What a bizarre question. If you could swim fast enough and produce enough heat, how fast EXACTLY would you need to swim to turn all of the water in the pool into STEAM?
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Day 1 Finals – 2016 Hancock Prospecting Australian Swimming Championships
Live from SA Aquatic & Leisure Centre.
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Seven Hills student qualifies for Olympic Trials
A senior at Seven Hills has qualified for the Olympic Trials.
Matthew Marquardt qualified swimming the 200 meter backstroke in 2.03. Matthew is a multi-sport athlete but has really concentrated on swimming lately. He helped lead his high school swim team to back-to-back state championships for the first time in school history. He also swims with the Sea Wolves club team. He practices eight times a week for two hours at a time.
“The way I see my story of swimming is that it’s one of kind of gradual progression. I wasn’t a super star right when I started swimming, but over time through hard work and commitment to the sport, I’ve really moved through the levels of the sport,” said Matthew.
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Fire rips through vacant swim club in Pikesville
Crews battled a fire at a old swim club in Pikesville Wednesday night.
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Katie Ledecky on National Team Visit to NORAD
Olympic gold medalist Katie Ledecky on the National Team’s 2016 visit to Cheyenne Mountain Air Force Station in Colorado Springs.
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Ex-Olympic swimming champ Park Tae-Hwan denied Rio Olympics / YTN
South Korea’s only Olympic swimming gold medalist Park Tae-Hwan will unlikely be allowed to race for his country in this year’s Rio Summer Olympic Games.
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Chopper Swim Challenge – 20km ocean swim for rescue helicopters
12 slightly mad swimmers braved the cold temperatures and aggressive swells of the Hauraki Gulf in a bid to raise money for the Westpac Rescue Helicopter on March 31, 2016.
The swimmers launched off from Waiheke Island to battle the ocean for 5-7 hours before arriving at the Auckland Rescue Helicopter Trust Chopper base in Mechanics Bay.
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Ice swimming considered for Winter Olympics
With a one-mile ice swim event being considered for inclusion at future Winter Olympics researchers at Winona State University in Minnesota and the International Ice Swimming Association (IISA) have investigated the performance and human physiological response in water -5° Celsius or less.
The scientists analysed more than 80 ice swimmers ((71 male, 17 female) who completed ice mile swims, in an attempt to understand how age, gender and environmental factors such as wind chill affected performance.
Ice swimming was a demonstration sport at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, and is being considered as a permanent addition to the event line-up in future Winter Olympic games.
“It’s amazing to see how a ‘silly’ idea eight years ago has taken off,†said Ram Barkai, IISA founder and board chairman.
“Our study of the IISA data set wonderfully describes how much we as humans can ask our bodies to do while in an adverse environment (water that is 5° C or less) and how we can train our minds to accomplish these goals,†said Spencer Treu, a member of the research team.
The team found a slight correlation between age and swim speed: The older the swimmers were, the slower they swam. However, the correlation was modest and suggests that ice swimming could be a sport in which individuals could be competitive in well into their 30s and 40s.
Read 220 Triathlon
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Olympic gold medallist Park to miss Rio 2016 following Korean Olympic Committee ruling
Olympic gold medallist Park Tae-hwan’s hopes of representing South Korea at Rio 2016 have been dashed after the Korean Olympic Committee (KOC) refused to waive its rule on athletes competing at the Games who have failed drugs tests.
Park, who won the men’s 400 metres freestyle race at Beijing 2008, was handed an 18-month ban after testing positive for testosterone before last year’s Asian Games in Incheon.
The 26-year-old’s suspension ended on March 2 after he had his ban backdated to September 3, 2014, the date on which he provided the positive sample.
He had hoped to be allowed to compete at this summer’s Olympic Games in the Brazilian city but the KOC have enforced their regulation, which states any athlete who tests positive for banned drugs is not allowed to represent the national team for three years, starting on the day the suspension ends.
The ruling, introduced in 2014, caused controversy and the KOC immediately faced calls to amend the regulation.
Read Inside the Games

