• Competitive swimmers are looking to improve their performance with a new piece of tech from TritonWear. This new piece of wearable tech analyzes nearly every aspect of their swim and records it in real time to a tablet or computer.

    The device itself is rather unobtrusive and attaches to the strap of your goggles. After powering on, it uses motion sensors to record stroke count, turn time, time underwater, and much more. By beaming the data directly to an iPad, a coach can then analyze and compare specific swimmers across an entire team.

    Read Digital Trends

  • This is crazy

    Katinka Hosszu Now Owns All of the Hungarian SC National Records

  • The head of Kenya’s swimming federation, Ben Ekumbo, was reportedly found hiding under a bed before being arrested as part of the country’s inquiry into missing money and equipment following Rio 2016.

    Ekumbo, who is also the vice-president of Kenya’s Olympic committee, is the fifth senior official to be arrested as part of the inquiry. Police officers allegedly found boxes of Nike running shoes and unused Kenya uniforms that were supposed to be for athletes at the Games. Investigators are looking into a report that senior officials stole more than £6.4m in expenses and equipment.

    Read The Guardian

  • South Korean swimmer Park Tae-hwan has claimed he was offered lucrative sponsorship contracts and a high-profile role at a university in Seoul by a Government official in return for not competing at the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro.

    Park, the Beijing 2008 400 metres freestyle gold medallist, was only cleared to take part at Rio 2016 a month before the Games following a successful appeal against a Korean Olympic Committee ruling forbidding athletes from representing any national team for three years after a doping suspension.

    The 27-year-old, one of South Korea’s household sporting names, was banned in 2014 after testing positive for the anabolic steroid testosterone and served an 18-month ban.

    Read Inside the Games

    Photo by KOREA.NET – Official page of the Republic of Korea

  • The International Paralympic Committee has detailed anti-doping standards Russia must meet to regain membership after a state-backed doping program was exposed.

    The IPC says Russia’s Paralympic body must also “publicly distance itself from all political/propaganda-type statements issued by Russian authorities.”

    Read CBC

    Photo by The Department for Culture, Media and Sport

  • The FINA Honorary Secretary and LEN President visited the Headquarters of the Budapest 2017 Organising Committee during his one-day trip to the Hungarian capital.

  • ‘Anyways, an Olympic final, Gregorio Paltrinieri, last lap, everyone is getting crazy, it’s amazing, amazing, unbelievable, look at him, look at him, oh my god, last ten meters, he is going to die in that water, look at the stroke, he’s awful, now, but I mean, he’s perfect, perfect!’ :-)

  • A multinational group of swimmers swam seven hours through the salty, soupy waters of the Dead Sea on Tuesday in a bid to draw attention to the environmental degradation of the fabled lake.

    At dawn, the 25 swimmers left on boats from Ein Gedi on the Israeli side of the Dead Sea to Wadi Mujib on the Jordanian side. Then, wearing special protective masks and snorkels, the swimmers paddled through the thick waters in what turned into an 11-mile swim from Jordan to Israel.

    Swimming in the Dead Sea is unusual.

    Tourists typically dip themselves from the beaches and float on the water with the help of the lake’s high salt concentration. It also draws people from around the world who believe the water’s high mineral content is beneficial for skin conditions.

    The Dead Sea, the lowest place on earth at 1,388 feet below sea level, has shrunk significantly over recent decades, a process environmentalists blame on unsustainable water management and over-exploitation of the lake’s minerals.

    “We’re here for the first ever Dead Sea swim challenge with 25 swimmers that come from all over the world to send out a clear message to save the Dead Sea, which is shrinking today at an alarming rate,” said Mira Edelstein, from the environmental group EcoPeace, one of the swim’s organizers.

    Organizers say the Dead Sea’s water level has fallen more than 80 feet over the last three decades. The lake’s southern basin, disconnected from the shrinking northern side, has seen flooding in recent years because of heavy industrialization.

    The swimmers, who hailed from Israel, the Palestinian territories and as far as New Zealand, South Africa and Denmark, wore special face masks to shield them from the briny water, which is painful to the eyes and can be deadly to ingest. The group was accompanied by support vessels with medical equipment and food.

    Despite the tough conditions, only three swimmers failed to finish — two who suffered from dehydration and a third who complained of chills.

    Read CBS News

  • It’s not every day the most decorated Olympian of all time strolls into your living room, so Lori Loughlin feels pretty lucky.

    PEOPLE Now recently caught up with the Fuller House star, who revealed the backstory behind her epic Instagram pic with Michael Phelps back in August.

    See People