• This controversial method teaches infants survival skills to save themselves from drowning.

  • One of the top sports stories in Australia revolves around tennis star Nick Kyrgios who might be slapped with a $27,000 fine for “tanking” or purposefully giving up points during a match at Wimbledon.

    Kyrgios, who’s father is Greek born has been criticized by media in a country where tennis is taken very seriously. But in addition to this being a sports story, it’s now turned into one of alleged discrimination and what the tennis player referred to as “racism” and “unaustralian behavior by a swimming legend.” in a media slugging match between the two.

    Enter former champion swimmer Dawn Fraser, herself a major sports figure in Australia after winning the 100 metres freestyle at three successive Olympics.

    In an interview with Australia’s Today Show, she lashed out at Kyrgios’ behavior on the tennis court and suggested “if they don’t like it, they should go back to where their fathers cam from,” a reference to Kyrgios’ Greek immigrant father.

    Nick Kyrgios fired back at Fraser on Tuesday, accusing her of being a “blatant racist” about him and Davis Cup teammate Bernard Tomic in a nationally televised interview.

    See The Pappas Post

  • She was the quintessential recruit for the women’s swimming team at Harvard University: a nimble breaststroker with a fierce work ethic and sharp intellect. But when Schuyler Bailar jumps into the school’s Olympic-size pool this fall, he instead will be a member of the men’s team, the first openly transgender collegiate swimmer in U.S. history.

    Emerging from a tortuous year of self-reckoning and a lifelong quest to feel comfortable in his own skin, Bailar, 19, will be navigating far more than the usual freshman challenges; he also will be a pioneer and role model as society openly grapples with shifting mores about traditional male/­female gender lines.

    Bailar, a 5-foot-8, 170-pound athlete, struggled for years through depression, self-harm, suicidal thoughts, eating disorders and a broken back. As a girl, Bailar competed at a high level — setting a national relay record on a girls’ team with future Olympic champion Katie Ledecky — but she was confused and pained.

    “I was a very lost kid who didn’t understand why I spent my entire childhood being a boy but not really, one who focused intently on studies and swimming to distract from anything that came up in my mind,” said Bailar, who grew up in Virginia and attended the private Georgetown Day School in the District. “I was caught between two worlds.”

    Read The Washington Post

  • A beloved Eden Prairie swim coach died in a northern Minnesota boating accident over the 4th of July weekend, and the driver of the boat has been arrested in connection with her death.

    Brenda Larson, 50, coached with Team Foxjet in Eden Prairie for six years, teaching 5 to 8-year-olds how to swim.

    The Beltrami County Sheriff’s Office says Larson was riding in a boat driven by a 45-year-old Minnetonka man, with a 4-year-old also on board when they were thrown into the water about 4:15 p.m. Saturday, when riding into a harsh wave.

    The driver’s wife, who was not thrown overboard, alerted nearby fishermen who rescued the boat driver and the child.

    Investigators say when the driver went back to rescue Larson from the water, she was unresponsive and not breathing when she was pulled onto the boat a short time later. Rescuers took her to shore, and she was pronounced dead at a Cass Lake hospital. The boat driver remains in jail pending an autopsy and formal charges, but was arrested on suspicion of boating under the influence.

    See kare11

  • Olympic 200m & World 100m & 200m Butterfly Champion, Chad Le Clos expresses his water instinct.

    He explains that for many swimmers it’s about the feel of the water, but for him it runs much deeper.

    What is your #waterinstinct?

  • Fitness First caught up with Team GB athletes Jade Jones, Michael Jamieson & Helen Glover on the road to the Rio 2016 to ask what motivates them to get out of bed in the morning. The answer? Watch and find out… #‎GetTraining

  • Even scoliosis couldn’t stop Olympic medalist Natalie Coughlin. Olympic swimmer Natalie Coughlin shares the secrets to her 12 medals ESPN The Magazine Body Issue.

    https://youtu.be/dbr0lhSgrZg

  • While shark cage diving, our cage was attacked by an 11.5 foot Great White shark. The round buoy attached to the side of the cage was bent in half. Some of the lining of the outside blue barrier bar was bitten through as well. It was quite the up close and personal experience!
    This was a trip I went on during one of my days off from volunteering at Cango Wildlife Ranch. The video was shot with a GoPro Hero 4 wide angle. The shark was even closer than he appears. I apologize for the shakiness….. and my friend’s screaming.

  • Russia amasses 23 titles – a record

    Russia managed to better its best ever result at the junior Europeans by amassing 23 gold medals, one more than in last year – this is a record in the championship’s history. Their youngsters clinched 8 titles on the last day of the European Games’ swimming competitions.

    (more…)