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Want to Be Mentally Tougher This Season? Sleep More

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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.

Mental toughness isn’t just about being more gritty than the next swimmer; it’s about taking care of yourself between practices. Here’s how sleep will help you be more resilient this season.

The life of a competitive swimmer can be grueling. You don’t really need me to tell you that. Between the early morning workouts, the in-season meets, and a season that stretches across every month on the calendar, we put a lot of time and energy into the sport.

As a result of all the millions and millions of swim practices, and all of the competing interests for our time—school, eating, what passes for a social life, more eating—our schedule becomes taxed to the point that we start looking for things to cut corners on.

Unfortunately, sleep is usually the first thing on the cutting block.

Your coach has told you a hundred times how important it is. So have your parents. And so have I.

When you think of what mental toughness is, there are probably a host of different examples that come to mind. It’s being able to show up on those early mornings when you are sore and tired. It’s finishing the main set at full throttle even though your lungs and muscles are screaming for oxygen. It’s doing the little things right, even when you don’t feel like doing them.

Mental toughness, essentially, is the ability to withstand stress.

The approach we take when it comes to “toughening up” usually goes against how mental toughness works, however. We go balls-to-the-wall all the time, never giving ourselves a chance to recover and rejuvenate. Or we treat our bodies like a five-alarm dumpster fire between practices, ensuring that we never have a chance to properly bounce back.

The sneaky reality of mental toughness is buried in how we well we recharge and recover. It’s looking after ourselves physically and mentally so that we can “top up” our toughness for moments where we need it most.

Mental Toughness Comes from Proper Recovery

Some swimmers naturally come by exceptional levels of resilience. There’s no arguing that point. There are athletes among us have a better developed approach to mental toughness.

But mental toughness is not something that is static or even entirely genetic. It’s a skill, something that we can crank up when we give it a little bit of TLC.

And one of the easiest (and most enjoyable) ways to secure yourself some hot-blooded mental toughness is spending more time in the sheets.

Lack of Sleep Makes Your Workouts Harder Than They Need to Be

Think back to the last time you went back-to-back sleepless nights: how did those workouts go?

Sleep deprivation causes things to feel harder than they should. When we experience sleeplessness the next day our rate of perceived effort goes up—even off just one night of bad sleep, meaning that the hard workout planned is going to feel even harder.

Sleep deprivation causes our ability to pay attention to plummet. Ever notice that it gets harder to focus on things when you are tired? Things like the interval, the breathing pattern, or even keeping track of how many rounds of the main set you’ve done?

Sleep deprivation causes us to be sicker more often. Unsurprisingly, when we subject ourselves to sleep loss we put our bodies at risk of being sick. Research has consistently shown a connection between poor sleep and bad health outcomes (here’s one), which should make intuitive sense: how many times have you gotten sick when your schedule was over-burdened?

Sleep deprivation makes us less tough. One study found that teenagers who had higher levels of mental toughness slept better, slept longer and more deeply, and woke up less often compared to their groggy and less mentally tough peers.

The Next Step

Getting more sleep usually means that you are going to have cut corners elsewhere.

Perhaps they are going to be things that you think you need (Netflix, chatting on your phone till the wee hours of the morning, scrolling social feeds like the wheel on Wheel of Fortune). Perhaps it means you need to get serious about your schedule. (Here are some more ideas on how to carve out time for more sleep.)

Write yourself out a sleep schedule. Get some naps in. Spend more quality time with your pillows.

Higher levels of mental toughness and better and faster swimming await.

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: Yuppers–we do team orders of “Conquer the Pool” which include 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: Want to Be Mentally Tougher This Season? Sleep More


Swimming’s TopTenTweets: UNO Toasting

Haley Anderson Preoccupata Per Situazione Acque Libere Tokyo 2020

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By Giusy Cisale on SwimSwam

Haley Anderson ha recentemente affrontato il tema acque libere alle Olimpiadi di Tokyo in un forum di Reddit.com del canale NBC .

Un utente (marco_esquandolas) ha posto la seguente domanda:

“Lavoro per un sindacato. Scuotevo la testa alle passate Olimpiadi per le condizioni di salute che i nuotatori in acque libere hanno dovuto rischiare semplicemente per poter competere nell’evento più prestigioso di questo sport. Ritiene che parte del processo di valutazione delle offerte debba concentrarsi maggiormente sugli standard di qualità dell’acqua? Gli standard minimi per i batteri, ecc. dovrebbero essere più severi? Vi preoccupate dei rischi per la salute? Questo è un argomento di discussione vivo tra i vostri compagni?”.

La Anderson ha dato la seguente risposta. Afferma che gli atleti hanno espresso preoccupazioni che sono “rimaste inascoltate”:

“E’ qualcosa che abbiamo dovuto affrontare in passato e che stiamo affrontando ancora oggi. Per Tokyo il nostro evento non è compromesso solo dalla qualità dell’acqua. Anche la temperatura dell’acqua è molto pericolosa. Non c’è nemmeno una sede di piano B, che a mio parere non dovrebbe essere negoziabile. E’ una cosa di cui abbiamo discusso tra i concorrenti, ma che finora è rimasta inascoltata. E’ difficile andare alle Olimpiadi essendo preoccupati per la nostra sicurezza. Non ho fiducia che FINA (organo di governo acquatico) o il CIO (comitato olimpico internazionale) abbiano la stessa preoccupazione per gli atleti”.

GLI ALLARMI GIA’ AD AGOSTO ’19

Lo scorso agosto alcuni atleti, avevano già espresso le loro preoccupazioni dopo aver partecipato a una prova olimpica in mare aperto nel Parco Marino di Odaiba, Giappone.

Il tunisino Ous Melloulitre medaglie olimpiche, aveva dichiarato in quella occasione:

“Questa è stata la gara più calda che abbia mai fatto”. “Mi sono sentito bene per i primi 2 km, poi mi sono surriscaldato”.

In ottobre, Haley Anderson e la compagna Ashley Twichell erano pronte a rappresentare gli Stati Uniti ai World Beach Games inaugurali di Doha. Gli Stati Uniti che il Canada si sono però ritirati per le temperature previste dell’acqua (30 gradi).

In quella stessa location, nel 2010, morì Fran Crippen durante una tappa della FINA Marathon Swim Series.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Haley Anderson Preoccupata Per Situazione Acque Libere Tokyo 2020

Practice + Pancakes: Kentucky Throws Down Short Rest 200 Pace

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By Coleman Hodges on SwimSwam

FORM is swim goggles with a smart display. FORM is a sports technology company with a simple mission: to break down the barriers between what swimming is and what it could be.

After the Pro Swim in Knoxville, SwimSwam headed just north up Lexington to see what the University of Kentucky was up to. On this Tuesday afternoon, they were mostly doing various forms of 200 pace work. I focused mostly on the women’s side of the pool, and got to see Kentucky’s famed “Backstroke U” group in action.

The set was 4 rounds of 3×75 @ :55 seconds, trying to hit 200 pace. Between Asia Seidt, Caitlin Brooks, Ali Galyer, and Sophie Sorenson in this UK backstroke core, it was a sight to behold.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Practice + Pancakes: Kentucky Throws Down Short Rest 200 Pace

Daily Swim Coach Workout #61

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By Dan Dingman on SwimSwam

SwimSwam’s daily swimming workout series is a collection of workouts written by coaches from a variety of backgrounds. All daily swimming workouts have been written using Commit Swimming. The workouts themselves are not indicative of SwimSwam’s or Commit’s views on training. They strictly reflect the opinions of the author swim coach.

Workout Context

  • Purpose:  Base building
  • Target age group:  13-18 years old, 19-22 years old, 23+ years old
  • Target level:  Age Group (Advanced), National/ Collegiate Level, Elite International Level, Masters (Advanced)
  • Weeks until target meet:  < 1 week
  • Team Location:  United States
  • Course:  25 Yards
  • Shared workout link:  Click here to view this workout on commitswimming.com

The Workout

warm-up
    1×800 swim
2x
    2×25 epic under water kick @40
    2×50 choice kick @1:00
8×25 choice to prepare for 1st sprint set @40
4x
    3×75 choice EN3 FAST @1:30
    1×25 choice sprint @30
    1×100 easy @2:30
10×50 free pull 4-easy recovery / 6-breathing 3/5 3/7 @55
10×50 back w/B 1-EN1 / 1- 25 mod / 25 FAST – use legs – tight kick @55
6x
    1×75 choice Sprint @1:30
    1×75 easy @1:30
3x
    3×50 EN1 free @45
    2×25 epic under water kick @40
6×25 choice FAST turns @40


Rick Guenther
Head Coach, Corvallis Aquatic Team

SwimSwam’s daily swimming workout is powered by Commit Swimming.

Commit Swimming

Swimming news for swim coaches and swim teams, courtesy of Commit Swimming. Click here to view all daily swimming workouts on SwimSwam.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Daily Swim Coach Workout #61

Update: NY Coach Suspension Came After Allegedly Providing Alcohol to Minor

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By Jared Anderson on SwimSwam

A New York high school and club swim coach suspended by the U.S. Center for SafeSport was arrested for allegedly providing alcohol to a minor, WENY News reports.

Last week, we reported on Mark Miles‘ inclusion in the U.S. Center for SafeSport’s database as well as on USA Swimming’s temporary ban list. Miles was formerly the head coach for girls swimming & diving at Horseheads Central School District, and was previously listed as the head senior coach for Thrashers Swimming out of New York. Miles was given a temporary suspension and a no-contact directive by the U.S. Center for SafeSport as of January 29.

WENY News now reports that Miles was arrested by the Horseheads Police Department and charged with unlawfully dealing with a child. WENY reports that the charge is for allegedly providing alcohol to a person younger than 21 years old.

The Horseheads School District provided SwimSwam the following statement, noting that he is no longer employed in the district:

“Mr. Miles is no longer employed by the Horseheads Central School District. As this is a personnel matter, we cannot comment further. Any further questions should be directed to the Horseheads Police Department.”

Thrashers Swimming did not respond to our request for comment, but Miles is no longer listed on the team website’s coaches page.

Miles has also not responded to our request for comment.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Update: NY Coach Suspension Came After Allegedly Providing Alcohol to Minor

Heavy Lies The Crown Part 2: Men With OLY Qualifying Times

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By Retta Race on SwimSwam

We are one month into the year of the 2020 Summer Olympic Games bound for Tokyo, Japan, which means swimmers are making every start, every stroke, and every finish count as a final preparation step in qualification.

Jockeying for the top spot in the season’s world rankings may not be the top priority at this point in time for the upper echelons of the world’s elite, but it doesn’t hurt to carry the confidence with you that comes with ranking #1 in the world heading into your nation’s Olympic Trials.

Earlier this year we published the complete list of Olympic Trials meets per nation. But, as we mentioned in that piece, although FINA dictates the overall Olympic qualification process in terms of consideration times and the time frame window to make the cut, most individual nations also draft their own official selection criteria that stands as the ultimate say in whether or not a swimmer books his or her ticket to Tokyo.

With that in mind, let’s take a look at the top performers in each event for the time period of August 2, 2019, through January 29, 2020, who have achieved a FINA ‘A’ cut for the 2020 Olympic Games, knowing that, for most swimmers, that time is arbitrary.

This post will include the men’s events, while you can find our previously published women’s version here.

 

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Men 50 Freestyle (22.01)
RankTimeNameTeamMeet NameMeet CityMeet CountryDate
121.27MOROZOV VladimirRUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019SingaporeSGP15/08/2019
221.56MANAUDOU FlorentFRA22nd Luxembourg Euro MeetLuxembourgLUX25/01/2020
321.59FRATUS BrunoBRAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA05/12/2019
421.78ANDREW MichaelUSAFINA Swimming World Cup 2019SingaporeSGP15/08/2019
521.81APPLE ZachUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA05/12/2019
621.86GKOLOMEEV KristianGREFINA Champions Swim Series 2020BeijingCHN18/01/2020
721.92SHIOURA ShinriJPNFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN2/8/2019
821.93MATSUI KosukeJPNFINA Swimming World Cup 2019BerlinGER11/10/2019
921.97BUKHOV VladyslavUKR22nd Luxembourg Euro MeetLuxembourgLUX25/01/2020
921.97CHADWICK MichaelUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA05/12/2019
1121.99DOTTO LucaITANational Winter ChampionshipsRiccioneITA12/12/2019
Men 100 Freestyle (48.57)
RankTimeNameTeamMeet NameMeet CityMeet CountryDate
147.69APPLE ZachUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA07/12/2019
247.78GRINEV VladislavRUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019KazanRUS02/11/2019
347.88MOROZOV VladimirRUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019SingaporeSGP16/08/2019
447.99CHALMERS KyleAUSSouth Australian State ChampionshipsAdelaideAUS21/02/2020
548.15PIERONI BlakeUSAFINA Swimming World Cup 2019SingaporeSGP16/08/2019
648.22MIRESSI AlessandroITANational Winter ChampionshipsRiccioneITA13/12/2019
748.38VENDRAME IvanoITANational Winter ChampionshipsRiccioneITA13/12/2019
848.41VEKOVISHCHEV MikhailRUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019KazanRUS02/11/2019
948.45FARRIS DeanUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA07/12/2019
948.45SZABO SZEBASZTIANHUNFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN3/8/2019
1148.48FERREIRA JUNIOR Marco AntonioBRACampeonato BrasileiroSao JoseBRA07/09/2019
1248.52CONDORELLI SantoITAFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN3/8/2019
1348.55GROUSSET MaximeFRAInternational Meeting of HortillonsAmiensFRA22/12/2019
Men 200 Freestyle (1:47.02)
RankTimeNameTeamMeet NameMeet CityMeet CountryDate
101:44.38RAPSYS DanasLTUFINA Swimming World Cup 2019SingaporeSGP16/08/2019
201:45.55SUN YangCHNFINA Champions Swim Series 2020BeijingCHN18/01/2020
301:45.77KOZMA DominikHUNFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN4/8/2019
401:45.82MATSUMOTO KatsuhiroJPNKitajima CupTokyoJPN24/01/2020
501:45.92HAAS TownleyUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA06/12/2019
601:46.54JI XinjieCHNCISM Military World GamesWuhanCHN19/20/2019
701:46.61VEKOVISHCHEV MikhailRUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019KazanRUS03/11/2019
801:46.62PIERONI BlakeUSAFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN4/8/2019
901:46.76APPLE ZachUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA06/12/2019
1001:46.99STJEPANOVIC VelimirSRB22nd Luxembourg Euro MeetLuxembourgLUX26/01/2020
Men 400 Freestyle (3:46.78)
RankTimeNameTeamMeet NameMeet CityMeet CountryDate
103:43.91RAPSYS DanasLTUFINA Swimming World Cup 2019JinanCHN8/8/2019
203:44.07SUN YangCHNFINA Champions Swim Series 2020ShenzenCHN15/01/2020
303:46.57COSTA GuilhermeBRAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA05/12/2019
Men 800 Freestyle (7:54.31)
RankTimeNameTeamMeet NameMeet CityMeet CountryDate
107:47.37COSTA GuilhermeBRAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA04/12/2019
207:48.56PALTRINIERI GregorioITANational Winter ChampionshipsRiccioneITA14/12/2019
307:48.90ROMANCHUK MykhailoUKR22nd Luxembourg Euro MeetLuxembourgLUX25/01/2020
407:49.05JERVIS DanielGBR22nd Luxembourg Euro MeetLuxembourgLUX25/01/2020
507:49.76WILIMOVSKY JordanUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA04/12/2019
607:51.53GROTHE ZaneUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA04/12/2019
707:51.93DETTI GabrieleITANational Winter ChampionshipsRiccioneITA13/12/2019
807:54.29FINKE RobertUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA04/12/2019
Men 1500 Freestyle (15:00.99)
RankTimeNameTeamMeet NameMeet CityMeet CountryDate
114:42.66PALTRINIERI GregorioITANational Winter ChampionshipsRiccioneITA14/12/2019
214:51.61ROMANCHUK MykhailoUKRFINA Swimming World Cup 2019DohaQAT08/11/2019
314:55.49COSTA GuilhermeBRAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA07/12/2019
414:57.83WELLBROCK FlorianGERFINA Swimming World Cup 2019BudapestHUN05/10/2019
514:57.90JERVIS DanielGBR22nd Luxembourg Euro MeetLuxembourgLUX24/01/2020
614:58.14NGUYEN Huy HoangVIE30th South East Asian GamesNew Park CityPHI05/12/2019
714:58.30MICKA JanCZEFINA Swimming World Cup 2019DohaQAT08/11/2019
814:59.88GYURTA GergelyHUNFINA Swimming World Cup 2019DohaQAT08/11/2019
915:00.45IPSEN AntonDENFlanders Swimming CupAntwerpenBEL19/01/2020
Men 100 Backstroke (53.85)
RankTimeNameTeamMeet NameMeet CityMeet CountryDate
152.59IRIE RyosukeJPNKitajima CupTokyoJPN24/01/2020
252.97XU JiayuCHNFINA Champions Swim Series 2020BeijingCHN18/01/2020
353.14CASAS ShaneUSAArt Adamson InvitationalCollege StationUSA22/11/2019
453.54GREVERS MattUSAFINA Champions Swim Series 2020ShenzenCHN14/01/2020
553.68BOHUS RichardHUNXIII Gyor OpenGyorHUN20/12/2019
653.76TARASEVICH GrigoryRUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019KazanRUS03/11/2019
653.76LARKIN MitchAUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN4/8/2019
853.79QUAH Zheng WenSGP30th South East Asian GamesNew Park CityPHI04/12/2019
953.80CECCON ThomasITA22nd Luxembourg Euro MeetLuxembourgLUX24/01/2020
1053.85SABBIONI SimoneITANational Winter ChampionshipsRiccioneITA13/12/2019
Men 200 Backstroke (1:57.50)
RankTimeNameTeamMeet NameMeet CityMeet CountryDate
101:55.35IRIE RyosukeJPNKitajima CupTokyoJPN24/01/2020
201:55.97LARKIN MitchAUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN2/8/2019
301:56.37PEBLEY JacobUSAFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN2/8/2019
401:56.39SUNAMA KeitaJPNFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN2/8/2019
501:56.47RESTIVO MatteoITANational Winter ChampionshipsRiccioneITA14/12/2019
601:56.48TELEGDY AdamHUNXIII Gyor OpenGyorHUN19/12/2019
701:56.58MENCARINI LucaITANational Winter ChampionshipsRiccioneITA14/12/2019
801:56.88LI GuangyuanCHNCISM Military World GamesWuhanCHN19/10/2019
901:57.04REID ChrisRSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA07/12/2019
Men 100 Breaststroke (59.93)
RankTimeNameTeamMeet NameMeet CityMeet CountryDate
158.61KAMMINGA ArnoNEDFINA Champions Swim Series 2020ShenzenCHN14/01/2020
258.73SHYMANOVICH IlyaBLRFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN2/8/2019
358.75MARTINENGHI NicoloITANational Winter ChampionshipsRiccioneITA12/12/2019
458.83YAN ZibeiCHNFINA Champions Swim Series 2020BeijingCHN18/01/2020
558.93WILSON AndrewUSAFINA Swimming World Cup 2019SingaporeSGP16/08/2019
658.94CHUPKOV AntonRUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019KazanRUS01/11/2019
759.01KOSEKI YasuhiroJPNFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN2/8/2019
859.36BALANDIN DmitriyKAZWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA06/12/2019
959.56WANG LizhuoCHNFINA Swimming World Cup 2019JinanCHN8/8/2019
1059.58POGGIO FedericoITANational Winter ChampionshipsRiccioneITA12/12/2019
1159.62WILBY JamesGBRNorthampton Swimming Club Winter FestivalCorbyGBR20/12/2019
1259.63QIN HaiyangCHNFINA Swimming World Cup 2019JinanCHN2/8/2019
1359.71SILADI CabaSRBFINA Swimming World Cup 2019BerlinGER11/10/2019
1459.80SCOZZOLI FabioITANational Winter ChampionshipsRiccioneITA12/12/2019
1559.81MILLER CodyUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA06/12/2019
1659.83STUBBLETY-COOK ZacAUSQueensland ChampionshipsBrisbaneAUS14/12/2019
1759.84YAMANAKA YoshikiJPNFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN2/8/2019
1859.85LIMA FelipeBRAFINA Swimming World Cup 2019DohaQAT07/11/2019
1959.89PACKARD JakeAUSSouth Australian State ChampionshipsAdelaideAUS21/01/2020
2059.90SAKCI HuseyinTURTurkish Turkcell LCM National Team Selection MeetIstanbulTUR24/12/2019
Men 200 Breaststroke (2:10.35)
RankTimeNameTeamMeet NameMeet CityMeet CountryDate
102:07.28STUBBLETY-COOK ZacAUSQueensland ChampionshipsBrisbaneAUS14/12/2019
202:07.58SATO ShomaJPNKitajima CupTokyoJPN24/01/2020
302:07.71CHUPKOV AntonRUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019KazanRUS03/11/2019
402:07.77WILSON AndrewUSA

Nordin, Gowlett Named Pac-12’s Women’s Swimmer & Diver of the Week

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By SwimSwam on SwimSwam

Courtesy: Pac-12 Conference

SAN FRANCISCO — The Conference office announced today that Emma Nordin of ARIZONA STATE was named Pac-12 Women’s Swimmer of the week and Naomi Gowlett of USC was named Pac-12 Diver of the Week.

WOMEN’S SWIMMER OF THE WEEK: Emma Nordin, Jr., Arizona State (Carmel, Ind.)
Nordin (Carmel, Ind.) dominated in her individual events as ASU hosted No. 10 Texas on Friday. Despite the Sun Devils’ loss (117-177) in the dual meet, Nordin won every single individual event she entered. The junior swimmer tabbed her fifth win in both the 500-yard (4:44.57) and 1,000-yard freestyle (9:42.97). She also had her first win in the 200- free (1:47.41), her first time swimming in the event this season.

Nordin has not placed lower than second in any single dual meet this season. This is the first time this season that Nordin has been named Pac-12 Women’s Swimmer of the Week.

Also Nominated: Alicia Wilson, California; Alex Crisera, Stanford; Sara McClendon, Utah.

WOMEN’S DIVER OF THE WEEK: Naomi Gowlett, Sr., USC (Queensland, Australia)
Gowlett (Queensland, Australia) won two events over the weekend as USC was defeated in dual meets against top-talent in No. 1 California (136.5-161.5) and No. 5 Stanford (110.50-183.50).

Gowlett took first in the 1-meter event on both days of competition, scoring 291.00 points versus Cal on Friday and 298.80 versus Stanford on Saturday. The senior’s two victories were the most in a weekend since she won three events against the Arizona schools in November. Gowlett has won the 1-meter four times this season and the 3-meter event once in dual-meet action.

This is the first time this season that Gowlett has been named Pac-12 Women’s Diver of the Week.

Also Nominated: Ruby Neave, UCLA; Emma Ruchala, Utah.


PAC-12 WOMEN’S SWIMMING AND DIVING CHAMPIONSHIP
• Tickets for the 2020 Pac-12 Women’s Swimming and Diving Championship on Feb. 26-29 in Federal Way, Wash. are on sale now. Tickets can be found at pac-12.com or by clicking the link here.


2019-20 PAC-12 WOMEN’S SWIMMER AND DIVER OF THE MONTH/WEEK
Month/Week
Swimmer
Diver

2020 Mizzou Swim Camps – Sign Up Today

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By SwimSwam Partner Content on SwimSwam

Want to take your swimming to the next level?  Then come be a part of the 2020 Mizzou Swim Camps!

Tiger Starts and Turns Camp
The most vital components of any race are starts and turns. With a focus on power, speed, and efficiency, the Tiger Starts and Turns Camp will help campers maximize their race potential. This popular camp is designed to enhance starts, turns, and breakouts for all four strokes and is open to all swimmers age 8-18. To enrich your experience and gain a competitive edge, add on the Tiger Technique Camp or Training Camp.

Tiger All Around Camp
The Tiger All Around Camp is aimed to take all of the knowledge of the Mizzou Coaching staff and merge everything together. We will be teaching stroke technique, starts, turns, training, and race strategy. We will leave no stone unturned to make your camper better. With these changes will come an additional day of camp, so our camps will run Sunday evening to Thursday morning.

courtesy of Mizzou Athletics

Mizzou Swim Camps offers a $20 discount for registering multiple campers for one session and a $30 discount for registering the same camper for multiple sessions.

Sign up for Mizzou Swim Camps Today

Residential Camp: Campers are housed two per room in either Wolpers Hall or Johnston Hall, an air-conditioned, University of Missouri dormitory three blocks from the Mizzou Aquatic Center and one block from Plaza 900 dining hall. Campers may bring snacks to keep in their rooms. Plaza 900 offers a variety of foods on an all-you-can-eat basis for a well-rounded, balanced diet.

Roommates will be assigned, according to age, when you register online. If you would like to request a roommate, both parties must fill out a Roommate Request during online registration.

Commuter Camp: Fees for commuter camp include camp instruction, t-shirt, swim cap, camp booklet, lunch and dinner, and use of the facility. Campers will NOT stay in the dorm, parents will drop-off at the start of the morning workout and pick-up their camper after the evening workout.

Daily Schedule
Campers swim once on the first and last day of camp and three times per day for all other days. All sessions last for 90 minutes. In addition to a morning, afternoon, and evening session there will be classroom sessions that include nutrition talks, viewing elite swimmer’s videos, start/turn/stroke instruction, and goal setting. Generally, the evening session includes underwater videotaping, more stroke instruction and relays!

Mizzou Swim Camps offers a $20 discount for registering multiple campers for one session and a $30 discount for registering the same camper for multiple sessions.

Sign up for Mizzou Swim Camps Today

Facilities

All pool sessions are held at the Mizzou Aquatic Center on The University of Missouri campus. Ranked by Sports Illustrated (September, 2005) as the #1 Student Recreation Center in the United States. The Mizzou “Fast Water” pool is one of the premier competitive aquatic facilities in the world. Since its completion in 2005, there have been multiple American and World records set in its waters. The competition pool is 8-8.5 feet deep, 50 meters by 25 yards, and can create either eight 50-meter lanes or 22 25-yard lanes. The diving pool is an 18-foot deep, 25-yards-wide pool, and can create 8 lanes.

A couple of added features have made the experience even better for athletes, coaches and spectators. We have added Ultraviolet (UV) disinfection systems to both the 50M Pool and Diving Well. In concert with proper air handling and pool chemistry, the UV systems will provide better air and water quality in the Mizzou Aquatic Center, as well as a reduction in pool chemicals needed for proper maintenance.

For photos and more information please visit http://www.mizzourec.com/facilities/aquatic/50m-pool/.

courtesy of Mizzou Athletics

Mizzou Swim Camps offers a $20 discount for registering multiple campers for one session and a $30 discount for registering the same camper for multiple sessions.

Sign up for Mizzou Swim Camps Today

Mizzou Swim Gear

The Tiger Swim Camp is offering exclusive Mizzou Swimming gear for its 2020 camp sessions!
Mizzou Swimming gear is available for pre-order during online registration or online any time after registration. Merchandise is delivered upon arrival at camp. There are no refunds on camp merchandise after May 1, 2020. If you cancel your camp session after May 1, your merchandise is shipped to you starting July 5, 2020.

HOW TO ORDER:

  1. Gear must be paid for at time of purchase.
  2. The easiest way to order is during the registration process – just add gear to your shopping cart along with your camp session.
  3. Access your on-line account, add gear to your cart, and check-out.
  4. The Camp has the right to cancel/modify any merchandise due to manufacturer supply issues or insufficient orders.
  5. When ordering hoodies, it is recommended that you order one size LARGER. Manufacturers vary in their sizing, and tend to run more true to size. The Camp cannot be responsible for differences in manufacturers sizing and cuts.
  6. ALL merchandise is sold in ADULT SIZES (S-XL) ONLY unless noted.
  7. Camp gear is delivered at camp check-in. There are no exchanges for sizes or colors.
  8. If you cancel your camp session after May 1, 2020, there are NO REFUNDS for merchandise. It is shipped to you starting July 5, 2020.
  9. Questions? Please contact Alec Hayden, camp director at: MizzouSwimCamp@Missouri.edu

Sign up for Mizzou Swim Camps Today

“The NCAA prohibits any University of Missouri Booster (other than a parent/legal guardian or close family member) from paying any portion of a camper’s camp fees.”

“All MU Camps are open to any and all entrants, limited only by number, age, grade level, and/or gender”.

Mizzou Swim Camps is a SwimSwam partner.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: 2020 Mizzou Swim Camps – Sign Up Today

Practice + Pancakes: Kentucky Throws Down Short Rest 200 Pace

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By Coleman Hodges on SwimSwam

FORM is swim goggles with a smart display. FORM is a sports technology company with a simple mission: to break down the barriers between what swimming is and what it could be.

After the Pro Swim in Knoxville, SwimSwam headed just north up Lexington to see what the University of Kentucky was up to. On this Tuesday afternoon, they were mostly doing various forms of 200 pace work. I focused mostly on the women’s side of the pool, and got to see Kentucky’s famed “Backstroke U” group in action.

The set was 4 rounds of 3×75 @ :55 seconds, trying to hit 200 pace. Between Asia Seidt, Caitlin Brooks, Ali Galyer, and Sophie Sorenson in this UK backstroke core, it was a sight to behold.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Practice + Pancakes: Kentucky Throws Down Short Rest 200 Pace

Top 3 Remains the Same in Women’s CWPA Poll Amidst Minor Adjustments

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By Wendy Mayer on SwimSwam

With just two upsets among 61 games, the Feb. 5 women’s Collegiate Water Polo Association poll saw only minor adjustments. No team moved more than two spots up or down.

The Top 3 remained the same from last week, led by the 2019 national runnerup USC with Stanford and UCLA right behind. Hawaii and UC Irvine rounded out the Top 5.

The Trojans won their lone Week 3 contest, topping Loyola Marymount 16-3 behind a six-goal effort by Mireia Guiral. The Cardinal went 3-0 at home, downing #11 UC Davis 12-4, #7 Michigan 13-10 and #6 Cal 10-6. UCLA picked up two wins, defeating #13 San Jose State 18-10 and Fresno State 16-10.

The Rainbow Wahine, which were tied for #3 with the Bruins in the Jan. 29 poll, went 5-0 at the Arizona State Cross Conference Challenge. Hawaii downed Cal State East Bay 18-1, #10 Arizona State 9-7, #25 Azusa Pacific 17-4, #15 Princeton 16-3 and Ottawa (Ariz.) 16-1.  Szonja Kuna put in six goals against Cal State East Bay, while Lalelei Mata’afa chipped in five against APU.

UC Irvine chalked up two wins, defeating #13 San Jose State 11-7 and #12 Fresno State 15-11. Toni Shackelford dropped a five-bagger in the win over FSU.

Arizona State climbed two spots from #10 to #8 after posting a 4-1 mark at its home Cross Conference Challenge. The Sun Devils picked up wins over #25 Azusa Pacific 12-6, Cal State East Bay 11-4, Sonoma State 18-5 and Princeton 9-5. ASU’s lone loss came at the hands of Hawaii. Borbala Kekesi was the top scorer for the Sun Devils, notching three goals against Azusa Pacific, two vs. Cal State East Bay, one vs. Hawaii, four vs. Sonoma State and three vs. Princeton.

Michigan fell two positions from #7 into a three-way tie for #9 after dropping all three of its contests at the Stanford Invitational. The Wolverines, which fell to #6 Cal 10-8, #2 Stanford 13-10 and #11 UC Davis 11-6, share the #9 spot with UC Santa Barbara and UC Davis.

The Gauchos, which had the weekend off, were #9 last week as well, while the Aggies moved up two spots from #11. UC Davis went 1-2, topping Michigan, while also dropping exhibition contests against #2 Stanford 12-4 and #6 Cal 13-11. Noelle Wijnbelt was one of the week’s top individual scorers, racking up seven goals in the loss to Cal.

Long Beach State and Harvard each moved up two spots to #12 and #15 respectively.

Cal Baptist joined the Top 25 for the first time in 2020, checking in at #25, tied with Azusa Pacific, after receiving votes last week. The Lancers went 1-1, falling in a two sudden death 11-10 loss to #21 Cal State Northridge and bouncing back with a 13-4 win over Fresno Pacific.

Sonoma State earned a spot among the vote getters for the first time in 2020. The Seawolves posted one of Week 3’s upsets, besting #25 Azusa Pacific 10-9, in a 2-2 weekend. Sonoma State bookended the weekend with the win over APU and a 13-2 victory over Ottawa (Ariz.). The team fell to #15 Princeton 9-7 and #10 Arizona State 18-5.

RankTeamWeek 2 PollPoints
1University of Southern California1100
2Stanford University296
3University of California-Los Angeles3 (T)90
4University of Hawaii3 (T)88
5University of California-Irvine585
6University of California679
7University of California-San Diego870
8Arizona State University1069
9 (T)University of California-Santa Barbara967
9 (T)University of Michigan767
9 (T)University of California-Davis1167
12Long Beach State University1453
13Fresno State University1252
14San Jose State University1350
15Harvard University1738
16Loyola Marymount University1636
17 (T)University of the Pacific18 (T)32
17 (T)Princeton University1532
19Indiana University2029
20Wagner College18 (T)28
21San Diego State University2222
22California State University-Northridge2118
23Bucknell University2314
24Marist College247
25 (T)Azusa Pacific University254
25 (T)California Baptist UniversityRV4
RVBrown UniversityRV1
RVSonoma State UniversityNR1

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Top 3 Remains the Same in Women’s CWPA Poll Amidst Minor Adjustments

Jason Lezak Joins Coaching Staff at Mater Dei High School

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

U.S. Olympic hero and general manager of the Cali Condors in the International Swimming League Jason Lezak has joined the coaching staff at Mater Dei High School in Santa Ana, California. According to Dan Albano of the OC Register, there he will serve as a part-time assistant coach for a program led by head coach Ken Dory, who was Lezak’s high school coach at Irvine High School.

Mater Dei, a Catholic co-ed school with an enrollment of over 2,100 students, is the largest non-public school west of Chicago. Last season, the Mater Dei girls finished 3rd at the CIF-Southern Section Division I Championships, while the boys didn’t score. Dory has been the head boys coach at Mater Dei since 2013, while the girls team is lead by 2nd-year head coach Kelly Dullard. Lezak will be working with both the boys and girls programs.

The 44-year old Lezak is an 8-time Olympic medalist, including 4 gold, 2 silver, and 2 bronze medals. All but 1 of those bronze medals (2008 – 100 free) were won as part of American relays, including his best-known performance at the Beijing Olympics to run down the French and preserve Michael Phelps’ bid for a record 8 Olympic gold medals. That swim was the fastest relay split in history.

More recently, Lezak last season was the general manager for the Cali Condors of the International Swimming League, one of 8 teams to participate in the league’s inaugural season.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Jason Lezak Joins Coaching Staff at Mater Dei High School

Denison Women, Kenyon Men Remain on Top in February 5 CSCAA D3 Poll

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By Anne Lepesant on SwimSwam

Editor’s note: the College Swimming Coaches Association of America (CSCAA)’s rankings track dual meet strength, specifically. That is, a higher-ranked team is expected to win in a head-to-head dual meet with a lower-ranked team, according to the voters. These rankings aren’t an NCAA finish prediction – for a ranking closer to that model, check out SwimSwam’s Power Rankings (for Division I).

The College Swimming Coaches Association of America (CSCAA) released their Top 25 Dual Meet Poll today and the Denison women and Kenyon men came out on top once again. This is the last poll before the teams head off to their conference championships later this month; the final poll is scheduled for release on February 27.

On the women’s side, Denison held on at #1, where they had moved in December at the time of the last poll. Also maintaining their previous spots were #2 Emory and #3 Kenyon. The Big Red, Eagles, and Ladies have been in the top-5 for the entire season. Williams moved from #10 to #4, Johns Hopkins slip a spot from 4th to 5th, and MIT made its first appearance in the top-6 moving up 2 spots from #8 to #6.

The Kenyon men earned a unanimous vote for the top position, while Denison remain ranked #2. Johns Hopkins moved up from 5th at the last poll to tie for 2nd with Denison. MIT came in at 4th for the second time in a row while Carnegie Mellon moved into the top 5 for the first time this season, jumping from 10th to 5th. Coast Guard, Gustavus, Merchant Marine, Washington and Lee, Bates, and Cal Lutheran all made this week’s top-25 poll after not having been ranked in the December edition.

Committee chair Jake Taber said, “The Committee saw a little bit of movement this week and had some very healthy dialogue about the poll and its intent. While voting, we try to keep in mind: if the meet took place today, who would win?  We have been intentional to reward the real life wins here.”

Division III Women

RankPreviousTeamPoints
11Denison296
22Emory288
33Kenyon277
410Williams260
54Johns Hopkins259
68MIT234
77Chicago220
86Tufts213
99WashU202
105NYU195
1112Carnegie Mellon188
1217Amherst155
1311Claremont-Mudd-Scripps150
1414Saint Catherine144
1513Pomona-Pitzer139
1615Bates126
1716Washington & Lee104
1820Bowdoin90
1919SUNY Geneseo84
2018Case Western Reserve79
21NRSwarthmore47
2221Calvin43
2324Birmingham Southern31
2422Rowan29
2523Trinity (TX)23

Also Receiving Votes:

Middlebury (16), Catholic (7), Wellesley (1)

Division III Men

RankPreviousTeamPoints
11Kenyon300
22Denison278
25Johns Hopkins278
44MIT264
510Carnegie Mellon252
67WashU239
73Emory224
811Williams214
98Chicago200
1013Tufts189
119Claremont-Mudd-Scripps179
1217Amherst171
1312Pomona-Pitzer157
146NYU149
15NRCoast Guard125
16NRGustavus111
17NRMerchant Marine105
1814Rowan102
1916TCNJ92
2021Case Western Reserve76
2120Franklin & Marshall48
2215Calvin41
23NRWashington & Lee35
24NRBates25
25NRCalifornia Lutheran18

Also Receiving Votes:

SUNY Geneseo (12), John Carroll (8), WPI (3), Birmingham Southern (3), Swarthmore (1), RPI (1)

Regional Rankings

WOMEN:

CENTRAL: 1. Denison 2. Kenyon 3. Chicago 4. Saint Catherine 5. Case Western 6. Calvin 7. Albion 8. Carthage 9. Hope 10. Franklin

NORTHEAST-NORTH: 1. Williams 2. MIT  3. Tufts 4. New York University 5. Amherst 6. Bates 7. Bowdoin 8. Middlebury 9. Wellesley 10. Vassar

WEST-MIDWEST-SOUTH: 1. Emory 2. John Hopkins 3. Washington University (Mo) 4. Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 5. Pomona-Pitzer Colleges 6. Washington & Lee 7. Birmingham Southern 8. Trinity (TX) 9. Mary Washington 10. Centre

NORTHEAST-SOUTH: 1. Carnegie Mellon 2. SUNY-Geneseo 3. Swarthmore 4. Rowan 5. Gettysburg 6. RIT 7. Rochester 8. Franklin & Marshall 9. Allegheny 10. TCNJ

MEN:

CENTRAL: 1. Kenyon 2. Denison 3. Chicago 4. Gustavus Adolphus 5. Case Western 6. Calvin 7. John Carroll 8. Saint Thomas 9. Hope 10. Wabash

NORTHEAST-NORTH: 1. MIT 2. Williams 3. Tufts 4. Amherst 5. New York University 6.  U.S. Coast Guard Academy 7. U.S. Merchant Marine Academy 8. Bates 9. WPI 10. RPI

WEST-MIDWEST-SOUTH: 1. Johns Hopkins 2. Washington University (Mo) 3. Emory 4. Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 5. Pomona-Pitzer 6. Washington & Lee 7. California Lutheran 8. Birmingham Southern 9. Mary Washington 10. Trinity (TX)

NORTHEAST-SOUTH: 1. Carnegie Mellon 2. Rowan 3. TCNJ 4. Franklin & Marshall 5. SUNY-Geneseo 6. Swarthmore 7. Gettysburg 8. RIT 9. Ithaca 10. Stevens

Women’s Poll Committee

Jake Taber, Hope (Chair); Meg Sission French, MIT (Chair of NE-N); Dean Brownlee, Centre O(Chair of MWSW); Justin Zook, Saint Catherine’s (Chair of Central); Ben Delia, Franklin & Marshall (Chair NE-S); Shannon O’Brien, RPI; Bob Rueppel, Middlebury; Brad Burnham, Bowdoin; Jon Duncan, Southwestern; Chris Mhyre, Puget Sound; Cori Meyette, Pomona-Pitzer;  Jason Webber, Chicago; Jay Daniels, Kalamazoo; Anne Ryder, UWEC;  Melissa Gates, Elizabethtown; Paul Waas, Catholic; Andy Eaton, Franklin & Marshall

Men’s Poll Committee

Sean Tedesco, USMMA (Chair); Paul Bennett, WPI (Chair of NE-N); Jean-Paul Gowdy, Pomona-Pitzer (Chair of MWSW); Keith Crawford, Rose-Hulman (Chair of Central); Brad Bowser, Rowan (Chair of NE-S); Jason Webber, Chicago; Mark Fino, John Carroll; Nick Stone, Albion; Eleanore Stevens, Wash U; Brent Summers, Willemette; Nate Harding, Redlands; Justin Anderson, Mary Washington;  Matt Emmert, Roger Williams; Peter Casares, Bates; Erica Belcher, Rowan; Pat Smith, Westminster; Michael Kroll, Buffalo State; David Dow, TCNJ; Paul Dotterweich, SUNY Geneseco

A complete list of the Top 25 rankings can be found at: cscaa.org/top25

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Denison Women, Kenyon Men Remain on Top in February 5 CSCAA D3 Poll

Jolyn Foreverever Fabric Technology Delivers Fit, Function, and Sustainability

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By SwimSwam Partner Content on SwimSwam

Stretched-out, faded swimsuits are now a thing of the past. JOLYN is taking their mission to empower women athletes to the next level with their Foreverever Fabric Technology

Known for their high-quality swimsuits featuring prints and colorways that are designed to help you feel confident in and out of the pool, JOLYN is constantly striving to offer the best in fabric and stitching technology to make sure that your suit works has hard as you do. Foreverever swimsuit fabric is even chlorine resistant to keep those colors just as bright as the day you first bought them.

Foreverever Fabric Technology, ups the ante with game-changing features in fit, function and sustainability. From performance to sun protection, this long-lasting fabric is designed to keep you and your suit in shape year after year. 

With shape-retention and pilling resistance, Foreverever fabric will stand up to the intensity you put it through every day. Your swimsuit will survive sand, sun, friction and, of course, chlorine. 

Foreverever’scontrolled stretch keeps your fit consistent with elastic of the highest grade, so it won’t stretch out or crunch. This means that even extreme athletes like ocean swimmers and triathletes can adventure without fear of your suit ripping, thinning or sagging.

These swimsuits are breathable, fast-drying and stretch in all directions and this fade-prooffabric offers UV protection. That means the colors and patterns JOYLN is known for will stay as vibrant as they were the day you bought them. 

Shop Foreverever Technology at JOLYN.com

About JOLYN

Created by athletes who were tired of boring swimsuits that didn’t fit, JOLYN’s mission of empowering women athletes comes to life with an uncompromising drive to create stylish gear with the best materials out there.

Follow us on Instagram: @jolynclothing

Follow us on Facebook: @jolynclothing

Swimming gear news is courtesy of Jolyn, a SwimSwam partner. 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Jolyn Foreverever Fabric Technology Delivers Fit, Function, and Sustainability

11-Year Old Ohio Swimmer Fighting for Her Life After Collapsing on Pool Deck

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By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

An 11-year old swimmer from Lebanon, Ohio is fighting for her life after collapsing on the pool deck after a swim practice.

On Tuesday, January 28th, Emma Palmer exited the pool after an otherwise-normal swim practice and collapsed. After being life-flighted to the hospital, doctors discovered that she had a spontaneous brain bleed, though they are still unsure as to the cause. She has undergone 2 brain surgeries and is currently in a medically induced coma.

Palmer swims for the Countryside YMCA, and her teammates dedicated their swims over the weekend at the Teddy Bear Invite hosted by the Blue Ash YMCA to their teammate.

Updates on a GoFundMe page that has been started to support her medical costs indicate that on Wednesday, doctors were working to get a lung infection under control, and that she is scheduled to receive an MRI as doctors hope to learn more about what is happening with her brain.

Over $28,000 has been donated so far.

 

Read the full story on SwimSwam: 11-Year Old Ohio Swimmer Fighting for Her Life After Collapsing on Pool Deck


Joseph Schooling Reuniting with Former Coach Sergio Lopez Through Tokyo

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By Torrey Hart on SwimSwam

Singaporean Olympic champion Joseph Schooling is set to reunite with former coach Sergio Lopez, according to a report from the Straits Times.

The Times reports Schooling will join Lopez — currently the head coach at Virginia Tech — in Virginia this Sunday and train there through the Tokyo Games this summer (with a trip back to Singapore in March for the National Age Group Swimming Championships.)

The 24-year-old Schooling previously trained under Lopez, 51, while attending high school at The Bolles School in Florida from 2010 to 2014. He went on to swim for Eddie Reese at the University of Texas, during which time he won Olympic gold in the 100 fly in 2016, and became a 22-time All-American before graduating in 2018.

After serving as an assistant coach at Auburn, the Spanish Olympic medalist Lopez took over at Virginia Tech in 2018. He was head coach of the Singapore national team from 2015 to 2016 prior to his time at Auburn. Lopez has assembled a diverse pro group, called “Swim Pinnacle Racing,” in Blacksburg. The group, reported to have 15 members currently, includes Egyptian Olympian Farida Osman.

Schooling has struggled to reclaim his spot atop the international ranks since his 2016 performance. He did not advance out of prelims in the 100 fly at the 2019 FINA World Championships last summer, finishing over 2.5 seconds behind his Rio-winning time. At the SEA Games last year, he won the 100 fly and took silver in the 100 free.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Joseph Schooling Reuniting with Former Coach Sergio Lopez Through Tokyo

Winter Juniors Finalist Emma Willmer Commits to Boise State

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By Anne Lepesant on SwimSwam

Fitter and Faster Swim Camps is the proud sponsor of SwimSwam’s College Recruiting Channel and all commitment news. For many, swimming in college is a lifelong dream that is pursued with dedication and determination. Fitter and Faster is proud to honor these athletes and those who supported them on their journey.

Emma Willmer, a senior at Edison High School in Huntington Beach, California, has committed to swim at Boise State University in the fall of 2020. She will join future Broncos Jessica Davis, Katie Faris, Maxine Catig, and Samantha Nickell in the class of 2024.

“I am beyond ecstatic and excited to announce my verbal commitment to swim and study at Boise State University!! While on my trip there, [it] was hard for me not to miss the closeness and special bond that the team has, it truly feels like one big family. I absolutely loved how Coach Christine and Coach Jordan are both so dedicated to help their swimmers not only become better athletes and students, but also help them become better individuals. I cannot wait for this next chapter in my life and I am so incredibly thankful for my big family (for cheering me on and never failing to make me smile), my coaches (for always encouraging and helping me) and my teammates (for pushing me and making me laugh). Also, a huge thank you to the team for welcoming me into the bronco family!! So grateful that God has blessed me with such an amazing opportunity and I’m SO excited to be a bronco these next four years!! #bleedblue </body> </html>

See 19 Swim Camps You Might Love

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By Gold Medal Mel Stewart on SwimSwam

These swim camps are headed by some of the best coaches in swimming. Stay tuned. More swim camps will be listed soon.

2020 PENN STATE COMPETITIVE SWIM CAMPS – SIGN UP TODAY

Penn State boasts some of the finest swimming facilities in the nation. McCoy Natatorium has a heated Olympic-size (50m) outdoor pool; an Endless Pool Elite system, that helps swimmers analyze strokes on an individual basis; and three indoor pools: a six-lane, 25-yard racing pool; a six-lane, 25-meter instructional pool; and a deep diving well, used for start and turn instruction. The Natatorium has more than 500 lockers and a gallery that seats 1,000. The pool deck has ample space for stretching and dryland instruction.

2020 BOLLES SWIM CAMP – SIGN UP TODAY

The Bolles Sharks has made a significant impact on the national and international swimming scene. The Bolles Sharks had its first national finalist in 1980. Since that time the Bolles Sharks swimmers have captured 23 individual national championships and 16 relay championships as well as 34 team championships. Bolles Sharks swimmers have won at the World Championships, Asian games, Pam Am Games, Southeast Asian Games, World University Games, and the Olympic Games, as well as many other international meets.

2020 LONGHORNS SWIM CAMP – SIGN UP TODAY

For 42 seasons, the Longhorns Swim Camp has offered elite-level instruction with a fantastic summer camp experience! Led by Texas Head Coaches Eddie Reese and Carol Capitani, camp is held in the world renown Jamail Texas Swimming Center on the University of Texas at Austin campus.  Home to 23 National Championship teams, it is considered one of the finest aquatic venues in the world.

2020 GATOR SWIM CAMPS – SIGN UP TODAY

The University of Florida GATOR SWIM CAMPS are developmental camps designed to teach swimmers proper technique and provide quality training to swimmers of ALL abilities between 8 and 18 years old. The camps emphasizes technical skills, training habits, and mental preparation as well as the importance of health and fitness in a structured, fun, and enthusiastic Gator environment. Campers will interact with Olympic Gold Medalists, World and NCAA Champions, as well as Olympic and World Championship coaches.

2020 AUBURN WAR EAGLE SWIM CAMPS – SIGN UP TODAY

Head Coach Gary Taylor will lead the Auburn Swim Camps along with a staff of highly qualified, accomplished, and enthusiastic coaches, counselors and collegiate swimmers. Gary Taylor‘s coaching staff will combine the best of the Auburn Camp Tradition while incorporating the techniques used to create champions across the globe. This camp will feature technique instruction which will provide swimmers with the tools for success that can be applied to their training and development throughout their careers.

2019 SERGIO LOPEZ SWIM CAMPS AT VIRGINIA TECH – SIGN UP TODAY

Join Virginia Tech Head Coach Sergio Lopez in a dynamic learning environment for swim camp this summer.  This camp focuses on technique instruction, race preparation, & mental training.  We also offer an additional early morning training session for swimmers 13 and older.  Coach Sergio will be joined by the Virginia Tech coaching staff as well as additional expert university staff, camp counselors, and guest speakers to provide a positive, informative, and fun experience.

2020 EAGLE SWIM CAMPS @ FGCU FEATURING OLYMPIC GOLD MEDALISTS

Improve your skills at the most unique camping experiences in the country. Eagle Swim Camps offer the most unique camping experience in the country. Eagle Swim Camps, on the campus of Florida Gulf Coast University take place in beautiful Fort Myers, Florida. Campers will not only enjoy our state of the art Olympic sized pool, but also the beachfront at beautiful Lake Como, home of USA Swimming’s Open Water National Championships.

2020 UPPER VALLEY SWIM CAMP AT DARTMOUTH COLLEGE – SIGN UP TODAY

The Upper Valley Swim Camp is designed for competitive swimmers who are looking to improve technique across all strokes, starts and turns. Swimmers will focus on a specific stroke and skill each day of the camp, swimmers will improve their technique through a progression of drills and video review led by a member of the coaching staff. Each camper will leave with an under and above water video of all four stroke, inducing a voice over with tips for improving each area.

2020 NORTHWESTERN WILDCAT SWIM CAMPS – SIGN UP TODAY

COACH KIPP PRESENTS THE NORTHWESTERN WILDCAT SWIM CAMPS“Welcome to our 2020 New Look Swimming camps at Northwestern University.  Our staff at Northwestern will be running 2 camps for the 2020 summer. As the  Director of Swimming and Diving at Northwestern, I can guarantee that your swimmers will have a world class experience and walk away with a great appreciation for the sport and, of course, Northwestern Swimming.”

2020 MICHIGAN WOLVERINE SWIM CAMP – SIGN UP TODAY

The Michigan Swim Camp is designed to provide each competitive swimmer with the opportunity to improve their pursuit of excellence both in and out of the pool. It is open to any and all participants limited only by age and specified number of campers. During registration, campers will select from one of two tracts depending upon their needs.

KENTUCKY SWIMMING CAMPS – SIGN UP TODAY

At the University of Kentucky Elite Swim Camp, swimmers will receive assessment of strokes, power, strength and flexibility. Daily professional instruction by the UK Varsity swim staff. Two daily water sessions. Dryland training and educational lectures

2020 RISING TIDE SWIM CAMP – SIGN UP TODAY

Our camp is all about teaching athletes the foundation skills and drills they will need to perfect their technique. We take the time to teach them how the brain manages everything they do, and how to program the brain in a way that helps them “upgrade the neural software” needed to reproduce perfect skills without having to think about them. It involves critical thinking and exploring new ways to achieve new skills since we’re all built differently and there isn’t a one size fits all technique.

2020 NEAL STUDD SWIM CAMP @ FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY

The Neal Studd Swim Camp at Florida State University, is a camp that focuses on giving each swimmer age 7-18 the tools to improve their overall technique. The camp focuses on, fitness, stroke technique, starts, turns, nutrition and mental training. Each camper will recieve specific instruction on all 4 strokes, turns and starts. There will be classroom sessions on these principles as well as talks on nutrition. We will also have champion swimmers come in to talk to our campers. Our goal each session is to give your camper the tools to improve their swimming as well as give them a renewed love of the sport!

2020 NAVY ELITE SWIM CAMP – SIGN UP NOW

The Navy Swim Elite Training Camp is designed and implemented by our Navy Coaching staff to take swimmers to the next level of performance by focusing on a progressive stroke technique session, while adding an elite level pool training session to each day. The technique session will include competitive stroke progressions in all strokes, starts and turns, racing prep, and video analysis. The training component will incorporate the learned techniques with a high level energy systems based training program to prepare the swimmer for excellence in the summer season.

2020 TOTAL PERFORMANCE SWIM CAMPS AT KENYON COLLEGE

The cornerstone of the Competitive Stroke Camp’s success is a dedication to helping campers improve each of the four strokes when it comes to technique, training and race strategy. Our campers receive small-group instruction in a low swimmer-to-coach environment, team and leadership building sessions, daily video analysis of strokes and classroom sessions. Most importantly, Total Performance campers have FUN – both in and out of the pool – with scavenger hunts, variety shows, games and meeting new friends!

2020 CAVALIER SWIM CAMPS – SIGN UP TODAY

Our goal is to create a positive atmosphere where competitive swimmers can learn and improve the skills needed to compete at a higher level. Cavalier Swim Camp offers a unique balance of intensive conditioning, thorough stroke instruction and analysis with our coaches and experienced staff. Each day of camp features daily workouts, clinics on stroke mechanics and a “race preparation” session. Workouts will be conducted under the direction of the camp staff featuring the University of Virginia swim coaches.

2019-2020 BOB BOWMAN SUN DEVIL SWIM CAMPS – SIGN UP TODAY

Campers will have the opportunity to improve their swimming technique and training directly from Coach Bowman and his talented staff. Each coach brings an extensive history of knowledge and expertise of the sport that will benefit swimmers of all levels. Hosted at the newly renovated Mona Plummer Aquatic Complex, Bob Bowman Sun Devil Camps offer pre-workout routines, tailored swim sets and drills, video demonstration and instruction, technique review, dryland workouts, and coaching talks.

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Mark Tewksbury: How Visualization Will Help You Achieve Your Goals

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By Olivier Poirier-Leroy on SwimSwam

by Olivier Poirier-Leroy. You can join his weekly motivational newsletter for competitive swimmers by clicking here.

When Mark Tewksbury lunged backwards into the touch pad at the 1991 FINA world championships and looked up at the scoreboard, he felt a sharp blast of satisfaction.

Even though Tewksbury had placed second in a time of 55.29, he was just 0.06 behind the winner, Jeff Rouse of the United States. The silver medal was a validation that the training was working, the commitment was paying off, and that he was inching closer and closer to his ultimate goal of being the fastest 100m backstroker in the world.

Olympic gold two years later in Barcelona was so close he could taste it.

The trajectory had been in the works for a while. At the Seoul Olympics two years earlier, Tewksbury had placed fifth in the 100 backstroke and collected a silver medal in the medley relay with the late Victor Davis.

At the Pan Pacific Championships, held in Edmonton in the summer of 1991, Tewksbury and Rouse again met in the final for the 100m backstroke. Given that Tewksbury was still working hard in practice, and that he’d been so close the last time they’d raced, Tewksbury figured he had a serious shot of unseating the world-leading Rouse.

Not so much.

Tewksbury was never in the race, with Rouse using his superior start and underwater dolphin kick to drop a blistering 53.93, wrecking the world record by over half a second.

This time, when Tewksbury looked at the scoreboard and saw second place there wasn’t joy or satisfaction. There was the sickening feeling of his world having been shaken, turned upside down and thrown across the room. Rouse’s time surpassed what Tewksbury thought was humanly possible in the event.

“In my wildest dreams I thought it might be possible for me to swim a time of 54.50,” Tewksbury recalled in his auto-biography, Visions of Excellence. “That was an outrageous, wild dream that I kept in my head.”

Tewksbury would have to drop 1.2 seconds to be competitive with the time Rouse swam. This was the same amount of time Tewksbury had dropped in the previous seven years, and now he had only one year to match that improvement.

He left the pool that day winded, his dream of Olympic gold evaporating into the chlorinated air.

Visualize the Success You Want to Experience

The year of the Barcelona Olympics started on a better note.

In February, Tewksbury and his teammates from the University of Calgary set the world record for the 4x100m medley relay in short course meters, with Tewksbury leading off in a blistering world best of 52.50.

(Side note: Watching this race from the pool deck was one of the highlights of my age group swimming days. I get chills just thinking about how electrified the building was that night.)

The next month Tewksbury traveled to Barcelona to see the pool where the swimming events were going to be held. He had been using visualization regularly to picture that perfect gold-medal winning performance, but in his mind every time he swam his goal race he came fifth, like he had in Seoul.

To “rewrite” the visualizations he traveled to the still unfinished Piscines Bernat Picornell. Construction workers milled about the site, but Tewksbury could see the finished pool in his mind.

I tried to imagine where the sun would be in the evening for the final and made a mental note. The picture in my mind was becoming a little clearer.

I stood up in the stands looking at the pool for a long time. Eventually I went down and stood on the deck. I walked from where I thought the ready room would be out to lane four and I waved to the imaginary crowd.

I then walked back to the ready room and went through the same procedure to lane five.

Tewksbury soaked it all up, remembering the random features of the pool so that he could enrich his daily visualizations.

I pictured winning in this pool. I imagined the feeling I would have when I looked up at the scoreboard and my name had the number one beside it. It was so exhilarating I had goosebumps just thinking about it.

The trip went a long way in boosting Tewksbury’s confidence that he could bring his absolute best performance later that summer.

Six One Hundredths in Barcelona

On July 30, 1992, the finalists of the 100m backstroke were paraded out at the Barcelona Olympics. The sky was overcast—great for backstrokin’ as this meant the sun wouldn’t be in their eyes.

In lane four, Jeff Rouse. In lane five, Tewksbury.

Here we go again.

Tewksbury felt calm and relaxed. An hour earlier he had been in the midst of his final preparations. “I visualized the race over and over again, always winning,” he said.

When the starter’s gun finally went off Rouse took off to a quick half body length lead, dolphin kicking nearly all the way to 15m. By the 50m mark, Tewksbury had largely caught up, only to get soundly beaten on the second underwater.

The gap was half a body length.

Yet again, an unrelenting Tewksbury had to charge back, slowly coming back on Rouse. With 10m remaining Rouse was still clutching the lead, but it was shrinking with every stroke. With five meters to go Tewksbury pulled even. Stroke for stroke they went under the flags, and with a final hurl of the arm both swimmers hit the wall.

The scoreboard lagged for an endless second before it spat out the results.

Canada, gold.

Tewksbury erupted, pushing off the wall, throwing his fist into the sky, sitting on the lane rope, hands clasped on his hand, struggling with the realization that he’d achieved his ultimate goal.

The gold-medal winning time?

Ironic—he’d won in a time of 53.98, an Olympic record, out-touching Rouse by the exact same margin that Rouse had beaten him with two years earlier.

Just six one hundredths of a second.

Great swimmers see the swim they want before they swim it

While Tewksbury’s exuberance may have suggested he was surprised by the result, he’d rehearsed that exact race so many times in his mind that the physical performance was just another rep.

Elite-minded swimmers experience the race they want—the smell of the chlorine, the coldness of the pool, the pain of that third 25—long before the starter’s gun, so that when it’s race time all they have to do is clear their mind and let their body take the wheel.

Effective visualization works because our brains have difficulty telling the difference between real and imagined events.

Here are some quick ways you can incorporate this mental skill for better swim practices and races:

Use visualization to picture yourself conquering adversity.

Do you go to competitions expecting that everything will go perfectly from beginning to end? Come on, it’s okay to admit it if you do—we all do to some extent. When we expect things to go perfectly it leaves us unprepared for the moment that things do not go our way—when the inevitable adversity hits us it rocks us.

Visualize your meet warm-up not going perfectly, or your competition blowing out to an early lead—and then imagine yourself handling the adversity with poise. It will lay the groundwork for smarter reactions when adversity does happen (and it will).

Use it in practice to boost performance.

Visualization is a more powerful performance tool than your old-school psych-up talk. When track athletes were instructed to visualize their ideal performance or lean on motivational self-talk, the visualization group ran significantly faster. Before you push off for that big set or all-out rep, take a handful of seconds to visualize yourself swimming the way you want to swim.

Use physical cues to anchor your visualizations.

When Tewksbury visited the Barcelona pool he was doing exactly this: giving his visualization a deeper level of detail, which made it more real.

You don’t need to fly halfway across the world in preparation for your next meet, but you can add things like: the smell of chlorine, the cold pool deck below your feet, the texture of the starting block, and the initial shock of cold water rushing past your body.

The richer and more detail-oriented the visualization, the deeper it will anchor.

Treat it as another part of your training.

Most of the time when I talk to athletes about using visualization it’s because they are scrambling to do something, anything, in a last ditch effort to prepare for an upcoming competition. The power of visualization shows when you make it part of your regular training. Each night set yourself a goal of doing 5 reps of your goal race.

Just like lifting in the gym, or swimming laps in the pool, developing effective mental skills is a game of putting in the reps.

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 PoolHe’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: Yuppers–we do team orders of “Conquer the Pool” which include 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: Mark Tewksbury: How Visualization Will Help You Achieve Your Goals

Ranking Mondiale: Gli Uomini Con Tempi FINA Di Qualificazione Olimpica

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By Giusy Cisale on SwimSwam

Il Ranking Mondiale nel primo mese dell’anno olimpico può non essere in cima alle preoccupazioni dell’elite del nuoto mondiale.

E’ pur vero che essere il numero 1 al mondo può infondere la fiducia necessaria per affrontare i rispettivi trials olimpici nazionali.

CLICCA QUI PER CONSULTARE IL RANKING MONDIALE AGGIORNATO DI SWIMSWAM

Vi è infatti da sottolineare che la FINA, l’organo di governo internazionale delle discipline acquatiche, ha dettato il processo generale di qualificazione olimpica in termini di tempi limite e finestra temporale per realizzarli.

Le singole nazioni, poi, hanno un proprio regolamento.

Sono proprio i criteri ufficiali di selezione delle singole nazioni a decidere se un atleta parteciperà o meno alle Olimpiadi di Tokyo della prossima estate.

CRITERI DI SELEZIONE NAZIONALE ITALIANA

La collega Retta Race ha dunque creato una classifica molto speciale. Tenendo conto di quanto sopra precisato, vediamo quali sonno gli uomini che, nel periodo tra il 02 agosto 2019 ed il 29 gennaio 2020, hanno già nuotato il tempo indicato nella tabella A pubblicata da FINA.

Di seguito sono indicate le gare olimpiche maschili.

Per l’articolo dedicato alle donne clicca qui

50 METRI STILE LIBERO (22.01)

RankTimeNameTeamMeetingMeet CityCountryDate
121.27MOROZOV VladimirRUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019SingaporeSGP15/08/2019
221.56MANAUDOU FlorentFRA22nd Luxembourg Euro MeetLuxembourgLUX25/01/2020
321.59FRATUS BrunoBRAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA05/12/2019
421.78ANDREW MichaelUSAFINA Swimming World Cup 2019SingaporeSGP15/08/2019
521.81APPLE ZachUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA05/12/2019
621.86GKOLOMEEV KristianGREFINA Champions Swim Series 2020BeijingCHN18/01/2020
721.92SHIOURA ShinriJPNFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN2/8/2019
821.93MATSUI KosukeJPNFINA Swimming World Cup 2019BerlinGER11/10/2019
921.97BUKHOV VladyslavUKR22nd Luxembourg Euro MeetLuxembourgLUX25/01/2020
921.97CHADWICK MichaelUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA05/12/2019

11

21.99

Luca Dotto

ITA

National Winter Championships

Riccione

ITA

12/12/2019

100 METRI STILE LIBERO (48.57)

RankTimeNameTeamMeetingMeet CityCountryDate
147.69APPLE ZachUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA07/12/2019
247.78GRINEV VladislavRUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019KazanRUS02/11/2019
347.88MOROZOV VladimirRUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019SingaporeSGP16/08/2019
447.99CHALMERS KyleAUSSouth Australian State ChampionshipsAdelaideAUS21/02/2020
548.15PIERONI BlakeUSAFINA Swimming World Cup 2019SingaporeSGP16/08/2019

6

48.22

Alessandro Miressi

ITA

National Winter Championships

Riccione

ITA

13/12/2019

7

48.38

Ivano Vendrame

ITA

National Winter Championships

Riccione

ITA

13/12/2019

848.41VEKOVISHCHEV MikhailRUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019KazanRUS02/11/2019
948.45FARRIS DeanUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA07/12/2019
948.45SZABO SZEBASZTIANHUNFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN3/8/2019
1148.48FERREIRA JUNIOR Marco AntonioBRACampeonato BrasileiroSao JoseBRA07/09/2019

12

48.52

Santo Condorelli

ITA

FINA Swimming World Cup 2019

Tokyo

JPN

3/8/2019

1348.55GROUSSET MaximeFRAInternational Meeting of HortillonsAmiensFRA22/12/2019

200 METRI STILE LIBERO (1:47.02)

RankTimeNameTeamMeetingCityMeet CountryDate
101:44.38RAPSYS DanasLTUFINA Swimming World Cup 2019SingaporeSGP16/08/2019
201:45.55SUN YangCHNFINA Champions Swim Series 2020BeijingCHN18/01/2020
301:45.77KOZMA DominikHUNFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN4/8/2019
401:45.82MATSUMOTO KatsuhiroJPNKitajima CupTokyoJPN24/01/2020
501:45.92HAAS TownleyUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA06/12/2019
601:46.54JI XinjieCHNCISM Military World GamesWuhanCHN19/20/2019
701:46.61VEKOVISHCHEV MikhailRUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019KazanRUS03/11/2019
801:46.62PIERONI BlakeUSAFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN4/8/2019
901:46.76APPLE ZachUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA06/12/2019
1001:46.99STJEPANOVIC VelimirSRB22nd Luxembourg Euro MeetLuxembourgLUX26/01/2020

400 METRI STILE LIBERO (3:46.78)

RankTimeNameTeamMeetingMeet CityCountryDate
103:43.91RAPSYS DanasLTUFINA Swimming World Cup 2019JinanCHN8/8/2019
203:44.07SUN YangCHNFINA Champions Swim Series 2020ShenzenCHN15/01/2020
303:46.57COSTA GuilhermeBRAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA05/12/2019

800 METRI STILE LIBERO (7:54.31)

RankTimeNameTeamMeet NameMeeting CityMeet CountryDate
107:47.37COSTA GuilhermeBRAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA04/12/2019

2

07:48.56

Gregorio Paltrinieri

National Winter Championships

Riccione

ITA

14/12/2019

307:48.90ROMANCHUK MykhailoUKR22nd Luxembourg Euro MeetLuxembourgLUX25/01/2020
407:49.05JERVIS DanielGBR22nd Luxembourg Euro MeetLuxembourgLUX25/01/2020
507:49.76WILIMOVSKY JordanUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA04/12/2019
607:51.53GROTHE ZaneUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA04/12/2019

7

07:51.93

Gabriele Detti

ITA

National Winter Championships

Riccione

ITA

13/12/2019

807:54.29FINKE RobertUSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA04/12/2019

1500 METRI STILE LIBERO (15:00.99)

RankTimeNameTeamMeetingMeet CityMeeting CountryDate

1

14:42.66

Gregorio Paltrinieri

ITA

National Winter Championships

Riccione

ITA

14/12/2019

214:51.61ROMANCHUK MykhailoUKRFINA Swimming World Cup 2019DohaQAT08/11/2019
314:55.49COSTA GuilhermeBRAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA07/12/2019
414:57.83WELLBROCK FlorianGERFINA Swimming World Cup 2019BudapestHUN05/10/2019
514:57.90JERVIS DanielGBR22nd Luxembourg Euro MeetLuxembourgLUX24/01/2020
614:58.14NGUYEN Huy HoangVIE30th South East Asian GamesNew Park CityPHI05/12/2019
714:58.30MICKA JanCZEFINA Swimming World Cup 2019DohaQAT08/11/2019
814:59.88GYURTA GergelyHUNFINA Swimming World Cup 2019DohaQAT08/11/2019
915:00.45IPSEN AntonDENFlanders Swimming CupAntwerpenBEL19/01/2020

100 METRI DORSO (53.85)

RankTimeNameTeamMeeting NameMeet CityMeeting CountryDate
152.59IRIE RyosukeJPNKitajima CupTokyoJPN24/01/2020
252.97XU JiayuCHNFINA Champions Swim Series 2020BeijingCHN18/01/2020
353.14CASAS ShaneUSAArt Adamson InvitationalCollege StationUSA22/11/2019
453.54GREVERS MattUSAFINA Champions Swim Series 2020ShenzenCHN14/01/2020
553.68BOHUS RichardHUNXIII Gyor OpenGyorHUN20/12/2019
653.76TARASEVICH GrigoryRUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019KazanRUS03/11/2019
653.76LARKIN MitchAUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN4/8/2019
853.79QUAH Zheng WenSGP30th South East Asian GamesNew Park CityPHI04/12/2019

9

53.80

Thomas Ceccon

ITA

22nd Luxembourg Euro Meet

Luxembourg

LUX

24/01/2020

10

53.85

Simone Sabbioni

ITA

National Winter Championships

Riccione

ITA

13/12/2019

200 METRI DORSO (1:57.50)

RankTimeNameTeamMeeting NameMeet CityMeeting CountryDate
101:55.35IRIE RyosukeJPNKitajima CupTokyoJPN24/01/2020
201:55.97LARKIN MitchAUSFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN2/8/2019
301:56.37PEBLEY JacobUSAFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN2/8/2019
401:56.39SUNAMA KeitaJPNFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN2/8/2019

5

01:56.47

Matteo Restivo

ITA

National Winter Championships

Riccione

ITA

14/12/2019

601:56.48TELEGDY AdamHUNXIII Gyor OpenGyorHUN19/12/2019

7

01:56.58

Luca Mencarini

ITA

National Winter Championships

Riccione

ITA

14/12/2019

801:56.88LI GuangyuanCHNCISM Military World GamesWuhanCHN19/10/2019
901:57.04REID ChrisRSAWinter National ChampionshipsAtlantaUSA07/12/2019

100 METRI RANA (59.93)

RankTimeNameTeamMeet NameMeeting CityMeet CountryDate
158.61KAMMINGA ArnoNEDFINA Champions Swim Series 2020ShenzenCHN14/01/2020
258.73SHYMANOVICH IlyaBLRFINA Swimming World Cup 2019TokyoJPN2/8/2019

3

58.75

Nicolo Martinenghi

National Winter Championships

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