• Courtesy of USA Swimming on YouTube

  • Orlando Duque is in a constant search of unique diving locations around the world. Hearing so much about Croatia, and the island of Vis, he came to explore the best the island has to offer. On his adventure along the coast, he took the time to climb and jump from some of the most magnificent locations he’s ever been to.

  • Team Speedo swimmer, Jazz Carlin, gets the video interview treatment in this short Q&A, where we chat cartoons, gymnastics, and ocean swimming in Thailand. Find out more about the GBR swim star, double European champion and Commonwealth Games gold medallist.

  • The world is still in shock over the attacks that took place in Paris, France over the weekend. With 129 people dead, many want answers, including Chloe Parsemain, a France native and a swimmer at Marshall University.

    “Who thought that a shooting was going to happen in Paris on a Friday night? No one,” Parsemain said.

    See WOWKTV

    WOWK 13 Charleston, Huntington WV News, Weather, Sports

  • Watch our waterside video interview with Team Speedo USA swim star and Olympic gold medallist, Jessica Hardy. We chat Disney movies, sport and people watching with the 11-time world record holder.

    https://youtu.be/o2dcraRN-1g

  • Gregorio Paltrinieri won’t be surprised again by Sun Yang.

    The Italian swimmer recovered from his initial shock over his Chinese rival’s last-minute no-show to win the longest race in the pool at this year’s World Championships.

    For next year’s Rio de Janeiro Olympics, Paltrinieri is already considering the possibility that Sun won’t enter the 1500m freestyle at all.

    “It would be great if for once I could really race him stroke for stroke. I’m not afraid of a showdown with him. In fact I would relish that,” Paltrinieri said in a recent interview with The Associated Press.

    “But I’ve also got to realize that he might not enter,” Paltrinieri added. “I’ve got to keep the option open in my mind that if he doesn’t race I’m going to be the favorite in an Olympic final and all eyes are going to be on me just like everyone was watching Sun Yang before.”

    At the World Championships in Kazan, Russia, in August, Sun created chaos in the ready room when he failed to show up for the final of an event that he had dominated for five years.

    Sun attributed the no-show to a heart problem but he also got into an altercation with a Brazilian swimmer in the warmup pool on the day of the final.

    There were already questions over Sun’s form since he served a three-month doping suspension last year for a banned stimulant. And he didn’t dominate as usual in the 800 free, coming from behind over the last two laps to narrowly edge Paltrinieri for gold.

    Three months later, Paltrinieri suspects Sun was afraid of losing.

    “It could have been that he was ill. I’m not doubting that. But he was definitely tense and nervous. I had finished this close to him in the 800,” Paltrinieri said, holding his hands less than a meter (yard) apart. “And in the 1500 heats I had beat him by a lot. So I think he just wasn’t so sure anymore that he could win the 1500. And that must have been a factor.”

    Since neither Sun nor the Chinese team told organizers that he wasn’t racing, his lane remained empty for the final and reserve Pal Joensen of the Faeroe Islands was denied a chance to compete.

    “I still don’t understand what happened and I don’t think we ever will,” said Stefano Morini, Paltrinieri’s coach. “The Chinese are a fairly enigmatic people and they don’t really express themselves too much. And that can be a good thing. We Italians talk too much.”

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  • Tim Layden is a Senior Writer for Sports Illustrated who primarily covers the NFL and the Olympics.

    Tim joined Ken and Steve to talk about Michael Phelps and his struggles with alcoholism.

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  • The state of Wisconsin produces plenty of great high school athletes that go on to college and compete in their respective sport, but very few of them get offered an athletic scholarship to one of the best schools in the country.

    A senior from Cedarburg High School is making that dream come true and breaking records along the way.

    “I think it’s a comforting feel. I think you can escape everything once you hit the water,” Katie Drabot said.

    See WISN

  • Katinka Hosszu (HUN) and Cameron van der Burgh (RSA) are the winners of the 2015 edition of FINA/airweave Swimming World Cup after the conclusion of the eighth leg of the competition, organised in Dubai (UAE) on November 6-7. At the end of the series, the Magyar star collected 669 points, while the South African star led the overall ranking with 369 points. This is the fourth consecutive win for Hosszu, the best of the World Cup since 2012, while Van der Burgh had already won in 2008 and 2009. For their victories, they will receive the top prize money of US$ 100,000 each.