• Journey through the Sandpiper Team Banquet in Las Vegas, NV 2018. I share some lessons about swimming and being thankful.

  • The Kenya swimming federation has unveiled five swimmers who will represent Kenya in the commonwealth games set for April this year in Australia. This is after the end of national trials that were held at Kasarani Aquatic centre last weekend.

  • View the highlights from the 2018 Swimming Championship, held at Melbourne Sports & Aquatic Centre on Friday February 23rd.

  • Carl Waterer got back into competitive swimming a couple years ago and has found a multitude of benefits from the activity.

  • One of the most common questions we get is how do you make sure your goggles don’t fall off during a dive?

  • A new study has found bathing in the sea increases the risk of ear infections, and gastrointestinal illnesses that cause diarrhoea.

    A major review of 40 previous studies found the risk of picking up stomach aches or diarrhoea increased by 29 per cent for bathers, compared to those who had not recently been swimming in the sea.

    The likelihood of reporting an earache increased by 77 per cent after a swim, according to the research published on Monday in the International Journal of Epidemiology.

    Most of the studies entailed talking to people at beaches and near the seaside.

    The academics behind the study said they hope the work leads to a push to clean up coastal waters. The research was undertaken by the University of Exeter Medical School and the UK-based Centre for Ecology and Hydrology.

    Dr Anne Leonard, an academic at the University of Exeter Medical School, said there was a “perception” in high-income countries that there was no health risks to spending time in the sea, but their research pointed in the opposite direction.

    The study suggested that “pollution is still an issue affecting swimmers in some of the world’s richest countries”, she said.

    Read The Irish Times

  • LEN has chosen Dailymotion’s player technology to livestream the Men’s Water Polo
    Champions League – here each and every game is available and can be followed for free.
    From now on, Dailymotion will have a dedicated Champions League channel where the live
    streaming of each game is featured as well as all previous matches and the game’s highlights
    can be relived.

    Today the live stream will feature another crucial day in Group A: the game of Brescia (ITA)
    and Dynamo (RUS) can become a decisive battle in the hunt for the Final Eight berths. Five
    teams chase the four available F8 spots in Group A and two more still have mathematical
    chances so the race is quite exciting. In Group B this day might begin to widen the gap
    between the top and the lower ranked four sides.

    For free live streaming of all matches of the LEN Champions League, play-by- play action and
    detailed stats, visit the LEN website (www.len.eu) and
    https://www.dailymotion.com/LENChampions

    Press release from LEN

  • As someone who competed for 11 years at the national level, I can tell you that as much as I loved swimming, I also hated it. Nearly every coach I came across with a reputation for being one of the best was also incredibly mean. Not just “makes you swim hard” mean, but yelling, cursing, throwing kickboards at children in the water mean. These coaches were also known to weigh female swimmers in front of each other, or make comments about their bodies (pointing out thigh size, for example, or the effects of puberty). With over 20 hours in the pool a week, in a setting where pushing yourself so hard you throw up is seen as a sign of a “good” practice, boundaries can be blurry or scarcely exist.

    That all came back when my childhood sport made headlines this past week. An investigative report by The Southern California News Group alleges that USA Swimming covered up the sexual abuse of hundreds of swimmers, mostly by their coaches, The Orange County Register reported. The investigation alleges that officials at every level knew about predatory coaches, even receiving complaints about specific instances, and—as with USA Gymnastics during Larry Nasser’s reign of terror—they did nothing about it for decades. (Two top swimming officials have resigned as a result.)

    I’m a psychiatrist now, which means I’m overexposed to this kind of evil and able to feel protected from it by a false sense of distance (I’m not a gymnast! I am not an actress!). But it became obvious during Nassar’s weeks-long trial, which included impact statements from 156 survivors, that the question wasn’t whether other powerful men in elite sports would stand accused, but when and who. I find myself feeling angry, ashamed, sad, defensive, and ultimately, not surprised that it was my sport that came next.

    Read Glamour

    Photo by allendc33