• Ever since 3-year-old Cobi Sky could walk, her mom’s been worried about her drowning.

    She doesn’t worry so much anymore.

    “I know she can survive; it’s just a comfort level for me that I know we are OK,” said Atiya Young.

    Children with special needs are at an especially high risk for drowning, but they’re often turned away from swimming lessons due to health issues.

    Now a Winter Park doctor is making sure all children can save themselves from drowning.

    See wftv.com

  • Patrick Mulcare could not have predicted that the best swimming performances of his young career would come in the days after a dense layer of smog inflamed his throat.

    Mulcare, a USC commit, was in Nanjing, China in August for the Youth Olympic Games. Amid the challenges of time zone changes, hours upon hours of travel and adapting to the country’s unique bathroom facilities, he shined in his first-ever international competition.

    Once he acclimated to his surroundings and the throat irritation subsided, he became a finalist in four of his five events at the games and set personal records for best times.

    See Oregon Live

  • China’s controversial swimming superstar Sun Yang has taken a potshot at rival Japan’s national anthem at the Asian Games, describing it as “ugly”.

    The double Olympic champion told Chinese media he had taken great pleasure in helping the men’s 4×100 freestyle relay team beat the Japanese on Wednesday. He then indulged in a spot of diplomatic jousting.

    “The Chinese let their anger out tonight,” he is heard as saying on a Chinese-language audio passed to AFP.

    “Honestly speaking the Japanese national anthem sounds ugly.”

    Read NDTV

  • Neighborhood children are petitioning against Highland Park Independent School District’s $15-$20 million plan to build a new swim center at Curtis Park. The park is considered the summer aquatic, social and recreational hub of University Park.

    “We think we should have a say in our community,” one child told CBS 11 News about their petition, which has 500 signatures.

    Many neighbors stand in opposition with the children against building the center across from University Park Elementary School.

    “I do not support the location of the natatorium,” said one University Park resident, many of who lined up to speak at City Hall. The adults have also started another petition online.

    “We don’t think it’s unnecessary to cut down healthy trees that predate the founding of University Park,” said another resident.

    See CBS Local and Save Curtis Park

  • A Frankfort couple have charged in a Fayette Circuit Court lawsuit that negligence by Transylvania University led to the drowning of their 13-year-old son in a university swimming pool in June.

    The suit was filed Monday by Ricky L. and Jessica A. Harris, whose son, Ricky Harris III,died June 23 after losing consciousness during a recreational swim at Transy’s William T. Young Campus Center. He was attending an academic summer camp at Transy.

    The lawsuit alleges that because of a “culture of disregard as to swimming pool safety” at Transy, Ricky Harris sank under the water without being noticed, remaining underwater “for an extended period of time” before being found.

  • New underwater footage posted online Friday is believed to be the world’s first video showing a pod of killer whales hunting and killing a tiger shark.

    According to Barcroft TV, the video was captured off the coast of Costa Rica by photographer Caroline Power on September 8th.

    See The Blaze

    http://youtu.be/uqimOYOQjJ8

  • At the AIDA team world championships in Sardinia, Italy, on Friday the 26th of september 2014, Natalia Molchanova from Russia broke the world record dynamic with a dive of 237 meters.
    Camera Daan Verhoeven http://daanverhoeven.com

  • A Japanese swimmer has been kicked out of the Asian Games and will have to pay his own way back home after being charged by police for stealing a camera from a South Korean journalist.

    Naoya Tomita, a gold medallist from Guangzhou in 2010 but outside the medals in Incheon, had been captured by video surveillance putting the 8 million won ($7,600) camera into his bag at the Games swimming venue on Friday.

    Japan delegation chief Tsuyoshi Aoki apologised for Tomita’s behaviour on behalf of the team at a news conference on Saturday.

    Incheon police told Reuters the athlete had been booked without detention and barred from leaving the country.

    “After we received a report, we analysed CCTV and could see that it was a Japanese athlete, but to confirm it we went to see the Japanese team leader and showed him the clip,” police told Reuters by telephone.

    Police located the athlete cheering on his team mates and spoke to him in a private interview.

    “He admitted it right away,” police said. “The case will be dealt with by the prosecutor’s office next week.”

    Japanese Olympic Committee official Naoya Yanagiya said Tomita had been expelled from the team and would have to pay his own way back to Japan.

    “His name has been stricken from Japan’s team and once the decision is made in the investigation, we will take the next step,” Kyodo news quoted Yanagiya as saying.

    Read for instance Reuters and Japan Times

  • A Swedish lady struggling with keeping her husband in frame.

    Apparently, it is a thing ! :-)

    http://youtu.be/XS1lCbbtVu8

    http://youtu.be/pqF1mu3MApE