Footage taken from a recent photoshoot with Olympic & World 100m Breaststroke Champion, Ruta Meilutyte. Ruta talks openly about swimming and her relationship with the water.
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32-year-old Nicholas Mevoli dies trying to set freediving record
A New York man trying to set a freediving record died Sunday after he surfaced from a depth of more than 200 feet.
Nicholas Mevoli, a 32-year-old from Brooklyn, hoped to reach 236 feet (72 meters) with one breath of oxygen and without the assistance of fins.
When he surfaced, he flashed the OK sign and then lost consciousness 30 seconds later, organizers said.
Mevoli was going for a record at Dean’s Blue Hole in the Bahamas. At 663 feet (202 meters), it is considered the world’s deepest blue hole in seawater.
See also wptv.com
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3rd Grade swimmer suffers from stroke
The Rhode Show is WPRI 12’s daily lifestyle show for having fun, eating well, and living life.
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Teens swim for suicide awareness
Swimmers in Oshkosh took to the pool for a good cause Sunday.
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Scott Miller escapes drug dealing charge, admits he ran an escort service
Read South Burnett Times and ABCRetired Olympic swimmer Scott Miller has escaped a drug dealing charge and will instead be sentenced for drug possession early next year.
During a special hearing on Monday, the Sydney District Court heard the former champion and medalist was allegedly mixed up in hard drugs and prostitutes.
http://youtu.be/AKHnk57hgpM
Scott Miller told police he ran an escort agency when he was arrested in Sydney on suspicion of drug activity earlier this year.
He pleaded guilty to the possession of three bags of methamphetamine, found when police pulled him over in a hire car at Mascot in Sydney’s south in June.
Prosecutors have withdrawn a charge of drug supply, but he still faces drug charges, relating to his arrest at Potts Point in July.
Officers found methamphetamine and more than $16,00 in cast, along with scales, a ledger and several mobile phones and SIM cards.
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New Methods for Detecting Anabolic Steroids Lead to Hundreds of Positive Doping Tests
Read PR Newswire and ARD
In recent months, two European doping control laboratories have – largely unnoticed – discovered an alarmingly high number of doping cases using improved detection methods. Based on information from the editorial staff who work on doping at the German public television broadcaster ARD, the laboratories in Cologne and Moscow have this year tested hundreds of samples from athletes that have turned out positive for the anabolic steroid Oral-Turinabol, known from the state-run doping programme in the former East Germany, and the substance stanozolol, which Ben Johnson was found guilty of using in the 1988 Olympics. Such a high number of positive test results in one fell swoop is unprecedented in laboratory doping analyses. According to information from the laboratories, all of these samples would have remained undetected in 2012, as the detection windows for the substances were significantly shorter with the conventional detection method.
Grigory Rodchenko, head of the Mosow control laboratory, who tracked down Oral-Turinabol, the drug of choice in the GDR, told the ARD editorial staff working on doping: “With this detection method, 100 urine samples have now tested positive that would previously have turned up negative.” Rodchenko estimates the detection window for identifying the substance after it has been administered now to be six months or more, thus significantly longer than before. This is also true of the substance stanozolol, which has already been discovered in well over 100 urine samples at the Cologne laboratory thanks to the improved detection method. Cologne doping analyst Hans Geyer confirmed: “By my count, we have hundreds of positive cases that we would otherwise never have found.”
Read more on PR Newswire
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CC photo #686: “Spaghetti relay”
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32-year-old Nicholas Mevoli dies in Bahamas free diving contest
Read for instance AP and AIDA‘s statement:
It is with great sadness that I inform you that Nicholas Mevoli, of the United States, passed away today after a dive at the 2013 Vertical Blue Competition. Nick had performed a constant weight no fins dive to 72m, reached depth, and swam back to the surface successfully. Nick attempted to complete the surface protocol, but was unsuccessful and had difficulty breathing. He lost consciousness, and in spite of great efforts by the doctor and paramedic on site, failed to recover after reaching the local hospital. Nick appears to have suffered from a depth-related injury to his lungs.
http://youtu.be/lzBRLwKuXlQ (more…)Post by Vertical Blue. -
Grace Darling Memorial swim 2013
A group of six open water swimmers tackled this tough swim, never before successfully completed. It began at the sheltered side of the Longstone Lighthouse, through the Farne Islands, past Big Harcar, where Grace Darling and her father rescued survivors of the wreck on the paddle steamer, the Forfarshire 7th September 1838
Grace Darling Memorial swim 2013 from Barbara Keating on Vimeo.


