too.

There are moments where it can be detrimental to your swimming:

  • The teammate that cheats through the main set, making you think that skimping on a section of the main set maybe isn’t that big of a deal.
  • The swimmer who pulls into the wall from 10m out on kick sets, making you think you need to do the same in order to keep up.
  • The athlete who eats overly-processed garbage after practice, leading you to think, “If they are doing it, why can’t I?”

There’s a popular saying attributed to personal development guru Jim Rohn that asserts that you are the average of the five people you spend the most time with.

Looking around at the swimmers and people you fill your life with, can you say that they are bringing out the best in you?

Are you bringing out the best in them?

Choose Your Lane with Performance in Mind

Here’s an example of just how much of an effect the performance others have on what we do.

One fun little research experiment looked to see how our effort is influenced by the people we work out with.

A group of about 90 college students did a 20-minute workout and were told to keep it at 60-70% of max intensity. The students were split into three groups: one group worked out with someone very fit, one group did their session alongside someone not very fit, and the third did their workout solo.

Could something as simple as working out with someone who was in better shape influence how we hard we go?

You bet your water-logged butt.

When participants worked out near “fit” people, they stomped the gas on their effort, with their average heart rate far higher compared to those worked out near less fit people, with the difference particularly profound in the men: (133 BPM vs 119 BPM for the ladies, 124 BPM vs 99 BPM for the men).

The study fits into what we know (even if it’s just superficially)—that our effort tends to go up or down depending on who is next to us. Even when instructed to hold a specific level of intensity the participants ended up trying to mimic and match what the exercise partner was doing.

Side note: Those who worked out alone reported feeling calmer and more relaxed compared to the those who got partnered up—regardless of intensity. Maybe something to think about when you need a chill session at practice, or maybe even during your taper.

The study showed that if you want to get more from your workouts, surrounding yourself with people who are crushing is going to help push you to bigger heights.

What lane are you going choose at practice today?

At swim practice the lane we end up in is often chosen with less-than-ideal reasons:

There’s a lot of value in swimming with athletes who are faster than you. They are more likely to bring the best out of you. These are the moments where your limits and perceived notions of what you are capable of get redrawn.

Don’t avoid them. Chase them fervently.

If it’s improvement you want, choose to spend more training time with the swimmers who are going to push you and make you better.

ABOUT OLIVIER POIRIER-LEROY

Olivier Poirier-Leroy is a former national level swimmer. He’s the publisher of YourSwimBook, a ten-month log book for competitive swimmers.

Conquer the Pool Mental Training Book for SwimmersHe’s also the author of the recently published mental training workbook for competitive swimmers, Conquer the Pool: The Swimmer’s Ultimate Guide to a High Performance Mindset.

It combines sport psychology research, worksheets, and anecdotes and examples of Olympians past and present to give swimmers everything they need to conquer the mental side of the sport.

Ready to take your mindset to the next level?

Click here to learn more about Conquer the Pool.

COACHES & CLUBS: Yuppers–we do team orders of “Conquer the Pool” which includes a team discount as well as complimentary branding (your club logo on the cover of the book) at no additional charge.

Want more details? Click here for a free estimate on a team order of CTP.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: If You Wanna Train Better, Swim with Faster Swimmers

Minnesota Earns Verbal Commitment from Rapidly-improving Isaac Barrera

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By Anne Lepesant on SwimSwam

Isaac Barrera of New Braunfels, Texas, has announced his verbal commitment to the University of Minnesota. He swims for Alamo Area Aquatics Association and New Braunfels High School.

“I am extremely excited to announce my verbal commitment to further my education and swimming career at the University of Minnesota!  The combination of amazing coaching staff, teammates and academics made it the perfect fit for me.  Go Gophers!”

A NISCA All-American, Barrera specializes in free, fly and IM. He placed 8th in the 200 free (1:41.88) and 8th in the 100 fly (50.48) at the 2018 Texas UIL 6A Swimming & Diving State Meet. He also split 21.49 on the 200 free relay and led off the 400 free relay in 46.75 during prelims. After high school season he went on a tear, wrapping up short-course season with PBs in the 50 free, 100 back, 100 breast, 100 fly, and 200/400 IM at NCSA Spring Championship. He dropped in all his events over the course of the summer, finishing with A-final appearances and new lifetime bests in the 200/400 free, 100 fly, and 200 IM at Rochester Futures. It was a real breakout meet for Barrera as he scored first-time Winter Juniors cuts in both freestyle distances as well as the 200 IM and achieved eye-popping time drops:

 201620172018
200 LCM free2:00.761:59.171:55.94
400 LCM free4:16.804:14.324:06.21
100 LCM fly59.6056.91
200 LCM IM2:14.412:17.662:09.46

Barrera will join the Minnesota class of 2023 with fellow verbal commits Gavin Olson and Sam Kennedy. He will add depth to the mid-distance freestyle group headed by Nicholas Saulnier, Timothy Sates, and Kyle Van Niekerk.

Best SCY times:

  • 200 Free: 1:39.53
  • 500 Free: 4:34.18
  • 100 Fly: 55
  • 200 IM: 1:54.31
  • 400 IM: 4:01.36

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: Minnesota Earns Verbal Commitment from Rapidly-improving Isaac Barrera

Come Ci Influenzano Gli Altri. Migliorare Allenandosi Con I Più Veloci

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By Giusy Cisale on SwimSwam

Andando su e giù per la linea nera possiamo dimenticare che esistono altri nuotatori in corsia.

Ma ci sono. Gli altri nuotatori influenzano il nostro modo di allenarci.

A volte ci infastidiscono con le onde, o toccandoci i piedi, altre volte possono essere sprono per spingerci oltre il nostro limite.

COME CI INFLUENZANO GLI ALTRI NUOTATORI.

Chi si allena con noi può influenzarci in modo positivo o negativo.

Ci sono occasioni in cui gli altri possono essere di beneficio per noi:

  • Quando qualcuno nella tua corsia sta spingendo durante il set centrale. In quei casi sei motivato a non mollare.
  • Nei momenti in cui il nuotatore in corsia accanto ti guarda, è chiaro, sta stimolando il tuo spirito competitivo.
  • Quando gli altri nuotatori in corsia non si lamentano di quanto sia difficile il set, non ti lamenti nemmeno tu.

Altre volte possono essere dannosi:

  • Il compagno di squadra che imbroglia durante una serie. Classico. Siamo sicuri che risparmiare qualche 50 mt sia proprio un grande affare?
  • Il nuotatore che parte sparato nel riscaldamento. Pur di stargli dietro inizi a spingere già dai primi metri, salvo poi morire prima del lavoro centrale.
  • L’atleta che mangia cibo spazzatura dopo l’allenamento, che ti porta a pensare: “Se lo fa lui, perché non posso farlo io?”

C’è un detto popolare che afferma che  sei la media delle cinque persone con cui trascorri la maggior parte del tuo tempo.

Guardati intorno, pensa alle persone con cui trascorri la maggior parte del tempo e chiediti:

  • stanno tirando fuori il meglio di me?
  • Io faccio emergere il meglio di loro?

SCEGLI LA CORSIA TENENDO CONTO DELLE PRESTAZIONI

Le prestazioni degli altri influenzano ciò che facciamo.

Per dimostrare ciò, vi riporto l’esempio di una ricerca eseguita su alcuni studenti universitari che praticano nuoto agonistico.

Il gruppo di 90 atleti è stato diviso in tre sottogruppi. Uno ha lavorato con qualcuno molto in forma, un altro gruppo ha fatto la sessione guidato da qualcuno non molto in forma. E’ stato poi collocato un nuotatore ad allenarsi in corsia da solo.

Credo che potete immaginare i risultati.

Nei partecipanti che hanno lavorato vicino ai compagni più in forma, la frequenza cardiaca media risultava  di gran lunga superiore rispetto a quella dei nuotatori della corsia accanto. La maggiore differenza è stata riscontrata negli uomini: 133 BPM contro 119 BPM. Per le donne 124 BPM contro 99 BPM.

Lo studio dimostra quello che sappiamo già. Il nostro sforzo tende ad aumentare o diminuire a seconda di chi ci è accanto.

Se si vuole ottenere di più dall’allenamento, bisogna dunque circondandosi di persone che stanno lavorando al massimo e che ci aiuteranno a spingere di più.

QUALE CORSIA SCEGLIERAI OGGI?

Ci sono giorni in cui la scelta della corsia ha motivazioni non proprio ideali:

  • Non vogliamo confrontarci con i migliori perchè non ci reputiamo alla loro altezza
  • Vogliamo attenerci a ciò che è sicuro e familiare.
  • Semplicemente non  vogliamo lavorare duramente perché abbiamo paura del dolore che di solito arriva dopo.

Gli atleti che sono più veloci di noi possono però insegnarci tanto. Non evitarli. Cercali.

Se si desidera davvero migliorare, passare più tempo con i migliori nuotatori che abbiamo in piscina è la scelta giusta.

DI OLIVIER LEROY-POIRIER

Olivier Poirier-Leroy è un ex nuotatore di livello nazionale. Lui è l’editore di YourSwimBook , un registro di dieci mesi per nuotatori competitivi.

E’ anche l’autore del programma di lavoro per lo sviluppo della mentalità per nuotatori competitivi, Conquer the Pool.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Come Ci Influenzano Gli Altri. Migliorare Allenandosi Con I Più Veloci

Yoga for Swimmers: How to Incorporate Yoga Into Your Program

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By Jeff Grace on SwimSwam

swimming-specific yoga

Incorporating a swimming-specific yoga practice into your program is an effective and efficient way to accomplish many of your dry land goals.

When incorporating any modality into your training there are many things to take into consideration:

  • Goals for the specific modality
  • Time restraints
  • Timing
  • Facility access
  • Delivery of the program

Goals of a Swimming-Specific Yoga Practice

The first thing to do is determine what you want to gain from the yoga practice. Some of the benefits include:

  • Increasing mobility
  • Improving strength
  • Optimizing recovery
  • Developing body awareness
  • Injury prevention
  • Breathing efficiency
  • Moving with ease
  • Mental Skills

Time

How much time do you need for an effective yoga session?

An effective practice can be done in as little as 15 minutes. In fact adding different elements into your warm-up or warm-down routines is a great way to start.

An ideal duration is 45 minutes to an hour, but you do not need that much time to reap the benefits of a yoga practice.

Timing

Macro – Periodization

How yoga fits into your periodization is the most important aspect to consider when implementing a practice. To be effective it needs to compliment the training you are doing in the water in a systematic way.The yoga practice should be designed to address the different of swimmers so it can be incorporated seamlessly into a periodized program.

Micro – When to Do Yoga

The timing of a yoga session is determined by the goals of the practice. Yoga can be done before, during or after your in water training.

When doing a session before a practice they focus can be on active mobility, activation, body awareness, breathing and mental skills. A session during a practice can target mobility, strength, body awareness and breathing. After practice the concentration can be put on many different areas such as recovery, mobility and breathing.

Facilities

The ideal facility is very different than what is necessary. Just as a 50-meter is nice to have you don’t need one to excel in the sport.

What is ideal:

  • Mats
  • Forgiving flooring
  • Quiet space
  • Appropriate lighting

What is necessary:

  • Easy to breath
  • Traction

Methods

Online

Online programs are a cost effective way to access an expert in the field at any time anywhere.

In Person Teacher

There are many good yoga teachers, but when bringing someone in you should ensure:

  • They understand how yoga fits into your overall training plan
  • The unique needs swimmers have
  • The personality of the teacher resonates with the athletes

Using Different Components

Implementing different aspects of a yoga practice into your dry land training can be quite simple. Many sequences involve very common dry land and stretching activities performed with greater awareness and connection to the breath. The QSwim app is a fantastic tool to use for this purpose.

Classes Outside of Structured Training

Just as there are many great yoga teachers there are a lot of incredible classes. When doing a separate practice ensure that what you are doing fits into the periodization of your program.

This Yoga for Swimmers article is brought to you bySwimming-Specific Yoga the world’s top resource for online yoga classes and courses designed for swimmers and multi-sport athletes.

 

With a monthly membership to our Vimeo channel you will gain access to over 40 classes ranging from 15-45 minutes in length with two new classes coming out each week.

 

We also offer team and individualized programs.

Swimming Specific Yoga

Sign up here to receive the Swimming Specific Yoga newsletter

The newsletter includes information on how yoga can enhance both your swimming performance and your wellness.

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Yoga for Swimmers: How to Incorporate Yoga Into Your Program

FINIS Set of the Week: Life in the FAST Lane

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By SwimSwam Partner Content on SwimSwam

Set of the Week is courtesy of FINIS, a SwimSwam partner.

This week’s set comes from Randy Kasir, a former swimmer & current Business Development Representative for FINIS.

Combining equipment and speed work is a fine balance. Combining speed and equipment is a great way to get a full body workout, but it’s crucial to pick equipment that won’t interfere with proper technique at high speeds. We’ve put together this set to highlight the few pieces of equipment that trust, even at the fastest sets.

6 Rounds
Odd rounds = Free
Even Rounds = Stroke

6 x 25 Sprint with Freestyler Paddles (no paddles for stroke rounds) and PDF Fins
4 x 25 – Sprint with PDF Fins
2 x 25 – No equipment

For more awesome workouts, visit FINIS’ Training Tips & Workouts page today!

About FINIS, Inc.

John Mix and Olympic Gold Medal swimmer Pablo Morales founded FINIS in Northern California in 1993 with a mission to simplify swimming for athletes, coaches, beginners and lifelong swimmers around the world. Today, FINIS fulfills that mission through innovation, high-quality products and a commitment to education. FINIS products are currently available in over 80 countries. With a focus on innovation and the fine details of swimming, FINIS will continue to develop products that help more people enjoy the water.

Set of the Week is courtesy of FINIS, Inc., a SwimSwam partner.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: FINIS Set of the Week: Life in the FAST Lane

Ashby’s On A Roll, Collects Two More Kiwi Records On Night 2 of NZL SC

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By Loretta Race on SwimSwam

2018 NEW ZEALAND SHORT COURSE CHAMPIONSHIPS

22-year-old Bradlee Ashby followed up his record-breaking session from last night with an additional 2 golds this evening in Auckland. After taking the 200m free and 50m fly national titles on night 1, Ashby crushed a new personal best in the SCM 200 IM to kick-off another night of the New Zealand Short Course Championships and collect another gold.

Entering tonight’s final, Ashby’s personal best was the 1:55.30 NZL national record he threw down at these same championships last year. Tonight, however, the athlete representing North Shore registered a winning time of 1:54.51 to blow his PB out of the water and also very comfortably slide under the FINA B cut of 2:00.77 for this December’s Short Course World Championships.

Two North Shore teammates finished behind Ashby to make it a club sweep, with Wilrich Coetzee and Callum Prime earning 200m IM silver and bronze with respective times of 1:57.94 and 1:59.32.

Only about 30 minutes later, Ashby was back in the pool contesting the men’s 100m back race, where the versatile swimmer got the job done yet again. Clocking a PB of 52.06, Ashby nailed another FINA B cut to offer himself up for consideration for Hangzhou.

Another record-breaking swim on the night came in the form of Gina McCarthy‘s 16-year national age record in the women’s 200m IM. The Hillcrest Amateur Swim Club teen topped the podium in a stellar 2:13.40, a personal best by 1.85 seconds. The mark also overtook the previous NAG for 16-year-olds set by Helen Norfolk way back in 1998.

Behind McCarthy tonight were North Shore’s Yeonsu Lee and Ruby Matthews of Evolution Aquatics Tauranga. Lee touched in 2:15.46, while Matthews rounded out the top 3 in 2:16.31.

Additional FINA B cuts were obtained by winners Paige Flynn in the women’s 100m back (58.90) and Carina Doyle in the women’s 400m free. For Doyle, her winning time this evening of 4:06.81 smashed her previous PB by almost 5 seconds and dipped under the FINA ‘A’ cut as well (4:07.29), most assuredly securing her spot on the Hangzhou roster.

With Australia’s Andrew Hemsworth getting his hand on the wall first in the men’s 50m breast in 27.81, it was 27-year-old Malcolm Richardson who earned the New Zealand national title this year by finishign ahead of all other Kiwis. Of note, Richardson had retired post-2012 and focused on his medical career, but decided to come back to swimming now as a medical doctor. In just 3 months of training, the Kiwi was able to nab a national title.

Last night’s 100m breast hero for the women struck again, this time in the 50m sprint, with 17-year-old Ciara Smith clocking 31.83. That mark fell just .06 outside of the FINA B cut.

Additionally, for anyone wondering about Commonwealth Games bronze medalist Lewis Clareburt, the teen told SwimSwam that he decided not to target NZL SC because he wasn’t planning on going to Short Course Worlds. Instead, he’s planning on going to the Queensland Championships that are slated for December.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Ashby’s On A Roll, Collects Two More Kiwi Records On Night 2 of NZL SC

USA Youth Added To FINA World Cup Mix For Budapest

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By Loretta Race on SwimSwam

2018 FINA WORLD CUP – BUDAPEST

The 2nd stop of the 2nd cluster of the 2018 FINA World Cup is set to get underway tomorrow in Budapest, site of the 2017 FINA World Championships. In reviewing the entry lists, we see that many of the same competitions present in Eindhoven are making their way to Hungary, including series leaders Sarah Sjostrom and Vladimir Morozov.

Sweden’s Sjostrom sits atop the women’s earnings throne with a hefty sack of $72,400, while Russia’s Morozov saw a surge with his $10,000 world record bonus to top the men in $57,650. Hungarian Katinka Hosszu is on the hunt, however, holding a bag of $66,750 through Eindhoven and is entered in 12 events here, although not all count toward points earning.

For the men, Morozov’s teammate Anton Chupkov isn’t too far behind in $57,000, while America’s Michael Andrew has also cracked $50,000 thus far this series.

New competitors set to take on the field in Budapest include 2016 Olympic champion in the 50m freestyle, Pernille Blume of Denmark, as well as 2018 Commonwealth Games backstroke champion Georgia Davies of Great Britain.

For Team USA, mainstays Kathleen Baker, Kelsi Dahlia and Melanie Margalis are among the stars ready-to-go, but they’ll be joined by a young squad of stars n’ stripes athletes that includes the likes of Danielle Carter, Miranda Heckman, Mattias Blanco, and Tyler Lu.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: USA Youth Added To FINA World Cup Mix For Budapest


Park Tae Hwan Entered In Korean Nationals Later This Month

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By Loretta Race on SwimSwam

Despite hinting at possible retirement, 2008 Olympic champion Park Tae Hwan of Korea is expected to compete at this 99th Korean National Swim Meet coming up later this month. After bowing out of the 2018 Asian Games due to ‘not being in good enough swimming shape’, the 29-year-old freestyle ace stated at the time, “rather than saying I am retiring, I’d like to take some time to think about my future.”

The man is now among those slated to compete at the Korean Nationals set for October 13-18th, entered to swim the 200m free and 400m free events. If the national record holder indeed shows up and races, he’s a shoe-in for wins and qualification for this year’s Short Course World Championships. At the last edition of the international event, Park took home 3 gold medals, winning the 200m/400m/1500m freestyle. His performance in the SCM 1500m was especially impressive, with his winning mark of 14:15.51 establishing a new Asian Record.

Expected to join Park at Nationals is Kim Seoyeongthe sole Korean to win swimming gold at the 2018 Asian Games. 24-year-old Seoyeong took the top prize in the women’s 200m IM in Jakarta, earning a new Games Record and Korean National Record of 2:08.34 in the process. Seoyeong also earned silver behind Japan’s Yui Ohashi in the women’s 400m IM event.

Kang Jiseok and Lee Joho, who both earned individual bronze medals in Jakarta in the 50m back and 100m back, respectively, are also slated to compete at Nationals, as is An Sehyeon who won bronze at the Asian Games in the women’s 100m fly.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Park Tae Hwan Entered In Korean Nationals Later This Month

Hungary Eyes New Pool In Koriyama City For Possible Tokyo 2020 Staging

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By Loretta Race on SwimSwam

The Hungarian Swimming Federation will be putting a Japanese training facility to the test, with a 12-day camp happening this month in the Asian nation. Announced this week, 4 coaches and 12 swimmers (unnamed) will descend upon the Koriyama Shinkin Kaiseizan Pool, a 5,451.42 square meter facility that is situated about 130 miles from Tokyo and houses both a 50m and 25m pool. (Sankei.com)

The facility located in Koriyama City in the Fukushima Prefecture was just completed in July of 2017 with a price tag of approximately 4.3 billion Yen (~$37.8 million USD). The pool is approved by the Japanese Swimming Federation as a stadium to be used for official domestic competitions. If all goes well with the training camp at the Koriyama Shinkin Kaiseizan Pool, the idea is that Hungary would sign a formal agreement for an actual staging camp preceding the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo.

Koriyama touts its proximity to the Tokyo Metro area and the convenience of its transportation infrastructure, which includes rail network and expressways. Additionally, the Prefecture is the starting point of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Torch Relay symbolizing a memorial of sorts to those affected by the 2011 earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster.

Hungary isn’t alone in pursuing its pre-Tokyo camp site, as the German Swimming Association (DSV) is cooperating with the city of Kumamoto (Japan), while the British Olympic Association (BOA) signed training venue contracts with 3 Japanese sports facilities, one of which is the Yokohama International Pool based in the city of Yokohama.

Translation assistance provided by Rebecca Nishikawa- Roy.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Hungary Eyes New Pool In Koriyama City For Possible Tokyo 2020 Staging

2018-2019 Women’s NCAA Power Rankings: First Edition

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

As in previous years, SwimSwam’s Power Rankings are somewhere between the CSCAA-style dual meet rankings and a pure prediction of NCAA finish order.  SwimSwam’s rankings take into account how a team looks at the moment, while keeping the end of the season in mind through things like a team’s previous trajectory and NCAA scoring potential.  These rankings are by nature subjective, and a jumping-off point for discussion.  If you disagree with any team’s ranking, feel free to make your case in a respectful way in our comments section.

The Division I NCAA swim season is underway, and that can only mean one thing: the return of SwimSwam’s Power Rankings!

We started this process with preseason ranks we published early in our College Preview magazine, then used to count down our College Swimming Previews series on the web. These rankings are a bit different, in that they average out the ranking ballots of five of our top college swimming reporters periodically throughout the NCAA season.

Stanford has won two straight NCAA team titles, and despite the losses of some huge names to graduation and/or the professional realm, they remain our consensus #1. Check out our full ranks below:

SwimSwam’s Power Rankings are the average of ballots from a panel of our top college swimming reporters. While this should help readers glean which teams are consensus picks at their rank and where in the order things get fuzzy and more subjective, bear in mind that these rankings are not an opportunity to personally attack any specific writer.

(Also receiving votes: Florida)

#20: Northwestern Wildcats (2018 NCAA Finish: 22nd)

New staff is bringing great energy that wasn’t there before. The freshman class is sneakily good, and Valerie Gruest being back on the roster gives them a probable mile scorer to go along with big points from diver Olivia Rosendahl. -KO

#19: Missouri Tigers (2018 NCAA Finish: 15th)

Mizzou only graduates the freestyler from both scoring medleys. They’ve also got Annie Ochitwaone of the best versatile sprint relay pieces in the NCAA. -JA

#18: Arizona Wildcats (2018 NCAA Finish: 20th)

No individual scorers graduated, and Arizona had a great showing as a team at Summer Nationals. Factoring out seniors increases their returning points haul pretty significantly. And the relays mostly finished just on the wrong side of the scoring line last year – it won’t take much improvement to drastically change the Wildcats’ relay scoring output. -JA

#17: Wisconsin Badgers (2018 NCAA Finish: 17th)

We don’t have any idea what new coach Yuri Suguiyama‘s first year in Wisconsin will look like. But Beata Nelson is a pretty safe bet to put up big individual points and carry a couple relays. -JA

#16: Ohio State Buckeyes (2018 NCAA Finish: 13th)

You can’t overstate the loss of sprint star Liz Li. But Freya Rayner is about as good a replacement as you can hope for, going 22.0/48.4 as a freshman. -JA

#15: Auburn Tigers (2018 NCAA Finish: 16th)

Yeah, the cupboard is bare on the men’s side, but don’t sleep on Auburn’s women, who return six potential scorers (when factoring out seniors). Aly Tetzloff could be one of the best (and least talked about) sprinters in the country. And Julie Meynen was so much better on relays (47.7 split) than she was individually (48.7, 27th place) that it’s fair to suggest she could well outperform her sophomore individual score. -JA

#14: NC State Wolfpack (2018 NCAA Finish: 18th)

Injuries clearly wracked this team a year ago. But a healthy Ky-Lee Perry plus top-tier recruit Emma Muzzy, transfer Kay Sargent and Swedish breaststroker Sophie Hansson could mean a ferocious comeback for the hungry Wolfpack. -JA

#13: Kentucky Wildcats (2018 NCAA Finish: 14th)

When you rescore 2018 NCAAs without seniors, Kentucky returns the 10th-most points in the nation. That’s not a perfect predictor, but does show Kentucky’s returning strength. Asia Seidt keeps getting better and better. -JA

#12: Georgia Bulldogs (2018 NCAA Finish: 11th)

It’s tough to rank this group, which is powered by a highly-talented but unproven (at the NCAA level at least) freshman class. Is former #1 overall recruit Eva Merrell healthy? Just how many star freshman flyers will this program have? There’s a high ceiling, but a lot to prove for this group early on. -JA

#11: USC Trojans (2018 NCAA Finish: 12th)

We’re not going to know exactly what USC has until January, with top prospect Erica Sullivan sitting out the fall semester and a few other key pickups transitioning to short course yards. Transfer Courtney Caldwell could be a massive get, if she’s recovered after an injury-riddled season with NC State. -JA

#10: Minnesota Golden Gophers (2018 NCAA Finish: 10th)

One of the best diving groups in the nation, complemented by a great breaststroker in Lindsey Kozelsky and the support pieces to put together some outstanding medley relays. They’ll need a big year from the free relays (and to find a new butterflier), but there are big points to be had from this roster. -JA

#9:  Virginia Cavaliers (2018 NCAA Finish: 9th)

Sure, the Wahoos graduated a lot of points and key relay legs from Caitlin Cooper and Jen Marrkand. But at what point do we start trusting coach Todd Desorbo more than the questions his team faces? UVA overperformed expectations by a country mile last season, and another top 10 finish in 2019 would only add to the growing buzz in Charlottesville. My head says I ranked Virginia where the numbers say they should be (12th). My gut says that’s too low, and I might be changing tunes in a hurry by our next rankings. -JA

#8: Tennessee Volunteers (2018 NCAA Finish: 7th)

If the medley relays hadn’t been a whirlwind of errors, Tennessee might’ve been 5th in 2018. Then again, they graduated their breaststroker, so its hard to project those medleys scoring what they hypothetically could have in 2018. Still, a year of experience in the spotlight is going to help this upstart roster. -JA

#7: Indiana Hoosiers (2018 NCAA Finish: 8th)

Lilly King is still the heart and soul of this team, and who can’t get behind that much confidence and swagger? Doesn’t hurt that she outsplits the entire nation by multi-second margins on the breaststroke leg of both medleys, either. Bailey Andison is an impact transfer. And the young additions to the sprint group (22.1/49.5 Ileah Doctor and 22.5/49.7 Julia Wolf) should pay dividends on relays. -JA

#6: Texas A&M Aggies (2018 NCAA Finish: 3rd)

A&M graduated a lot, but they’ve already proven they’re a reliable program that creates NCAA scorers and doesn’t rely too heavily on a few top swimmers. They get the benefit of the doubt despite not returning a ton of points. -JA

#5: Louisville Cardinals (2018 NCAA Finish: 5th)

Louisville was scheduled to return all 20 relay legs, before rising junior Rachel Bradford-Feldman was missing from the 2018-2019 roster. Mallory Comerford is one of 3 serious candidates for NCAA Swimmer of the Year (Ella Eastin, Taylor Ruck) -BK

#4: Texas Longhorns (2018 NCAA Finish: 6th)

The Longhorns have steadily built up a deep roster and their sprint-heavy freshman class is a boost individually and for relays. -KO

A small recruiting class, but one that could have incredible relay impact with the best 50 freestyler (Grace Ariola22.17) and best 100 freestyler (Julia Cook47.82) in the entire recruiting class. -JA

#3: Michigan Wolverines (2018 NCAA Finish: 4th)

Our consensus #3 team, Michigan returns a very strong core and supplements with an internationally-accomplished freshman class. The Wolverines are well-rounded enough to have five great relays despite graduating key pieces. And Siobhan Haughey is next-level good. -JA

#2: California Golden Bears (2018 NCAA Finish: 2nd)

After Stanford’s Simone Manuel and Katie Ledecky turned pro early, Cal had an avenue to a 2019 team title. Kathleen Baker doing the same later in the summer made that road much tougher. -BK

Prospects look a lot different with Baker out of the mix, but Cal still has plenty of talent. Abbey Weitzeil could be the best sprinter and relay hero in the NCAA. Katie McLaughlin has been getting better and better since her 2016 neck injury. -JA

#1: Stanford Cardinal (2018 NCAA Finish: 1st)

That graduating class (Manuel, Ledecky, Hu, Howe, Engel, Cook) should be downright roster-crushing. But for Stanford, it just means the best recruiting classes of the last several years have more opportunities to shine. 48.2/1:44.7/4:36.6 sophomore Lauren Pitzer has barely gotten any NCAA relay swims. 3:59 IMer/4:37 freestyler Brooke Forde was basically an afterthought on this roster as a freshman. Last year, Stanford was leaving 48-lows off their 400 free relay, 22-lows off their 200 free relay and a 1:40 off their 800 free relay while still winning all three. This is the best roster in swimming right now, and while there are a lot more question marks than a year ago, it’s impossible to pick anywhere else at the moment. -JA

Full Ranking Ballots

RankJaredBradenKarlTorreyRobert
1StanfordStanfordStanfordStanfordStanford
2CalCalCalCalCal
3MichiganMichiganMichiganMichiganMichigan
4TexasLouisvilleTexasTexasTexas
5Texas A&MTexasTexas A&MLouisvilleLouisville
6LouisvilleTexas A&MLouisvilleTexas A&MTexas A&M
7IndianaIndianaIndianaIndianaTennessee
8TennesseeVirginiaVirginiaTennesseeIndiana
9MinnesotaTennesseeTennesseeMinnesotaVirginia
10USCMinnesotaMinnesotaVirginiaMinnesota
11GeorgiaGeorgiaUSCUSCGeorgia
12VirginiaKentuckyG

Youth Olympic Games: Programma, Start List E Gli Italiani In Gara

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By Giusy Cisale on SwimSwam

YOUTH OLYMPIC GAMES 2018

La cerimonia di apertura dei Giochi Olimpici Giovanili è prevista per Sabato sera a Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Pubblicata la start list del nuoto, dove però sono indicati soltanto gli atleti e le gare ai quali sono iscritti.

Le prime 16 nazioni ai campionati mondiali di nuoto 2017 sono state autorizzate a convocare fino a 4 maschi e 4 femmine. Per essere ammessi a partecipare ai Giochi Olimpici della Gioventù, gli atleti devono essere nati tra il 1 gennaio 2000 ed il 31 dicembre 2003.

In totale, 140 nazioni parteciperanno all’evento. Solo 13 dei 16 paesi autorizzati a convocare otto partecipanti lo hanno fatto. Essi sono: Australia, Brasile, Canada, Cina, Francia, Germania, Ungheria, Giappone, Polonia, Russia, Sud Africa, Spagna, Stati Uniti.

La Russia schiera anche  Kliment Kolesnikov. Il diciottenne è il detentore del record del mondo nei 50 dorso in vasca lunga e dei 100 dorso in vasca corta.

Kolesnikov è iscritto a tre gare: il 50, 100, e 200 dorso.

Da segnalare che l’ungherese Kristof Milak nuoterà ben 9 gare, e sarà l’avversario più temibile per i nostri atleti.

Top 16 nazioni – Campionati Mondiali di Nuoto FINA 2017:

SQUADRAPUNTI
USA1094
Cina521
Australia507
Russia500
Giappone466
Gran Bretagna434
Ungheria392
Canada355
Italia317
Brasile237
Olanda179
Svezia163
Polonia101
Francia101
Germania94
Spagna89

NAZIONALE ITALIANA NUOTO

L’Italia ha convocato cinque rappresentanti per il nuoto:

I cinque convocati hanno raggiunto risultati importanti nell’ultima stagione:

 

Con la collaborazione di Braden Keith

Puoi leggere l’approfondimento in inglese qui

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Youth Olympic Games: Programma, Start List E Gli Italiani In Gara

Nuoto Paralimpico: Annunciate Le Date Delle World Series 2019

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By Giusy Cisale on SwimSwam

World Para Swimming ha annunciato il programma per le World Series 2019, terza edizione della manifestazione.

Il programma prevede che le World Series si svolgeranno in otto città.

Ben quattro continenti saranno coinvolti dalla manifestazione, che si svolgerà da febbraio a giugno del prossimo anno.

Tra i paesi ospitanti abbiamo l’Australia, Olanda e Singapore, che faranno il loro debutto nelle World Series.

Per il terzo anno di fila, ci saranno tappe a Berlino, Indianapolis e San Paolo.

Confermata anche la tappa italiana a Lignano Sabbiadoro, che si svolgerà a Maggio 2019.

Nel corso delle tappe, le prestazioni individuali dell’atleta saranno valutate con il sistema di punteggio del World Para Swimming. Il vincitore sarà annunciato a conclusione dell’intera serie.

Il brasiliano Daniel Dias ha vinto entrambi i circuiti maschili 2017 e 2018. L’inglese Louise Fiddes ha vinto l’edizione 2018, mentre la nostra Monica Boggioni è la vincitrice delle Series 2017.

Le World Series prevedono anche premi per la migliore squadra. 

L’edizione 2018 ha visto il record del mondo di Carlotta Gilli nei 400 misti e dei 200 farfalla nella tappa di Berlino.

Il 2018 del nuoto paralimpico italiano è stato un anno che passerà alla storia.

Ai Campionati Europei di Dublino, l’Italia ha conquistato 74 medaglie.

Un traguardo storico.

Nessuna nazionale, di nessuno sport, ha mai ottenuto con 28 atleti un risultato paragonabile agli azzurri del nuoto paralimpico.

Ventinove medaglie d’oro, 23 argenti, 22 bronzi.

A questi risultati si aggiungono sei Record del Mondo e due Record Europei.

World Series 2019 – Nuoto Paralimpico

CITTÀDATE
Melbourne, Australia
15-17 febbraio
TBA, Paesi Bassi marzo
Indianapolis, USAaprile 04-06
Glasgow, Gran Bretagna25-28 aprile
Sao Paulo, Brasile26-28 aprile
Singaporemaggio 10-12
Lignano Sabbiadoro, Italiamaggio

 

Con la collaborazione di Torrey Hart

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Nuoto Paralimpico: Annunciate Le Date Delle World Series 2019

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