Description
Swimming World Magazine November 2015 Issue
In this issue:
FEATURES
016 TOP 9 OLYMPIC UPSETS: #9 IRON MIKE
by Chuck Warner
Beginning with this issue and running through July 2016—a month before the start of the Olympic swimming events in Rio on Aug. 6—Swimming World Magazine will bring you its top 9 upsets in the individual events in Olympic history—in particular, in the last 50 years.
018 2015 OPEN WATER SWIMMERS OF THE YEAR
by Steven Munatones
With impressive performances in the 10K marathon swim this past summer at theFINA World Championships in Kazan, 2015 Open Water Swimmers of the Year Aurélie Muller and Jordan Wilimovsky now have their sights sets on Rio.
021 MEMORABLE OPEN WATER MOMENTS OF 2015
by Jeff Commings
Swimming World presents this year’s five biggest open water stories.
023 AT RISK IN RIO?
by Annie Grevers
With less than a year away from the 2016 Olympics, there is still concern for the safety of athletes who will be competing in the waters off the coast of Rio de Janeiro.
026 THE ULTIMATE COMPETITOR
by Annie Grevers
A successful pool swimmer, American Haley Anderson has also become one of the world’s most decorated and most consistent open water athletes. Since winning an Olympic 10K silver medal in 2012, she took the world title in the 5K in 2013 and struck gold in the 10K at Pan-Pacs in 2014. This past summer, she reclaimed gold in the 5K at Worlds and also qualified as the first female member of the 2016 U.S. Olympic team.
030 RCP TIBURON MILE
by Steven Munatones
With the ebb tide the strongest it’s been in the history of the race, Jordan Wilimovsky and Ashley Twichell successfully battled the conditions to win the RCP Tiburon Mile.
COACHING
010 LESSONS WITH THE LEGENDS: JIM MONTRELLA
by Michael J. Stott
012 SWIMMING TECHNIQUE MISCONCEPTIONS: ARM COORDINATION (Part I of II)
by Rod Havriluk
In the first of a two-part series, Dr. Havriluk explains how the typical arm coordination (based on conventional wisdom) limits velocity and how a unique arm coordination can result in much faster swimming.
038 STREAMLINES & BREAKOUTS: A PREREQUISITE FOR SPEED
by Michael J. Stott
042 Q&A WITH COACH ADAM CROSSEN
by Michael J. Stott
043 HOW THEY TRAIN OWEN KAO
by Michael J. Stott
TRAINING
045 DRYSIDE TRAINING: ON-LAND SWIM STROKE MOVEMENTS—BUTTERFLY
by J.R. Rosania
JUNIOR SWIMMER
014 GOLDMINDS: THE LANGUAGE OF THE LANES
by Wayne Goldsmith
048 UP & COMERS
COLUMNS & SPECIAL SECTIONS
008 A VOICE FOR THE SPORT
032 HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE
046 GUTTER TALK
049 PARTING SHOT
ON THE COVER
During the 2015 summer season, there was no one as technically perfect and strategically savvy as the USA’s Jordan Wilimovsky, who was named Swimming World Magazine’s Male Open Water Swimmer of the Year. The 21-year-old handily beat deeply talented fields in the 10K marathon swims at both the USA Swimming national champions and at the FINA World Championships. Then in September, he added the RCP Tiburon Mile title to his list of accomplishments. (See stories, pages 18, 21 and 30.) [PHOTO BY ELLIOT KARLAN]