September 18, 2016 “Foundations of the Earth” Background Scripture
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OLYMPIC SWIMMING MEDAL STANDINGS Country Gold Silver Bronze Total
Speedo and are registered trademarks of and used under license from Speedo International trademarks of and used under license from Limited. registered are Speedo and CULLEN JONES RISE AND SWIM SPEED SOCKET GOGGLE SPEEDOUSA.COM ANTHONY ERVIN • 2000, 2012, 2016 OLYMPIAN discover your speed. new! EDGE COMFORTABLE, HIGH VELOCITY SWIM FINS To learn more, contact your local dealer or visit FINISinc.com STRENGTH DOES NOT COME FROM PHYSICAL CAPACITY. IT COMES FROM AN INDOMITABLE WILL. arenawaterinstinct.com SEPTEMBER 2016 FEATURES COACHING 010 ROCKIN’ IN RIO! 008 LESSONS WITH Winning half of the events and col- THE LEGENDS: lecting more than three times more SHERM CHAVOOR medals than any other country, Team by Michael J. Stott USA dominated the swimming compe- PUBLISHING, CIRCULATION tition at the XXXI Olympiad in Brazil. 040 Q&A WITH AND ACCOUNTING COACH www.SwimmingWorldMagazine.com 012 2016 RIO DE JANEIRO TREVOR MIELE Chairman of the Board, President - Richard Deal OLYMPICS: PHOTO by Michael J. Stott [email protected] GALLERY Publisher, CEO - Brent T. Rutemiller Photos by USA TODAY Sports 042 HOW THEY TRAIN [email protected] ELISE GIBBS Circulation/Art Director - Karen Deal 031 GIRLS’ NATIONAL by Michael J. Stott [email protected] HIGH SCHOOL Circulation/Operations Manager - Taylor Brien [email protected] CHAMPIONSHIPS: TRAINING THE NUMBERS Advertising Production Coordinator - Betsy Houlihan SPEAK FOR 039 DRYSIDE [email protected] THEMSELVES TRAINING: THE by Shoshanna Rutemiller NEED FOR SPEED EDITORIAL, PRODUCTION, The Carmel (Ind.) High School by J.R. Rosania MERCHANDISING, MARKETING AND girls’ swimming team just keeps ADVERTISING OFFICE on winning...and doing so with JUNIOR 2744 East Glenrosa Avenue, Phoenix, AZ 85016 class. -
II~Ny Ore, Continue Their Dominance of Their Respective Events
I'_l .N" l'.l('l FI4' There are different opportunities f II A .~1 I' I qi ~ ~ II I i ~ au'aiting all swimmers the year after an Olympic Games. By BtdD ~i,VmHllnoin.~,~i~ tions' exciting new talent to showcase its potential. Neil Walker, FUKUOKA, Japan--The post-Olympic year provides different op- Lenny Krayzelburg, Mai Nakamura, Grant Hackett, Ian Thorpe and portunities for swimmers. others served notice to the swimming world that they will be a force For the successful Atlanta Olympians, the opportunity to contin- to be reckoned with leading up to the 2000 Sydney Olympics. ue their Olympic form still remains, or they can take a back seat The meet was dominated once again by the U.S. and Australian with a hard-earned break from international competition. teams, who between them took home 31 of the 37 gold medals. For those who turned in disappointing results in Atlanta, there Japan (2), Costa Rica (2), China (i) and Puerto Rico (1) all won was the opportunity to atone for their disappointment and return to gold, while charter nation Canada failed to win an event. world-class form. The increasing gap between the top two nations and other com- And for others, the post-Olympic year provides the opportunity peting countries must be a concern for member federations in an era to break into respective national teams and world ranking lists while when most major international competitions are seeing a more even gaining valuable international racing experience. spread of success among nations. The 1997 Pan Pacific Championships Aug. -
FINA Champions Swim Series 2019 - Athletes List
Published on fina.org - Official FINA website (//www.fina.org) FINA Champions Swim Series 2019 - Athletes List Updated on: 19.04.2019 Guangzhou (CHN) - Men 50m Freestyle - USA Anthony Ervin - GBR Ben Proud - ITA Andrea Vergani - RUS Vladimir Morozov 100m Freestyle - RUS Vladimir Morozov - BEL Pieter Timmers - RUS Kliment Kolesnikov - RSA Chad Le Clos 200m Freestyle - CHN Sun Yang - RSA Chad Le Clos - LTU Danas Rapsys - CHN Wang Shun 400m Freestyle - ITA Gabriele Detti - CHN Sun Yang - AUS Jack McLoughlin - UKR Mykhailo Romanchuk 50m Backstroke - RUS Kliment Kolesnikov - ROU Robert Glinta - RUS Vladimir Morozov - USA Michael Andrew 100m Backstroke - CHN Xu Jiayu - RUS Kliment Kolesnikov - JPN Ryosuke Irie - ROU Robert Glinta 200m Backstroke - CHN Xu Jiayu - JPN Ryosuke Irie - LTU Danas Rapsys - CHN Li Guangyuan 50m Breaststroke - BRA Joao Gomes Jr - ITA Fabio Scozzoli - BRA Felipe Lima - USA Michael Andrew 100m Breaststroke - RUS Anton Chupkov - NED Arno Kamminga - ITA Fabio Scozzoli - USA Michael Andrew 200m Breaststroke - KAZ Dmitry Balandin - RUS Anton Chupkov - JPN Ippei Watanabe - CHN Qiu Haiyang 50m Butterfly - GBR Ben Proud - BRA Nicholas Santos - UKR Andriy Govorov - USA Michael Andrew 100m Butterfly - RSA Chad Le Clos - RUS Andrei Minakov - USA Michael Andrew - CHN Li Zhuhao 200m Butterfly - JPN Masato Sakai - RSA Chad Le Clos - CHN Li Zhuhao - CHN Wang Zhou 200m Ind. Medley - CHN Wang Shun - CHN Qin Haiyang - USA Michael Andrew - CHN Wang Yizhe Guangzhou (CHN) - Women 50m Freestyle - DEN Pernille Blume - SWE Sarah Sjostrom - NED -
NCMS Zooms to 8Th Place Team Finish at 2014 Spring Nationals by Don Gilchrist
NCMS Zooms to 8th place team finish at 2014 Spring Nationals By Don Gilchrist Seventeen members of NCMS shined at Spring Nationals, May 1-4, at the George F Hanes International Swim Center, Santa Clara, California. This is the pool where the Olympic legends competed and trained, and considered the epicenter of competitive swimming over the last 75 years. Enthusiasm and excitement was rampant and gave rise to great swims by NC swimmers and fellow master swimmers. More recent legends participated and provided much thrill. They included Olympians Matt Biondi, Anthony Ervin, Josh Davis and Nathan Adrian (18.78 50 free and 41.13 100 free). NCMS member and national legend E Ole Larson, age 93, proved age is no hindrance by sweeping six events. Taking gold in all and having to purchase another bag to carry home the loot. One incredible feat! Below: Ole finishes the 1000 yd Freestyle Below: Matt Biondi and Jenny Perrottet, our secretary. For those who have thought about attending a USMS National Event, please view the Spring National wrap up, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m31VCsfkQPc&list=UUieORPCvi3T59wtqHLvbeww Other first place finishes came from Barbara Crowder, Elizabeth Novak and Jon Klein but much contribution in scoring and enthusiasm came from others; Robert Crowder, Melissa Gass, Dana Greene, Kevin Happ, Stacey Harris, Amy Holland, Paul Kern, Jamie Miller, Steve Pegram, Jennifer Perrottet, Carol Redfield, Amanda Rubel and Don Gilchrist. Jamie and Jenny received by informal vote the toughness award by competing in the 200 butterfly. There were 2249 participants making this event one of the largest USMS national events ever. -
April 13-15: Arena Pro Swim Series in Mesa
April 13-15: Arena Pro Swim Series in Mesa Written by Editorial Olympic champions Nathan Adrian (Bremerton, Wash./California Aquatics), Anthony Ervin (Valencia, Calif./SwimMAC Carolina), Katie Ledecky (Bethesda, Md./Stanford Swimming) and Simone Manuel (Sugar Land, Texas/Stanford Swimming) highlight the expected field of the 2017 Arena Pro Swim Series in Mesa, set for April 13-15 at the Skyline Aquatic Center. Additional individual Olympic medalists expected to compete include Kathleen Baker (Winston-Salem, N.C./SwimMAC Carolina), three-time defending series champion Conor Dwyer (Winnetka, Ill./Trojan Swim Club), Matt Grevers (Lake Forest, Ill./Tucson Ford Dealers Aquatics), Cullen Jones (Irvington, N.J./Wolfpack Elite), Katie Meili (Colleyville, Texas/New York Athletic Club), Josh Prenot (Santa Maria, Calif./California Aquatics), Dana Vollmer (Granbury, Texas/California Aquatics) and Leah Smith (Pittsburgh, Pa./Cavalier Swimming). The three-day meet opens Thursday, April 13 and continues through Saturday, April 15, with daily prelims at 9 a.m. PT followed by finals at 5 p.m. Single- and all-session tickets are on sale now online. Two days of television coverage from Mesa will air on delay on NBC Sports Network – Friday, April 14, and Saturday, April 15, at 1 a.m. ET. All three finals sessions also will be streamed live via NBC Sports, while a live webcast of the entire meet also will be available at usaswimming.org. In total, approximately 500 swimmers will swim in Mesa, including 40-plus members of the USA Swimming National Team and more than 20 U.S. Olympians. On the local front, Mesa native and 2012 Olympian Breeja Larson is expected to compete, as are a number of standout area age-groupers. -
Tomorrow's Swimmer Today Ncaa Championships
NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS TOMORROW'S SWIMMER TODAY $ 4.95 USA NUMBER 256 www.swimnews.com MARCH 2000 $ 4.95 CAN FIVEFIVE GOLDSGOLDS FORFOR NEILNEIL WALKERWALKER ATAT SCSC WORLDSWORLDS RICKRICK SAYSAY BETTERSBETTERS 200200 FREEFREE RECORDRECORD 2 SWIMNEWS / MARCH 2000 SWIMNEWS CONTENTS MARCH 2000 N. J. Thierry, Editor & Publisher CONSECUTIVE NUMBER 256 VOLUME 27, NUMBER 3 Marco Chiesa, Business Manager Karin Helmstaedt, International Editor FEATURES Russ Ewald, Sunland, USA Editor Paul Quinlan, Australian Editor 13 Speedo Spring Nationals Nikki Dryden Cecil Colwin, Ottawa, Features Editor Anita Smale, Copy Editor West is Best as Centres Dominate Feature Writers George Block, San Antonio, USA Record in 200 Free For Rick Say Nikki Dryden, Calgary Katharine Dunn, Halifax 15 Short Course World Championships Nick Thierry Wayne Goldsmith, Australia Anita Lonsbrough, England Fifteen World Records International Statistical Support Group: Americans Win Most Medals Jorge Aguado, Argentina Rumen Atanasov, Bulgaria 18 Women’s NCAA Championships Mary Wagner Chaker Belhadj, Tunisia Young-Ryul Cho, Korea Georgia Wins Second Team Title Szabolcs Fodor, Hungary Gerd Heydn, Germany Two World Records Set Franck Jensen, Denmark Berth Johansson, Sweden 19 Men’s NCAA Championships Mary Wagner Daniel Pichon / Michel Salles, France Hans Peter Sick, Germany Moses Parts The Waters Juan Antonio Sierra, Spain Neville Smith, South Africa Texas Runs Away With Team Title Fratisek Stochl, Czech Republic Nelson Vargas, Mexico Canadian Records for Riley Janes Janusz Wasko, Poland Sumire Watanabe, Japan 21 Ask Judy Judy Goss Computer programs for TAG, World Rankings developed by EveryWare Development Corporation. Don’t Always Expect It! SWIMNEWS established in 1974 Published ten times yearly (January to October) 28 Taking The Next Step Wayne Goldsmith Contents copyright © No portion of this magazine may be reprinted without permission of the publisher. -
Swimming and Diving DIVISION I
96 DIVISION I Swimming and Diving DIVISION I 2002 Championships Highlights Texas Hooks Up Swimming Title: The Texas Longhorns pulled out their third consecutive championship in dramatic fashion, coming back to take the lead in the second-to-last event of the meet and holding on for the victory. The Longhorns finished with 512 points, 11 more than the Stanford Cardinal. That margin of victory is the closest since the advent of the 16-place scoring system in 1985. Divers made the difference for the Longhorns. Troy Dumais was named diver of the meet for the third straight time after sweeping the spring- board events and taking fifth on platform. With his win in the three- meter event, he became the first diver in NCAA history to win an event all four years. Photo by Erik S. Lesser/NCAA Photos For the complete championship story go to the April 15, 2002 issue of Texas swimmer Brendan Hansen earned the 200-yard breaststroke The NCAA News at www.ncaa.org on the World Wide Web. title, helping his team claim its ninth overall championship. TEAM STANDINGS 1. Texas............................ 512 21. Texas A&M ................... 33 2. Stanford........................ 501 22. Southern Methodist......... 29 1/2 3. Auburn ......................... 365 1/2 23. Brigham Young.............. 21 4. Florida .......................... 277 24. Pittsburgh ...................... 18 5. Southern California ........ 272 25. UNC Wilmington ........... 15 6. California...................... 271 26. South Carolina............... 14 7. Arizona ........................ 242 27. LSU............................... 11 8. Minnesota ..................... 216 Hawaii ......................... 11 9. Michigan ...................... 183 10. Georgia ........................ 167 Georgia Tech................ 11 30. Washington................... 9 1 11. Virginia......................... 157 /2 31. -
2020 U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Swimming 1 Media Guidelines & Information Usaswimming.Org/Trials L @Usaswimming L @Usaswimmingnews L #Swimtrials21
2020 U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Swimming 1 Media Guidelines & Information usaswimming.org/trials l @USASwimming l @USASwimmingNews l #SwimTrials21 Facility Address Media Seating CHI Health Center Omaha USA Swimming will provide seating charts for tabled media in the competition 455 N. 10th Street venue. Overflow (non-tabled) media seating is available in section 102 and 103. Omaha, NE 68102 Seating in the media work room will not be assigned. COVID-19 Guidelines Internet Getty Images All credentialed, on-site media must adhere to the COVID-19 health and safety Wireless internet access will be available throughout the various media work areas. protocols listed at www.usaswimming.org/trials. Media members must receive a Ethernet connections will be available in the Media Seating Area (tables only), 2020 U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Swimming Media Guide COVID-19 PCR test 3-6 days before picking up their credentials in Omaha. select photographer locations and the Media Work Room. usaswimming.org/trials l @USASwimming l @USASwimmingNews l #SwimTrials21 Credentials Photographer Guidelines Competition Details Media credential pick-up will be located at the media entrance of the CHI Health Steven Currie will again serve as the photo chief for the U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Center Omaha. The entrance is located at the back of the building (east side of the Swimming. He will assist and coordinate locations for all photographers in Omaha. Wave I Dates: June 4-7, 2021 building), adjacent to Parking Lot A. This will be the media entrance throughout the Complete guidelines will be distributed to all credentialed photographers prior to Wave II Dates: June 13-20, 2021 me11-1et. -
Men's Olympic Swimming Sinks While Title IX Swims Megan Ryther
Marquette Sports Law Review Volume 17 Article 8 Issue 2 Spring Swimming Upstream: Men's Olympic Swimming Sinks While Title IX Swims Megan Ryther Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.law.marquette.edu/sportslaw Part of the Entertainment and Sports Law Commons Repository Citation Megan Ryther, Swimming Upstream: Men's Olympic Swimming Sinks While Title IX Swims, 17 Marq. Sports L. Rev. 679 (2007) Available at: http://scholarship.law.marquette.edu/sportslaw/vol17/iss2/8 This Comment is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at Marquette Law Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. SWIMMING UPSTREAM: MEN'S OLYMPIC SWIMMING SINKS WHILE TITLE IX SWIMS* I. INTRODUCTION At the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia, the U.S. Men's Olympic Swimming Team (the U.S. Team) was defeated for the first time ever 2 in the 4x100 Freestyle Relay' in international competition by the Australians. Many people thought this was a fluke and the United States would come back with a vengeance in 2004, but that was not the case. At the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece, the U.S. Team could not even manage to walk away with a silver medal, let alone a gold medal, in the 4x100 Freestyle Relay, an event it had once dominated. 3 The U.S. Team lost to South Africa and the 4 Netherlands, respectively, coming home with only a bronze. As one begins to search for answers as to why the United States continues to lose its dominance on the international swimming scene, an analysis of Title IX and its unintended consequences may provide some of the necessary answers. -
1999 Pan Pacific Championships Results
1999 Pan Pacific Championships Aug. 22-29, 1999 Sydney. Australia Results | 5K and 25K Open Water Results Below Top 3 and all U.S. swimmers (full results at official site) Aug. 22, 1999 Morning heats Women's 400m IM - heats *1, Maddy Crippen, USA (Philadelphia, Pa.), 4:43.13 (1:04.42, = 2:16.21, 3:36.84) 2, Joanne Malar, CAN, 4:44.76 3, Yasuko Tajima, JPN, 4:45.07 *4, Cristina Teuscher, USA (New Rochelle, N.Y.), 4:45.7 (1:05.57, = 2:18.63, 3:40.53) 13, Jenna Street, USA (Johnson City, Tenn.), 4:53.22 (1:06.35, = 2:23.50, 3:45.48) Men's 400m Free - heats 1, Grant Hackett, AUS, 3:47.37 (54.35, 1:51.76, 2:49.51) 2, Ian Thorpe, AUS, 3:48.36 3, Ryk Neethling, RSA, 3:49.47 *5, Chad Carvin, USA (Laguna Hills, Calif.), 3:52.41 (55.83, = 1:55.36, 2:55.28) *6, Jon Younghouse, USA (Cape Girardeau, Mo.), 3:52.63 (56.43, = 1:55.46, 2:54.54) 6, Chris Thompson, USA (Roseburg, Ore.), 3:52.63 (56.51, 1:54.77, = 2:53.92) 9, Erik Vendt, USA (North Easton, Mass.), 3:55.00 (55.34, 1:54.42, = 2:55.57) Women's 100m Fly - heats ^1, Jenny Thompson, USA (Dover, N.H.), 59.26 (27.95) 2, Susan O'Neill, AUS, 59.43 ^3, Misty Hyman, USA (Phoenix, Ariz.), 59.89 (27.66) ^5, Ashley Tappin, USA (New Orleans, La.), 1:00.76 (28.09) ^7, Richelle Fox, USA (Scotia, N.Y.), 1:00.85 (28.23) 13, Molly Freedman, USA (Washington, D.C.), 1:01.85 (29.41) Men's 100m Breast - heats 1, Simon Cowley, AUS, 1:01.87 (29.32) 2, Morgan Knabe, CAN, 1:02.56 ^3, Michael Norment, USA (Philadelphia, Pa.), 1:02.59 (28.93) ^11, Kurt Grote, USA (San Diego, Calif.), 1:03.54 = (29.88) Evening session -
Hall of Fame Presentations/Awards Nominees & Winners
APRIL 22, 2018 Hall of Fame Presentations/Awards Nominees & Winners Class of 2018 Hall of Fame Inductees WISCONSIN SWIMMING HALL OF FAME JIM MONTGOMERY • 1973 World Championships: Belgrade, Yugoslavia – Gold (100m free, 200m free), 3 gold relays • 1975 World Championships: Cali, Colombia – Bronze (100m free), 2 gold relays • 1976 Montreal Olympics – Gold (100m free), Bronze (200m free), 2 gold relays • 1978 World Championships: West Berlin, Germany – Silver (100m free), 2 gold relays • NCAA Championships – 3 championships (100y free, 200y free), 5 relays • AAU Championships – 7 championships (100y free, 200y free, 100m free, 200m free), 4 relays • World Records – 4 recorders (100m free) 7 relays • 1976 Montreal Olympics video WISCONSIN SWIMMING HALL OF FAME KELLEY BECHERER • 2004 Paralympic Games: Athens, Greece • 2006 World Championship Results – Silver (100 back), Bronze (100 free & 400 free) • 2008 Paralympic Games: Beijing, China – Gold (500 freestyle), Bronze (400 free, 100 free) • 2010 World Championships – Gold (50 freestyle, 100 free, 200 IM, 100 backstroke), Bronze (400 free, 100 fly) • 2012 Paralympic Games: London, England – Gold (100m freestyle, 50m freestyle), Bronze (100m breaststroke, 200m IM) • World Records – 50 backstroke and 200 free • American LCM Records – 50 free, 100 free, 200 free, 400 free, 50 back, 100 back, 50 breast, 100 breast, 50 fly, 200 IM, 400 IM • Current LCM American Records – 50 free and 100 free • Team Record: Northeastern University – 800 freestyle relay • Paralympics Swimmer and Northeastern Student -
2017 USA Swimming Awards and Honors
USA Swimming Awards and Honors USA Swimming Award 2008 Michael Phelps 1968 Sherm Chavoor Established in 1982, the USA Swimming Award is 2009 Ryan Lochte 1969 Jim Montrella the highest honor in the sport of swimming, given 2010 Ryan Lochte 1970 Don Watson to the individual or organization with the most 2011 Ryan Lochte 1971 Jim Montrella outstanding contribution to the sport of swimming. 2012 Missy Franklin 1972 George Haines 1982 United States Olympic Committee 2013 Katie Ledecky 1973 Bob Miller 1983 Don Gambril 2014 Katie Ledecky 1974 Dick Jochums 1984 Bernard J. Favaro 2015 Katie Ledecky 1975 Mark Schubert 1985 William A. Lippman, Jr. 2016 Katie Ledecky 1976 Mark Schubert 1986 Ross Wales 2017 Caeleb Dressel 1977 Paul Bergen 1987 Buck Dawson 1978 Paul Bergen 1988 Richard Quick USA Swimming Coach/Developmental 1979 Randy Reese 1989 Mary T. Meagher Coach of the Year 1980 Dennis Pursley 1981 Mark Schubert 1990 Sandra Baldwin Established in 1996 by USA Swimming in 1982 Dick Shoulberg 1991 Michael M. Hastings conjunction with the U.S. Olympic Committee’s 1983 John Collins 1992 Carol Zaleski Coaches Recognition Program, this award is given 1984 Randy Reese 1993 Doug Ingram to the individual with the most outstanding year in 1985 Nort Thornton 1994 Bud and Irene Hackett coaching swimmers, voted on by the LSC Coaches’ 1986 Richard Quick 1995 Harvey Schiller and Bill Hybl Representatives at the annual meetings. The award 1987 Bud McAllister 1996 Dr. Allen Richardson was renamed the Doc Councilman Award in 1999. 1997 George Breen 1988 Bud McAllister