• A day out at a Beijing waterpark with my friends. Very large pool with wave machine and 30 minute concert!

    https://youtu.be/K7-3ya2KMr8

  • 2017 European Short-Course Swimming Championships, Copenhagen (DEN)

    With two months to go, 14,000 tickets already sold

    With two months to go, the organising process has geared up in Denmark where the hosts are preparing for their second big LEN Event in four years. After the outstanding success of Herning 2013, another European Short-Course Swimming Championships will take place in the North, this time in Copenhagen.

    “This event is going to be another wonderful celebration of European Aquatics” LEN President Paolo Barelli said. “The Danish Swimming Federation, headed by our fellow Bureau Member Pia Holmen, is doing a wonderful job and we can be sure that this edition of the short-course European Championships will be another big hit. European athletes have done a fantastic job in 2017, too, our continent was by far the strongest in the World Championships either we consider the medal charts, the number of finalists or the number of participants. We are convinced that our swimmers will come up with fantastic performances in December again and LEN, our National Federations and European Aquatics will close this year on a high.”

    The venue cannot be any more exciting: the brand new Royal Arena will witness the coronation of the short-course season on 13-17 December. The Arena has already hosted a handful of concerts, including tremendous shows of Metallica and Drake, but sport is yet to make its debut in the multipurpose facility and in two months time LEN’s biannual swimming meet shall inaugurate it as a sport venue.

    The Danish Swimming Federation, in association with Sport Event Denmark and the City of Copenhagen, is committed to stage another wonderful event which is going to feature a handful of European stars. It takes another month before the home team will be selected, however, it’s almost sure that the locals could cheer for such greats as Olympic champion sprinter Pernille Blume, world record-holder breaststroker Rikke Moller Pedersen, European champion Mie Nielsen and Viktor Bromer to name a few.

    Ticket sales figures sign pretty strong interest from the fans: 14,000 have already been purchased and the organisers expect to pass the 25,000 barrier by the start – if not more as the Arena could accommodate 6,500 spectators per session.

    Foreign fans representing 24 nations have also had their shares of the ticket purchasing. Not surprisingly, the Swedes were busy to book their seats in huge numbers, 10% of the tickets were bought by the neighbours who are eager to cheer for Sarah Sjostrom. She has been enjoying a brilliant season: she amassed three world titles and a silver at the FINA World Championships in Budapest in July, setting two WRs en route, and later she added four more global marks in the short-course World Cup.

    In December, Sjostrom and fellow European swimmers might hit the top gear again to force LEN to transfer a larger sum to their bank accounts as the European Federation offers record-bonuses for the first time in its history. World Records are worth €10,000 while the European Records pay €5,000 and the total prize money pot for the top 12 results (both genders respectively) amounts €220,000.

    Press release from LEN

  • Suhan Mohamed and Nimo Gohe are the first Somali teenagers to join the St. Cloud Apollo girls swim team – and they won’t be the last, reports John Lauritsen

    See CBS Minnesota

  • An air force unit in northern Thailand are teaching youths to swim to prevent them from drowning during their school break.

    https://youtu.be/Dkuzo8uyfpc

  • Tracey Ayton set up Little Heroes Swim Academy, a not-for-profit swimming academy with a philosophy of inclusion, to help the less abled kids she had seen left out in mainstream swimming classes.

  • A veteran swimmer was brought back from the dead after nearly an hour – while the flags were lowered to half mast around him.

    Peter Marks, 75, had finished towelling down after his usual morning dip when he suddenly keeled over and stopped breathing.

    He was clinically dead for 55 minutes and has no memory of his dramatic rescue.

    Word quickly spread and the flags at the seawater lido where he had been swimming were lowered in respect.

    But after intially given CPR by friend and former paramedic Steve Pinfield at the scene Peter miraculously survived after being flown to hospital.

    Peter, of Penzance, Cornwall, spent two weeks in hospital before making a full recovery – but still has no recollection of his dramatic survival.

    See The Herald

  • Run. Bike. Swim. Three simple tasks, but when you add grueling conditions and hellish distances, you get one of the most intense races in the history of the sport of triathlon. Take an inside look ahead of IRONMAN’s biggest annual competition. With all the usual big-hitters vying for the world crown, we preview the event by the numbers.