The Week That Was: Five Things You Might Have Missed Last Week
PHOENIX, Arizona, March 4. WE had a few records broken, some new records that are set to be broken and a star swimmer recognized for her record-setting performances. Let’s not
PHOENIX, Arizona, March 4. WE had a few records broken, some new records that are set to be broken and a star swimmer recognized for her record-setting performances. Let’s not
HOLLYWOOD, California, March 4. DIANA Nyad, who captured the hearts and minds of the American public with her swim from Cuba to Florida last year, has been selected as part
PHOENIX, Arizona, March 4. WE bring you four interviews from the deck of last week’s Atlantic Coast Conference men’s swimming championships on today’s edition of The Morning Swim Show, conducted
LINCOLN, Nebraska, March 3. ONE national public school record and five state marks were lowered during the Nebraska High School Swimming Championships February 27-March 1 at the University of Nebraska
INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana, March 3. CHESTERTON High School dominated this year’s version of the Indiana Boys State High School Swimming and Diving Championships. The Trojans combined for 240 points, giving them
PHOENIX, Arizona, February 27. THE history of African-Americans in swimming goes much further back than the 1980s, but when talk turns toward the best black swimmers in the sport, Chris
CHARLOTTE, North Carolina, March 3. IN an article on the Daytona Beach News-Journal, Olympic star Ryan Lochte has now said he might have come back from his knee injury a
PHOENIX, Arizona, March 3. TWO Masters swimming short course yards national records in the 100 breaststroke fell recently, as two notable names in the sport raced against younger competitors in
CANCUN, Mexico, March 3. THE first meeting of the FINA Bureau in 2014 took place in Cancun (MEX) on March 1-2, immediately after the organisation of the successful FINA World Water Polo
BROOKFIELD, Wisconsin, March 3. HEAD coach Fred Russell, who has coached at Elmbrook Swim Club in Wisconsin for nearly three of his nearly five decades in the sport of swimming,