• 2 On Your Side has confirmed that a fourth female swimmer has joined a lawsuit against Niagara University.

    The new allegation is from a Jane Doe, who says during the fall semester in 2018 that a member of the men’s swim team sexually assaulted her.

    The other accusations were for harassment and other Title IX violations.

    According to the amended lawsuit filed Thursday in federal court, the latest accuser says she got a threatening phone message from the man she believes assaulted her, and she claims the university covered it up.

    See WGRZ and The Buffalo News

  • Former Navy SEAL Jeff Nichols takes Bart through intense swim training and talks about how to get your body acclimated to being underwater.

  • In September 1936 aboard a boat on which she returned to New York City from Europe, Eleanor Holm (also known as Eleanor Holm Jarrett), a Brooklyn born and raised swimmer, comments about her removal the previous month from the U.S. Olympic team because of what this British newsreel report refers to as “alleged whoopie,” aboard the ship en route to the Olympic Games in Berlin, Germany.

    Holm, a 100-meter backstroke gold medalist at the 1932 Olympic Games and the daughter of a New York City fire department captain, had qualified for the 1936 Olympics and was the favorite to win another gold medal in the 100-meter backstroke. She had set world records in the 100-meter backstroke and 200-meter backstroke and had not lost a race in seven years.

    On July 15, 1936, Holm and 333 other Olympians departed New York Harbor on the S.S. Manhattan. Before the ship arrived in Germany, Holm was off the team, a decision made by the American Olympic Committee (now the United States Olympic Committee) and its powerful president, Avery Brundage, who claimed Holm was a poor role model for breaking curfew and drinking alcohol.

    One night on the ship, Holm was in attendance as an invitee at a sportswriters party on the first-class deck and stayed past curfew. Another night on the ship, she attended another sportswriters party and would admit to drinking champagne at the event.

    Holm maintained that other U.S. Olympians were drinking alcohol on the ship and that the American Olympic Committee didn’t have a rule against drinking. When they learned of Holm’s removal from competition, more than 100 fellow team members asked the American Olympic Committee for her reinstatement, but Brundage kept her ban in place and she didn’t complete at the Games.

    https://youtu.be/SvUxZ4Sj1gs

  • We hope this guy’s friends got him a warm bath and a fresh set of clothes stat.

    See Digg

  • Lynchie heads to the pool where he met up with the Burlington High Girls Swim Team that welcomed a new member to the squad this fall and that young lady became an instant, inspirational leader.

  • A commuter airplane carrying 42 people, including a high school swim team, went off the runway while landing Thursday at a small Alaska community on the Bering Sea.

    Peninsula Airways said in a statement that two passengers were critically injured and 10 others were receiving medical care. A school official said the swim team was fine and eating pizza shortly after the incident

    Read USA Today

    https://youtu.be/qHwuhxBdnJs

    https://youtu.be/r5uTdmOIyFU

  • Learn More about SenSwim – A video based tracking system for competitive swimmers that measure training components.

  • The guys go over the 2nd ISL meet. Bryan is impressed over the camaraderie at the meet and Luke is blown away the fast swimming and “hard work” put in. In recent news with Conor Dwyer, the guy’s transition to performance enhancement. Bryan reminds us of his difficulties with the drug test schedule and its intricacies. While the guys also wonder how all the supplements are decided as performance enhancers.