• Made it to San Antonio for my first Pro Series of 2021! It’s been one whole year since my last Pro Series! Feels good to be creating again, I missed you guys!

  • Due to the ongoing COVID restrictions, continued uncertainty around the exact timetable of easing of lockdown, and in recognition that relatively few swimmers are back in training, the meet has been scaled back, with the ultimate focus being senior selections for international competition later this year. The meet will now be reduced in length by one day, running from Wednesday 14th to Sunday 18th April. 

    Given this very specific focus of the event, we feel we can no longer call this a British Championships, hence the revision of the event title to the 2021 British Swimming Selection Trials.

    We have also removed the junior-specific element of the Trials, given the overwhelming majority of young swimmers have not been able to train for the best part of the last 12 months, that there has been no announcement from LEN or FINA around dates and venues for the 2021 European Junior or World Junior Championships, school term dates around the Easter period are still fluid and variable, and our ability to reasonably select any junior representative teams has been severely compromised.

    That being said, this will not exclude junior swimmers from entering the event – but there will be no dedicated Junior or Transition finals. For younger athletes, our primary concern now is to continue planning to facilitate a series of ‘restart’ meets to give as many athletes as possible an opportunity to return to racing through the summer. Significant discussions have already taken place with our Home Nation partners to provide opportunities that the whole of the swimming fraternity can buy into in July – this is likely to focus on a more regionalised ‘festival of swimming’ rather than a single performance-focussed event.

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  • The curtain fell on the National Age Group Long Course Swimming Championships out in Couva where there were some very encouraging performances, especially from the older kids, but no records fell as was expected.

  • Dr. Gary Hall Sr. talks all about the great James ‘Doc’ Counsilman and his magnificent wife, Marge.

  • Sometimes the Old Gods that live in the water get hungry…

  • A marathon effort is underway tonight, with a Brisbane woman attempting to swim a lap of Bribie Island. Jessica Evans is braving strong currents, stingers and sharks, all to raise awareness for suicide prevention

  • Who is Ryan Murphy and what makes him so good at backstroke?

    In this week’s Blackboard Breakdown from Propulsion Swimming, we look at Murphy’s achievements in swimming and why we think he’s still the man to beat in the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games.

    In this analysis, we will look at Murphy’s performances over the last 5 years; starting from his amazing medal haul at the Rio 2016 Olympics to backstroke NCAA dominance, and then his incredible swims at the International Swimming League in 2019 and also in ISL 2020.

    After disappointment at the Budapest World Championships 2017 and the Gwangju World Championships 2019 due to big competition from the likes of Coleman Stewert, Rylov, Irie, Kolesnikov, Mitch Larkin etc; Murphy will be looking to settle the score at Tokyo 2021.

  • As an Olympic medalist, Gustavo Borges shares his experience and confidence in his training program. He firmly believes one must trust their training and focus on the training and focus on the process for success. This and focusing on the daily training habits is his key to handle high-pressure taper swim meets.

  • Madisyn Cox shares her thoughts on the power of trusting your coaches and teammates to make the transition from high school to college go smoothly.