Thousands of quarries exist across the country but some can be disastrous. Jonathan Baksh, 19, jumped into Martin’s Creek quarry in Pennsylvania in 2015, but he never made it back to land after suffering a cramp in the water. His mom was stunned when she found out her son was the second young man to die in quarry that year. Now, as the one year anniversary of her son’s passing arrives next month, she’s on a crusade to tell the world about the dangers of swimming in quarries.
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Lochte Wanted To Quit After DWTS Protest
Olympic swimmer Ryan Lochte has admits there was a brief period following his drama-filled “Dancing with the Stars” debut last week when he considered hanging up his ballroom shoes. Lochte said “Right after the show I wanted to quit because it hurt so bad. And having my mom in hysterics, crying — watching her go through it, that hurt me. And I wanted to quit.” Lochte’s dancing partner and his family reminded Lochte that he’s “not a quitter … so I’m still here.” On the season premiere of Dancing With The Stars, two protesters told reporters last week they staged the stunt to protest the casting of Lochte. Lochte has been entangled in a flurry of bad press stemming from his “exaggerated” claim that he and three other swimmers had been robbed at gunpoint while in Rio de Janeiro for the Olympics.
https://youtu.be/kkjAOxmgRU0
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Ryan Lochte Channels “The Muppets” on “DWTS”
The gold medal-winning swimmer and partner Cheryl Burke open up about performing as Kermit and Miss Piggy on “Dancing With the Stars.”
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Putin criticizes WADA for hypocrisy by allowing Western sportsmen & sportswomen to take doping
The information leaked by the group behind the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) hack raises lots of questions, as it revealed that some healthy athletes were allowed to use doping while the whole Russian Paralympic team was banned only on suspicion, Vladimir Putin has said. Russian President Vladimir Putin attended a summit of the Commonwealth of Independent states (CIS) in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.
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Hackers leak fourth batch of confidential WADA data
Four-time Olympic athletics champion Mo Farah and 14-time Grand Slam winning tennis player Rafael Nadal are among another 26 athletes whose leaked data has been revealed by hacking group Fancy Bears after a cyber-attack on the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).
Farah, who successfully defended his 5,000 and 10,000 metres titles at last month’s Games in Rio de Janeiro, is one of eight reigning Olympic champions from Great Britain named on the latest list.
Others include golfer Justin Rose and two of the most high-profile members of the British rowing team in Peter Reed and Helen Glover, winners of their respective third and second Olympic titles in Rio.
Also named is gold and silver medal winning cyclist Callum Skinner and a trio of hockey players in Crista Cullen, Alex Danson and Samantha Quek.
Hungarian swimmer Laszlo Cseh, a six-time Olympic medallist, is another high profile inclusion.
Read Inside the Games
https://youtu.be/bxgOlseGYyM
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Scottish Swimming – Learn to Swim Launch
Scottish Swimming is the national governing body for swimming in Scotland, representing clubs, swim schools, aquatic disciplines, athletes, coaches and thousands of talented and committed volunteers across the entire swimmer pathway from development and participation through to performance. Our vision is to ensure that every single person in Scotland has access to quality swimming programmes, regardless of age or ability.
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Homeless Florida man attacked by alligator while swimming
A homeless Florida man out on a morning swim became the victim of a vicious alligator attack Monday, police said.
The 56-year-old man, only identified by his street name “Ron Jon,” was swimming nearby a pier in the Indian River outside Melbourne, Florida around 9 a.m. when a gator lunged at him, Florida Today reported.
Ron Jon was left with several deep puncture wounds to his shoulders but was expected to survive, according to police.
See NY Daily News
https://youtu.be/S0lSYOcg_YI
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The Obscure Ultra-Endurance Sport Women Are Quietly Dominating
There’s something special about ultra-swimming, it seems. In 2014, for example, Knechtle published a paper looking at 30 years of finishing times for the Manhattan Island Marathon Swim, a 28.5-mile loop around the perimeter of Manhattan. On average, the best women were 12 to 14 percent faster than the best men. Another study, published in 2015, looked at 87 years of finishing times for the 20.1-mile Catalina Channel Swim, and found that when “the swimming times of the annual fastest women and the annual fastest men competing between 1927 and 2014 were compared, women were 52.9 minutes faster than men,†Knechtle and his colleagues write.
That’s notable in itself. But it’s not the whole story. Where it gets really interesting is at the amateur level, said Steven Munatones, considered one of the foremost experts on open-water swimming. A few years ago — purely to satisfy his own curiosity — Munatones analyzed the finishing times of men and women who participated in the biggest ultra-distance swims around the world. He did this for three years, keeping track of “12 or 13†races — he can’t remember exactly. He never intended to publish these results anywhere; again, this was for his own curiosity, as a coach and as an open-water swimming fan. Here’s what he found. “If you’re looking at the average times — the average woman is faster than the average man,†said Munatones, who is the founder of the World Open Water Swimming Association. “Which, frankly, I was surprised to see.â€
Read New York Magazine
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Korean swimmer writes history in Rio 2016 Paralympics
With just a few hours left to until the 2016 Paralympics comes to a close, Korean Swimmer Cho Ki Sung… claims his third gold medal.
