A typical day in the life of a swimmer.
https://youtu.be/ERnwlzC7FDQ
A typical day in the life of a swimmer.
https://youtu.be/ERnwlzC7FDQ
A suburb of the German city of Bonn has forbidden adult male refugees from visiting the town’s public pool, a city spokesman announced on Friday. After women at the municipal pool in Bornheim had begun complaining of sexual harassment, said the spokesman, it was clear that immediate action should be taken to protect the rights of the women.
Initially the men, who live in a shelter in Bornheim while they await the results of their asylum applications, were given access to the municipal pool as part of a small package of benefits. Soon, however, women began going to the manager saying the men’s behavior was unacceptable.
While none of the incidents amounted to anything illegal, the city said it was important first and foremost to make it clear to the men that in Germany, the rights of women are sacrosanct.
“Once our social workers tell us that they have got the message, we’ll terminate the measure,” said Markus Schnapka, head of Bornheim’s social welfare office.
Read Deutsche Welle (in English)
Read the interview with Danish national coach Dean Boles here on svoem.dk (mostly in English)
What is the idea behind the Kicking Performance Ranking?
– My belief is to do an inventory (opgørelse, red.) of strengths and weaknesses – I have observed that many programs don’t value kicking an important ingredient for world class swimming and in particular here in Denmark (it is prevalent (almindeligt, red.) in North America, and my years with Canadian Swimming was to influence and improve the level of kicking – I believe the impact has been realized as the Canadian Junior program is making good progress and feeding the Senior Team). I did much of the kicking influence through camps I conducted over 6 years, so not really knowing how things worked here in Denmark I thought I would convey a template (udforme en skabelon, red.) and a bit of a nudge to get on to it, and what a better way to motivate than create a national ranking?
– That is one of many positive things here in Denmark: It is possible to move or shift toward improvement because of its size and the close knit coaching group. After discussions with my colleagues in the Federation I decided to shoot for the ranking of the 50 and 200 meter kick – the 50 to recognize speed and seeing the preference to short distance swimming here in Denmark. But we can’t hang our hat on the short stuff, we must build the endurance side of the equation as well, since there is only one 50 meter event at the Olympics but 10 other individual events which are 100m and higher.
How does it work, and how do you “sign up” to get a time on the ranking (if you are fast enough)?
– It’s pretty easy to sign up and see the ranking – go to the svoem.org website, look for the new tab where we have created a “coach’s tool box†or this link both English and Danish:
Danish:Â http://www.svoem.org/Discipliner/Svoemning/Talentudvikling/Traenervaerktoejskasse/
English:Â http://www.svoem.org/Discipliner/Svoemning/Talentudvikling/Traenervaerktoejskasse/Coaches-tool-box/– Follow the instructions, some basic rules in how to keep a relatively level playing field – and go create sets with a fast 50 timed kick and or 200 timed kick – so not to interfere or take away from the practice.
Where does the idea come from?
– The idea came with my thinking and observation, how can I help create something to have a positive impact without being invasive in the training environment and at the same time make it competitive.
Where can we follow the rankings?
– The results will be posted on the Federation website early to mid February with a second challenge in the May/June time frame. One of my key messages and foundations in my role is to encourage and have all embrace the idea of not only improvement (individual) but also progression (swimming performance as a whole on the world level).
See for instance SwimmingWorld
https://www.swimmingworldmagazine.com/news/katie-ledecky-blasts-807-barrier-world-record-800-free-austin/
Russia is back after 13 years
Thirteen years after finishing 4th in Kranj, the Russian team managed to reach the best eight at the European Championships for the first time. The others are well-known ‘figures’ at this phase: today Italy, Hungary and Greece all cleared the hurdles with ease in the eight-finals. Among the women Spain and Italy warmed up with big wins for their clash, due in two days time.
No hiccups in the men’s eight-finals so far
Nations of the former Yugoslavia made full progress in the eight-finals, Serbia, Croatia and Montenegro all passed the first serious test with ease, just as Spain. The Netherlands demonstrated their strength against the Russians in the women’s tournament and clinched the top spot in Group A.
Italy and Hungary on top, Greece sinks to 3rd place
Italy sailed through in Group C matches as expected while Hungary finished atop in Group D after the Greeks couldn’t widen the gap enough against Russia to better their goal difference, what’s more they went down by the end and had to settle for the third place. The women’s tournament didn’t see too much excitements, the last goal of the host Serbs from 17 metres against title-holder Spain was the special highlight of the day.
For the first time since Alexander Dale Oen passed in 2012, the Norwegian national team is back in Flagstaff, Arizona. As national coach Petter Løvberg puts it, they need to move forward in his memory, and also to go back as part of that process.
Spain and Serbia clinch top spots
Spain finished atop in Group A, ahead of Montenegro, thanks to its better goal-difference. The Serbs struggled against France in the first half but showed their strength in the second part. Croatia set the single-game scoring record against Malta by netting 22 goals. Among the women, Russia downed Greece by an unexpected margin of 10 goals and Turkey managed to score its first ever European goal against Hungary.