• A Cambridge graduate who drowned in a swimming pool during a party at his family home had been playing a game to see how long he could hold his breath underwater, an inquest heard.

    Dominic Hamlyn, 24, died earlier this year after friends pulled him from the pool during a party at his home for his younger brother’s 21st birthday, the hearing was told.

    The 24-year-old is the son of world-famous neurosurgeon Peter Hamlyn, who is famed for saving the life of boxer Michael Watson when he was injured during a world title fight with Chris Eubank in 1991.

    He had just given a 15 minute speech to guests toasting his brother before going for a swim with his friends.

    During this time he had been playing in a game to see how long he could hold his breath underwater, it was heard.

    But he had to be pulled from the pool by friends following the game.

    Paramedics were called to the families £3m farmhouse in Crundale, near Ashford in the early hours of July 28 when it became clear that Dominic was unresponsive, an inquest heard.

    Dr Hamlyn then desperately performed CPR on his son until paramedics arrived.

    Read The Telegraph

     

  • A junior at Thornapple Kellog High School in Michigan is battling cancer as she finishes the swim season with her team. Lydia Cole has been swimming for the past 11 years and throughout her high school career.

  • The NMU Student Nurses Association and the U.P. Diabetes Outreach Network are hosting former Olympic swimmer, Gary Hall Jr., on Friday.

    Gary Hall Jr. is an Olympic swimmer (1996, 2000, 2004) and winner of 10 Olympic medals (5 gold, 3 silver, and 2 bronze). He was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes in 1999 while he was training for his second Olympics.

    Hall is going to speak in NMU’s Jamrich Hall from 5:30-7:00 p.m. Friday. The presentation is free and open to everyone.

    Read Upper Michigan Source

     

  • As anticipation and excitement builds for Tokyo 2020, Swimming Australia is proud to unveil its Olympic and Paralympic campaign ‘Greatness Starts Somewhere’.

  • National sportswoman and world record-holding diver Şahika Ercümen on Oct. 28 broke the 90-meter women’s cave diving (without fins) world record at the Gilindire Cave in Aydıncık, a town in southern Turkey’s Mersin.

    The cave was discovered by a shepherd in 1999 and dates back to the Ice Age.

    The freestyle driver said she was overjoyed at earning the Guinness World Record and dedicated her win to Turkish soldiers.

    Read Hürriyet Daily News and Daily Sabah

  • The targets: The attacks were aimed at at least “16 national and international sporting and anti-doping organizations across three continents” and began in mid-September, according to a blog post from Microsoft, whose security researchers detected the attacks. Several were successful, but most were not. The hackers used tactics like spear-phishing, password spraying, and exploiting internet-connected devices.

    Repeat offenders: The hacking group responsible, known widely as Fancy Bear or Strontium, is a unit of Russia’s military intelligence agency, the GRU.  It was most famously responsible for attacks against the Democratic National Committee during the 2016 American election. But its résumé stretches  back far longer: Ukraine, NATO, French television, and American think tanks have all been victims.

    Olympic grievances: The attacks, Microsoft notes, began days before the World Anti-Doping Agency threatened to ban Russian athletes from the Olympics and other major sporting events. Fancy Bear launched repeated successful cyberattacks against the 2018 Winter Olympics after the Russian team was suspended from it, also over doping charges.

    That campaign included internet disruptions during the opening ceremony of the games, leaked emails, a global disinformation operation, and broad infections and theft of data from Olympic Games systems.

    Read MIT Technology Review, Cyberscoop, Wired

  • Rice freshman swimmer Ahalya Lettenberger has overcome obstacles life has thrown at her, and her next stop? The Olympics.

  • Team Iron captain Katinka Hosszú capped off a stellar weekend by wrapping up the MVP award in front of the Budapest crowd.

  • London Roar make it back to back wins in Group B with a stunning victory in Budapest.