Japanese swimmer Rikako Ikee was named the Olympic Council of Asia’s Most Valuable Player at the 18th Asian Games in Jakarta and Palembang by the OCA on Sunday.
Ikee, 18, won six gold and two silver medals at the GBK Aquatic Centre in Jakarta to become the first female athlete in any sport to win six gold medals at a single Asian Games.
With eight medals in total, Ikee equalled the record medal haul in a single Asian Games held by North Korean shooter So Gin-man at the 1982 Asian Games in New Delhi, India.
She also became the first female winner of the MVP award, which the OCA introduced at the 1998 Asian Games in Bangkok, Thailand.
Three swimmers had won the award previously: Kosuke Kitajima (Japan) in 2002, Park Tae-hwan (Republic of Korea) in 2006 and Kosuke Hagino (Japan) in 2014.
The Chairman of the OCA MVP Award Selection Committee, Raja Randhir Singh, said: “The selection panel was unanimous in its decision to award the OCA MVP Trophy for the 18th Asian Games to the athlete Rikako Ikee of Japan.
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St. Lawrence River boathouse jumping
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Iraq’s war amputees swim despite disability
Iraqi civilians who lost limbs during the government offensive against ‘Daesh’ group militants in the northern city of Mosul swim during a competitive sports event sponsored by the Kuwaiti government in Arbil, Iraq.
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370 swimmers participate in “fast & furious” competition
A record three hundred and seventy (370) swimmers turned up for the third edition of the Dolphin club organized “Fast and Furious†championship held at Gem Cambridge in Butabika.
The one day event pits short swimming races with a view to give the swimmers an opportunity to gain experience in all versions of the sport.
Thirteen clubs took part in today’s event that organisers believe was more competitive than the first two editions. -
How Taking Up Swimming Helped One Stressed New Yorker Learn to Manage Her Anxiety
They call themselves the Bold and the Beautiful, a group of hundreds of swimmers who gather every morning on Manly Beach in a small Australian coastal town near Sydney. Every member wears a hot pink cap and swims 750 meters to the neighboring beach of Shelly, and back again. For hours starting at 7 a.m., a sea of pink bobbing heads of all genders and ages, arching arms, and flutter kicks can be seen moving like a school of fish, stride by stride, across waves and around rocks and jagged bends.
“I wish I could join them,†I whispered to my host during a recent vacation Down Under, “But I’m scared I won’t be able to finish.†“That’s not the point,†she responded, repeating the words a ranger said to her when she, too, was moved to join the squad two years back: “‘It’s about breathing,’ he said. ‘And not dying.’â€
It’s a good lesson—breathe, don’t die—for life as well as for swimming. I’d know. For at 31-years old, I had just graduated from one term of introductory swim class at Asphalt Green, a neighborhood nonprofit sports, swim, and fitness organization with a 25-yard lap pool next door to my office in Lower Manhattan. I signed up for a private class in hopes of deflating my fear of water, and of drowning in it or being eaten by an animal in it, strange phobias picked up along the route to adulthood.
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An alligator hit the beach for a swim at Oak Island, bringing spectators and screams
North Carolina beachgoers are accustomed to seeing a lot of different creatures in the ocean, but an alligator turns heads.
Numerous Facebook posts on Friday noted the presence of an alligator swimming in the surf at Oak Island.
Chuck McCullen of Cary said he and his family saw a crowd of people walking down the shoreline watching something in the water. He thought it was a turtle.
It wasn’t.
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Indonesia announces surprise bid for 2032 Olympics
Indonesia will bid to host the 2032 Olympics following the success of the Asian Games held there over the past two weeks, President Joko “Jokowi†Widodo said in a surprise announcement Saturday that highlights the rising ambition of the giant but long underperforming Southeast Asian nation.
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The Long Swim: The Finish
Endurance swimmer Lewis Pugh has completed an unprecedented length of the English Channel, a 330-mile journey which has taken 49 days. Here’s a look back at his journey.
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Olympic Swimmer Simone Manuel visits Norfolk
Olympic swimming champion Simone Manuel made a stop at Norfolk’s Southside Aquatic Center for a very special cause.
