The most dominant distance swimmer of her generation serves meals to the homeless once a month.
Maryland teenager Katie Ledecky also collects, assembles and repairs bicycles for developing countries instead of attending classes every other week during the school year.
The Stanford-bound swim star volunteers with the Wounded Warrior Project at the Walter Reed Bethesda Naval Medical Center and is a member of Help2 0, a group that raises awareness and money to benefit the construction of water wells in developing countries.
Ledecky and Cal sophomore Missy Franklin — the young faces of American swimming — are competing at the Phillips 66 U.S. championships Wednesday through Sunday in Irvine.
Ledecky, 17, isn’t just another dedicated swimmer churning through chlorinated pools mornings and evenings. She describes herself as a devout Catholic who embraces the religion’s call to service.
“My faith has always been important to me,” Ledecky said in a recent interview. “It defines who I am.”
Most know her as an Olympic gold medalist, world-record holder and four-time world champion.
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Swimmers ignore lightning threat, sharks for swim race
Swimmers competing in the Dwight Crum Pier-to-Pier Swim had more than just other competitors to worry about.
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Watch as Great White sharks attack underwater cameras
REMUS SharkCam: The hunter and the hunted: In 2013, a team from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution took a specially equipped REMUS “SharkCam” underwater vehicle to Guadalupe Island in Mexico to film great white sharks in the wild. They captured more than they bargained for.
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For Michael Phelps, there’s no place like home
Sitting on the deck at his beloved Meadowbrook, Michael Phelps glances toward the pool where he was once afraid to put his face in the water.
“This is me,” he said, a slight smile curling off his lips. “This is home.”
This is where Phelps put in most of the work to become the most decorated athlete in Olympic history. This is where he’s looking to add to that legacy after an aborted retirement, his eyes firmly on the Rio Games two years away.
And as the world’s greatest swimmer takes his comeback to it’s the biggest stop yet, this week’s U.S. national championships in Irvine, California, it’s important for him to remember where he came from.
Why? Because for all the hoopla over LeBron James returning to Cleveland, there’s no bigger homebody than Phelps.
Read Boston Herald
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The Ripple Effect – How a Small Oz Town Produced 5 Surf Champions
Five thousand. That’s the population of Coolangatta, Australia. Yet someway, somehow, this tiny town has produced more surfing world champions than anywhere else in the world.
A lot of that has to do with the local wave. You may have heard of it – it’s called the Superbank. But in The Ripple Effect, we learn that the history of the Coolangatta Kids runs a whole lot deeper than the world’s most famous sandbar.
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High Diving comes to Russia
Following the remarkable introduction of High Diving in the FINA World Championships programme and crowning moment of the first-ever World champions in Barcelona (ESP) last year, Kazan (RUS) will host the inaugural edition of the FINA High Diving World Cup on August 8-10, 2014.
Two events are on the programme: a men’s competition in three rounds (Aug 8 and 10) and a women’s competition in one round (Aug 9). Men will perform five dives from a 27m platform while women will take off from a 20m platform, exhibiting three dives.
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LEN moves 2015 Short Course Europeans to December
With a majority decision, through mail vote, the LEN Bureau approved to move the next European Short Course Swimming Championships from January to December 2015.
Earlier this year LEN allocated the next edition of the European Short Course Swimming Championships to the city of Netanya (ISR) – the dates of the event were set at 15-18 January 2015.
After recent consultations, the host of the continental showcase, the Israeli Swimming Federation informed LEN on their purpose to transfer their initial aim of institutional naming support to the City of Herzliya. In the meantime LEN also conducted surveys and found that changing of the dates would also secure a bigger success to the event.
“The overall sports calendar in January is quite overloaded, and LEN wishes to avoid a clash with most of the other main sport events, as well as its own continental organisations counterparts, in order to properly value the due outcome of the aquatic product to offer worldwide†LEN Executive Director Paulo Frischknecht said.
A mail vote has been conducted and the overwhelming majority of the LEN Bureau members approved the proposal on moving the event to December.
This means that the next European Short Course Swimming Championships will take place on 2-6 December 2015 with the institutional naming support of Herzliya. The event will also mark the first ever s/c Europeans to be held over 5 days.
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Dolphins surfing off Esperance, Western Australia
Dave filmed this amazing aerial vision with his quadcopter off Esperance, along south Western Australia’s beautiful coastline. Huge pods of bottlenose dolphins cruise the shoreline and surf the crystal clear turquoise waves.
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“Girl Water Diviner” – original 1954 reel from British Pathe
Catherine Bent is a female water diviner whose body is highly sensitive to nature and physical elements. She identifies spots where water and underground streams can be tapped into, using a bizarre zombie-like walk which throws her body around so violently that “sometimes she falls flat on her face”.
