-
-
Coaches Corner: “The Art of Coaching Swimmers,” Legendary Coach and Athlete Advocate, Jack Roach
Perhaps one of the most influential coaches in American swimming history, Coach Jack Roach, joins Mike Murray in the @Fitter and Faster Swim Camps Coaches Corner, for an exclusive discussion on the art of coaching.
-
Flags Warn Swimmers in Galveston of Dangerous Rip Currents | KHOU 11
If you’re going out on the beach and plan on getting in the water, you should be sure to check the flags to see how rough the water is that day.
-
Leawood Swimmer Prepares for Olympic Trials Next Month | KMBC 9
Sam Disette is getting ready to go to the Olympic trials in June.
-
Catching up with Olympic swimmer Ryan Murphy | KSDK News
Murphy is a three-time Olympic gold medalist and holds the world record for the men’s 100-meter backstroke.
-
Valencia girls and West Ranch boys dominate 2021 Foothill League Swim Championships | Canyons News
Canyons News is a student-produced news agency on the campus of College of the Canyons in Santa Clarita, Calif. Watch our live shows, breaking, local and campus news daily.
-
Cherokee County Teen One Step Closer to Olympic Dreams
Grant Davis is off to trials in two weeks.
-
Japan’s Top COVID Adviser Says Fate of Olympics Needs Scrutiny
The organizers of this summer’s Tokyo Olympics must decide whether to go ahead with the games after scrutinizing the impact they may have on Japan’s medical system, the country’s top government COVID-19 adviser said Friday.
The call from Shigeru Omi, an infectious disease expert who heads a government subcommittee on the coronavirus, came as another wave of infections, driven by mutated variants, has caused a shortage of hospital beds and medical staff in some Japanese areas under a state of emergency.
While addressing a question from an opposition lawmaker in a parliamentary committee, he said it is the “responsibility” of the organizers to determine if Japan can actually host the Olympics and Paralympics, adding, “The decision cannot be made at the last minute.”
Read Kyodo News -
European Aquatics Championships, Budapest (HUN) – Day 12, Summary
British empire: three titles, five medals in one day
The day belonged to Team GB as they amassed three titles – all in the women’s events – and five medals altogether. Kathleen Dawson won the 100m back (in fact twice), Molly Renshaw did a clean job in the 200m breast, while the 4x200m free relay won by a mile. Italy’s Simona Quadarella was a cut above the rest in the 1500m free and won her second title here, like Russia’s Martin Malyutin, in the men’s 200m free. The hosts clinched gold in the 50m fly, thanks to the lucky touch of Szebasztian Szabo who won by 0.01sec.

Gold Medal SZABOÂ Szebasztian HUN Silver Medal GOVOROVÂ Andriy UKR Bronze Medal ZHILKINÂ Andrey RUS 50m Butterfly Men Swimming Budapest – Hungary 21/5/2021 Duna Arena XXXV LEN European Aquatic Championships Photo Giorgio Perottino / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 
Gold Medal RENSHAWÂ Molly GBR Silver Medal MAMIEÂ Lisa SUI Bronze Medal EFIMOVAÂ Yuliya RUS 200m Breaststroke Women Swimming Budapest – Hungary 21/5/2021 Duna Arena XXXV LEN European Aquatic Championships Photo Giorgio Perottino / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 
Gold Medal MALYUTINÂ Martin RUS Silver Medal SCOTTÂ Duncan W GBR Bronze Medal DEANÂ Thomas GBR 200m Freestyle Men Swimming Budapest – Hungary 21/5/2021 Duna Arena XXXV LEN European Aquatic Championships Photo Giorgio Perottino / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 
Gold Medal GREAT BRITAIN HOPEÂ Lucy GBR VAN SELMÂ Tamryn GBR HIBBOTTÂ Holly GBR ANDERSONÂ Freya GBR Silver Medal HUNGARY JAKABOSÂ Zsuzsanna HUN FABIANÂ Fanni HUN VERESÂ Laura HUN KAPASÂ Boglarka HUN Bronze Medal ITALY PIROZZIÂ Stefania ITA GAILLIÂ Sara ITA QUADARELLAÂ Simona ITA PELLEGRINIÂ Federica ITA 4x200m Freestyle Women Swimming Budapest – Hungary 21/5/2021 Duna Arena XXXV LEN European Aquatic Championships Photo Giorgio Perottino / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 
Gold Medal DAWSONÂ Kathleen GBR Silver Medal PANZIERAÂ Margherita ITA Bronze Medal KAMENEVAÂ Maria RUS 100m Backstroke Women Swimming Budapest – Hungary 21/5/2021 Duna Arena XXXV LEN European Aquatic Championships Photo Giorgio Perottino / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 
Gold Medal QUADARELLAÂ Simona ITA Silver Medal KIRPICHNIKOVAÂ Anastasia RUS Bronze Medal CARAMIGNOLIÂ Martina Rita ITA 1500m Freestyle Women Swimming Budapest – Hungary 21/5/2021 Duna Arena XXXV LEN European Aquatic Championships Photo Giorgio Scala / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 
DAWSON Kathleen GBR 100 Backstroke Women Final Gold Medal Swimming Budapest – Hungary 21/5/2021 Duna Arena XXXV LEN European Aquatic Championships Photo Andrea Staccioli / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 
RENSHAW Molly GBR 200 Breaststroke Women Final Swimming Budapest – Hungary 21/5/2021 Duna Arena XXXV LEN European Aquatic Championships Photo Andrea Staccioli / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 
MALYUTIN Martin RUS 200 Freestyle Men Final Gold Medal Swimming Budapest – Hungary 21/5/2021 Duna Arena XXXV LEN European Aquatic Championships Photo Andrea Staccioli / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 
GBR GREAT BRITAIN HOPE Lucy VAN SELM Tamryn HIBBOTT Holly ANDERSON Freya 4 x 200 m Freestyle Women Final Swimming Budapest – Hungary 21/5/2021 Duna Arena XXXV LEN European Aquatic Championships Photo Giorgio Perottino / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 
Silver Medal HUNGARY JAKABOSÂ Zsuzsanna HUN FABIANÂ Fanni HUN VERESÂ Laura HUN KAPASÂ Boglarka HUN 4x200m Freestyle Women Swimming Budapest – Hungary 21/5/2021 Duna Arena XXXV LEN European Aquatic Championships Photo Giorgio Perottino / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 
DAWSON Kathleen GBR Great Britain WOMEN – 100M BACKSTROKE Swimming Budapest – Hungary 21/5/2021 Duna Arena XXXV LEN European Aquatic Championships Photo Giorgio Perottino / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 
WOMEN – 100M BACKSTROKE Podium Swimming Budapest – Hungary 21/5/2021 Duna Arena XXXV LEN European Aquatic Championships Photo Giorgio Perottino / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 
QUADARELLA Simona ITA Italy CARAMIGNOLI Martina Rita ITA Italy 1500m Freestyle Women Final Swimming Budapest – Hungary 21/5/2021 Duna Arena XXXV LEN European Aquatic Championships Photo Giorgio Perottino / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 


Team GB enjoyed a brilliant evening in the Duna Arena by winning three out of the four women’s events. Kathleen Dawson indeed won the 100m back final twice, once early in the session as scheduled, then again late in the evening when the event was re-swum.
As it turned out, the voice-signal system, which aides the backstrokers at the start, malfunctioned at a couple of blocks and Sweden’s Louise Hansson – who was otherwise a late replacement of Israel’s Gorbenko – started off almost two seconds later and Kira Toussaint of the Netherlands also talked about confusion around the starting signal after the final. Sweden lodged an official protest and the LEN officials gave way to repeat the final, after the conclusion of the original programme.
Dawson was dominant again and won by a margin of 0.52sec once more, and she set a new Championship Record once more, 58.18 (she clocked 58.13 previously). The twist came in the runner-up position: while at first Netherlands’ Kira Toussaint finished second with 59.02, in the re-run Italy’s Margherita Panziera claimed silver (59.01), while the bronze remained in Russia’s Maria Kameneva’s hand who was slightly off her original pace (59.13 v 59.22). It was Toussaint who could not near her original effort (59.02 v 59.32), despite taking the fastest start in the second swim.
Molly Renshaw’s victory in the 200m breast was much more peaceful in all sense: she went in front over the second lap and never let it go after. After a silver in 2014 and a bronze in 2018, Renshaw finally made it: she gained 0.71 seconds on Switzerland’s Lisa Mamie who was in shock upon learning that she just took the silver medal. Her astonishment was quite understandable: the Swiss has never been close to the podium in women’s breaststroke events. Russia’s title-holder Yuliya Efimova – who earned her first title back in 2008 over this distance – out-touched compatriot Evgeniia Chikunova by 0.01sec for the bronze.
The Brit’s completed a golden hat-trick by landing another relay title, No. 4 here in Budapest, this time in the 4x200m free. It was a dominant performance, their winning margin was huge, 3.11sec, ahead of the hosts’ quartet who claimed silver a bit surprisingly from lane 7, while Italy got the bronze.
That was a fine way to end the day for the Italians – besides Panziera’s lucky silver – as it already started off well when Simone Quadarella retained her 1500m free title in the opening event of the session. She did the 400-800- 1500 treble in Glasgow 2018, here she stands 2/2 so far, with the 400m coming on the last day.
As for the men, Russia’s Martin Malyutin achieved the great double too, added the 200m title to his 400m gold while setting a new CR. The Russian was the only one under 1:45sec – he geared up lap by lap (his placement at the turns: 4th-3rd-2nd-1st). It was a fine win, 0.40sec ahead of the Brits, titleholder Duncan Scott and Thomas Dean.
The 50m fly, as a tradition, brought the closest contest imaginable. Hungary’s Szebasztian Szabo had the luckier touch at the end, 0.01sec ahead of worldrecord holder and 2016-18 champion Andriy Govorov of Ukraine, to win his first-ever gold at majors (he had a silver from the 2019 short-course Europeans). The bronze was also decided by the smallest margin possible, Russia’s Andrey Zhalkin edged out Konrad Czerniak of Poland by 0.01sec too.
Press release from LEN, photos courtesy of Deepbluemedia/Insidefoto
