Category: Equipment
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Geoff Huegill might wear a cap now with the Fastskin3
31-year-old champion butterflyer Geoff Huegill may change the habit of a lifetime and wear a cap in international competition, following the launch of Speedo’s new Fastskin3 “racing system” of suit, cap and goggles. “The hardest thing with ‘fly is that as you put your head in the water, it tends to push the cap up,”…
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Speedo FASTSKIN3 launch – behind the scenes
A look behind the scenes at the launch of the Speedo FASTSKIN3 Racing System in London, including the views of Rebecca Adlington.
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Katie Hoff revealing the Fastskin3 system on The Today Show
Grin, “Matt asked Katie a question he rarely asks on-air: “Could you please take your jacket off?” Via today.msnbc.msn.com Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy
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Under Armour event in Shanghai with Michael Phelps
Back in August, promoting the sports clothing and accessories company from his hometown Baltimore.
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It is here, the Speedo Fastskin³
According to Speedo, the Speedo FASTSKIN3 Racing System offers unrivalled benefits to swimmers, including a full body passive drag reduction of up to 16.6%, an 11% improvement in the swimmer’s oxygen economy enabling them to swim stronger for longer, and a 5.2% reduction in body active drag, to create the world’s fastest cap, goggle and suit ever. Read official press release at Speedo.com
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Speedo claim their Fastskin3 suits will revolutionise the world of swimming
Here we go again, as mentioned before, Speedo is about to launch the most advanced swimwear design since the introduction in January 2010 of new FINA regulations banning full-body coverage and the use of polyurethane. Sources now say tomorrow November 30th, read for instance The Telegraph
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Omega – Michael Phelps
Fancy a watch? – Well, you will now! :-) Omega – Michael Phelps from Sarah Laird & Good Company on Vimeo.
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Arena Powerskin® The Next Generation
Had a nice experience with Arena’s customer support yesterday, so this one’s on me :-)
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The supersuits were wrong, philosophically speaking
So, I’m totally out of my depth here, but this article is interesting, discussing whether the supersuits were wrong or not, philosophically speaking. The conclusion is that yes, if we value fair competition and the ability to compare results against an absolute standard over time, then the supersuits were wrong. (11) If some technological advance…
