At the 2014 Danish Open in Bellahøj tonight, Danish swimming prodigy Mie Ø. Nielsen shattered her own 28.51 Nordic record twice with first a prelim time of 28.28 in the 50 meter backstroke, and then a winning time of 27.96 in the final.
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Rikke Møller Pedersen chases 200 breast world record with a time of 2:19.94
At the 2014 Danish Open in Bellahøj tonight, Rikke Møller Pedersen gave her own 200 breaststroke world record a good go with a winning time of 2:19.94, the world record 2:19.11 and the competition back in 2:28.90 and less.
To celebrate this, she indulged herself in a pair of winegums
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Pernille Blume rattles Danish record in the 100 free
At the 2014 Danish Open in Bellahøj tonight, Danish swimming darling Pernille Blume rattled the Danish record with a winning time of 53.69 to Jeanette Ottesen’s 54.07, the Danish record of Ottesen from 2009 still standing at 53.41.
Oh, and she is good-looking too
Post by Pernille Blume. -
Swimming stars Bronte and Cate Campbell find inspiration close to home
Read The Sydney Morning Herald
Australian swim stars Cate and Bronte Campbell do not need to look far for grounding when they feel themselves caught up in ”first-world” problems. When they think things are getting too hard, their younger brother Hamish provides a timely reminder that things are really not that bad.
Hamish has cerebral palsy and the 15-year-old has the development of an one to three-year-old and requires around-the-clock care. But he appears perpertually happy.
With the limited communication he possesses, whether it is a smile when he sees one of his sisters or when he delivers a well-timed noise that disrupts a family dispute, he brings joy and a sense of perspective to his parents and four sisters.
”Whenever we think that our lives are getting too hard, we look over at him and he can’t feed himself, he can’t clothe himself, he can’t go to the toilet by himself, he can’t tell us when he’s thirsty or he’s hungry, he can’t see and you think, ‘You know what? My life is pretty good’,” Cate says.
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James Magnussen, Cate Campbell and Emily Seebohm plan to set record straight at last
Read The Australian
James Magnussen, Cate Campbell and Emily Seebohm are Australia’s “virtual world record holders’’. They are three fastest swimmers the world has seen, they just don’t have the official title to prove it.
World 100m freestyle champions Magnussen and Campbell, and Brisbane backstroker Seebohm are the fastest swimmers ever in textile suits and are centimetres away from breaking records set during the notorious supersuit era.
As Australian swimmers prepare for their first major meeting of the year, the Commonwealth Games trials in Brisbane starting Tuesday, hopes are growing that the proud swimming nation will once again reign supreme by holding an official world record.
“Cate Campbell and James Magnussen would be world record holders if we never had those suits,†Australian head coach Jacco Verhaeren said.

Image courtesy of Craig Franklin, CC BY-SA 3.0 -
The Sailfish’s Dance In Action
We where lucky and found lost of this magnificent hunters in plain action, unfortunately for me, my underwater camera had some leaking and I decided to leave it on the boat.
Fortunately, my friend Carlos Mendieta was kind enough to lend me his Go Pro Hero 3 Camera, which we used to take several shots that and make this video.
The Sailfish´s dance in action from Iskander Itriago on Vimeo.
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Why swimming is good for your brain as well as your body
Read NY Daily News
A small study by Howard Carter of the University of Western Australia School of Sport Science suggests that immersing the body in water to the level of the heart increases blood flow through the brain’s cerebral arteries, thus improving vascular health and cognitive function.
“Studies on the positive effect of exercise on heart health have been numerous, but we are taking a different angle and are interested in the link between heart and brain health,” says Carter. “To our knowledge, ours is the first examination of the effect of graded euthermic [warm] water immersion on cerebral blood flow.”
Photo by steve.garner32 
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New Aussie coach Jacco Verhaeren wants an Australian swimmer in every Olympic final
The Australian swim team would have a finalist in every Olympic race by the 2020 Games in Tokyo, if not by 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, new head coach Jacco Verhaeren has declared.
Verhaeren, the former coach of Dutch Olympic champions Pieter van den Hoogenband and Inge de Bruijn, was recruited to form a new tandem power structure within Swimming Australia with high performance director Mark Scott, the pair charged with rebuilding the team after a dismal performance in London.
Verhaeren, who has been in the post since January, said he had identified several events where there is a lack of depth, despite having good performers within them,and they must be the focus of talent development if Australia was to achieve his public goal of becoming the best in the world by 2020.
He will get his first look at how the Australian hopefuls stack up at the Commonwealth Games trials that start in Brisbane on Tuesday.
‘‘I think we know the gaps that are there to cover,’’ Verhaeren said.
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Eamon Sullivan aims for 50m in Rio

Image courtesy of Bidgee / Wikimedia Commons Read Herald Sun
Eamon Sullivan believes he can get back to his best as a one-lap specialist as he targets a fourth Olympics in Rio in 2016.
Sullivan will return from the swimming wilderness to compete at a key meeting for the first time since the London Olympics at next week’s Commonwealth Games trials in Brisbane.
The 28-year-old former world record holder took a year off after a disappointing London campaign — headlined by the dramas surrounding the men’s 4 x 100m freestyle relay team — to recover from two rounds of shoulder surgery and consider his future in the pool.
He determined that he wasn’t finished as a swimmer and has been back in training since September last year in his home town of Perth.
Sullivan has entered the 50m freestyle and 50m butterfly for the trials, which he hopes will provide a springboard for more international competition this year, although he is going into the meet without expectation.

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