• The Brazilian Confederation of Water Sports (CBDA) is set to take legal action against Globo after the commercial broadcaster suspended its rights deal with the body.

    Globo last week informed the CBDA of its intention to end rights payments to the body amid the suspension of sport due to the Covid-19 outbreak.

    The CBDA said the suspension of the April payment directly affected its cash flow forecast for the end of the month. The federation said it only received notification of the suspension the day before the payment was due.

    Legal action has now been initiated by the CBDA, according to Brazilian news outlet UOL.

    Read SportBusiness

    brazil swimming photo
    Image courtesy of Chickenonline, Pixabay License Free for commercial use, No attribution required
  • A horse was rescued after falling into a swimming pool that was covered in Chester County. Crews rescued the horse in the backyard of a home on Hunt Club Lane in Malvern.

    The horse is no longer trapped.

    See CBS Local

  • They’re first in the pool and last out of the pool at nearly every practice on every team around the globe. Distance swimmers grind day in and day out putting in massive mileage. In this live broadcast, four-time Olympic gold medalist Janet Evans spoke to Chloe Sutton, the first and only American woman to swim in the Olympics in both open water and pool swimming, about how to physically, mentally, and emotionally survive training in “the Animal Lane”.

  • This man has swam some of the most contaminated waterways in America to fight for clean water. Christopher Swain holds the record for being the first person to swim the length of the Columbia, Hudson, Mohawk, Charles, Mystic and East Rivers, as well as Lake Champlain, the Gowanus Canal, Newtown Creek, Long Island Sound, Narragansett Bay, and large sections of the Atlantic coast of the United States.

  • The SeaWolves Swim Team, located in Georgia, started training with Social Distancing protocols in late February, before stay-at-home orders were in place.  The SeaWolves started with 2 small training groups so they could document their workouts, sets, and processes just before they had to stop swimming in order to have videos and methods ready for training the rest of their swimmers when the team came out of hibernation later.  This early experimentation with social distancing protocols gave the SeaWolves the chance to evaluate what would work and what wouldn’t.  They quickly decided that all of their swimmers needed to have a ‘home base’ to return to as their new ‘starting wall’.  When 1-2 of their swimmers were starting at a wall, it was a physical disadvantage to those in the same lane that were starting away from the walls.   They also learned that the process of rotating the stopping locations (such as rotating who was at the wall each set) was far too confusing and created accidental ‘pile-ups’ between swimmers, even though the SeaWolves were training with headsets so the coach was talking to each swimmer 100% of the time.  Still, accidents happened and swimmers ended up stopped in the same locations.  So their experience taught them that;

    1. It was best to assign a ‘home’ position for each swimmer.
    2. The ‘home positions’ all needed to be away from the walls so no one had an advantage or disadvantage.
    3. The ‘home positions needed to be marked by a unique color, both below the lane line as well as something standing up well above the lane line so it could be seen when swimming on the back or on the stomach for any type of kick or swim sessions.
    4. Each swimmer needed a way to store their equipment at their ‘home’ position to avoid going back to the walls for gear changes and thus avoiding any ‘pile-up’ at the walls between sets (and also save time in the workouts).
    5. Their gear storage needed to be out of way and not drift/float into the lanes when circle swimming.

    The process the SeaWolves developed allowed them to fit as many as 5 swimmers per line and none of them were starting/stopping at a wall position (1 under each backstroke flag, 1 at each red line, and 1 in the center of the pool).   However, a 6th location was possible at the wall, as long as that was for the leader in each lane and not the last person in the lane.  If the last person in the lane is on a wall, they will easily push off and run into the person in front of them due to the clear advantage of a wall push compared to a start without a push.  So as long as the front lane leader is on the wall and the other 5 swimmers are stationed along the lane line, this can work but not ideal.  The layout the Seawolves used with 5 positions down the lane creates about 12 feet from each swimmer in the same lane and 8+ feet between swimmers and the swimmers in the lanes next to each other.

    Read SwimmingWorld and see SwimmersBest

  • This is the best workout to learn some basic fundamentals for weightlifting, specifically the Snatch.

    Key pointers:

    • Wide grip
    • Feet pressure even
    • Neutral spine
    • Extend legs before moving arms
    • Moving slow is main objective.

    Workout

    Warm-Up:

    • PVC Snatch Warm-Up Complex x3

    Block A:

    • A1. PVC Snatch Start Position Hold x2(3x5s)
    • A2. PVC 3-Point Snatch Pull 2×3

    Block B:

    • B1. PVC ½ Snatch Grip Deadlift 2×5
    • B2. PVC 3-Point Snatch High-Pull 2×3

    Block C:

    • C1. PVC Snatch Rolls 3×5

    Block D:

    • D1. PVC Jump Snatch 3×5

    Block E:

    • E1. PVC Hollow Tuck 3×5

     

  • A member of Canada’s national women’s water polo team wanted to keep up her training during the COVID-19 pandemic but all the pools were closed — so she “baled” herself out by building one … out of hay.

    Kyra Christmas, 23, had been training full time with the team in Montreal as they prepared for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics before the pandemic hit.

    When the physical distancing restriction began, she happened to be visiting her parents near Calgary, just southeast of Airdrie in Rockyview County. Then the Olympics were cancelled and all the pools shut down because of the coronavirus.

    Still, Christmas was itching to get back into the water and keep up her training.

    “Being out of the pool for over a month was just a bit too long for me. So I was looking at, like, buying above ground for the first time and I realized that none of them are deep enough to tread water,” Christmas told the Calgary Eyeopener.

    “So my parents were, like, well, we can come up with a better solution than that.”

    Read CBC

  • Many people in Colorado are wondering if they’ll be able to swim in pools this summer.