At the Faroese short course championships today, 3 more senior records and 2 juniors were posted. Ægir KlaksvÃk managed a junior record of 3:41.20 in the men’s 4×100 freestyle, Magnus Jákupsson from Tórshavn a senior and junior record of 55.94 in the men’s 100 IM, Ægir KlaksvÃk a senior record of 4:27.11 in the men’s 4×100 IM, and HS Tórshavn a senior record of 3:28.93 in the men’s 4×100 freestyle. See all results here.
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CC photo #134: Magnus Jákupsson (FAR) 55.94 in the 100 SC individual medley
Magnus Jákupsson managed an (at least for us) impressive time of 55.94 in the 100 meter short course IM today at the Faroese Championships, beating Pál Joensen’s Faroese national record of 57.66 from the supersuited days of 2009, and his own Faroese junior record of 57.75 from the Danish short course championships in 2011. Pál was 2nd in 57.69, Magnus now ranked 4th among European juniors this season. Kudos.
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Cameron van der Burgh remembering Alex
Beautiful words by South Africa’s world record holder Cameron van der Burgh, in honor of his late rival and friend Alexander Dale Oen. A small excerpt here, read the rest here on Cameron’s blog.Thank you for inviting me into your home and sharing your life with me.
Fortunately I have only good memories about you and these will fill the gap that is left behind.
The late nights.
The meaningful conversations.
The uncontrollable laughs.
The whale that nearly ate us.
The races we had. -
US man completes entire triathlon while juggling
On April 21, 2012, 31-year-old Joe Salter from Pensacola, Florida completed a sprint triathlon consisting of 1/4 mile of swimming, 16.2 miles of bicycling and 4 miles of running in less than two hours while juggling, plasing 147th of 246 participants. Yes, juggling even when open water swimming, serious skills there.
- Swim: 1/4 mile (402 meters) in 21min 39sec (appr. 3 drops)
- Bike: 16.2 miles (26 kilometers) in 1hr 42sec (0 drops)
- Run: 4 miles (6.4 kilometers) in 31min 29sec (0 drops)
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Japan’s swimmers defy altitude fears
Japan’s Olympic swimmers will prepare for this year’s London Games by undergoing altitude training as planned, despite the death of Alexander Dale Oen. Read Reuters.
“We feel great sorrow at what happened (to Dale Oen),” JSF executive director Masafumi Izumi said. “But the autopsy results did not immediately link his sudden death to the altitude.
“After holding an executive meeting we decided to take all necessary precautions and prepare the athletes in the safest way possible,” he added.
“We will send doctors to monitor the swimmers and before going we will conduct electrocardiogram and heart echo tests under low-oxygen conditions.”
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German Trials: Biedermann books London tickets
At the German Championships today, world 200m freestyle record-holder Paul Biedermann secured his spot on the German Olympic squad with a time of 1:46.07 in the 200 freestyle, ahead of also qualifying Clemens Rapp in 1:47.57. Marco Koch and Christian von Lehm qualified in the men’s 200 breaststroke with 2:09.48 and 2:10.07 respectively, while Silke Lippok just missed the German cut though making FINA A standard with a time of 1:57.93 in the women’s 200 freestyle. The Germans will have a second chance of making and rearranging the squad at the Debrecen 2012 Europeans, it seems. Read more here on SwimmingWorld Magazine.
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Arab swimmer to represent Israel at Debrecen 2012
Arab-Israeli swimmer Jowan Qupty will represent Israel in the European Swimming Championship. Qupty, 22, was originally denied a spot on the national team. He won a Swimmer’s Association appeal over the decision on Thursday. Read ynetnews.com.
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Missy Franklin’s Mom is the reason she’s a swimmer
On Missy Franklin’s 17th birthday Friday, and two days before Mother’s Day, the teen has released a video dedicated to her mother, D.A. Franklin, and her mother’s own dedication to the teen’s success. As she almost certainly wouldn’t be a world class swimmer if it wasn’t for her mother, and her mother’s own struggles with the water. Read Yahoo! Sports.
“My mom actually started me swimming when I was very, very young because she’s afraid of the water,” Franklin said. “She wanted me to be comfortable in the water, wanted me to enjoy being in it, and ever since I was a baby, being in the water has been like my second home.”
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CC photo #133: Øygarden in my ears, Tórshavn in my eyes



