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Calendar
February
18-20 Valentine Meet (Tomac at Etobicoke) 18-27 National AG Championships Week 18-20 Provincial Championships-Manitoba 25-27 Provincial AG Championships-Quebec
Ontario Seniors-Sudbury
East Coast Championships-Fredericton
Alberta Senior & AG
March
3- 5 CIAU Championships-Sherbrooke
4- 5 Ontario High School Champs-Brock
Cambridge Invitational 4-6 Provincial Championships-Saskatchewan
4- 13 CSCA Sprint Swimming Week
5- 6 Dartmouth Crusader Sprint Meet 12-13 Thunderbolt Invitational-Thunder Bay 16-19 Winter Nationals-New Westminster 24-26 Junior Nationals-Sudbury/Saskatoon April
15-17 Canadian Masters-Etobicoke 22-24 Trojan LC invitational-Halifax 22-24 Ontario Team Championships-+A/4A
Edmonton Pre-FISU Invitational 29-30 Operation Los Angeles-Quebec Goldfin Invitational-Saskatoon
29-1 May
2-4 6-8
Hapoel Games-Israel (National Team) Royal Insirance Meet-Sudbury ROW Invitational-Kitchener 7-8 Canada vs Great Britain (National Meet)
Junior Invitational-Prince Albert, Sask 13-15 Quebec Cup 3- at CAMO in Montreal
Manitoba Marlin Senior-Winnipeg 12-15 Edmonton Keyano AG Invitational 27-29 Nova Scotia AG Championships
Thunder Bay Invitational 27-29 Canada Cup-Vancouver June
3-5 Guelph Co-Operators Invitational 10-12 University of Calgary Invitational 24-26 Nova Scotia Senior Championships Alberta AG Championships
N J. Thierry Editor & Publisher
Terry Holmes Features Editor Contributors
Nancy Lee, Jim Shaw, Dan Thompson, Trevor Tiffany
Greg Hemstreet (Computer programs) Tony Duffy (Photography)
SWIM established in 1974, is published monthly
except October and November.
Contents Copyright © 1982 by Swim Magazine.
No portion of this magazine may be reprinted
without written permission from the publisher.
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ISSN 0319 - 0560
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Tel: (416) 368 2606
July
1- 11 FISU Games Edmonton 8-10 Quebec Cup 4-Montreal 8-10 Youth Championships
15- 17 Ontario Championships
East Coast Championships-Halifax
Alberta Senior Championships
Saskatoon Championships 22-24 Quebec Team Championships
Dr. Paul Hauch Invitational-London 27-30 Summer Nationals-Montreal 29-31 Junior Nationals-Vancouver August
4- 6 Junior Nationals-Thunder Bay
16- 23 Pan American Games-Caracas
Pan Pacific Meet-Tokyo
MAJOR MEETS 83-84 SEASON December
2- 4 Canada Cup-Etobicoke (scm) January
6-8 US International (scm)
25-28 Winetr Nationals-Winnipeg (scm)
February
5- 7 Youth Championships (scm) March
I- 3 CIAU Championships (scm) 22-24 Junior Nationals (scm) April
5-7 Canada Cup (Icm) May
II- 13 Canada Cup-Vancouver(lcm) June
16-20 Olympic Trials-Etobicoke July
Youth Championships 29-4 OLYMPIC GAMES-Los Angeles August
Junior Nationals 15-18 Summer Nationals-Vancouver 1986
July 17-27 Commonwealth Games-Edinburgh
Contents
March 1983
Volume 10, Number 3
Consecutive Number 89
|
3 |
Calendar |
|
4 |
US International |
|
5 |
Profile: Dominique Roussy |
|
and David Shemilt |
|
|
6 |
Results US International |
|
9 |
A winning combination |
|
10 |
For the record |
|
11 |
Fit without fat |
|
The distance alternative |
|
|
12 |
Colwin talks to Schubert |
|
14 |
Esso present: |
|
The Fast and The Furious |
|
|
18 |
Results in brief: European Cup, |
|
Quebec Cup, Warthog meet |
|
|
20 |
Poolside |
|
21 |
A tale of two pools |
|
22 |
TAG (Top Age Group Times) |
|
25 |
Record setters |
|
26 |
Making Waves |
s
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CIA/HAT A GREAT MEET DOMINIQUE SILVER MEDAL WINNER AT THE \ 1983 US INTERNATIONAL KEEP UP THE GREAT SWIMMING /
4
1983 US International
by Terry Holmes
American swimming's mid-term report card was delivered Jan 7-9 at the United States Swimming International meet in Indianapolis. The assessment was tough on U.S. swimmers who need marked improvement before their 1984 test in Los Angeles to regain former standing.
For instance, an eight-member team from the German Democratic Republic {GDR}, including six winners from the '82 World Championships swam away from the field to take 11 gold medals and set six world best times.
In comparison, the U.S. national team, with 24 members, won 16 events while Californian Jeff Kostoff swam a lone world best 7:44.53 for the 800 free.
The GDR women complained about turning on an unfamiliar pool gutter but otherwise mastered a fast pool, especially well in the case of Kristin Otto, who broke the minute barrier in the 100-metre backstroke with a time of 59.97. Other world best swims came from Birgit Meineke's exceptional freestyle speed, 100-metres honed to 53.99, 200-metres to 1:56.99, and Cornelia Sirch's 200-metres backstroke, covered in 207.74. Their relay foursomes for the medley {4:0285} and freestyle {3:41.74} are the fastest in the world.
Many Canadians stayed at home for the Pointe Claire meet, but Select's Dominique Roussy was a strong runner-up in the 200-metre breaststroke, going 231.99, well behind Geweniger's 226.85. Roussy incidentally, was
reinstated in that race after a successful appeal on a turn disqualification in the heats. In the 100-metre breaststroke with a 1:1209, she was fifth.
Brock University's David Shemilt had strong swims in freestyle events 200-metres and longer. He was most competitive over the 800 and 1500-metres, finishing fourth in both. His 8:01.16 for the 800 was a near Canadian record and his 15:23.53 was a life-time best, best
Kathy Richardson also from StCatharines, had solid fifth place efforts in the 200-metres breaststroke {236.29} and the 400-metres im {4:54.08}. Brock, it appeared, was rested and shaved for the meet
Butterfly great, Mary T. Meagher, swam an inspired 200-metre race {208.23} to grab a narrow, come-from-beyond victory over GDR's Ines Geissler. Meagher lagged by half a second at 100-metres but put her head down to sprint the last 50— metres and out-touch Giessler by a tenth of a second.
"It's almost the most satisfying race in my life," a beaming Meagher said. "The pressure was there and I came through from behind."
National team coach, Mark Schubert shared her enthusiasm saying, "We were
Jeff Kostoff, of the United States winner of the 400-800- 1500 free and 400 i.m. The 17 year-old
is the great hope of American swimming in the distance events. His 800 was a world short course best.
thrilled. That was a big comeback. It's important to see our girls race aggressively. They're obviously swimming for first place."
The problem, he said, is that athletes such as Meagher and Tracy Caulkins, who don't face close competition at home, have a tough time racing when they are finally pitted against the world's best.
Kim Linehan's 400-metre free {4:04.13} and Tiffany Cohen's 800-metre free were the only other wins over the fleet Fraulein.
Top-billed American men failed to win several events. Freestyler Rowdy Gaines, for example, bowed out to Sweden's Pelle Holmertz {49.59} at 100-metres
and to Yugoslavia's Borut Petric {1:48.27} at 200-metres. World record holder, Craig Beardsley settled for second in the 200-metre butterfly behind Washington's Roger Von Jouanne {1:57.71}
American relay teams are in a different kind of doldrums than faltering Canadian relays. They were twice beaten this year by speedy swims from Sweden in the men's 400-metre free relay {3:18.48} and the men's 800 free relay {7:21.46}.
United States Swjmming declared it wasn't racing short course metres for fun. European swimmers proved with their victories they were equally serious.
Kristin Otto, first girl to better the minute in the 100 backstroke.
Dara Torres, of the USA at 15 already the fastest 50 sprinter in the world in 1983.
Profile. Dominique Roussy
Dominique is the newest luminary to emerge from Quebec City. She follows in the footsteps of Pan Am medal winners Anne Gagnon and Johanne Bedard. Curiously, Dominique's specialty is the same stroke.
She started swimming at age 10 with the local Ste-Foy club. For the past four years she has been coached by Jean-Marie DeKoninck and Benoit Lebrun at the Select du Quebec team.
Her prodigious improvement of the past year is due in her own words to just "Having decided that I was capable of swimming faster." Immediate goals are to finish first in both breast distances at the next nationals.
Dominique expects to better the current Canadian record of 231.68 to win. Her performance in Indianapolis puts her right on target
Her improved turn technique is another reason for her current success. She formerly considered herself to be a better long course swimmer. According to coach Lebrun, training exclusively breaststroke is too demanding. This season, training includes more individual medley and kicking drills, resulting in a general improvement for the club's breaststrokers. Of the 11 workouts per week, three are strictly specialty oriented.
Like most successful breastrokers, Dominique has stroke timing problems. Just recently, following her win at the Canada Cup she had such a problem. According to Lebrun, the best method to regain her form was working on the arm pull with a dolphin like kick.
Lebrun noticed drills exclusive to the arms tend to harm the smooth rhythm of the stroke. Thus he likes Dominique to always pull without a buoy, but with a small dolphin-like kick to work on the undulation of the stroke. Training sets are
over short distances, with proper technique foremost
The short tenure of many of the best breaststrokers of the past few years is attributed to problems with weight. According to Lebrun, as the girls get older they tend to increase their body weight, their technique changes, usually for the worse.
Modern breaststroke techniques approximate the motion of the dolphin. Those that have mastered it, are very successful indeed.
Dominique's secret, if any, is her coordination. When she mastered the correct flow between the arms and the legs, she improved immediately by two seconds in the 100 and four seconds in the 200.
Training includes, long course in the mornings, and by moving the bulkhead, a 16-metre course in the evenings. The reasons for this 'short' course is to work on the turns. {16 metres works out to roughly three lengths for a 50}.
Long range plans include finishing her high school, entering a CEGEP and eventually enrolling at the University of Laval. She definitely plans to stay with the winning combination of coach and pool in her home town.
The most impressive aspect of competing in Indianapolis was the opportunity to race against the best swimmer in the stroke, namely, Ute Geweniger. Lebrun, sums her up as 'power-oriented.' The hand movements are very effective, with great sculling and acceleration throughout the pull. Another lesson is to 'attack' each race. Take the lead immediately, get ahead on the field on the first length.
With the current strength and depth of this stroke in Canada, Dominique will have to be better than ever to be a champion.
Dominique Roussy with coach Benoit Lebrun
David Shemilt
by Terry Holmes
David Shemilt has definite ideas about distance races. Naturally. The 18-yr old Brock University athlete churned 1500-metres in 15:4243 to rank top Canadian in the event last season while securing fifth place at the Commonwealth Games.
His performance at the USS International in January {15:23.53} holds more promise. "It's a good experience," David said at Indianapolis. "You don't see these people very often. Swimming in your own area, you see the same people and know what to expect. Come down here and you don't know what to expect. You've got to be on your toes all the time. You've got to swim your own race."
Swimming his own race is important. "You have to keep your strategy in mind, keep your stroke together and keep yourself motivated," he explained.
"The 1500-metre event is a good place to break into the national scene. If you're good at the 800 or 1500, then in time, the shorter distances will come. As I get older and bigger the 400, 200 and 100-metres freestyle are coming along," David said.
Progress did not happen overnight. This is his eleventh season under coach Herb deBray. At age 16, David moved away from his family and the Granite Club program and relocated in St Catharines, Ontario to stay with deBray.
David's weekly training includes six morning long course sessions, three evening short course sessions plus two or three weight training efforts.
"Heavy training is 1 2,000-metres, three times a week," David said. "Sometimes we get up to 13,000 or 14,000-metres if we're really pushing the metres but we concentrate on quality work."
"For example, we'll go 20x100, trying to hit pace on the last 15. We try not to repeat workouts and we run and do calisthenics three mornings a week."
An all-out effort is demanded but David said he thinks he can go the distance.
6
1983 US International
lndianapolis,Jan. 7-9 25m WOMEN 50 m free
25.31 B.Meineke.GDR 25.39 J.Sterkel, USA 25.48 D.Torres, USA (25.37) 26. 47 E. Corcoran, Osh 26. 53 C. Klimpel, Un. Texas 26.99 A.Schloegl.NYAC 27. 16 K. Doolan, Un. Georgia 27.67 M. New, Edm Keyano 27.92 N. Home, Brock 100 m free
*53.99 B.Meineke,GDR 54.22 K.Otto.GDR 55.39 J.Sterkel, USA 57. 69 E. Corcoran, Osh 57. 89 C. Klimpel, U. Texas 58. 57 C. McA rt on, NY AC 59. 25 A . Sch loegl, NY AC 59. 53 M. New, Keyano 59. 69 K. Doolan, U. Georgia 200 m free
•1:56.35 B.Meineke,GDR 1:59.59 K.Linehan,USA 1:59.94 S.Linke,USA 2:04.85 C. Klimpel, U. Texas 2:05.40 C. McA rton,NYAC 2:07. 13 D.McGinnis,Keyano 400 m free
4:04.13 K.Linehan,USA 4:04.46 M.Linzmeier.USA 4:05.90 C.Schmidt,GDR 4:21.93 C. McA rt on, NY AC 4:23.75 D. McGinnis, Keyano 800 m free
8:23.53 T.Cohen, USA 8:25.71 M.Linzmeier.USA 8:28.01 M.Richardson, USA 8:52. 70 D.McGinnis.Keyano 9:04. 18 C. McA rton, NY AC 1500 m free
15:59.96 K.Linehan,USA 15:54.13 T.Cohen,USA 16:06.15 M.Linzmeier,USA 17:00.71 D.McGinnis.Keyano 1 7: 1 0. 56 C. McA rton, NY AC 100 m back
* 59.97 K.Otto,GDR 1:00.86 C.Sirch.GDR 1:02.44 S.Walsh, USA 1:06. 10 E.Corcoran, Osh 1: 06. 4 1 B. McBain, ODSC 200 m back
•2:07.74 C.Sirch.GDR 2:08.65 K.Otto,GDR 2: 13.80 P.Gavin, USA 2:24.31 B. McBain, CDSC 100 m breast
1:07.85 U.Geweniger.GDR 1:10.76 K.Rhodenbaugh,USA 1:11.49 A.Knipping,FRG 1: 12. 09 D. Roussy, Select 1: 12.87 K.Richardson, Brock 1:13.75 A.Dozzo.NYAC 1:14. 76 L. Borsholt, CDSC 1: 15.04 S.Garay, Brock 1: 15.48 T.Balkwill, Brock
200 m breast
2:26.85 U.Geweniger.GDR 2:31.99 D.Roussy,Select 2:33.75 B.Acker,USA 2:36.29 K.Richardson, Brock 2:37. 60 A. Dozzo, NY AC 2:40.88 L.Borsholt.CDSC 2:41.89 S. Garay, Brock 2:41.97 T.Balkwill, Brock 100 m fly
59.43 M. Meagher, USA 1:00.26 J.Sterkel, USA 1:00.43 I.Geissler,GDR 1:03. 76 K. Doolan, U. Georgia 1:03.90 N.Deschamps.Select 1:03.98 M.MacPherson.NYAC 1:05.24 A. VanDyke,CDSC 1:05.26 N. Home, Brock 1:06.74 M. New, Keyano 200 m fly
2:08.23 M.Meagher, USA 2:08.33 I.Geissler.GDR 2: 1 3.42 T.McQuirk, USA 2: 19.08 N.Deschamps.Select 2:20.63 N. Home, Brock 2:21.20 A. VanDyke.CDSC 2:22.43 M.MacPherson.NYAC 2:23.65 K. Doolan. U.Georgia 200 m ind. medley 2:12.05 K.Otto,GDR 2:12.66T.Caulkins,USA 2:14.97 P.Gavin, USA 2:20.71 N.Deschamps.Select 2:21. 80 A.Dozzo.N YA C 2: 22. 20 K. Richardson, Brock 2:24. 14 M.MacPherson.NYAC 2:29.92 T.Balkwill, Brock 400 m ind. medley 4:42.16T.Caulkins,USA 4:44.73 P.Gavin, USA 4:47.68 S.I_inke,USA 4:54.08 K.Richardson, Brock 4: 54. 80 M. MacPherson,N YA C 4:56.87 N.Deschamps.Select 5:01.57 A.Dozzo.NYAC 5: 05. 78 D. McGinnis, Keyano 4x100 medley relay •4:02.85 German Dem.Rep 4:09.72 United States A 4: 13.47 United States B 4: 18.45 Canada A
1:06.27 McBain,
1:11.99 Roussy
1:03.09 Deschamps 57. 10 Corcoran 4:24.00 Canada B
1:07. 18 Dozzo
1:14.31 Richardson
1; 03.60 MacPherson 58.51 New 4x100 free relay •3:41.74 German Dem.Rep 3:42.80 United States A 3:49.99 Ft. Lauderdale 3:52.24 Canada A
58.60 New
57.06 Corcoran
59,20 MacPherson
57.38 McA rton
Kim Linehan, USA
Birgit Meineke, GDR
3:56.35 Canada B 58.94 Sch loegl 58. 35 Deschamps 59.01 Dozzo
1:00.05 McGinnis
,4x200 free relay
8:01.46 United States A
8:12.69 United States B
8:25.64 Canada A 2:04.84 McArton 2:07.57 McGinnis 2:06.33 MacPherson 2:06.90 Richardson
8:39.26 Canada B 2:10.00 Sch loegl 2:09.49 New 2:10.09 Dozz 2:09.68 VanDyke
MEN
50 m free
22.42, P.Siong-Ang,SNG 22.66 P.Holmertz,SWE 22.69 J.Spencer, USA 23.53 L.St.Laurent,Select 24.42 W.Kelly, Vic O 24.46 G.Welbourn.CDSC 100 m free
49.59 P.Holmertz,SWE 49.95 R.Gaines, USA 50.38 F.Canales.PRO 51. 10 L.St.Laurent.Select 51.84 P.Hubble. UCSC 52.52 G.Welbourn.CDSC ■53.29 W.Kelly. Vic O 200 m free
1:48.27 B.Petric.YUG 1:48.30 R.Gaines.USA 1:48.74 P.Holmertz,SWE 1:51.07 P.Hubble, UCSC 1:52.67 D.Shemilt, Brock 1:54.30 B.CIement,U.Mich 1:55. 14 G.Welbourn.CDSC 1:55.82 L.Mady.unatt 1:56. 19 B.Berger.Hyack 1:56.89 W.Kelly, Vic O 1:56.95 A.Wallingford.U M 400 m free
3:47.24 B.Petric.YUG 3:48.11 J.Kostoff,USA 3:50.09 D.Petric,YUG 3:53.47 D.Shemilt, Brock 3: 55. 30 B. Clemen t, U. Mich 4:00.61 P.Hubble,UCSC 4:05.54 A.Wallingford,U.M 4:07.45 B.Berger.Hyack 4:08.02 L.Mady.unatt 4:09.39 W.Kelly, Vic O 4:11.54 K.Auger,lnd.U
800 m free
•7:44.53 J.Kostoff,USA 7:48.74 D.Petric,YUG 7:58.77 J.My kkanen,USA 8:01. 16 D Shemilt. Brock 8:05.64 B.Clement, U.Mich 8: 12.15 B.Berger,Hyack 8:27. 69 A . Wall in gford, U. Mich 1500 m free
14:50.37 J.Kostoff ,USA 15:01.55 D.Petric.YUG 15:1 1.97 J.Mykkanen.USA 15:23.53 D.Shemilt,Brock 15:30.85 B.Berger.Hyack 15:44.85 B.CIement.U.Mich 16:0 1.56 A.Wallingford.U.M 100 m back
56.06 F.Baltrusch.GDR 56.23 L.Craft.USA 56.59 B.Baron.SWE 58.31 R.Morris.Louis.St 58.72 S.Goss.NYAC 59.97 B.Berger.Hyack 200 m back
1:59.47 F.Baltrusch.GDR 2:00.85 S.Barnicoat.USA 2:02.61 M.Dillard.USA 2:04.81
2:04.81 R.Morris,Louis,St disq S.Goss.NY (2,04.65) 2:05.78 B.Berger.Hyack 2:07.81 P.Dobson.Hyack 2: 13.04 C.Reid.Ariz.St. 100 m breast 1:01.82 J.Moffet.USA 1-02.29 J.UIibarri.USA 1 :02.85 A.Moorehouse,GBR 1:05.51 R.Chernoff.UCSC disq S. Score, Hyack 200 m breast 2:14.75 J.Moffet,USA
2:17.10 A.Moorehouse,GBR 2:17.55 J.UIibarri.USA 2:21.20 R.Chernoff.UCSC 2:23.86 S.Score, Hyack 100 m fly
54.15 B.Hering, USA 54.28 B.PIacak.USA 54.65 C.Beardsley.USA 56.96 P.Hubble.UCSC 58.01 R.Morris.Louis.St. 58.80 W.Kelly, Vic O 59.05 K.Auger.lnd.U 59.56 L.Mady.unatt 200 m fly
1:57.71 R.VonJouanne.USA 1 :58.51 C.Beardsley.USA 2:00.64 F.Colon.PRO 2:04.41 L.Schroeder.U.Mich 2:05.01 P.Hubble.UCSC 2:04.51 L.Mady.unat (scr) 2:06.02 K.Auger.lnd.U 2:06.03 P.Dobson.Hyack 2:11.08 C.Reid.Ariz.St. 200 m ind. medley 2:01.58 R.VonJouanne USA 2:03.02 P.Ferreira.USA 2:05.27 J.Berndt.GDR 2:05.60 C.Reid,Ariz.St 2:05.03 S.Goss,NYAC(cons) 2:08.30 R.Chemoff.USA 2:09.02 P.Dobson.Hyack 2: 13. 16 A.Willingford.U.Mich 400 m ind. medley 4:19.52 J.Kostoff, USA 4:19.97 R.Madruga.BRA 4:21.49 R.VonJouanne.USA 4:26.97 C.Reid.Ariz.St 4:28.05 P.Dobson.Hyack 4:31.24 S.Goss.NYAC 4:32. 1 1 R.Chernoff.UCSC 4:36.95 A.Wallingford.U.MicI 4x100 medley relay 3:41.25 United States A 3:45.80 Arizona State 3:46.17 United States B 3:50.81 Canada A
58.99 Goss
1:04.80 Chernoff
56.77 Kelly 50.25 St. Laurent
4x100 free relay 3:18.48 Sweden 3:20.07 U.Arkansas SC 3:21.19 United States A 3:26.9 1 Canada A
52.31 Welbourn
52.55 Kelly
51.78 Goss 50.37 St.Laurent
4x200 free relay 7:21.46 Sweden 7:27.28 United States A 7:34.91 Arizona State 7:38.93 Canada
1:53.22 Shemilt
1:56.58 Welbourn
1:54.89 Berger
1:54.24 Mady
Successful Swedes — 4 x 100 sprint relay winners, Holmerz, Baron, Soderlund and Johansson.
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Age group invitational & YOUTH CUP
May 12-15, 1983
9
A winning combination
by Sandra Ferrin
No mountain is high enough, no ocean wide enough to keep England's Phil Hubble from the top in swimming. That's why he holds a silver medal from the 1980 Moscow Olympics and a gold medal from the 1982 Commonwealth Games, both for the 200-metre butterfly.
He has earned positions on many international teams, taking him to Germany, Equador, Australia and France. Where did his swimming career start and where might it take him?
Phil started in London, England and continued his training in Australia. When it came time for college.he decided on the United States, land of scholarship money and competition.
He chose the University of Houston in 1978.
Unfortunately, the training philosophies there were not for him.
"I did not feel I was getting enough work in my specialty strokes and distances," he says. "I started to realize the program was already established for a certain category of swimmer rather than my talents."
"Communication between the swimmer and coach are most important," says Phil. "I'm looking for two-way communication, whereas in most cases, the communication is from coach to swimmer and it ends there. I didn't want a coach to dictate my life to me. I wanted a coach who treated his swimmers as individuals rather than just lower class athletes."
Phil knew it was time to move again but it was hard to leave the United States where the competition is good and where he now had social ties. The big question was where next. He had already trained in three strong swimming nations.
A first class training program, coach, location and facility with research available were criteria determining his choice. His search led him to Calgary, home of the University of Calgary and the 1982 CIAU champions, the University of Calgary Dinosaurs.
Phil says, "I knew of Deryk
Phil Hubble Photo by Tony Duffy
Snelling in South Hampton, England, but never met him until the 1979 NCAA Championships. After talking to him about his training philosophy my mind was made up. Deryk gives everyone specific training for their events rather than treat us as cloned swimmers. I also like the fact the team is improving so fast because it rubs off on me."
At an altitude of 4,000 feet, Calgary is an excellent training site and the Human Performance Centre at the university provides the research Phil was seeking. The laboratory researchs strength, flexibility, cardiovascular assessment,blood analysis, biomechanics and pulmonary function.Swimmers can rely on the experience and services of noted English physiologist, Dr. Dave Smith, who works with the team daily. Phil is well on his way to making his 1984 goal a reality.
"The 1980 Olympics was the biggest anti-climax I've had in my career. It wasn't an Olympics, it was just another meet,"Phil remembers.
The countries that pulled out of the Games hurt themselves judged by the competition over the last two years, says Phil. "Those countries who took part in the Olympics will be one step ahead," he says.
Phil Hubble is a leader who is settled now and heading for the top. His days of moving are over. He says, "I've found the combination I've been looking for and I couldn't be more satisfied."
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10
The 'Winning Edge'
Muskoka's Olympia Swim Camps
Canada's most complete sport specialty camp now offers 3 comprehensive, July, swim training weeks to challenge every compe- titor for both skill building and fun.
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Forthe record
by Claus Bredschneider
{touch! } - He flung his hand across the water and struck the wall with a determined finality - the end of the race. Exhausted, he pulled himself over to the side of the lane, dragged his left arm over the rope and clung there, gasping for air, trying to recover. Within moments, he began to feel the tension within his body subside, the fatigue wash away, his heart rate slow and weaken.
An ideal race! Perfect, absolute, faultless and infallible; a feeling of ultimacy - everything that an athlete strives for. He had gone out hard, trying his best from the beginning, oblivious to his fear of the painful weariness that would eventually set in. All four strokes had worked well, achieving a sensuous harmony, an almost orgasmic quality to the physical motion and stress of the body as it worked its was through the water - a rare, transcendental experience. And, just when the burning ache of the fatigue tempted him most to slow down, to give in, he had summoned his determination to beat his nearest competitor, seven lanes away. While the two swimmers in the middle of the pool had left the field far behind, he had not given up. He had tried, tried his best for third place.
As his senses began to return, he noticed an unusual noise - loud, steady applause and cheering. He turned towards the far end of the pool, squinted and strained, tried to focus his nearsighted eyes upon the electronic scoreboard, 200 feet away - all was a haze. He turned to the swimmer in the next lane to ask what had happened.
The answer: "A new world record."
The shock stunned him - the noise of the crowd fell off into a distant hum, while his mind became an immense, white blank. A new world record! He felt hollow, empty, uncertain of what to do; this had never happened before. In a moment, he began to make his way over the ropes and, lane by lane, approached the victor. Void of any feeling, he congratulated him.
Later, while the three medal winners stood on the podium, he watched and wondered. He had swum his own personal best time, a result that would normally have brought satisfaction. However, he still found himself feeling cold and hollow, uncertain of what to think, of how to react - a jumble of emotions. He sensed a certain amount of happiness for both competitors, each of whom had gone under the previous record time and yet, he was sorry for the close finish; one of the record swims had come one heat too late and would forever follow in the shadow of the other by a fraction of a second, a feat of almost equal magnitude that would never get the recognition it deserved. At the same time, he was disappointed - he had never seen a world record before, while in the same race, he had certainly not
seen this one.
A world record! What's my "ideal" race compared to this? What's it compared to the joyous, uplifting sense of uniqueness that goes with knowing that you're the best, that no one has ever gone better than you, that, out of all the people in the world, you're victorious, ultimate, and supreme. How would anything be more fulfilling, more "ideal", than this?
Within the massive swimming hall, the three figures stood distant, small, and isolated. All eyes were on them. Over the microphone, the announcer's voice boomed: "In third place, with a time of ... "
What am I doing here? After what they've done, it's an embarrassement to be standing up here. I was so far out of the race . . . what am I doing here?
As he stood upon the podium, he felt the blood rise to his face, making it hot and flushed. He felt out of place, small and lost within the huge building, nothing compared to the two men who stood next to him. Their performances filled the enormous building - his own swim, his own being, was, in comparison, insignificant Anxious, he desired nothing more than to escape this absurd formality.
"In second place, with a time under the previous world record ..."
Numb, desolate, and barren, he accepted his silver medal. He had become a fragile shell, inwardly drained of warmth, feeling, and emotion, oblivious, as if half asleep, to much around him. For years, both he and his victorious teammate had worked and trained for this moment, had been avid rivals and, in the process, had become like brothers. Together, they had striven for this day, sensed it approaching and, because of their friendship, feared its .outcome. Now, the result was known.
Upon seeing the scoreboard, he had been overcome by a frenzy of emotion. He was happy - it had been a good race, a lifetime best, something satisfying. Normally, he would even be able to accept losing by a tenth of a second. But, he had also achieved the ultimate, had also done a world record, a world record that had become, in the same instant, negated - he felt robbed, cheated, somehow tricked out of something important, rightfully his. He sensed outrage, anger and yet, could only be happy for the victor, his friend. Above all, he was disappointed, struck hard by the despair of having come so close to fulfilling a lifetime dream. His confused, whirling emotions left him cold and empty: the success was sweet, the defeat bitter; a hard lesson in life.
"And in first place, with a new Canadian, Commonwealth, and world record time ..."
Ed. Note: The events described took place during the 1977 Summer Nationals. Graham Smith and Bill Sawchuk bettered the then world record in the 200 i.m. with John VanBuren in third and Bredschneider fourth.
11
Fit without fat
From CASA's Research & Development Committee
Reducing the overweight swimmer
by Micheal E Houston Ph.D. Deptof
Kinesiology, University of Waterloo
At the National Coaches Conference last fall, I was asked a simple question, but one for which the answer is very difficult. The question dealt with reducing body fat on swimmers, and was focussed primarily on female swimmers. How do you approach this complex area?
The average elite female swimmer expends considerably more energy each day than the average elite female middle distance runner. However, the female swimmer has considerably more body fat than the runner. This documented observation suggests at least two points: {1} the penalty for extra fat storage in the swimmer is considerably less than it is for the runner; and {2} energy expenditure, at least for athletes in training, may not be a primary factor in terms of body fat storage.
We know that the very best swimmers tend to be big and strong, but they may or may not be leaner than their non-athletic peers. Since swimming is a weight supported, horizontal activity, the penalty for a few extra pounds is far less than what an 800 m runner would pay. I am not trying to argue that fat is beautiful for the swimmer. But I am indicating that for each swimmer there is probably a much larger range of body fat allowed before there is a significant effect on performance. We see the same thing in other sports where the extra weight penalty is low, or where there are no weight classifications.
Remember, any change in energy storage by the body is a result of an imbalance between energy expenditure and energy intake. Since an elite, female swimmer expends up to 4000 kilocalories {food calories} each day of which about 50% is directly related to training, it is easy to see that the energy output side is high. However, if the elite swimmer gains fat or maintains an overly fat body, it is also easy to see that the energy intake is too high, despite a huge energy expenditure.
Traditionally, weight reducing experts advocate a three-pronged approach to fat loss; {a} increase energy expenditure, }b} decrease food energy intake, and {c} make changes in eating behavior. However, in view of the large energy expenditure of elite swimmers, it is questionable whether they are capable of doing more exercise, or indeed whether this would have a significant effect on reducing fat stores. On the other hand, one could argue that the addition of a supplementary exercise program such as running, might be useful. In this regard, I am aware of several examples where a supplementary, daily running program helped university swimmers reduce their body fat to a desirable level. This strategy of increasing energy expenditure
can work, but whether it is feasible is something that the overweight swimmer and coach must decide.
The input side of the energy balance equation can be manipulated most easily. However, great care must be exercised here because the wrong diet could have disastrous consequences. Two major approaches can be considered in this area, formal dieting or simply selective elimination. The problem with most formal diets is they do not provide enough food for a hard working swimmer for any extended period of time since they are generally for sedentary or modestly active persons. For this reason, I prefer selective cutting. Here you attempt to chop out 500-1000 kilocalories from the diet each day. To illustrate how, I have listed some suggestions:
1— Omit jams, jellies and sugar — if you must, us a sugar substitute.
2— Cut out cookies, candies, pop, pies, cake etc.
3— Use skim milk instead of whole or 2% milk.
4— Lightly butter only one slice of bread in a sandwich.
5— When thirsty, drink water.
6— Carefully trim visible fat off meats.
7— Use skim milk instead of cream or cream substitute in coffee or tea.
8— Use calorie reduced salad dressing.
There are many more examples, but the point is that if a person follows these suggestions, they can cut out hundreds of extra calories from their daily diet, without appreciably reducing their intake of essential nutrients. At the same time, it is essntial that the swimmer continues to eat vegetables and whole grains. Fruit, beyond 3-4 daily servings can be reduced; cut back on fatty meat
The third component to successful weight control is the modification of
eating behaviour. This approach has been shown to be very successful and long-term weight reduction is almost impossible with altering eating behaviour. First, identify poor eating behaviours by listing what was eaten, when and where it was eaten and why. This may lead to some surprising, perhaps frightening discoveries about eating behaviour. For example, many people do not realize they frequently eat when they are not hungry.
To illustrate the behaviour change approach, I have listed some strategies as they would apply to a swimmer who wants to train hard, but still lose body fat.
1— Aim to lose 1-2 pounds (0.5-1.0 kg) a week only. A rapid weight loss may lead to undue fatigue, poor training and grouchy behaviour.
2— Eat five meals a day; before morning workout, after morning workout, lunch, after school and after evening workout — no bedtime snacks.
3— Weigh yourself once a week only — at the same time and with the same scale.
4— Do not keep easy to eat snack foods around.
5— Make each meal as big a deal as possible, and do not eat while doing something else (watching TV or reading).
6— Eat slowly - very slowly.
7— Get other members of your family and team behind you. Make a reward for successful completion that both you and your family or team can share in.
8— If you see a pig-out coming up, eat a small bulky snack beforehand; good examples are skim milk, raw vegetables and popcorn.
Remember, taking fat off is not the hard part, keeping it off is one of life's most difficult tasks. Think about Mayer's expression "the rhythm method of girth control" or a modificaion of Mark Twain's well known statement on stopping smoking, "loosing weight is easy, I have done it hundreds of times."
THE DISTANCE ALTERNATIVE
by Raymond Cusson
You have probably heard of the crossing of the English Channel, of Lake Ontario and of course Lake St- Jean, that body of water located north of Quebec City. Probably the thought of swimming 32 kilometres in cold water does not attract you. For those looking for a different kind of challenge, long distance swimming might be the answer.
I have often seen swimmers who were "average" in pools and excellent in open water. Swimming in open water is so different, you feel free, you feel part of nature. You must take into account different factors than in pools. For instance, a swimmer can not win because of a good start or turns. The race is 10-15-32 kilometres long, anything can
happen. Take into account the currents, the waves, the wind, etc. It's a challenge. In marathon swimming, even if you touched the dock or reach shore in fourth position, you are a winner, because you finished the marathon. That alone, is an accomplishment
For some swimmers who are considering retiring from competitive swimming and are looking for an interesting alternative. Marathon swimming could be a suitable option.
In Quebec this year, approximately 15 amateur marathons will be organized by the Quebec Swimming Federation. They range from 5 to 15 K.
Interested parties should contact me at Raymond Cusson, Canadian Police College, Phys.Ed.Section P.O.Box 8900, Ottawa, Ontario K1G 3J2
72
Colwin talks to Schubert
ABOUT CECIL COLWIN
The interview is the second in a series by Cecil Colwin. His experience as an international coach, Canadian Technical Director, author and lecturer brings probing questions to his subjects.
Colwin has interviewed other great sports figures, including most of the leading personalities in swimming.
"It's a good way to sit these outstanding people down and find out what they are really like, in a relaxed, conversational way," he says.
Mark Schubert is the most successful American coach to emerge in the last decade.
COLWIN: Your club is unique in that it is sponsored by real estate developers. Is that correct?
SCHUBERT: Yes.we're sponsored by the Mission Viejo Company. Basically, their sponsorship includes the facilities. We train in three privately owned recreational facilities; two with 25-yard pools, one with a 50-metre pool and two warm-up pools.
COLWIN: Did you sell the concept to the promoters or did they approach you? SCHUBERT: No, the promoters built the facility for the homeowners and I was hired as the age-group swimming coach for the 100-member team in 1972 At that time the 50-metre pool was under construction and we started the senior program September, 1972. Within two years, we turned the program to a serious orientation and developed an age-group program to feed the senior program geared to national competition. COLWIN: How did you find the age-groupers?
SCHUBERT: We have a tremendously big learn-to-swim program fall and spring. We bring out about 200 young swimmers, ages four to eight. The basic requirement is they have to be able to swim 25-yards. Then we teach them the four competitive strokes in a four week lesson set-up. They have the choice, if they are interested, to join the competitive program.
COLWIN: Do they pay fees to be taught to swim?
SCHUBERT: Yes, a $40 fee for one month. The dues for the team are $30 a month for residents and $40 a month for those outside the community. COLWIN: Do you pay pool rentals?
SCHUBERT: The pools are provided free by the recreation centre as part of their sponsorship of the team. COLWIN: Do you have all the training and teaching time you want or do you have to leave some time for recreational swimming?
SCHUBERT: We certainly have to work our training and teaching time around the recreational set of members. Our 50-metre pool is available for our total
use from September through the middle of June. From June to September, we have the pool from 5 am until noon and from 5 pm as late as we want. COLWIN: How are the coaches' salaries and travel expenses covered? SCHUBERT: The coaches' salaries are covered by the fees paid by the swimmers. Travelling expenses are provided by the booster club which raises about $70,000 a year. Travelling expenses to the nationals are provided both through US swimming, with their sponsorship by Phillips Petroleum, and by the Mission Viejo Company. Mission Viejo also sponsors swimmers who place in the top 16 at the nationals, giving them motel expenses and food during the nationals.
Mark Schubert
COLWIN: Tell me a little more about your fund-raising activities. SCHUBERT: We sell advertising for our major meets and our annual program. Swimathon is also a great part of fundraising. We run about ten major meets during the year with our own concessions. There are numerous small activities such as dinners, raffles and things of that nature. COLWIN: You must have a very well organized parent body to run the meets and participate in other activities. SCHUBERT: Yes, and I'd have to say that the enthusiasm of the parent group was there before I arrived. I think we've built on that enthusiasm and that's probably been one of our biggest plusses. COLWIN: Tell me about the motivation behind the Mission Viejo Company. SCHUBERT: Mission Viejo is a very unique community in southern California. Los Angeles being what it is, quite a megalopolis, it's very difficult for a community to have an identity. The first identity that Mission Viejo had was the swimming team and now kind of being known as the swimming capital of the
United States. I feel there is a lot of community pride and the company likes that because any type of community pride also helps sell homes. So this is why they've been enthusiastic. COLWIN:Do they keep evaluating the situation in terms of dollars and cents? SCHUBERT: They certainly do. They re-evaluate it every year. We have to submit a budget and it's scrutinized and, basically it's a selling job by the club and the booster club every year. But the Company has been extremely supportive. COLWIN: Tell me how you direct a staff to look after such a large number of swimmers? Exactly how many swimmers do you have?
SCHUBERT: The number ranges from 350 during the winter to 500 in the summer. We have a tremendous influx of age-group kids and we try to hold a percentage of those and make them more serious year-round swimmers. Our staff consists of twelve coaches. The head age-group coach is Pat Burch who's been with me for eight years and done a tremendous job of developing talent. The age-group coaches report directly to him and he reports to me. I have a senior staff of five coaches and we direct the junior national and senior national programs. We have about 165 senior swimmers in the summer and about 100 in tf^ winter.
COLWIN: Do you meet regularly and coordinate your efforts? How much of the effort is individual and how much within a set framework of the club and your personal philosophy?
SCHUBERT: We have weekly meetings. Pat and I have worked together for so long we have pret'ty much an ingrained philosophy. We direct a certain amount of overall philosophy but I've always felt that it's important to give your assistant coaches independence. Their creativity is brought into the program so they can feel they are an integral part of it. I don't set programs for the coaches. I give them a general outline of what I want to see. I want basic things done with strokes, breathing patterns and training attitudes so swimmers are indoctrinated in our program from the age-group level. COLWIN: When you say you give them just a general idea of what you want done ... do you say "We want this type of stress done today, endurance or speed-endurance, or some specific work, or just an easy type of day?" SCHUBERT: Well, more than a day-to-day idea. It's a seasonal outline. We try to make our training groups progressive stepping-stones in intensity so the athletes arent burned out at a young age. I feel the most important thing in age-group swimming is for the swimmers to really enjoy it.
COLWIN: Do you give your coaching staff individual opportunities for professional
13
development?
SCHUBERT: Yes, we encourage them to attend as many clinincs as possible. We have numerous outstanding clinics in southern California. Occasionally, the club sends them to national coaches' clinics. COLWIN: What about an age-group philosophy?
SCHUBERT: We feel it's very important to bring the kids up with the idea that swimming is fun . . . not train age-group swimmers twice a day, year round. We do train the top age-group swimmers twice a day in the summer but again, there isn't a lot of pressure as far as attendance is concerned. We make a great deal of compromises with the age-groupers if they want to participate in other activities. Soccer is very important in Mission Viejo. So are football and baseball. To keep the swimmers in the program, we allow them to do this and don't force them to make a choice at a young age. COLWIN: You said you discuss seasonal training emphasis with your assistants. How do you view the various phases of your season?
SCHUBERT: We have a Junior Olympic Championship in March and in August. Within each season we have an endurance phase, say for two months, a speed and endurance phase for two months and then a quality phase for about six weeks.
COLWIN: What type of work would your age-groupers do? SCHUBERT: At the bottom of our program, they would train for 45-minutes, three days a week and progress to an hour, five days a week. Then it's another group for an hour and half, five days a week. There's another group two hours a day, six days a week. Finally, the top age-groupers would be going two and a half hours, including some dry land work, five days a week. Once they have developed to senior swimming, this is determined by our local senior swimming standards, they are assigned to the senior program. Larry Leibowitz is the junior national coach in charge of developing the age-groupers into senior swimmers. He has about 65 swimmers in his charge and has an assistant coach with him. We have sprint, middle distance and distance programs just as we have in the national team. It's his resposibility to train these swimmers and teach them all the rigours of the senior program. They must attend eight workouts a week. We offer double workouts five mornings a week, taking Wednesday morning off, double workouts on Saturday, sometimes an optional workout on Sunday. We get into a more rigorous land program at that level. COLWIN: When you mention your dry-land program, it's appropriate to ask how you break down the time frames of your workouts.
SCHUBERT: In the junior national program, the swimmers train from 5:30 am to 7 am. They train dry-land from 3:30 pm to 4:30 pm and then swim 4:30 pm to 7 pm. This varies depending on the
events and distances they are going. COLWIN: What type of dry-land work are you doing?
SCHUBERT: It's a six day a week program. We do isokinetic work on Monday, Wednesday and Friday and we do weight training on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. The isokinetic work is based on the biokinetic swim bench and mini-gyms with various sets depending on the event. The endurance athletes will go long periods - perhaps two minutes exercise with thirty seconds off. The sprinters will go maybe twelve to twenty seconds with fifteen or twenty seconds off. In the weight training cycle, we gradually build our intensity to fairly heavy weights. That tapers off as the season progresses. With the distance swimmers, we do high repetitions on Nautilus and Universal equipment.
COLWIN: How do you blend your land-training taper with your swimming taper?
SCHBERT:I think rather successfully the last year and a half! We've changed our program and tapered our weight program instead of taking them off the weight program the last three weeks. I used to take them off weights totally and found they were losing strength. I think we've had a lot of success tapering the dry-land program similar to the way we taper the swimming. For instance, we're doing mini-gyms until the day we leave for the nationals. So they have about three days for the big meet when they are not on some type of dry-land program.
COLWIN: You have so many great athletes training together - Do you find problems at times of athletes being incompatible with each other?
I've always felt having great athletes train together is the best way to develop a good program and make mediocre athletes into good ones.
SCHUBERT: That's human nature and any coach is going to face the challenge. I've always felt having great athletes train together is the best way to develop a good program and make mediocre athletes into good ones. If there is a secret to our success, this is certainly one of them. It raises the level of the kids who dont have a lot of faith in themselves. I've seen amazing things happen when kids come to our program and train with a Brian Goodell or a Jesse Vassallo and find out they're human just like everyone else. All of a sudden, they'll decide 'well maybe I can be great too!' COLWIN: When you have three or four swimmers in the finals in the nationals, you've got to avoid any impression of having favourites. How do you handle a tricky situation like that? SCHUBERT: I always try to coach each athlete as an individual. I'm very honest
with them and tell them pretty much the strategy of the others so there are really no secrets and they don't feel I'm trying to play one against the other or anything of that nature. For example, in the 500 freestyle at this meet, the women's 500, we were fortunate enough to go first, second and third. I felt each of the girls had definite strengths and weaknesses. I tried to point out to them how they could capitalize on the strengths, how I thought the race would develop, where they needed to be and what they needed to do to capitalize on their strengths to win. COLWIN: How do you discuss race tactics?
SCHUBERT: I feel every swimmer should go into a race with a plan. A true champion will be able to handle any type of situation. Train your athletes to go into a race with a plan and follow it until it's obvious a change needs to be made. The athlete that can be flexible, maybe change his tactics, is the one that's going to be successful.
COLWIN: It's often said there can be eight swimmers in a race of almost equal ability but there's only going to be one winner. That's the person who arrived at the pool believing more than the others that he was going to win. That edge also belongs to the swimmer who can react to the unexpected as the race develops. This requires imagination too. SCHUBERT: Absolutely. I think this can be a minor problem with all the visualization and mental training. I know that a good example of flexibility was Brian Goodell in the 1500-metres at the Montreal Olympics. His plan was to be even at the 800 and then totally control the race. Well, he wasn't even in the race until 1300. So it went totally against what he thought. If he didn't have that flexibility and mental toughness, I think he would have been an easy third. I feel human nature shows you there are a number of ways to be successful and every person has his own method. I think you have to stay somewhat flexible and try to develop your program around the strengths of your athletes. Make them feel you're doing absolutely what's best for them. COLWIN: You've won nine national championships in a row. How important is it for you to keep winning team championships? Could you reach a satiation point as far as motivation is concerned?
SCHUBERT: We love winning the team championships. A big part of our program is the team motivation. That's from the little kids right on up. We try to make every kid feel as much a part of this national championship as the national champion himself. Every season is different. We have new kids to work with and the kids with experience still have new challenges. We are just trying to get each kid to accomplish his goals. I think that with a team such as ours, if we can be successful with 75 or 85 % of the kids, then the national championship is a result But I look a each season as a new challenge.
by Terry Holmes
Two world records, that's fast. Two swimmers beating personal obstacles and the competition, that's furious. Put it together in a 50 minute, prime time television special and you've got The Fast and the Furious, a documentary film from Lauron Productions Ltd., brought to you by Esso.
The athletes turned stars are, of course, Victor Davis, 18, and Alex Baumann, 18, who globetrotted the watery world last summer to set world marks respectively in the 200-metres breaststroke and the 200-metres individual medley.
To get the victory story, camera crews followed the Canadian team from Florida to Ecuador to Australia and finally the cameramen ventured to the hometowns of Waterloo for Davis and Sudbury for Baumann. Along the way, you meet Davis' coach, Cliff Barry and Baumann's mentor, Dr. Jeno Tihanyi, to get an idea of what professional swimming coaches in this country are like and how they work with world class athletes.
You learn the aquatic Canucks are a single-minded lot; they're unabashedly nationalistic; they don't work in half measures. Beyond that, you get a profile of Davis' and Baumann's contrasting personalities.
Davis comes across as the fierce, latter-day gladiator who likes a pre-meet haircut shorter than a marine recruit and ocassionaly chews through a towel before his race.
Baumann, on the other hand, looks more like a modern Greek god, his sleek body and rippling muscle bedecked with earring and necklace.
The differences of style are secondary to the enormous commitment both bring to their sport. Says Alex, "The monotony of training 16-kilometres day in, day out, going up and down a line is kind of crazy but when you want to be the best in the world, you've got to have this dedication."
Davis puts it another way. "Three days before the meet," he says, "all my dreams are about swimming fast - swimming fast and beating guys."
The making of this documentary looks simple but that's not the case. Co-directors Bill Johnston and Ira Levy pruned 45,000-feet of film, the yield of 40 days shooting, down to a final product of 1800-feet. At one point, Levy had to ignore the protests of a machine-gun toting security guard at the World Championships, in order to film Davis.
Since they didn't have cameras everywhere during the action, the filmmakers had to shoot many training scenes and interviews after the international competitions. Johnston says the swimmers proved to be uncanny actors. "On first take, they turned on. They could replay a moment," he recalls.
Lauron Productions will enter The Fast and the Furious at the American Film Festival this June in New York City, to help its profile and distribution in the U.S. market After two CBC showings, the documentary still has a shelf life of five years and the directors say Lauron will pursue broadcast possibilities with pay TV. in Canada and the U.S.
CASA has its own plans. Doug Fraser, the Association's General Manager, has set up a fund raising scheme that revolves around film premieres in Toronto, Calgary, Vancouver and Montreal between March 8 and March 21.
Don Mclvor, Chairman of the board Imperial Oil Limited, has spearheaded the drive to canvass some 1300 corporations for their support at the premieres. Organizers expect to raise $150,000 for Olympic team preparations.
The Fast and the Furious
PINE CREST SWIM CAMP 1983
June 12-August 5 Fort Lauderdale, Florida
G
CAMP DIRECTOR
GARY T. BUTTS, head coach of the Pine Crest School Swimming programs, will direct the 1983 Pine Crest Swim Camp. Butts, one of the outstanding Prep School coaches in the United States, is well known for his work with summer swim camps. Coach Butts has directed The Bolles School Swim Camp, The Mercersburg Swim Clinic and The Jack Nelson Swim Camp over the past eight years. His know- ledge of summer swim camps and a commitment to excellence assures you of- an outstanding summer.
CAMP PROGRAM
Designed for boys and girls ages 8 to 18.
Swimmers will live in fully supervised, air-conditioned dorms (two to a room) on Pine Crest's 47-acre campus. There will be 2-3 water work- outs each day, long course and short course.
A one hour stroke class will be held each day for all swimmers. Swimmers will train and learn in Pine Crest's two on-campus 25 yard pools and nearby 50 meter pools.
Color video above and below water of all swimmers. All meals served at Pine Crest's on-campus dining hall. Strength building course in- cludes use of Pine Crest's 12 Nautilus machines and free weights.
FREE AIRPORT PICKUP A full time activities director will supervise a complete program of extra curricular activities in- cluding: skin diving trips, water boggan, movies, fishing trips and two special trips to Disney World and EPCOT. Mental training course con- ducted by outstanding staff. A ratio of one coach for eight swimmers will be maintained throughout the entire camp. Swimmers may attend all eight weeks or a minimum of any two weeks.
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Universiade '83
s
Olympian Swim Club Hosts
Pre Universiade '83 INVITATIONAL
Edmonton
April 22-24, 1983
Edmonton Alberta • Canada Full slate of senior events
British Team Members and Commonwealth Games Medal Winners in attendance
Finals and Consolations in all events
"This will be the premier senior swim meet in Canada in '83"
This will be your club's opportunity to have your swimmers compete in a major Games environment against Canada's best and many international swimmers.
Entry forms and information:
Olympian Swim Club 10925- 139 Street Edmonton, Alberta T5M 1P8
Tel: (403) 455-8457
Attention: Pre- Universiade Committee
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18
Results in brief
Michael Gross, FRG world best in 200 butterfly
1982 EUROPEAN CUP
Goteborg,SWE Dec. 78-l8,25m
WOMEN
100 m free
55.25 A. Eriksson, SWE 56.37 C.VanBentum.HOL 56.48 S.Link,GDR 56.83 K.Seick,FRG 57.62 S.Persi.lTA 58.02 T.EIokhina,URS 200 m free
1:59.10 A. Verstappen,HOL 1:59.15 A. Eriksson, SWE 1:59.78 I.Beyerman.FRG 2:00.35 C.Schmidt.GDR 2:01.79 I.Gerassimova.URS 2:03.13 A;Cripps,GBR 400 m free
4:08.45 C. Schmidt, GDR 4:09.58 I.Beyerman.FRG 4:12.68 A.Linder.SWE 4: 13.30 Y.VandeMeer,HOL 4:16.82 O.Troitskaia.URS 4:17.71 C.Lasi.lTA 800 m free
8:36.10 O.Troitskaia.URS 8:38.54 A.Linder.SWE 8:38.86 D.Uebel.GDR 8:41.13 J. VandeMeer.HOL 8:48.14 S.Hardcastle.GBR 8:55.09 C.Lasi.lTA 100 m back 1:01.44 I.KIeber.GDR 1:02.33 L.Gorchakova.URS 1:03.93 M.Aizpors.FRG 1:04.26 M.Carosi.lTA 1:04.44 Y.deRover.HOL 1:05.06 B.Rose, GBR 200 m back
2: 1 1.36 K.Zimmermann.GDR 2:12.21 L.Gorchakova.URS 2:17.05 Y.deRover.HOL 2:17.88 M.Aizpors.FRG 2: 18.37 N.Halvorsen.NOR 2:19.52 S.Enzell.SWE 1 00 m breast 1:10.63 S.Horner.GDR 1: 10.91 C.Tagnin.lTA 1:11.13 A.Buzelite.URS 1:11.14 T.Bogomilova.BUL 1:11.54 C.Poirot.FRA 1:11.78 P.Brulhart.SWI 200 m breast
2:30.54 A.Holmstrom.SWE 2:30.89 T.Bogomilova.BUL 2:31.19 D.Dziedzic.POL 2:31.71 S.Horner.GDR 2:32.58 A.Buzelite.URS 2:32.94 G.Stanley.GBR
100 m fly
1:01.30 C.Savi-Scarponi.lTA 1:01.31 M.Lauckner.GDR 1:01.69 K.Seick.FRG 1:01.71 A.Verstappen.HOL 1:02.31 A.Andersson.SWE 1:02.83 L.Criddle.GBR 200 m fly
2:11.99 C.Polit.GDR 2:13.41 P.Zidnler.FRG 2:14.81 A.Carlsson.SWE 2: 14.90 C.Savi-Scarponi.lTA 2:16.16 C. Brook, SWI 2:16.66 C.VanBentum.HOL 200 m i.m.
2:14.71 K.Nord,GDR 2:16.55 I.Gersamivoa,URS 2:16.99 A.Philipsson.SWE 2:19.32 M.Sihvonen.FIN 2:19.32 G.Dziedzic,POL 2:19.68 C.Pielke.FRG 400 m i.m.
4:44.01 K.Nord.GDR
4:50.28 A.Philipsson.SWE
4:51 .20 C.Savi-Scarponi.lTA
4:51.88 P.Zindler.FRG
4:53.75 E.Dendebirova.URS
4:56.46 M.Scott, GBR
4x100 medley relay
4:08.50 German Dem.Rep
4: 12.04 Soviet Union
4: 12.13 Sweden
4:12.61 Fed. Rep. Germany
4:13.56 Holland
4:15.22 Italy
4x100 free relay
3:44.48 Holland
3:47.15 Fed. Rep. Germany
3:47.21 Soviet Union
3:47.66 Sweden
3:48.69 German Dem.Rep
3:52.15 Italy
MEN
100 m free
49.62 P.Holmertz.SWE 49.81 S.Krasiuk.URS 49.87 J.Woithe.GDR 50.11 D.Halsall.SWI 50.45 P.Knust.FRG 50.71 D.Lowe, GBR 200 m free
1:45.97 M. Gross, FRG T.47.71 S.Lodziewski.GDR 1:48.89 S.Semenov.URS 1:49.16 M.Sodertimd.SWE 1:50.73 T.Golomeev.BUL 1:51.05 H.Radek.CZE
400 m free
♦3:42.96 V.Salnikov.URS 3:44.75 S.Lodziewski.GDR 3:50.62 B.Petric.YUG 3:51.61 D.Korthals.FRG 3:53.77 J.Davey.GBR 3:53.94 R.Havel.CZE 1500 m free
*14:37.60 V.Salnikov.URS 14:58.20 D.Petric.YUG 15:23.03 S.Lodziewski.GDR 15:26.86 A. Calabria, ITA 15:28.63 P.Adamec.CZE 15:30.08 T.Fahrner.FRG 100 m back
55.30 V.Shemetov.URS 57.24 R.Dollmeyer.SWE 57.57 S.Peter.FRG
57.83 J.HIadky.CZE 58.30 P.UIvestad.NOR 58.54 C.Jambet.FRA 200 m back
1:59.03 V.Shemetov.URS 2:00.33 D.Richter.GDR 2:03.59 D.Campbell, GBR 2:03.66 J.Bidrman,CZE 2:04.27 B.Baron.SWE 2:05.49 N.KIaparek.FRG 100 m breast
1:03.01 A.Moorehouse.GBR 1:03.24 Y.Kis.URS 1:03.58 R.Avagnano.lTA 1:03.74 S.Hanke.GDR 1:03.76 P.Berggren.SWE 1:03.80 H.Schafer.FRG 200 m breast 2:13.27 R.Shulpa.URS 2:15.91 R.Buttgereit,GDR 2: 18.76 A.Moorehouse.GBR 2:19.21 M.Mily.CZE 2:19.57 P.Berggren.SWE 2:20.34 W.Schmith.FRG 100 m fly
53.74 A.Markovski,URS
53.84 M. Gross, FRG 54.22 D.Halsall.SWI 54.86 M.Gery.CZE 54.94 D.Lowe, GBR 55.61 B.Baron.SWE 200 m fly
*1:56.18 M. Gross, FRG 1:57.79 S.Fesenko,URS 1:59.75 P.Revelli,ITA 2:00.61 M.Gery.CZE 2:02.12 T.David.SWI 2:02.16 F;Drost,HOL 200 m i.m.
2:00.94 A.Sidorenko.URS 2:02.57 J.HIadky.CZE 2:03.01 G.Franceschi.lTA 2:04.52 R.Diegel.FRG 2:04.60 A.Reichel.GDR 2:06.16 A.Petersson.SWE 400 m i.m.
4:19.07 S.Fesenko.URS 4:20.1 1 J.HIadky.CZE 4:20.90 G.Franceschi.lTA 4:22.73 A.Reichel.GDR 4:26.60 D.Wolny.POL 4:28.73 R.Diegel.FRG
4x100 medley relay
*3:39.82 Soviet Union 3:43.23 German Dem.Rep 3:43.47 Fed. Rep. Germany 3:43.75 Sweden 3:47.86 Great Britain 3:50.77 Switzerland 4x100 freestyle relay 3: 18.26 Soviet Union 3:18.46 Sweden 3:18.53 Fed. Rep. Germany 3:20.24 German Dem.Rep 3:21.64 Italy 3:24.87 Czechoslovakia Team Score
|
Women |
Men |
||
|
230 |
GDR |
295 |
URS |
|
197 |
SWE |
244 |
FRG |
|
196 |
URS |
227 |
GDR |
|
190 |
FRG |
223 |
SWE |
|
183 |
HOL |
205 |
GBR |
|
171 |
ITA |
195 |
CZE |
QUEBEC CUP
Pointe Claire, Jan. 7-8 25 m
WOMEN
50 m free
27.77 M.Venne.PCSC 28.15 M.Ticktin.PCSC
28.24 N.Page.TOMAC
28.25 P.Choquet.CNB 28.27 L.Shields.DDO
28.78 A.Larouche.BBF 100 m free
59.18 J. Campbell, LUSC 59.68 N.Page.TOMAC 59.80 K.Ward.BBF 59.96 N.Bertrand, Select 1:00.59 L. Sanders, PCSC 1:00.91 M.Ticktin,PCSC 200 m free
2:05.51 N.Page.TOMAC 2:06.55 J. Campbell, LUSC 2:07.32 K.Ward.BBF 2:10.71 C.Venne.PCSC 2:11.45 L.Sanders.PCSC 2: 1 1.73 M.Vanne.PCSC 400 m free
4: 19.82 N.Page.TOMAC 4:20.89 L.Braf ield.ESC 4:23.83 J. Campbell, LUSC 4:26.17 K.Ward.BBF 4:26.31 C.Docherty.PCSC 4: 30.76 C.Venne.PCSC 800 m free
8:58.97 N.Page.TOMAC 9:01.94 K.Ward.BBF 9:01.99 L.Brafield.ESC 9:02.59 C.Docherty.PCSC 9:03.31 C.Venne.PCSC 9:05.64 N.Gingras.PCSC 100 m back
1:06.53 A.Larouche.BBF 1:06.75 M.Venne.PCSC 1:09.38 C.Manryk.Select 1:10.19 L.Brafield.ESC 1: 10.82 R.Ruggiero,CAMO 1: 12.05 C.Quosdorf.BBF
200 m back
2:21.02 J. Campbell, LUSC 2:23.86 M.Venne.PCSC 2:24.45 A.Larouche.BBF 2:24.89 N.Page.TOMAC 2:30.14 N.Gingras.PCSC 2:30.80 M.Lanthier.Laval 100 m breast 1: 16.49 J.Theriault.unatt 1:16.88 C.Meilleur.PCSC 1:17.11 E.Culley.DDO 1:17.27 K.Vendette.LUSC 1:17.65 N.Recoskie.BBF 1: 17.85 J.Labrie.POM 200 m breast
2:40.63 K.Vendette.LUSC 2:41.92 L.Rodie.PCSC 2:43.20 C.Meilleur.PCSC 2:44.00 J.Labrie.POM 2:45.69 T.NeumannPCSC 2:47.56 J.Theriault.unatt 100 m fly
1:04.68 J. Horstead, ESC 1:05.21 S.Rochford,DDO 1:05.34 L.Kucera.PCSC 1:05.47 N.Bertrand.Select 1:06.68 M. Moore, DCSC 1:06.92 N.PageJOMAC 200 m fly
2:19.22 J. Campbell, LUSC 2: 19.26 C.Venne.PCSC 2:22.26 L.Taus.LUSC 2:22.92 N.Gingras.PCSC 2:23.02 L.Hoganson.DCSC 2:23.25 M.Moore, DCSC 200 m i.m.
2:20.64 J. Campbell, LUSC 2:25.81 N.Page.TOMAC 2:25.94 J.Kerr.ESC 2:26.85 K.Vendette.LUSC 2:28.08 C.Venne.PCSC 2:29.66 L.Brafield.ESC 400 m i.m.
4:55.02 J.Campbell, LUSC 5:02.80 K.Vendette.LUSC 5:04.29 L.Taus.LUSC 5:08.03 N.Page.TOMAC 5:08.72 C.Venne.PCSC 5:13.63 N.Gingras.PCSC MEN 50 m free
24.12 A.Baumann,LUSC 24.49 M.Sofonio,DDO 24-78 B.Hasegawa.BBF
24.88 F.Danis.PCSC 24.92 G.Deschenes.DH 24.97 S.Forsey.NYAC 100 m free
51.89 A.Baumann.LUSC 53.69 M.Sofonio.DDO 54.40 G.Overing.PCSC 54.88 G.Deschenes.DH
55.13 S. Murphy, ESC 55.73 R.Wallenius.LUSC 200 m free
1:54.64 A.Baumann.LUSC 1:56.10 F.McAndie.TOMAC 1:56.74 G.Overing.PCSC 1:58.30 D.Hanvey.TOMAC 1:58.97 R.Wallenius.LUSC 1:59.31 M.Sofonio.DDO 400 m free
3:59.65 A.Baumann.LUSC 4:05.46 M.Teskey.McGill 4:05.61 F.McAndie.TOMAC 4:05.84 A.Theoret.Select 4:13.01 K.Smout.TOMAC 4:17.62 B.Volz.NYAC 1500 m free
15:45.21 A.Baumann.LUSC 16:18.02 S. Murphy, ESC 16:20.18 P.Ward, NYAC 16:21.48 A.Theoret.Select 16:21.82 D.Hanvey.TOMAC 16:30.13 F.McAndie.TOMAC
Kathrin Zimmermann,GDR with 2: 1 1.38 for 200 back
19
100 m back
1:00.17 M.West.ROW 1:00.21 R.Wallenius,LU 1:01.06 F.Danis.PCSC 1:02.60 F;Dionne,Seled 1:03.60 F.Chalut.CAMC 1:04.18 M.Coulombe.Cr 200 m back
2:07.32 A.Baumann,LU 2:09.10 R.Wallenius.LU 2:12.51 D.Botsford.TOP- 2:13.86 F.Dionne.Seled 2:17.83 A.Fortin.LUSC 2:22.01 F.D'Amour,CAI 100 m breast 1:08.29 B.Hasegawa.BB 1:08.71 D.Wallingford.L 1:08.72 F.Danis,PCSC 1 :09.04 M.Lapalme,Tra< 1:09.81 P.Lamy,Select 1:10.25 S.Ohi.NYAC 200 m breast 2:22.56 A.Baumann.LU 2:23.16 V.Davis, ROW 2:28.50 D.Wallingford,L 2:30.48 P. Lamy .Select 2:31.93 D.Leblanc,POM 2:35.08 M.Cavazzoni,D[ 100 m fly
57.53 P.Ward, NYAC 58.52 F.Chalut.CAMO 59.09 D.Lepine.Select 59.1 1 S. Murphy, ESC 1:00.46 P.Hess,ROW 1:00.60 R.Wallenius,LU 200 m fly
2:04.24 A.Baumann.LU 2:05.40 P.Ward, NYAC 2:10.16 F.Chalut,CAMC 2:10.91 C.Lamy .Select 2:1 1.97 B.L'Heureux.Se 2:13.87 D.Lepine.Select 200 m i.m.
2:03.70 A.Baumann.LU 2:10.32 R.Walleniue.LU 2:11.28 F.Danis.PCSC 2:13.68 V.Davis, ROW 2:14.15 D.Hanvey.TOM 2:16.26 F.Chalut.CAMC 400 m i.m.
4:28.27 A.Baumann.LU 4:42.13 D.Hanvey.TOM 4:45.96 F.Chalut.CAMC 4:46.33 D.Wallingford.L 4:54.69 D.Botsford.TOr 4:55.54 B.L'Heureux.Se
WARTHOG MEET
New Westminster, Jan. 14- 16,scm
WOMEN 50 m free
27.35 P.Rai.Hyack 27.53 Y.Hicks.Chena 27.71 C.Lee.CDSC 100 m free
59.36 P.Rai.Hyack 1:00.77 Y.Hicks.Chena 1:00.92 C.Lee.CDSC 200 m free
2:07.51 I.Leroi.CDSC 2:07.67 T. Adrian, CDSC 2:08.08 D.Tibelius,Manl 400 m free
4:26.09 T.Adrian, CDSC 4:27.65 D.Tibelius,Mam 4:27.68 M.CIark,Keyanc 800 m free
9:11.09 T.Adrian, CDSC 9:14.24 J. Lavender.CDS 9:14.68 K.Kropf.Manta 100 m back
1:06.70 B.McBain.CDSC 1-08.96 K.Bey.Hyack
1- 09.95 K.Ursan.Hyack 200 m back
2:22.83 B.McBain.CDSC
2- 25.20 K.Bey.Hyack 2:26.80 K.Kropf.Manta 100 m breast 1:14.65 T.Terins.CDSC 1: 17.22 D.DeMarchi.Hy,' 1: 18.99 P.Rai.Hyack 200 m breast 2:42.65 T.Terins.CDSC 2:46.48 B.Tymko.Keyar 2:47.07 V.Phillips.HyacI 100 m fly
1:05.83 P.Rai.Hyack 1:07.44 C.Laliberte.Man 1:07.82 C.Lee.CDSC 200 m fly
2:23.06 B.Tymko.Keyar 2:24.16 J. Lavender.CDS 2:24.46 A.VanDyke.CDi 200 m i.m.
2:25.86 T.Ternis.CDSC 2:26.72 C.Lee.CDSC 2:28.49 D.Gilhooly.Man 400 m i.m.
5:06.73 J. Lavender, CDS
5:11.14 F.Waddell.CDSC 5: 1 1.69 M.CIark,Keyanc
MEN
50 m free
24.83 G.Welbourn.CDS 24.90 R.Archibald.CDS 25.37 B.Ansell.UCSC 100 m free
52.28 G.Welbourn.CDS 53.72 B.Ansell.UCSC 53.74 E.Gyorfi.SFU 200 m free
1:54.51 B.Berger,Hyacl< 1:54.71 B.Ansell.UCSC 1:56.52 R.Archibald,C[ 400 m free
3:58.05 B.Berger.Hyack 4:04.61 B.Ansell.UCSC 4:05.16 F. Donnelly, Hy; 1500 m free 15:55.98 E.Gyorfi.SFU 16:02.15 F. Donnelly, H 16:04.50 P.Dobson.Hya 100 m back
1:00.89 B.Berger.Hyack 1:02.42 M.Tewksbury.L 1:03.18 T.Ferguson.CD: 200 m back
2:06.45 P.Dobson.Hyac 2:07.06 B.Berger.Hyack 2:12.30 M.Tewksbury.L 100 m breast 1:06.95S.Score.Hyack 1:07.87 M.Lougheed.Hy 1:08.22 T.Salpeter.OSC 200 m breast 2:25.50 S.Score.Hyack 2:27.80 T.Salpeter.OSC 2:29.43 T.Jakisch.Mant; 100 m fly
57.99 B.Ansell.UCSC 59.72 J. Kelly, Vic O 59.93 J.McCaffray.PGBJ 200 m fly
2:05.83 B.Ansell.UCSC 2:05.84 P.Dobson.HyacI 2:09.75 J. Kelly.VicO 200 m i.m.
2:11.37 B.Berger.Hyack 2:11.72 R.Archibald.CD 2:1 1.84 T.Jakisch.Mantc 400 m i.m.
4:31.76 P.Dobson.HyacI 4:37.75 T.Jakisch.Manta 4:39.22 G.Donnelly.CDJ
Alex Baumann, LUSC, off to a solid season with 10 for 10 at the Quebec Cup!
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Poolslde
The Canadian Championships
When Howard Firby, Canadian swimming expert and author, was asked to comment about championships in Canada, he offered a radical answer. Abolish the short course nationals, he urged some months ago.
If you examine the Firby Plan, as he termed it, there are compelling reasons to give his idea serious attention.
"The winter nationals are artificial in the framework of Canadian swimming and their now sacrosanct status does a disservice to the planning of our competitve season," says Firby.
"We don't have a true, definable short course season at the senior level so why have what amounts to a "mid-season" championships? It's totally illogical. We shorten a fine big pool for a meet when nearly all the contenders train year-round in long course pools," he says.
Firby suggests a belter way. Keep a long season. , Offer high calibre, long course Eastern / Western Championships open to the best athletes in each half of the country. Run 'the' Canadian Championships a month or two later.
This would reduce substantial travel and operating costs by trimming three national meets from the Canadian program. It would also appeal to the media since there would be only a single meet labelled the Canadian Swimming Championships.
Several provinces are burdened by a calendar jammed with a so-called championship every weekend late February through early April. This contributes to a burn-out of athletes, parents, officials, spectators and press alike. No one is deceived by this proliferation of activjty. Tired of it, yes.
Mr. Firby is not alone in his thinking. In the United States, Swimming World columnist, Stephen Berizzi argued last January for a similar re-examination of winter swimming in the United States and concluded the USS short course championships were unnecessary. One championship would bring together the finest swimmers to prepare them for the challenge of international competition, according to Berizzi.
The difference between the two countries is, of course, the NCCA system and championships. Canada doesn't face the problem of conflicting winter programs at home but perhaps two dozen top swimmers are in the American college program and routinely skip the Canadian Championships as it is. In the U.S., any meet billed as a championship after the NCAA contest is a decided anticlimax.
It's no coincidence that the same questions concerning cost-benefit and publicity should arise in an analysis of the winter championships in both countries.
Before shouts of regressive thinking obscure the issues, program planners should take a fresh look at the possiblities. When the Los Angeles Olympics are history, the need for experimentation may be clear.
21
A tale of two pools
By Terry Holmes
Its admirers call Indiana University a world class institution. The school's medical centre includes six hospitals; its track and field stadium accomodates 12,000; its sports centre seats 8,000 tennis fans.
Last July, a sparkling 4,700-seat natatorium was added to the list of world class facilities on the Indianapolis campus.
In the next two years, the Indiana University {IU} Natatorium will host nearly every major meet in the country. The list of competitions includes the NCAA Championships, the U.S. Short Course Championships and the U.S. Olympic Trials. The place is irresistible.
You get an idea why when the complex manager says in a pre-meet briefing, there will be 28-lanes available for warm-up. Twenty-eight lanes doesn't count the diving tank which is itself almost 25-metres wide. Long course, the facility can be set up as an eight-lane competition pool {nine to ten feet deep} with a six lane training pool just a few metres away.
"The people here are very far-sighted," says complex manager. Dale Neuburger. "It goes beyond dollars and cents. They can see the big picture and quality of life is important."
He refers in part to the City of Indianapolis' public spirited drive to become the amateur sports capital of the United States. Construction of the natatorium is the latest manifestation of the philosophy. Including two gyms, the facility cost $21.5-million.
Private funding from the Lilly Endowment Corporation and the Krannert Charitable Trust accounted for $13-million of the capital costs. State and Federal governments provided the balance.
The amenities are superb and good news for sport organizers is rental costs are low. For a $1,000 a day the place is yours and includes deck space with stainless steel bleachers for 1,000 coaches and athletes. Omega timing and what is billed as the nation's largest programmable alpha-numeric scoreboard are part of the package along with interview rooms and other television
fixtures.
Creature comforts also stand out. The pool environment is bright, warm and you particularly notice the humidity since it is maintained in the 40-50 per cent range.
It's accessible. High schools and clubs pay as little as $3 an hour for a short course lane. Demand doesn't conflict with a learn-to-swim program of 250 and another 100 fitness users.
This year's $625,000 appropriation from the State of Indiana will probably grow in the years ahead, Neuberger says.
The cooperation of public and private interests, it seems, is the key that opened the pool door.
In Canadian swimming, the Etobicoke Olympium is similar to the IU natatorium as a venue of major meets. It's an interesting comparison to see how the two stack up.
The Olympium is also a fine building. It houses 22 short course lanes, seats 1,700 and has all the timing and television accoutrements. Pool and gym cost $6.5-million when built in 1976 and the building shows little evidence of aging.
Aquatics manager, John Macintyre explains, "The approach to operating the Olympium is to serve well as many people as possible and keep the net cost low to taxpayers."
That means in peak season nearly 1,400 participate in learn-to-swim lessons each week while more than 200 fitness users pass through the doors each day. Etobicoke has been able to keep the municipal operating subsidy around $320,000 last year - about half the injection of funds required by the IU Natatorium.
"I tell meet organizers to budget at least $100 an hour for pool time," says Macintyre. The book price to rent the complex for a major event is $112 an hour and the charges apply to a 15 hour day, he explains.
In Etobicoke, the pool was a dollars and cents issue before it opened. Now, management takes a hard look at the bottom line for any rental. Conversly, corporate and government largesse put the operation of Indiana's Natatorium on another footing.
You can't escape the difference.
The new Indiana- Purdue University pool, site of many of the major American meets during the next two years.
CECIL I COLWIN
SWIM CAMPS (Est. 1966)
CARLETON UNIVERSITY OTTAWA, ONTARIO, CANADA
3-31 July 1983
Cecil Colwin, coach
Olympic medalists, world record holders, renowned author, lecturer. National Technical Director Canada 1973-1977.
The great triumvirate of swimming MOTIVATION success
TECHNIQUE TRAINING
A TIME-TESTED PROGRAM UNDER ONE OF THE FEW 'EDUCATOR-COACHES'
Four weeks of fun, fitness and learning. Males and females 10 and older.
A rare chance for personalized coaching under Cecil Colwin, eleven weekly workouts, stroke instruction with one of the world's great stroke-technicians.
Dynamic, challenging, carefully-planned program. Wide variety of activities. Instructional films, videao-taping. Exceptional 50 metre venue — site of Olympic Team preparation. Permission to attend meets by arrangements. Tennis, squash, rowing, canoeing, midst beautiful scenery. Exciting trips. See directory. Write for brochure.
For more information please write CECIL COLWIN SWIM CAMPS P.O.Box 8402, Postal Terminal, Ottawa, Ontario, K1G 3H8 CANADA
22
13-14G :
arena
JAG
Top Age Group Times
Compiled by SWIM Magazine on computer program developed by Greg Hemstreet.
Times done in 25 metres pools since Oct.1, 1982 received to Feb. 1~
CLASSEMENT PAR GROUPE D'AGES
TAG is financially supported by the CASA, Sport Canada and arena
TM2 G KB/
50 METRES FREE Rec: 0:27. 57 ADozzo, NYAC.81 0:28.15 Miriam Ticktin,1 2,Pt-Claire 0:28.35 Liane Shields.1 2,Dollard 0:28.60 Sylvia Tamme,1 2,Dollard 0:29.21 Wendy Trempe,1 2,Ajax 0:29.25 Lucy Ormerod,1 2,Pr.Alb OSP 0:29.39 Teresa Small, 1 2,Dollard 0:29.40 Lois Mare,1 2,Kenora 0:29.48 Leighann Howard, 1 2,Muskoka 0:29.51 Debbie Paterson,1 1, Hamilton 0-29.65 Debbie Wurzburger,1 2,London Y 0:29.66 Kati Veqhely,1 2,Pt-Claire 0:29.67 Alyson Smith, 1 2,Newmarket 0:29.70 Whitney Ross,1 1,Orillia 0:29.74 Wendy Johnston, 1 2,Markham 0:29.75 Erin Anderson, 1 2,Etobicoke
100 METRES FREE Rec: 0:59.31 J.Daigneault, PCSC.78 1:00.50 Miriam Ticktin.l 2,Pt-Claire 1:00.98 Liane Shields,1 2,Dollard 1:01.11 Serena Copenace,1 2,Kenora 1:02.91 Sylvia Tamme,1 2,Dollard 1:03.17 Wendy Trempe,1 2,Ajax 1:03.21 Lucy Ormerod.1 2,Pr.Alb OSP 1:03.40 Bridget Zubrecki,1 2,Cdn.Dolph 1:03.87 Debbie Wurzburger,1 2,London Y 1:04.06 Patricia Noall,1 2,Beaconf'ld 1:04.45 Leighann Howard, 1 1,Muskoka 1:04.46 Teresa Small, 1 2,Dollard 1:04.53 Elissa Purvis,1 1.Calq Case 1:04.54 Kati Veghely,1 2,Pt-Claire 1:04.61 Paula Neufeld,1 2,Chena 1:05.20 Debbie Paterson,1 1, Hamilton
200 METRES FREE Rec: 2:08.18 ADozzo, NYAC.81 2:10.69 Miriam Ticktin,1 2,Pt-Claire 2:11.03 Liane Shields, 1 2,Dollard 213.95 Sylvia Tamme,1 2,Dollard 214.53 Serena Copenace,1 2,Kenora 214.64 Debbie Wurzburger,1 2,London Y 214.88 Wendy Trempe,1 2,Ajax 214.99 Elissa Purvis, 1 1,Calg Case 215.00 Patricia Noall,1 2,Beaconf'ld 215.33 Kati Veghely,12Pt-Claire 215.71 Tama Corbett,1 2,London Y 215.88 Lucy Ormerod,1 2,Pr.Alb OSP 217.52 Jennifer Smith, 1 2,Brock 218.62 Adrienne Kovacs,1 2Guelph 218.90 Keltie Byrne,12,Edm Keyano 219.40 Bridget Zubrecki,1 2,Cdn.Dolph
400 METRES FREE Rec:4:26.04 M.Ticktin. PCSC.83 4:26.04 Miriam Ticktm,1 2,Pt-Claire 4:36.97 Liane Shields,1 2,Dollard 4:38.17 Debbie WurzburgerJ 2,London Y 4:39.19 Elissa Purvis.1 1,Calg Case 4:39.25 Lucy Ormerod,1 2Pr.Alb OSP 4:40.26 Sylvia Tamme,1 2Dollard 4:40.85 Kati Veqhely,1 2Pt-Claire 4:41.22 Wendy Trempe,1 2Ajax 4:41.96 Patricia Noall.1 2Beaconf'ld 4:44.78 Serena Copenace,1 2Kenora 4:45.08 Tania Corbett,1 2,London Y 4:45.34 Adrienne Kovacs,1 2Guelph 4:47.17 Hannelor Wurmann,1 2Edm Olym 4:47.28 Shoshana Zimmerman, 1 2,Dollard 4:47.64 Sophie Dufour.1 2Rich-Yam
800 METRES FREE Rec: 9:07. 33 TKHnck, ROW, 77 9:09.55 Miriam Ticktin,1 2,Pt-Claire 9:30.70 Serena Copenace,1 2,Kenora 9:32.01 Debbie Wurzburger.1 2London Y 9:33.86 Patricia Noall.1 2„Beaconf'ld 9:34.13 Lucy Ormerod,1 2,Pr.Alb OSP 9:35.50 Liane Shields,1 2,Dollard 9:35.73 Kati Veqhely.1 2Pt-Claire 9:37.67 Sophie Dufour.1 2,Rich-Yam 9:37.72 Elissa Purvis,1 1,Calg Case 9:39.03 Shoshana Zimmerman, 1 2,Dollard 9:39.48 Wendy Trempe,1 2,Ajax 9:4202 Sylvia Tamme,1 2,Dollard 9:43.80 Tama Corbett,1 2London Y 9:44.82 Adrienne Kovacs,1 2,Guelph 9:46.92 Jennifer Smith, 1 2Brock
100 METRES BACK Rec:1:07.28 S.Duncan, HTAC.77 1:09.50 Liane Shields.1 2Dollard 1:12.42 Marie-A. Lafontaine.1 2,Brossard 1:1255 Jessica Roberts, 1 2,Cdn.Dolph 1:12.74 Janet McKetsy,1 2,Sudb LUSC 1:13.38 Serena Copenace,1 2,Kenora 1:13.50 Susan Black,1 2,Hamilton 1:13.54 Miriam Ticktin.l 2,Pt-Claire 1:13.77 Michelle Chambers,1 2Winn Manta 1:14.13 Mojca Cater,1 2North York 1:14.67 Debbie Paterson,1 1, Hamilton 1:15.10 Marcelle Rousseau, 1 2Cowansvill 1:15.38 Wendy Johnston, 1 2,Markham 1:15.50 Sara Fnsby.1 2Cdn.Dolph 1:15.54 Andrea Spada,1 2,Kingston Y 1:15.91 Chris Moore,1 2Lachine
200 METRES BACK
Rec: 2: 2 3.93 A.Dozzo, NYAC.81
231.43 Liane Shields,1 2,Dollard 233.70 Jessica Roberts,1 2Cdn.Dolph 234.04 Janet McKetsy,1 2Sudb LUSC 235.01 Marie-A. Lafontaine,1 2,Brossard 237.46 Mojca Cater.1 2,North York 238.56 Susan Black.1 2,Hamilton
238.84 Michelle Chambers,1 2Winn Mante 239.30 Sara Fnsby.1 2,Cdn.Dolph
239.39 Martha Thomas,1 2London Y
239.90 Patsy Haworth,1 2,Salaberry 239.97 Andrea Spada,1 2Klngston Y 240.26 Elissa Purvis.1 1,Calg Case
240.40 Marie-H. Henry,1 1.Bonaventur 240.66 Marcelle Rousseau, 1 2,Cowansvill 240.79 Karen Leckey,1 2,Hyack
100 METRES BREAST Rec:1:15.63 B.Beatty, ROD.78 1:19.93 Karyn Hatton,1 2Cobra 1:19.95 Kaili Salmon.1 2Glouc-Ott 1:21.25 Candace Yustin,1 1,Mississaug 1:21.66 Al Davis,12Halifax 1:21.92 Lea Mahood.1 2Cdn.Dolph 1:2206 Lucy Ormerod,1 2,Pr.Alb OSP 1:2241 Jill Puskas,12,Burhngton 1:2254 Nancy Woodhall.1 1,Reg Waterl 1:23.02 Julie Lefebvre.1 2,Mtl-POM 1:23.04 Isabelle Bernard,1 2Pt-Claire 1:23.11 Sylvia Tamme,1 2Dollard 1:23.63 Sherri Copsey.1 2Winn Manta 1:23.67 Erin Anderson, 1 2Etobicoke 1:23.72 Kelly Allen.1 2Cobra 1:23.80 Elizabet Boisvert.1 1.Tracy
200 METRES BREAST
Rec: 2: 41.28 B.Beatty, ROD.78
250.65 Lea Mahood,12,Cdn.Dolph
25203 Jill Puskas,12,Burlington
25294 Al Davis,12,Halifax
254.78 Candace Yustin.l 1,Mississaug
255.04 Karyn Hatton.1 2,Cobra 255.40 Kaili Salmon.1 2Glouc-Ott 255.76 Lucy Ormerod,1 2Pr.Alb OSP 255.88 Tania Corbett,1 2London Y 256.26 Isabelle Bernard.1 2Pt-Claire
256.44 Sylvia Tamme.1 2,Dollard
256.91 Julie Lefebvre.1 2Mtl-P0M 257.23 Nancy Woodhall.1 1,Reg Waterl 257.75 Erin Anderson, 1 2JZtobicoke 258.88 Martha Thomas,1 ^London Y
259.05 Hannelor Wurmann,1 2Edm Olym
100 METRES FLY
Rec:1:05.48 M.Coulombe, CNMN.78 1:06.54 Liane Shields,1 2,Dollard 1:07.51 Mojca Cater, 12,North York 1:08.19 Miriam Ticktin.l 2Pt-Claire 1:08.76 Lea Mahood,1 2Cdn.Dolph 1:09.98 Wendy Trempe.1 2Ajax 1:10.70 Bridget Zubrecki.1 2Cdn.Dolph 1:10.82 Debbie Wurzburger.1 2London Y 1:11.14 Sylvia Tamme,1 2,Dollard 1:11.70 Tina Berger,1 2Mississaug 1:11.80 Serena Copenace,12,Kenora 1:11.84 Shoshana Zimmerman, 12,Dollard 1:11.85 Sophie Dufour.1 2,Rich-Yam 1:11.88 Kati Veghely.1 2Pt-Claire 1:1203 Adrienne Kovacs,1 2Guelph 1:1214 Marie-A. Lafontaine.1 2,Brossard
200 METRES FLY
Rec:2:18.09 M.Coulombe, CNMN.78
227.26 Liane Shields.1 2Dollard 229.14 Miriam Ticktin.l 2,Pt-Claire
230.39 Mojca Cater.1 2North York 230.65 Debbie Wurzburger.1 2London Y 231.79 Lea Mahood.1 2Cdn.Dolph 232.20 Sylvia Tamme.1 2Dollard 233.05 Sophie Dufour.1 2,Rich-Yam 233.78 Patricia Noall,1 2Beaconf"ld
235.27 Shoshana Zimmerman, 1 2Dollard 236.00 Tina Berger,1 2,Mississaug
236.10 Wendy Trempe.1 2A)ax 236.82 Stacey Ryan.1 2Dollard
237.11 Adrienne Kovacs.l 2Guelph
239.72 Debbie Gaudin,12Edm Keyano 239.85 Wendy Farrelly.1 I.Hamilton
200 METRES IND.MEDLEY flee; 2: 23.41 A.Dozzo. NYAC.81 231.22 Serena Copenace,1 2,Kenora 231.60 Liane Shields.1 2Dollard 23261 Lea Mahood.1 2Cdn.Dolph 23284 Debbie Wurzburger.1 2London Y 233.60 Sylvia Tamme.l 2,Dollard
234.34 Shoshana Zimmerman,1 2Dollard 234.50 Kaili Salmon,12Glouc-0tt 234.60 Marie-A. Lafontaine,1 2Brossard 235.47 Kati Veghely,1 2Pt-Claire 236.09 Mojca Cater, 1 2North York 236.94 Lucy Ormerod.12Pr.Alb OSP 237.56 Tania Corbett.1 2London Y
238.12 Adrienne Kovacs.1 2Guelph 238.47 Erin Anderson.1 2,Etobicoke 238.90 Wendy Johnston, 1 2Markham
400 METRES IND.MEDLEY flee: 5: 00.20 M.Coulombe, CNMN.78' 5:19.30 Liane Shields,12Dollard 5:19.65 Serena Copenace.1 2Kenora 5:19.93 Sylvia Tamme,1 2Dollard 5:2217 Patricia Noall,1 2Beaconf'ld 5:26.39 Kati Veghely,1 2Pt-Claire 5:27.65 Adrienne Kovacs.1 2Guelph 5:27.69 Tania Corbett,1 2London Y 5:28.52 Mojca Cater,12North York 5:28.65 Shoshana Zimmerman, 1 2Dollard 5:28.76 Sophie Dufour,1 2Rich-Yam 5:29.14 Debbie Wurzburger.1 2London Y 5:3246 Lucy Ormerod.12Pr.Alb OSP 5:32.84 Susan Black,1 2Hamilton 5:33.16 Hannelor Wurmann.1 2Edm Olym 5:34.38 Stacy Rvan.1 2Dollard
4x50 METRES MEDLEY RELAY Rec:2:10.90 Pointe Claire, ,81
214.46 Dollard,
214.59 Pt-Claire, 216.16 Brossard, 216.84 Cdn.Dolphin,
218.35 Winn Manta, 218.38 North York, 220.41 Cobra, 220.43 Mississauga, 220.62 London Y, 221.08 Hamilton, 221.89 Reg Waterloo,
226.47 Burlington,
223.40 Glouc-Ottawa, 225.18 Laval, 227.70 Markham,
4x50 METRES FREE RELAY Rec:1:56.30 Dollard, .82 1:56.30 Dollard, 1:59.24 Pt-Claire, 201.89 London Y, 203.22 Cdn.Dolphin, 203.31 Winn Manta, 203.87 Brossard, 204.64 Hamilton, 204.68 Mississauga,
205.28 Cobra,
206.73 Kenora, 207.00 Burlington,
207.60 Glouc-Ottawa, 208.02 Reg Waterloo, 208.55 North York, 208.73 Mtl-Aquatic,
50 METRES FREE Rec: 0:26.64 P.fla/, Hyack.80 0:26.92 Jane Kerr,14,Etobicoke 0:27.53 Kim Gellatly,14,Reg Waterl 0:27.82 Liane Shields,13,Dollard 0:27.89 Tara Terins,13,Cdn.Dolph 0:28.04 Rhonda Mayes,13,Edm Keyano 0:28.06 Kim Exelby,13,Trenton 0:28.32 Pascale Choquet,13,Bouchervil 0:28.32 Nadia Bertrand,14,Select 0:28.34 Krista Burris,14,Truro 0:28.42 Alison Cummings,14,Unlv.Calg 0:28.43 Kathy Josey,14,Charlott'n 0:28.44 Kim Paterson,13,Hamilton 0:28.46 Erica Wale,14,Brantford 0:28.52 Lori Abramowitz,14,Pt-Claire 0:28.55 Shelly Keown,14,Univ.Calg
100 METRES FREE Rec:0:57.27 D.Clarke, 787,76 0:57.46 Jane Kerr,14,Etobicoke 0:59.99 Chris Condello,14,Hamilton 1:00.16 Kim Gellatly,14,Reg Waterl 1:00.24 Liane Shields,13,Dollard 1:00.32 Tonya Adrian, 14,Cdn.Dolph 1:00.48 Alison Dozzo,14,North York 1:00.58 Erica Wale,14,Brantford 1:00.62 Nadia Bertrand,14,Select 1:00.69 Carol Docherty,14,Pt-Claire 1:00.95 Rhonda Mayes,13,Edm Keyano 1:00.97 Danielle Lebrun,14,Mtl-Aquat 1:00.97 Anne-M. Soroka,14,Cdn.Dolph 1:01.44 Kim Exelby,13,Trenton 1:01.60 Tara Terins,13,Cdn.Dolph 1:01.79 Kelly Twordik,14,unatt
200 METRES FREE Rec: 2:01.56 S.Smith, Hyack.76 203.48 Jane Kerr,14,Etobicoke 206.66 Tonya Adrian, 14,Cdn.Dolph 207.13 Donna McGmnis,14,Edm Keyano 207.19 Chris Condello,14,Hamilton 208.99 Alison Dozzo,14,North York 209.02 Erica Wale,14,Brantford 209.48 Liane Shields,13,Dollard 209.69 Lori Abramowitz,14,Pt-Claire 210.06 Carol Docherty,14,Pt-Claire 210.97 Jennifer McElroy,13,Reg Waterl 2:11.05 Rhonda Mayes, 13,Edm Keyano 211.42 Danielle Lebrun,14,Mtl-Aquat 211.76 Erin Searcy,14,Windsor 211.79 Robyn Gyrlevich,13,Moose Jaw 21218 Nadia Bertrand,14,Select
400 METRES FREE Rec: 4: 14.7 9 S. Smith, Hyack.76 4:22.40 Tonya Adrian, 14,Cdn.Dolph 4:23.75 Donna McGinnis,14,Edm Keyano 4:24.85 Jane Kerr,14,Etobicoke 4:25.41 Lori Abramowitz,14,Pt-Claire 4:26.31 Carol Docherty,14,Pt-Claire 4:29.12 Chris Condello,14,Hamilton 4:29.48 Danielle Lebrun,14,Mtl-Aquat 4:30.73 Erica Wale,14,Brantford 4:30.85 Liane Shields,13,Dollard 4:32.14 Leanne Long,14,Etobicoke 4:33.77 Hallie Peppin,13,Scarboro 4:34.15 Erin Searcy,14,Wmdsor 4:34.22 Tanya Simbalist,14,Univ.Calq 4:34.36 Teresa Buchignani,14,Univ.Calg 4:34.72 Alison Dozzo,14.North York
800 METRES FREE Rec: 8:43.68 D.McGinms, EKSC.82 8:52.70 Donna McGinms,14,Edm Keyano 8:59.27 Tonya Adrian, 14,Cdn.Dolph 9:02.59 Carol Docherty,14,Pt-Claire 9:08.11 Danielle Lebrun,14,Mtl-Aquat 9:08.56 Jane Kerr,14,Etobicoke 9:14.63 Lori Abramowitz,14,Pt-Claire 9:15.76 Leanne Long,14,Etobicoke 9:17.35 Chris Conde"llo,14,Hamilton 9:21.71 Erin Searcy,14,Windsor 9:2296 Sandi Barrett, 14,Hyack 9:25.10 Teresa Buchignani,14,Univ.Calg 9:25.40 Liane Shields,13,Dollard 9:28.73 Anne Bodak,14,Thun Bay 9:31.20 Megan Fowler,14,London Y 9:31.30 Hallie Peppin,13,Scarboro
100 METRES BACK Rec:1:04.20 N.Garapick, HTAC.75 1:07.18 Alison Dozzo,14,North York 1:09.18 Liane Shields,13,Dollard 1:09.47 Kelly Ursan,14,Hyack 1:09.62 Manon Simard,14,Haut-Rich 1:10.50 Theresa Barber,14,Thun Bay 1:10.59 Cindy Mabee,13,Hyack 1:10.60 Tanya Simbalist,14,Univ.Calg 1:10.60 Shelly Keown,14,Univ.Calq 1:10.88 Jennifer McElroy,13,Reg Waterl 1:10.90 Kristin Hanson, 14,Pt-Claire 1:11.28 Lara Bohatyretz,13,Pt-Claire 1:11.29 Kim Exelby,14,Trenton 1:11.50 Kristy Salmon, 14,Glouc-0tt 1:11.59 Laura Baker,14,Edm Keyano 1:11.91 Jane Kerr,14,Etobicoke
200 METRES BACK flee; 2:15.85 N.Garapick, HTACJ6 223.71 Alison Dozzo,14,North York 225.58 Liane Shields,13,Dollard 228.16 Tanya Simbalist,14,Univ.Calg 228.90 Cindy Mabee,13,Hyack
228.92 Manon Simard,14,Haut-Rich 2:29.79 Shelly Keown,14,Univ.Calg
230.20 Kristin Hanson, 14,Pt-Claire 230.50 Donna McGinnis,14,Edm Keyano
230.63 Kelly Ursan,14,Hyack 230.90 Judy Cowan, 14,Edm Olym 231.07 Bev Wicks,14,Muskoka 231.09 Jane Kerr,14,Etobicoke 231.11 Chris Condello,14,Hamilton
231.33 Jennifer McElroy,13,Reg Waterl 231.83 Kari Roberts,14,Guelph
100 METRES BREAST flee: 7: 77.08 R.Corsiglia. PCSCJ7 1:13.75 Alison Dozzo,14,North York 1:13.97 Josee Theriault,14,unatt 1:14.45 Tara Terins,13,Cdn.Dolph 1:14.76 Krista Burris,14,Truro 1:18.20 Kim Gellatly,14,Reg Waterl 1:18.53 Tania Neumann, 14,Pt-Claire 1:18.75 Allison Batstone,13,Thun Bay 1:18.94 Pam Wilson, 14,Brantford 1:19.13 Sophie Veilleux,13,Sherbrooke 1:19.29 Heidi Foster,14,Ajax 1:19.69 Susan Hovland,14,Oakville 1:19.95 Karen Morrison, 14,Mississaug 1:20.25 Jane Kerr,14,Etobicoke 1:20.30 Shauna lrwin,13,Pr.Alb OSP 1:20.43 Alana Mason,13,Wolfville
200 METRES BREAST
Rec:2: 33.27 R.Corsiglia, PCSCJ7
237.60 Alison Dozzo,14,North York
239.21 Josee Theriault,14,unatt 24233 Krista Burris,14,Truro 24265 Tara Terins,13,Cdn.Dolph 245.57 Tania Neumann,14,Pt-Claire
248.34 Shauna lrwin,13,Pr.Alb OSP 248.65 Kim Gellatly,14,Reg Waterl 250.16 Alanna Mason, 14,Wolfville 250.18 Lenore Doucette,14,Dorado 250.18 Pam Wilson,14,Brantford 251.46 Susan Hovland,14,Oakville 251.75 Sophie Veilleux,13,Sherbrooke 25246 Cara Driftz,14,Winn Manta 252.90 Charlene Orcheski,14,Edm Keyano 25296 Allison Batstone,13,Thun Bay
100 METRES FLY
Real: 03.89 M.Coulombe, CNMNJ9 1:04.54 Liane Shields,13,Dollard 1:05.52 Alison Dozzo,14,North York 1:06.71 Carol Docherty,14,Pt-Claire 1:06.76 Chris Condello,14,Hamilton 1:07.28 Jane Kerr,14,Etobicoke 1:07.44 Chris Laliberte,14,Winn Manta 1:07.64 Lenore Doucette,14,Dorado 1:07.74 Lyne St.Andre,14,Laval 1:07.75 Anna Jensen, 13,Cobra 1:07.80 Colleen MacKinnon, 14,Pt-Claire 1:07.80 Nadia Bertrand,14,Select 1:07.85 Alana Mason, 13, Wolf ville 1:07.97 Lisa Chisholm,13,London Y 1:08.06 Krista Sanders, 13,London Y 1:08.21 Tamara Piasta,14,Edm BF
200 METRES FLY
ftec:2;75.03 M.Coulombe, Select,80 221.11 Alison Dozzo,14,North York 224.36 Leanne Long,14,Etobicoke
224.93 Tanya Simbalist,14,Univ.Calg 225.30 Lyne St.Andre,14,Laval
225.65 Linda Gardiner,14,Reg Waterl 226.00 Colleen MacKinnon,14,Pt-Claire 226.24 Chris Condello,14,Hamilton 226.89 Anne-M, Soroka,14,Cdn.Dolph 227.28 Anna Jensen,13,Cobra
227.66 Tonya Adrian,14,Cdn.Dolph 228.05 Chris Laliberte,14,Winn Manta 228.21 Carol Docherty,14,Pt-Claire 228.43 Anne Bodak,14,Thun Bay 228.80 Miye Marubashi,14,Scarboro
229.64 Lenore Doucette,14,Dorado
200 METRES IND.MEDLEY
flee: 2:18.30 M.Coulombe, Select,80
221.80 Alison Dozzo,14,North York
223.89 Jane Kerr,14,Etobicoke 225.86 Tara Terins,13,Cdn.Dolph 226.94 Josee Theriault,14,Univ.Mtl 228.78 Tania Neumann,14,Pt-Claire
228.90 Tonya Adrian,14,Cdn.Dolph 229.01 Jennifer McElroy,13,Reg Waterl 229.15 Shelly Keown,14,Univ.Calg 229.23 Kim Gellatly,14,Reg_ Waterl 229.42 Theresa Barber.MlThun Bay 229.96 Donna McGinnis,14,Edm Keyano 230.35 Chris Condello,14,Hamilton 230.94 Linda Gardiner,14,Reg Waterl 231.86 Anne Bodak,14,Thun Bay 232.00 Lyne St.Andre,14,Laval
400 METRES IND.MEDLEY flee: 4: 5 6.7 2 M.Coulombe, CNMN.79 5:00.62 Alison Dozzo,14,North York 5:05.78 Donna McGinnis,14,Edm Keyano 5:07.37 Tonya Adrian,14,Cdn.Dolph 5:10.62 Tania Neumann, 13,Pt-Claire 5:13.39 Leanne Long,14,Etobicoke 5:13.39 Chris Condello,14,Hamilton 5:14.31 Shelly Keown,14,Univ.Calg 5:14.39 Judy Cowan,14,Edm Olym 5:15.73 Josee Theriault,14,Univ.Mtl 5:16.28 Alison Cumminqs,14,Univ.Calg 5:16.37 Anne Taylor,13,Edm Keyano 5:16.78 Linda Gardiner,14,Reg Waterl 5:17.90 Jennifer McElroy,13,Reg Waterl 5:18.87 Lyne St.Andre,14,Laval 5:20.90 Lori Abramowitz,13,Pt-Claire
4x50 METRES MEDLEY RELAY flee; 2:04.40 North York, ,81
208.15 Cdn. Dolphin, 209.61 Reg Waterloo, 210.00 North York,
210.16 Pt-Claire, 210.97 Univ.Calgary, 21240 Hamilton, 213.42 Laval, 214.04 Cobra,
214.49 Brock,
214.50 Edm Keyano, 215.09 Trenton, 215.19 Mississauga, 215.34 Winn Manta, 215.80 Montreal POM, 215.91 Brantford,
4x50 METRES FREE RELAY fiec:7;48.85 Etobicoke, ,81
1:53.61 Cdn. Dolphin,
1:54.08 Reg Waterloo,
1:54.23 Pt-Claire,
1:55.98 Hamilton,
1:56.33 Etobicoke,
1:56.86 Trenton,
1:56.93 Univ.Calgary,
1:58.20 Edm Keyano,
1:58.49 London Y,
1:58.70 Muskoka,
1:59.49 Scarboro,
1:59.53 Mississauga,
1:59.67 Laval,
200.08 Brock,
200.14 Oakville,
15-17G se
50 METRES FREE flee; 0:25.68 CKIimpel, SSAC.80 0:26.91 Andrea Schloegl,15,North York 0:27.10 Yvonne Hicks,17,Chena 0:27.22 Allison Loucas,17,Reg Waterl 0:27.35 Pam Rai,16,Hyack 0:27.37 Wendy Free,15,Etobicoke 0:27.42 Jennifer Campbell,16,Sudb LUSC 0:27.70 Kelly Lombardo,16,Alderwood 0:27.71 Chooi Lee,16,Cdn.Dolph 0:27.71 Cathie Griffin,16,Ajax 0:27.84 Kim Smylie,15,London Y 0:27.91 Manon Venne,l6,Pt-Claire 0:28.03 Rita Liebrucks,17,Newmarket 0:28.04 Nancy Page,16,Mississaug 0:28.07 Nadia Bertrand,15,Select 0:28.09 Mich MacPherson,16,North York
100 METRES FREE Rea 0:56.17 CKIimpel, SSAC.81 0:58.57 Cheryl McArton,16,North York 0:58.72 Jennifer Campbell,16,Sudb LUSC 0:58.84 Nancy Page,16,Mississaug 0:58.92 Andrea Schloeql,15,North York 0:59.11 Yvonne Hicks, 17,Chena 0:59.35 Helene Boudreault,16,Oakville 0:59.36 Pam Rai,16,Hyack 0:59.63 Manon Venne,16,Pt-Claire 0:59.68 Cathie Griffin, 16,Ajax 0:59.72 Mich MacPherson,16,North York 0:59.73 Kim Smylie,15, London Y 0:59.80 Karen Ward,16,Beaconf'ld 0:59.89 Wendy Free,15,Etobicoke 0:59.96 Nadia Bertrand,15,Select 0:59.97 Sandra Honour,17,Regina
200 METRES FREE flee: 2:00.28 N.Garapick, HTAC.79 204.84 Cheryl McArton,16,North York 205.51 Nancy Page,16,Mississauq 205.71 Karen Ward,16,Beaconf'ld 206.29 Sandra Honour,17,Regina 206.55 Jennifer Campbell,16,Sudb LUSC 206.66 Sophie Lake,17,Univ.Calg
207.21 Lois Brafield,17,Etobicoke 207.51 Ira Leroi,16,Cdn.Dolph 208.08 Debbie Tibelius,17,Winn Manta 208.17 Linda Sanders,17,Pt-Claire
208.22 MaryJo Clark,17,Edm Keyano 208.51 Julia Reidl,15,Dollard 208.99 Kim Smylie,15,London Y 209.08 Sharon Donnelly,15,North York 209.25 Andrea Schloegl,15,North York
400 METRES FREE Rec:4:09.30 J.Daigneault, PCSC.82 4:18.95 Sophie Lake,17,Univ.Calg 4:19.82 Nancy Page,16,Mississaug 4:20.05 Lois Brafield,17,Etobicoke 4:21.93 Cheryl McArton,16,North York 4:23.83 Jennifer Campbell,16,Sudb LUSC 4:23.83 Karen Ward,16,Beaconf'ld 4:24.67 Sandra Honour,17,Regina 4:26.86 Cathy Skipper, 17,Brantford 4:27.65 Debbie Tibelius,17,Winn Manta 4:27.68 MaryJo Clark,17,Edm Keyano 4:28.06 Ira Leroi,16,Cdn.Dolph 4:29.60 Kathy Kropf,16,Winn Manta 4:31.16 Kim Vendette,17,Sudb LUSC 4:31.41 Louise Dufour,15,Rich-Yam 4:31.55 Kim Bey,15,Hyack
800 METRES FREE flee: 8:33.89 J.Daigneault, PCSC.82 8:56.78 Sophie Lake,17,Univ.Calg 8:58.97 Nancy Page,16,Mississaug 8:59.10 Sandra Honour,17,Regina 9:01.94 Karen Ward.16,Beaconf*ld 9:01.99 Lois Brafield,17,Etobicoke 9:04.18 Cheryl McArton,16,North York 9:09.57 Jennifer Campbell,16,Sudb LUSC 9:10.54 Kim Vendette,17,Sudb LUSC 9:11.48 Julia Reidl,15,Dollard 9:11.90 Hanya Chmara,15,Sudb LUSC 9:14.24 Julie Lavender,16,Cdn.Dolph 9:14.68 Kathy Kropf,16,Winn Manta 9:14.99 Sharon Donnelly,15,North York 9:15.20 Maria Lember,17,Markham 9:16.09 MaryJo Clark,17,Edm Keyano
100 METRES BACK Rec:1:03.37 J.Boulianne, PCSC.80 1:05.33 Barb McBain,15,Cdn.Dolph 1:05.62 Lisa Cunningham, 16,Ajax 1:05.97 Aline Larouche,17,Beaconf'ld 1:06.75 Manon Venne,16,Pt-Claire 1:06.76 Jennifer Campbell,16,Sudb LUSC 1:08.58 Lianne Harker,17,Ajax 1:08.65 Kim Bey,15,Hyack 1:09.13 Suzie Szmolyan,17,Univ.Calg 1:09.21 Jill Horstead,15,Etobicoke 1:09.29 Lois Brafield,17,Etobicoke 1:09.38 Chris Manryk,15,Select 1:09.55 Laura Baker,15,Edm Keyano 1:09.64 Mich MacPherson,16,North York 1:09.67 Chris Quosdorf,15,Beaconfld 1:09.77 Natalie St.Onge,16,Laval
200 METRES BACK Rec:2:15.21 J.Boulianne, PCSC.80 220.34 Barb McBain,15,Cdn.Dolph 221.02 Jennifer Campbell,16,Sudb LUSC
221.83 Aline Larouche,17,Beaconf'ld 223.61 Lisa Cunningham, 16,Ajax 223.86 Manon Venne,16,Pt-Ciaire 224.23 Nancy Page,16,Mississaug 225.20 Kim Bey,15,Hyack
225.57 Suzie Szmolyan,16,Univ.Calg
225.65 Jeri-L. Schmidt,15,Univ.Calg
225.84 Mich MacPherson,16,North York 225.95 Lois Brafield,17,Etobicoke 226.80 Kathy Kropf,16,Winn Manta 227.13 Lianne Harker,17,Ajax
227.25 Karin Helmsiaedt,15,Kingston Y 227.28 Chris Quosdorf,15,Beaconf'ld
100 METRES BREAST Real: 11.11 A.Ottenbrite, Ajax.82 1:12.09 Dominiqu Roussy,16,Select 1:12.20 Anne Ottenbrite,16,Ajax 1:13.63 Cindy Ounpuu,16,Etobicoke 1:15.04 Susie Garay,17,Brock 1:15.48 Tammy Balkwill,17,Brock 1:16.16 Mary Lubawski,17,Etobicoke 1:16.49 Nathalie Recoskie,16,Beaconf'ld 1:16.72 Jennifer Good,17,Dorado 1:16.74 Elizabet Culley,17,Dollard 1:16.88 Chantal Meilleur,15,Pt-Claire 1:17.05 Josee Labne,15,Mtl-POM 1:17.22 Dina Demarchi,15,Hyack 1:17.27 Kim Vendette,17,Sudb LUSC 1:17.53 Kim Smylie,15,London Y 1:17.58 Janet Hyslop,15,Kenora
200 METRES BREAST Rea 2: 31.68 A.Ottenbrite, Ajax,82 231.99 Dominiqu Roussy,16,Select 2.34.49 Anne Ottenbrite,16,Ajax 238.13 Cindy Ounpuu,16,Etobicoke 239.82 Chantal Meilleur,15,Pt-Claire 240.63 Kim Vendette,17,Sudb LUSC 241.89 Susie Garay,17,Brock 241.92 Linda Rodie,17,Pt-Claire 241.97 Tammy Balkwill,16,Brock 243.78 Louise Dufour,15,Rich-Yam 244.00 Josee Labrie,15,Mtl-POM 244.16 Janet Hyslop,15,Kenora 244.52 Mary Lubawski,17,Etobicoke 245.18 Liz Taus,17,Sudb LUSC 245.61 Jennifer Campbell,16,Sudb LUSC 245.72 Nathalie Recoskie,16,Beaconf'ld
mmmmmmmmBtammBm
100 METRES FLY Real: 01.11 N.Garapick, HTAC.79 1:03.00 Mich MacPherson,16,North Yock 1:04.04 Jill Horstead,15,Etobicoke 1:04.48 Anita VanDyke,16,Cdn.Dolph 1:04.56 Stefanie Rochford,16,Dollard 1:05.03 Lynn Kucera,16,Pt-Claire 1:05.05 Marie Moore,15,Dartmouth 1:05.12 Chantal Martineau,17,Beaconf'ld 1:05.16 Liz Taus,17,Sudb LUSC 1:05.47 Nadia Bertrand,15,Select 1:05.61 Robin Ruggiero,16,Mtl-Aquat 1:05.64 Helen Boudreault,16,Oakville 1:05.81 Ruth Horne,17,Glouc-Ott 1:05.83 Pam Rai,16,Hyack 1:05.89 Kim Smylie,15,London Y 1:05.94 Jennifer Campbell,16,Sudb LUSC
200 METRES FLY
flee: 2: 72.06 C.Venne, PCSC.82
217.97 Jill Horstead,15,Etobicoke
218.56 Jennifer Campbell,16,Sudb LUSC 218.65 Anita VanDyke,16,Cdn.Dolph
219.84 Lois Brafield,17,Etobicoke 221.07 Helene Boudreault,16,Oakville
221.17 Liz Taus,17,Sudb LUSC 2.2243 Mich MacPherson,16,North York
222.76 Stefanie Rochford,16,Dollard
2 2285 Chantal Martineau,l7,Beaconf'ld 223.02 Lisa Hoqanson,16,Dartmouth 223.06 Brenna Tymko,15,Edm Keyano
223.25 Marie Moore,15,Dartmouth 223.74 Bronwyn Beatty,17,Regina 224.16 Julie Lavender,16,Cdn.Dolph
224.26 Stepham Saunders,15,Kingston Y
200 METRES I.M. Rec:2:13.18 N.Garapick, HTAC.79 220.64 Jennifer Campbell,16,Sudb LUSC 221.67 Kim Smylie,15,London Y
223.58 Kim Vendette,17,Sudb LUSC 224.00 Liz Taus,17,Sudb LUSC
224.13 Nancy Paqe,16,Mississaug
224.14 Mich MacPherson,16,North York
225.39 Jill Horstead,15,Etobicoke 226.25 Sophie Lake,17,Univ.Calq
226.40 Dawn Gilhooly,17,Winn Manta 226.72 Chooi Lee,16,Cdn.Dolph 226.80 Lois Brafield,16,Etobicoke
226.85 Jerri-L. Schmidt,16,Univ.Calg
227.59 Marie Moore, 15,Dartmouth 228.31 Marnie Irwin, 17,Univ.Calg
228.37 Denise Gereghty,15,Sudb LUSC
400 METRES I.M. Rea 4: 41.43 N.Garapick, HTAC.79 4:54.80 Mich MacPherson,16,North York 4:55.02 Jennifer Campbell, 16,Sudb LUSC 4:58.10 Lois Brafield,17,Etobicoke 4:59.48 Kim Vendette,17,Sudb LUSC 5:00.49 Liz Taus,17,Sudb LUSC 5:01.95 Sophie Lake,17,Univ.Calg 5:0263 Jill Horstead,15,Etobicoke 5:0285 Kim Smylie,15,London Y 5:03.87 Karen Ward,16,Beaconf'ld 5:04.48 Nancy Page,16,Mississaug 5:05.85 Fiona Waddell,16,Cdn.Dolph 5:06.73 Julie Lavender,16,Cdn.Doiph 5:08.55 Bronwyn Beatty,17,Regina 5:08.67 Linda Haworth,15,Salaberry 5:09.56 Marie Moore, 15,Dartmouth
4x50 MEDLEY RELAY ftec:2:02.04 Pointe Claire, ,78 204.78 Beaconsfiefd,
205.38 Pt-Claire,
206.77 Reg Waterloo, 208.00 Doflard, 209.14 Ajax,
209.94 Select, 210.14 Mtl-Aquatic,
211.18 Winn Manta,
211.39 Oakville, 21215 London Y, 21266 Montreal POM, 21271 Regina, 213.77 Edm Keyano, 214.22 Mississauga,
214.57 Dartmouth,
4x50 FREE RELAY flee: 7:46.49 North York, ,82
1:52.68 Beaconsfield,
1:52.97 Reg Waterloo,
1:53.20 North York,
1:53.63 Etobicoke,
1:55.68 Pt-Claire,
1:56.14 Winn Manta,
1:56.57 Regina,
1:56.63 London Y,
1:56.77 Ajax,
1:57.33 Mississauga.
1:57.58 Dollard,
1:57.65 Mtl-Aquatic,
1:57.81 Dartmouth,
1:58.33 Brantford,
1:58.53 Oakville,
24
11-12 B
BOYS / GARCONS
50 METRES FREE
Rec: 0:26.07 B.Creelman. TOMAC.82 0:26.07 Brad Creelman,1 2,Mississaug 0:26.62 Matthew Young,1 2,Elliot Lak 0:27.85 Taras Pawlowsky,1 2,Pt-Claire 0:28.02 Edward Preston, 1 2,Beaconf'ld 0:28.21 Don Haddow,1 2,Etobicoke 0:28.25 Sylvam LanthierJ 2,Mtl-P0M 0:28.50 Eric Smith, 1 2.MU-POM 0:28.65 Tom Papai,1 2,Nepean 0:28.66 Shannon Smith.1 2,Yarmouth 0:28.72 Rod Burki,1 2,Markham 0:28.80 Ivano Penn,1 2,Guelph 0:28.80 Kevin Pyle,1 2,Truro 0:28.84 David Loyola,1 2,Dorado 0:29.02 Tyler Clair,12,Reg Waterl 0:29.06 Sandy Magee,1 2,Calg Case
100 METRES FREE Pec: 0:56.9 3 B.Creelman, TOMAC.83 0:56.93 Brad Creelman,1 2,Mississaug 0:59.57 Matthew Young, 1 2,Elliot Lak 0:59.90 Jamie Bretzlaff.1 2,Sudb LUSC 1:01.17 Eric Smith, 1 2,Mtl-POM 1:01.27 Don Haddow,1 2,Etobicoke 1:01.73 Sylvain Lanthier.1 2,Mtl-POM 1:01.97 Taras Pawlowsky.1 2,Pt-Claire 1:02.13 Edward Preston,1 2,Beaconf'ld 1:02.69 Trent McNicol,1 2,London Y 1:02.70 Troy Hudson, 1 2,Truro 1:03.04 Todd MacNeil,1 2,Thompson 1:03.04 Ivano Penn,1 2,Guelph 1:03.13 David Loyola.1 2,Dorado 1:03.20 Kevin Pyle,1 2Jruro 1:03.26 Daniel Perreault,1 2,Tracy
200 METRES FREE Rea2:05.73 T.Jakisch. SJS.80 2:07.22 Brad Creelman,1 2,Mississaug 2:10.01 Sylvain Lanthier.1 2,Mtl-POM
210.10 Matthew Young,1 2,Elliot Lak 2-.10.90 Eric Smith, 1 2,Mtl-POM 2:12.06 Don Haddow.1 2,Etobicoke 2:1261 Taras Pawlowsky,1 2,Pt-Claire 216.14 Ivano Perin,1 2,Guelph 2:16.38 Todd Major,12,Reg Waterl 2:16.47 Patrick Gagnon.1 2,Brossard 216.63 Jason Brandt.1 2,Etobicoke 2:16.88 Donald Kidd,1 2,Mississaug 217.54 Trent McNicol.1 2London Y
217.95 Todd MacNeil.1 2Jhompson
217.96 Chris Boucher,1 2Welland 218.26 Edward Preston, 1 2,Beaconfld
400 METRES FREE Rec: 4:25.92 B.Volz. NY AC, 81 4:31.33 Brad Creelman,1 2Mississaug 4:35.93 Sylvain Lanthier,1 2,Mtl-POM 4:37.29 Eric Smith, 1 2,Mtl-POM 4:40.31 Don Haddow.1 2Etobicoke 4:40.37 Todd Major, 12,Req Waterl 4:46.02 Ron Andrews.l 2,Edm Olym 4:47.39 Scott Mercer,1 1, Burlington 4:47.94 Jason Brandt, 1 2,Etobicoke 4:48.06 Brian Connors,1 2Burlington 4:48.26 Trent McNicol,1 2London Y 4:50.81 Ivano Perin,1 2,Guelph 4:50.96 Sandy Maqee,1 2,Calg Case 4:51.36 Nicholas Richards, 1 1,Pt-Claire 4:52.24 John Earle.1 1,Winn SJS 4:52.45 Chris Boucher, 1 2Welland
1500 METRES FREE flec:77:72.22 T.Jaksich, SJS.80 17-53.33 Brad Creelman,1 2Mississaug 17:55.70 Sylvain Lanthier.1 2,Mtl-POM 18 21.50 Todd Ma)or,12Reg Waterl 18:30.18 Eric Smith,1 2,Mtl-POM 18:30.22 Don Haddow,1 2,Etobicoke 18:31.32 Scott Mercer.1 2,Burlington 18:40.00 Brian Connors,1 ^Burlington 18:46.83 Jason Brandt, 1 2,Etobicoke 184717 Ron Andrews,1 2,Edm Olym 18:54.32 Taras Pawlowsky.1 2,Pt-Claire 19:05.10 Kyle Seeback.1 2Cobra 19:05.51 Bernard Lapierre.1 1,Mtl-POM 1905 88 David Loyola,1 2,Dorado 19:06.41 Angus Fraser.1 2Pt-Claire 19:07.28 Michael Rollason,1 2North York
100 METRES BACK
Reel: 06. 43 P.Botman, Glouc.76
1:09.08 Kevin Pyle.1 2,Truro
1:10.37 Sylvain Lanthier,1 2Mtl-POM
1:11.00 Eric Smith.1 2,Mtl-POM
112.11 Brad Creelman.1 2,Mississaug 1:12.13 Rick Holt,12,Red Deer 1:12.24 Tyler Clair,12,Reg Waterl 1:13.08 Jamie Andrews.1 2Edm Olym 1:13.97 Derek Phillips, 1 1, Port Hope 1:13.98 Ron Andrews.1 2Edm Olym 1:14.53 John Earle.1 1.Winn SJS 1:14.80 Matthew Young, 1 2,Elliot Lak 1:15.06 Shannon Smith, 1 2,Yarmouth 1:15.31 Rod Burki,12Markham 1:15.31 Donald Kidd.1 2,Mississauq 1:15.39 Trent McNicol.1 2,London Y
200 METRES BACK Rec: 2:19.67 P.Botman, Glouc.76 228.40 Eric Smith,1 2Mtl-P0M 230.30 Jamie Bretzlaff,1 2Sudb LUSC 232.40 Kevin Pyle.1 2,Truro 23 240 Sylvain Lanthier.1 2Mtl-P0M 235.61 Ron Andrews.1 2Edm Olym 236.28 John Earle.1 1,Winn SJS 236.35 Rick Holt,12,Fted Deer 236.64 Donald Kidd,1 2,Mississaug 236.82 Brad Creelman,1 2,Mississaug 236.84 Jamie Andrews.1 2,Edm Olym 237.63 Derek Phillips, 1 1.Port Hope 237.79 Michael Rollason.1 2,North York 238.04 Tyler Clair.12.Reg Waterl 240.49 Jason Yustin.1 2Mississaug 241.20 Kevin Anderson, 1 1, Dollard
100 METRES BREAST Rec: 1:11. 3 3 M.Young, E LAC, 8 2
11.33 Matthew Young,1 2,Elliot Lak 12.48 Brad Creelman.1 2,Mississaug 17.03 Kevin O'Connell.1 2Dollard 17.19 Sean Koeller.1 2Calg Case 18.29 David Loyola.1 2,Dorado 19.35 Todd Major,12,Reg Waterl 19.92 Tom Papai,1 2Nepean
20.07 Steve Gombai.1 2,Windsor
20.55 Eric Smith.1 2,Mtl-POM 20.80 Greg Fairley.1 1, Hamilton 20.82 Taras Pawlowsky.1 2Pt-Claire 21.06 Trent Bacon, 1 2St.John SC
21.08 Cameron Grant, 1 2,Stettler
21.56 Jeft Popoff,12,Sask Goldf 21.60 Pat Gostovic,12Guelph
200 METRES BREAST Rec: 2: 35.26 M.Young, E LAC, 8 2 235.26 Matthew Young,1 2,Elliot Lak 236.93 Brad Creelman.1 2Mississaug 247.04 Sean Koeller.1 2,Calg Case 247.80 Kevin O'Connell.1 2Dollard 247.87 Steve Gombai.1 ZWindsor 250.13 David Loyola.1 2,Dorado 251.56 Todd Major,12,Reg Waterl 251.61 Tom Papai,1 2Nepean 251.64 Cameron Grant,1 2,Stettler 251.69 Eric Smith, 1 2,Mtl-POM 253.41 Pat Gostovic,12Guelph 253.92 Trent Bacon, 1 2,St.John SC 255.67 John Earle.1 1.Winn SJS 256.71 Andrew Boyd,12Cobra 258.24 Pascal Lemieux,1 2Brossard
100 METRES FLY Rec:1:03.60 R.Hamel, Cow,76
05.32 Brad Creelman,1 2Mississaug 08.44 Jason Brandt,1 2,Etobicoke 08.60 Ivano Perin,1 2,Guelph 08.86 Matthew Young.1 2,Elliot Lak 09.77 Grant MacDonald.1 2Cambridge 09.81 Sebast'n Goulet.1 2Mtl-P0M 09.98 Eric Smith, 1 2,Mtl-POM 10.21 Taras Pawlowsky.1 2Pt-Claire 11.18 Nicholas Starace.1 2Mtl-Aquat 11.31 Troy Hudson.1 2Truro 11.46 Donald Kidd,1 2Mississaug 11.50 Rick Holt,12,Red Deer 11.56 Kevin Pyle.1 2Truro 11.62 Bernard Lapierre.1 1,Mtl-POM 11.72 Andrew Boyd,12Cobra
200 METRES FLY Rec:2:20.23 R.Hamel, Cow,76
227.56 Jason Brandt.1 2Etobicoke 227.73 Brad Creelman.1 2Mississaug 230.05 Bernard Lapierre,1 1,Mtl-POM 231.07 Eric Smith, 12Mtl-P0M 234.02 Don Haddow.1 2Etobicoke 235.83 Sebast'n Goulet,12,Mtl-POM 236.43 Trent McNicol,1 2London Y 236.50 Andrew Boyd,12Cobra
236.57 Grant MacDonald,1 2Cambridge 236.59 Donald Kidd,12,Mississaug
237.17 Ivano Perin,12Guelph 237.80 Yo Miyazaki,12,Surrey
237.91 Michael Rollason.1 2,North York 238.09 Todd Major, 12,Reg Waterl 238.68 Neil Murray.1 20sFiawa
200 METRES IND.MEDLEY Rec:2:23.31 B.Creelman. TOMAC.82 223.31 Brad Creelman.1 2Mississaug 226.25 Matthew Young.1 2,Elliot Lak 227.00 Jamie Bretzlaff.1 2,Sudb LUSC 227.50 Glenn DelBosco.1 2,Sudb LUSC 228.31 Eric Smith, 12,Mtl-POM
231.18 Sylvain Lanthier.1 2,Mtl-POM 231.77 David Loyola, 12,Dorado 233.14 Ivano Perin.1 2Guelph 233.71 Todd Major,12,Reg Waterl
234.42 Jason Brandt, 12,Etobicoke
234.43 Don Haddow.1 2Etobicoke 234.50 John Earle,1 1,Winn SJS 235.68 Patrick Gagnon.1 2,Brossard 236.27 Kevin Pyle.1 2Jruro
237.00 Grant MacDonald.1 ^Cambridge
400 METRES IND.MEDLEY Rec: 5:05.83 B.Creelman. TOMAC.83 5:05.83 Brad Creelman.1 2,Mississaug 5:12.94 Eric Smith.1 2Mtl-P0M 5:15.85 Sylvain Lanthier,12,Mtl-POM 5:2252 Jason Brandt,1 2,Etobicoke 5:24.29 Don Haddow.1 2Etobicoke 5:24.94 Ivano Perin,12Guelph 5:25.91 David Loyola.1 2,Dorado 5:25.96 Todd Major.12.Reg Waterl 5:28.09 Bernard Lapierre.1 2,Mtl-POM 5:31.43 Michael Rollason.1 2,North York 5:33.82 Sebast'n Goulet.1 2,Mtl-POM 5:34.37 Trent McNicol.1 2London Y 5:34.77 Kyle Seeback.1 2,Cobra 5:35.30 David Malar.1 I.Hamilton 5:36.10 John Earle.1 1.Winn SJS
4x50 METRES MEDLEY RELAY Rec: 2:10.16 Pomte Claire, ,81
21209 Mississauga,
215.30 Sudb LUSC,
216.52 Montreal POM,
216.59 Calg Cascade,
216.73 Etobicoke,
217.22 Reg Waterloo,
217.71 Cobra,
219.77 Pt-Claire,
219.86 Nepean,
220.20 Brossard,
221.03 Sask Goldfin,
221.93 Regina,
221.94 Dollard, 22238 North York, 22252 Windsor,
4x50 METRES FREE RELAY fiec:7:56.06 Pomte Claire. ,
1:57.17 Mississauga,
1:57.64 Montreal POM,
1:59.12 Pt-Claire,
200.52 Etobicoke,
200.67 Nepean,
201.47 Calg Cascade,
201.82 Reg Waterloo,
202.28 Burlington, 20278 Sask Goldfin,
204.29 Cobra, 204.79 Windsor, 205.00 Regina, 205.60 Sudb LUSC,
206.30 North York, 206.50 Dollard,
87
13-14
BOYS/ GARCONS
50 METRES FREE
Rec: 0:25.08 M.Tewskbury, UCSC.82
0:25.08 Mark Tewksbury,14,Univ.Calg
0:25.82 Steven Vandermeulen,13,vernon
0:25.93 Scott Flowers,14,Edm Olym
0:25.99 Chris Kettles,14,Sask Laser
0:26.08 Stephen Merker,14,Cobra
0:26.22 Martin Gaide,13,Etobicoke
0:26.24 John Seawnght,14,Mississaug
0:26.30 Peter HeuseT,14,Kingston Y
0:26.35 Craig Stroyan,14,Soo Y Dol
0:26.50 Ron Wohlert,14,Muskoka
0:26.60 Louis Deragon,14,Granby
0:26.65 Ted Schipper,14,Pt-Claire
0:26.67 Randy Fedderson,14,Calg Case
0:26.68 Bernhard Volz,14,North York
0:26.72 Robin Godfrey, 14,Dartmouth
100 METRES FREE Rec: 0:5 3.7 9 J.Sheehan, FSC.79 0:55.28 Mark Tewksbury,14,Univ.Calg 0:55.91 Steven Vandermeulen,13,Vernon 0:55.93 Stephen Merker,14,Cobra 0:56.09 Scott Flowers, 14,Edm Olym 0:57.07 Bernhard Volz,14,North York 0:57.25 John Seawnght,14,Mississaug 0:57.39 David Schmidt,14,Brock 0:57.54 Paul Szekula,14,Pt-Claire 0:57.57 Craig Stroyan,14,Soo Y Dol 0:57.67 Scott Venables,14,Sask YL 0:57.70 Louis Girouard,14,Ste-Foy 0:57.74 Mike Meldrum,14,Univ.Calg 0:57.85 Peter Heusel,14,Kingston 0:58.10 Randy Fedderson,14,Calg Case 0.58.18 Paul Staples,14,Nepean
200 METRES FREE flee: 7: 5 3.28 A.Baumann, LUSC.79 1:58.96 Scott Flowers, 14,Edm Olym 1:59.15 Stephen Merker,14,Cobra 1:59.56 Bernhard Volz,14,North York 200.17 Mark Tewksbury,14,Univ.Calg 203.27 Mike Meldrum,14,Univ.Calg 203.55 Paul Szekula,14,Pt-Claire
203.57 Paul Hebert,14,Winn Manta 203.78 Steven Vandermeulen,13,Vernon 205.53 Jay London, 14,Moncton 205.62 Dan Finch, 14,Regina
206.03 Mike Gurzi,13,Hamilton 206.20 Paul Staples,14,Nepean 206.40 Chris Fenton,14,Cobra
206.58 Scott Venables,14,Sask YL 206.87 Dean Lindal,14,Vic Olym
400 METRES FREE flee: 4: 00.17 A.Baumann, LUSC.7 9 4:09.40 Bernhard Volz,14,North York 4:11.10 Scott Flowers,14,Edm Olym 4:11.88 Stephen Merker,14,Cobra 4:15.28 Mark Tewksbury,14,Univ.Calg 4:20.46 Mike Meldrum,14,Univ.Calg 4:20.64 Paul Szekula,14,Pt-Claire 4:2295 Paul Hebert,14,Winn Manta 4:23.58 Louis Girouard,14,Ste-Foy 4:23.84 Paul Staples,14,Nepean 4:24.23 Eric Blouin,13,Laval 4:25.49 Greg Streppel,14,Cambndge 4:26.05 Ian Fenton,13,Oakville 4:26.08 Martin Giroux,14,Dollard 4:26.44 Jay London, 14,Moncton 4:26.61 Mike Gurzi,13,Hamilton
1500 METRES FREE flee: 75: 32.75 ASaumann, LUSC.79 16:26.80 Bernhard volz,14,North York 16:28.80 Scott Flowers,14,Edm Olym 16:36.56 Stephen Merker,14,Cobra 16:44.60 Paul Szekula,14,Pt-Claire 16:55.02 Martin Giroux,14,Dollard 16:58.95 Mark Tewksbury,14,Univ.Calg 17:13.86 Paul Hebert,14,Winn Manta 17:13.90 Greg Streppel,14,Cambridge 17:14.08 Eric Blouin,13,Laval 17:17.12 Steven Vandermeulen,13,Vernon 17:18.19 Chris Fenton,14,Cobra 17:19.40 Scott Greenwood, 14,Burlington 17:19.79 Louis Girouard,14,Ste-Foy 17:20.01 Mike Gurzi,13,Hamilton 17:24.03 Jamie King,14,Cdn.Dolph
100 METRES BACK Rec: 7: 07.74 S.Goss, NYAC.81 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
01.20 Mark Tewksbury,14,Univ.Calg 02.72 Scott Flowers, 14,Edm Olym 04.34 Mike Meldrum,14,Univ.Calg 04.98 Jay London, 14,Moncton 05.72 Steven Vandermeulen,13,Vernon 05.80 Craig Stroyan,14,Soo Y Dol 05.86 Randy Fedderson,14,Calg Case 05.96 Bernhard volz,14,North York 06.13 Kym Gallagher,l3,Calg Case 06.78 Paul Szekula,14,Pt-Claire 06.90 Robert Bertelink,14,Cobra 07.09 Peter Kremer,14,Pt-Claire 07.13 Robin Godfrey,14,Dartmouth
07.62 Louis Deragon,14,Granby
07.63 John MacKenzie,14,Ajax
200 METRES BACK Rec: 2:11.21 R.Ostermeier. HWAC.80 211.85 Mark Tewksbury,14,Univ.Calg 21235 Scott Flowers,14,Edm Olym 218.04 Mike Meldrum,14,Univ.Calg 218.73 Bernhard Volz,14,North York 221.46 Paul Szekula,14,Pt-Claire
221.49 Robert Bertelink,14,Cobra
221.69 Jay London, 14,Moncton
221.83 Kym Gallagher,13,Calg Case 22237 Louis Deragon,14,Granby
223.33 Peter Kremer,14,Pt-Claire 223.75 Chris Robb,14,Brantford 224.02 Stephen Merker,14,Cobra 224.37 Greg Streppel,14,Cambridge
224.84 Sylvain Hogue,14,Mtl-Aquat 225.24 John MacKenzie,14,Ajax
100 METRES BREAST Rec:l:07.71 T.Gray. Branl,79 1:09.47 David Leblanc,14,Mtl-P0M 1:11.12 Martin Tamme,14,Dollard 1:1226 Andrew Young,14,Elhot Lak 1:1273 Stephen Merker,14,Cobra 1:1284 Steve verseghy,14,Ajax 1:13.00 Mike Meldrum,14,Univ.Calq 1:13.04 Trevor Forsberg,14,Sask Goldf 1:13.11 Chris Harbeck,14,Winn Manta 1:13.31 Martin Blanchette,14,Mtl-Aquat 1:13.37 David Schmidt,14,Brock 1:13.54 Dane McArthur,14,Pr.Alb SL 1:13.76 Dan Finch,14,Regina 1:13.83 Mike Hoehn,14,Kit-Wat Y 1:13.90 Ron Markwart,14,Hyack 1:14.08 Don Birchenough,14,Pt-Claire
200 METRES BREAST Rec:2:25.84 ABaumann, LUSC.79 229.56 David Leblanc,14,Mtl-POM 233.15 Martin Tamme,14,Dollard
237.34 Stephen Merker,14,Cobra 238.66 Martin Blanchette,14,Mtl-Aquat 238.82 Dan Finch, 14,Regina
239.63 Craig Guest,13,Hamilton
239.70 Corey Bernard,13,Edm Keyano 239.80 Len Walker,14,Univ.Calg 240.21 David Schmidt,14,Brock 241.32 Greg Horie.13,Hamilton
241.50 Ron Markwart,14,Hyack 241.68 Dane McArthur,14,Pr.Alb SL 241.87 Chris Harbeck,14,Winn Manta 241.90 Mike Meldrum,14,Univ.Calg 241.94 Don Birchenough,14,Pt-Claire
25
100 METRES FLY Rec:0:58.81 F.Chalut, CAMO.81 1:01.00 Scott Flowers, 14,Edm Olym 1:0203 Steven Vandermeulen,13,Vernon 1:0251 Louis-M. Girouard,14,Ste-Foy 1:02.67 Bernhard Volz,14,North York 1:0286 Mike Gurzi,13,Hamilton 1:03.23 Scott lsaac,14,Calg Case 1:03.57 John Billy,14,Winn SJS 1:04.25 Claude Larochelle,14,Trois-Riv 1:04.26 Mike Meldrum,14,Univ.Calg 1:04.71 Jean-P. Emond,14,Mtl-Aquat 1:04.91 Craig Stroyan,14,Soo Y Dol 1:05.08 Chris Fenton,14,Cobra 1:05.10 Peter Kremer,14.Pt-Claire 1:05.50 Kym Gallagher,13,Calg Case 1:05.57 Mark Tewksbury,14,Univ.Calg
200 METRES FLY Rec:2:07.63 F.Chalut, CAMO.81 21263 Scott Flowers,14,Edm Olym 216.63 Bernhard Volz,14,North York
216.89 Steven Vandermeulen, 13, Vernon
216.90 Mike Gurzi,13,Hamilton 216.96 Mike Meldrum,14,Univ.Calg
218.68 Michel Drouin,14,Salaberry 220.83 Stephen Merker,14,Cobra
221.52 Jamie King,14,Cdn.Dolph
221.58 Paul Szekula,14,Pt-Claire 221.94 Scott lsaac,14,Calg Case 22229 Chris Fenton,14,Cobra
222.53 Stephen French, 14,Burlington
224.30 Greg Streppel,14,Cambridge 224.53 Kym Gallagher,13,Calg Case
224.59 Louis-M. Girouard,14,Ste-Foy
200 METRES IND.MEDLEY
Rec: 2:10.07 ASaumann, LUSC.79
216.11 Scott Flowers,14,Edm Olym 216.25 Mike Meldrum,14,Univ.Calg 216.46 Stephen Merker,14,Cobra
219.31 Mark Tewksbury,14,Univ.Calg
221.12 David Leblanc,14,Mtl-POM 221.14 Dan Finch, 14,Regina 22231 Bernhard Volz,14,North York 22234 Paul Hebert,14,Winn Manta 22287 Kym Gallagher,13,Calg Case 223.59 Jean-P. Emond,14,Mtl-Aquat 223.67 Scott Venables,14,Sask YL 223.87 Jay London, 14,Moncton 224.23 Peter Kremer,14,Pt-Claire 224.23 David Schmidt,14,Brock 224.38 Chris Fenton,14,Cobra
400 METRES IND.MEDLEY Rec:4:25.80 ASaumann, LUSC.79 4:46.63 Scott Flowers,14,Edm Olym 4:47.95 Stephen Merker,14,Cobra 4:48.45 Mike Meldrum,14,Univ.Calg 4:48.59 Bernhard Volz,14,North York 4:51.79 Mark Tewksbury,14,Univ.Calg 5:00.70 Dan Finch, 14,Regina 5:0200 David Leblanc,14,Mtl-POM 5:03.31 Chris Fenton,14,Cobra 5:03.76 Kym Gallagher,13,Calg Case 5:04.50 Eric Blouin,13,Laval 5:04.54 Louis-M. Girouard,14,Ste-Foy 5:04.82 Steven Vandermeulen,13, Vernon 5:05.76 Paul Szekula,14,Pt-Claire 5:06.17 Paul Hebert,14,Winn Manta 5:06.71 Sylvain Hogue,14,Mtl-Aquat
4x50 METRES MEDLEY RELAY Rec:1: 58.00 Univ.Calgary, ,83
1:58.00 Univ.Calgary,
1:59.90 Pt-Claire,
201.62 Cobra,
201.69 Calg Cascade, 20245 Elliot Lake, 20289 Sask Y Laser, 204.21 Hamilton, 204.30 Edm Olympian, 206.11 Cambridge, 207.20 Kit-Waterl Y, 207.37 Montreal POM, 207.40 Winn Manta, 207.77 North York, 208.27 Brock, 208.89 Sudb LUSC,
4x50 METRES FREE RELAY Rec:1:45.59 Calg Cascade, ,81
1:47.18 Calg Cascade,
1:47.47 Pt-Claire,
1:47.53 Cobra,
1:48.70 Univ.Calgary,
1:48.80 Sask Y Laser,
1:49.33 Elliot Lake,
1:51.76 Edm Olympian,
1:52.08 Kit-Waterl Y,
1:5221 Mississauga,
1:5226 Hamilton,
1:52.36 Tracy,
1:5242 Sudb LUSC,
1:5281 Winn Manta,
1:52.88 Cambridge,
1:5290 Man Marlin,
15-17 B
GARCO
50 METRES FREE
Rec: 0:23.32 PMcConnell, UPC AN, 7 9 0:24.28 Sandy Goss,16,North York 0:24.47 Jeff Sheehan,17,Univ.Calg 0:24.65 Blair Hicken,17,Univ.Toron 0:24.79 Glenn Luxenberg,17,Dollard 0:24.84 Gilles Deschenes,17,Hull Dauph 0:24.87 Francois Danis,17,Pt-Claire 0:24.88 Tarek Raafat,16,St.John SC 0:25.20 Steven Keith, 16,Oshawa 0:25.31 Andre Denton, 16,Univ.Toron 0:25.31 Stephen Lines,17,Winn Manta 0:25.35 Rod Archibald,17,Cdn.Dolph 0:25.36 Regent Lacoursiere,16,Mtl-Aquat 0:25.44 Steve Jones,17,Nepean 0:25.48 Peter Lightbody,15,Oakville 0:25.48 Neil Hodge, 16,Burlington
100 METRES FREE Rec:0:50.12 ASaumann, LUSC.81 0:52.02 Jeff Sheehan,17,Univ.Calg 0:5265 Sandy Goss,16,North York 0:53.19 Tom Ponting,17,Univ.Calg 0:53.27 Rod Archibald,17,Cdn.Dolph 0:53.86 Blair Hicken,17,Univ.Toron 0:53.89 Ralph VanDonselaar,16,Edm Olym 0:54.05 Tarek Raafat,16,St.John SC 0:54.34 Darren Hanvey,17,Mississaug 0:54.73 Gilles Deschenes,17,Hull Dauph 0:54.92 Trevor Jakisch,15,Winn Manta 0:54.97 Regent Lacoursiere,16,Mtl-Aquat 0:55.02 Steven Keith, 16,Oshawa 0:55.06 Neil Hodge,16,Burlington 0:55.14 Peter Lightbody,15,Oakville 0:55.17 Peter Webster, 15,London Y
200 METRES FREE Rec:1:47.83 ASaumann, LUSC.81 1:55.77 Sandy Goss,16,North York 1:56.50 Peter Webster,15,London Y 1:56.72 Tom Ponting,17,Univ.Calg 1:56.74 Ron Melnyk,17,London Y 1:57.18 Ralph VanDonselaar,16,Edm Olym 1:57.37 Trevor Jakisch,15,Winn Manta 1:57.51 Philip Skinder,16,Hyack 1:58.03 Rod Archibald, 17,Cdn.Dolph 1:58.30 Darren Hanvey,17,Mississaug 1:58.68 Regent Lacoursiere,16,Mtl-Aquat 1:58.82 Francois Dionne,17,Select 1:59.06 Michael Stark,16,Regina 1:59.12 Fin Donnelly,16,Hyack 1:59.77 Todd Poulsen,17,Univ.Calg 1:59.80 Blair Hicken,17,Univ.Toron
400 METRES FREE flee: 3: 47.65 ASaumann. LUSC.81 3:59.16 Sandy Goss,16,North York 4:04.21 Shane Esau,17,Univ.Calg 4.05.16 Fin Donnelly,16,Hyack 4:05.60 Ron Melnyk,17,London Y 4:06.19 Ralph VanDonselaar,16,Edm Olym 4:06.20 Peter Webster, 15,London Y 4:06.28 Tom Ponting,17,Univ.Calg 4:07.18 Trevor Jakisch,15,Winn Manta 4:08.13 Trevor Lamb,15,Univ.Calg 4:08.14 Darren Hanvey,17,Mississaug 4:08.16 Philip Skinder,16,Hyack 4:09.40 Keith Smout,17,Mississaug 4:10.49 Rob Chernoff,17,Univ.Calg 4:11.35 David Young,17,Cdn.Dolph 4:11.86 Mike Hamilton, 16,Univ.Calg
1500 METRES FREE Rec:15:08.85 ASaumann, LUSC.81 16:02.15 Fin Donnetly,16,Hyack 16:07.07 Shane Esau,17,Univ.Calq 16:14.40 Ron Melnyk,17,London Y 16:15.06 Trevor Lamb,17,Univ.Calg 16:16.05 Sandy Goss,16,North York 16:16.18 Tom Ponting,17,Univ.Calg 16:17.37 David Young,17,Cdn.Dolph 16:21.82 Darren Hanvey,17,Mississaug 16:22 20 Trevor Jakisch,15,Winn Manta 16:2226 Rod Archibald,17,Cdn.Dolph 16:25.47 Ralph VanDonselaar,16,Edm Oly 16:27.11 Geoff Donelly,17,Cdn.Dolph 16:36.33 Mike Hamilton,16,Univ.Calg 16:37.52 Keith Smout,17,Mississaug 16:38.56 Chris Bowie,16,Cdn.Dolph
100 METRES BACK flec:0;55.46 M.West. ROW.82 0:58.72 Sandy Goss,16,North York 1:00.72 Roland Ostermeier,17,Hamilton 1:00.83 Jeff Sheehan,17,Univ.Calg 1:01.06 Francois Danis,17,Pt-Claire 1:0204 Mike Bushore,15,Univ.Calg 1:0218 Francois Dionne,17,Select 1:0 2 25 Tarek Raafat,16,St.John SC 1:0239 Gary Vandermeulen, 17, Vernon 1:0276 Malcolm Latta,17,Univ.Calg 1:0280 Kevin Draxinger,15,Kelowna 1:0291 Stephen Lines,17,Winn Manta 1:03.03 Ian McElroy,16,Hamilton 1:03.17 David Seabrook,17,Fredercfn 1:03.18 Tom Ferguson, 17,Cdn.Dolph 1:03.20 Henry Hebert,15,Bonaventur
200 METRES BACK
Rec: 2: 01.19 M.West. ROW.82
203.80 Sandy Goss,16,North York
207.92 Roland Ostermeier,17,Hamilton
211.93 Jeff Sheehan,17,Univ.Calg 212.13 Francois Dionne,17,Select 21251 Deke Botsford,15,Mississaug 213.13 Malcolm Latta,17,Univ.Calg
213.23 Kevin Bushore,15,Univ.Calg 213.25 Kevin Draxinger,15,Kelowna 213.36 Tom Ponting,17,Univ.Calg
213.40 Gary Vandermeulen, 17, Vernon 213.75 Tarek Raafat,16,St.John SC 214.32 David Kwasny,16,Thun Bay
215.34 Tom Ferguson, 17,Cdn.Dolph 216.07 Geoff Donelly,17,Cdn.Dolph
216.19 Ian McElroy,l6,Hamilton
100 METRES BREAST Rec:1: 01.36 V.Davis, ROW.82 1:05.12 Rob Chernoff,17,Univ.Calg 1:07.04 Tim Salpeter,17,Edm Olym 1:07.30 Darcy Wallingford,16,Sudb LUSC 1:07.87 Matt Lougheed,17,Hyack 1:08.00 Francois Danis,17,Pt-Claire 1:08.02 Greg Barbour,16,Oakville 1:08.10 Steve Thomas,17,Hamilton 1:08.15 Marc Lapalme,17,Tracy 1:08.33 Rod Archibalds 7,Cdn.Dolph 1:09.15 Mike Hamilton,16,Univ.Calg 1:09.18 Trevor Jakisch,15,Winn Manta 1:09.19 Albert Shaar,16,Mtl-POM 1:09.29 Darren Hanvey,17,Mississaug 1:09.56 Simon Baronet, 17,Cap Rouge 1:09.61 Steve Ohi,17,North York
200 METRES BREAST
Rec: 2:11.54 V.Davis, ROW.82
221.20 Rob Chernoff,17,Univ.Calg 225.83 Tim Salpeter,17,Univ.Calg
226.10 Darcy Wallingford,16,Sudb LUSC
227.11 Jamie Kemp,16,Trent 227.96 Trevor Jakisch,15,Winn Manta
228.35 Greg Barbour,16,Oakville 228.39 Albert Shaar,16,Mtl-POM 2.28.49 Mike Hamilton,16,Univ.Calg 229.02 Bruce Gilley,16,Univ.Calg 229.99 Darren Hanvey,17,Mississaug
230.24 Steve Thomas,17,Hamilton 230.28 Simon Baronet, 17,Cap Rouge
230.49 Marc Lapalme,17,Tracy 231.16 Ron Melnyk,17,London Y
231.41 Marc Laplame,17,Tracy
100 METRES FLY Rec: 0:56.01 RSethel, CDSC.80 0:56.77 Tom Ponting,17,Univ.Calg 0:57.80 Frederic Chalut,16,Mtl-Aquat 0:58.24 Jon Kelly,16,Vic Olym 0:58.42 Steve Lines,17,Winn Manta 0:58.85 Neil Hodqe,16,Burlington 0:59.24 John McCaffray,17,Pr.George 0:59.52 Todd Poulsen,17,Univ.Calg 1:00.10 Shane Esau,17,Univ.Calg 1:00.30 Gary Vandermeulen, 17,Vernon 1:00.47 Marc Lapalme,17,Tracy 1:00.48 Darren Hanvey,17,Mississaug 1:00.48 Trevor Lamb,15,Univ.Calg 1:00.52 Glenn Luxenberg,17,Dollard 1:00.72 Roland Ostermeier,17,Hamilton 1:00.98 Jim Tunney,17,Glouc-Ott
200 METRES FLY Rec: 1:58.44 V.Davis, ROW.82 206.22 Tom Ponting,17,Univ.Calg 206.98 Shane Esau,17,Univ.Calg 207.52 Jon Kelly,16,Vic Olym 208.31 John McCaffray,17,Pr.George
208.50 Frederic Chalut,16,Mtl-Aquat 209.15 Stephen Lines,17,Winn Manta 211.18 Geoff Donelly,17,Cdn.Dolph
211.59 Neil Hodge,16,Burlington
211.60 Gary Vandermeulen, 17, Vernon 211.83 Trevor Lamb,15,Univ.Calg 21208 David Young, 17,Cdn.Dolph 21230 Roland Ostermeier,17,Hamilton 21236 Keith Smout,17,Mississaug 213.74 Marc Lapalme,17,Tracy 213.78 Trevor Jakisch,15,Winn Manta
200 METRES I.M.
Rec: 2: 00.43 ASaumann, LUSC.81 205.03 Sandy Goss,16,North York 205.99 Jeff Sheehan,17,Univ.Calg 208.30 Rob Chernoff,17,Univ.Calq 210.68 Trevor Jakisch,15,Winn Manta 211.11 Tom Ponting,17,Univ.Calg 211.28 Francois Danis,17,Pt-Claire 21225 Mike Hamilton,16.Univ.Calg 21253 Rod Archibald, 17,Cdn.Dolph 21271 Darren Hanvey,17,Mississaug 213.32 Frederic Chalut,16,Mtl-Aquat 213.76 Jamie Kemp,16,Trent 213.95 Jon Kelly,16,Vic Olym 214.14 Deke Botsford,15,Mississaug 214.18 Philip Skinder,16,Hyack 214.21 Steven Lines,17,Winn Manta
400 METRES I.M. Rec:4:12.67 ASaumann, LUSC.81 4:29.56 Sandy Goss,16,North York 4:30.04 Jeff Sheehan,17,Univ.Calg 4:32.11 Rob Chernoff,17,Univ.Calg 4:37.75 Trevor Jakisch,15,Winn Manta 4:39.22 Geoff Donelly,17,Cdn.Dolph 4:40.68 Mike Hamilton,16,Univ.Calg 4:41.22 Frederic Chalut,16,Mtl-Aquat 4:41.50 Darren Hanvey,17,Mississaug 4:41.53 Deke Botsford,15,Mississaug 4:41.65 Roland Ostermeier,17,Hamilton 4:43.48 Philip Skinder,16,Hyack 4:44.10 Rod Archibald,17,Cdn.Dolph 4:46.33 Darcy Wallingford,16,Sudb LUSC 4:46.60 Jon Kelly, 16,Vic Olym 4:47.08 Tarek Raafat,16,StJohn SC
4x50 MEDLEY RELAY flec;7;50.50 Univ.Calgary, ,82
1:53.54 Winn Manta,
1:54.26 Oakville,
1:54.52 Sask Goldfin,
1:54.88 Mississauga,
1:57.71 Man Marlin,
1:57.96 Dollard,
1:58.12 Montreal POM,
1:58.30 Pr.George,
1:58.44 Glouc-Ottawa,
1:58.90 Vic Olympian,
1:59.27 Mtl-Aquatic,
1:59.38 Burlington,
1:59.64 Pt-Claire,
200.24 Trent,
200.89 Univ.Calgary,
4x50 FREE RELAY Rec: 1:36. 7 8 Pointe Claire, ,78
1:40.32 Winn Manta,
1:42.22 Mississauga,
1:44.42 North York,
1:44.80 Oakville,
1:44.80 Vic Olympian,
1:45.00 Pr.George,
1:45.25 Burlington,
1:45.49 Mtl-Aquatic,
1:45.50 Sask Goldfin,
1:45.84 Pt-Claire,
1:46.10 Glouc-Ottawa,
1:46.38 Dollard.
1:46.51 Man Marlin,
1:46.90 Trent,
1:47.08 Edm Keyano,
Record breakers
Records bettered during January 1983
WORLD BEST (25 m pool)
MEN
7:44.53 Jeff Kostoff, United States 3:39.82 Soviet Union
800 m free 400 m MR WOMEN 100 m free 200 m free 100 m back
53.99 Birgit Meineke, German Dem.Rep 1:56.35 Birgit Meineke, German Dem.Rep 1:00.43 Kristin Otto, German Dem.Rep 59.97 Kristin Otto, German Dem.Rep 200 m back 2: 10.80 Cornelia Sirch. German Dem.Rep 2:07.74 Cornelia Sirch, German Dem.Rep 400 m MR 4:02.85 German Democratic Republic 400 m FR 3:41.74 German Democratic Republic NA TIONAL AGE GROUP (25 m pool) GIRLS 11-12
400 m free 4:26.04 Miriam Ticktin, Pointe Claire SC BOYS 11-12 100 m free 400 m i.m. BOYS 13-14 400 m MR
200 m MR
56.93 Brad Creelman, Mississauga Aquatic Club 5:05.83 Brad Creelman, Mississauga Aquatic Club
4: 18.10 University of Calgary Swim Club Tewksbury, Walker, Meldrum, Dowdle 1:58.00 University of Calgary Swim Club Tewksbury, Walker, Meldrum, Dowdle
Indianapolis Goteborg
Indianapolis
Indianapolis
Rostock
Indianapolis
Rostock
Indianapolis
Indianapolis
Indianapolis
Markham Markham
Calgary Calgary
Jan. 7 Dec. 18
Jan. 9 Jan. 7 Dec.15 Jan. 8 Dec. 16 Jan. 9 Jan. 8 Jan.9
Pointe Claire Jan. 8
Jan. 15 Jan. 16
Jan. 1 5 Jan. 16
26
Making Waves
Steven Vandermeulen, 13,
TA G Perfromances
Long Course 100 free 8) 58.01 200 free 23)2:08.87 400 free 40)4:34.15 100 back 10) 1:06.90 100fly 11) 1:03.92 200 fly 44)2:29.70 200 im 34)2:27.79
Vernon Kokanee SC
50 free 100 free 200 free 400 free 1500 fr 100 back 200 back 100 fly 200 fly 200 im 400 im
Short Course 2) 25.82 2) 55.91 8) 2:03.78
18) 4:28.10
10) 17:17.12 5) 1:05.72
24) 2:29.27
2) 1:02.03
3) 2:16.89 22) 2:26.40 12) 5:04.82
Steven Vandermeulen's travel to competition in Eastern Canada brought a welcome discovery. He's a better swimmer than he thought
"It's exciting. I didn't expect to do quite as well as I did. I wanted to win medals but I thought it would be a lot harder," he said about his racing at the recent Youth Cup.
He's got reason to be surprised since the meet in Etobicoke was only his second competition outside British Columbia and Alberta. The Vernon, B.C. native will add to his experience by taking advantage of a two week club trip to Modesto, California for training and a meet this year
The trip is possible now that the Vernon Kokanees, 100-strong under coach Tom Bryce, have a club van. The California experience will beef up the 6,000-metres a day Steven is able to log in a 25-metre pool.
As a grade nine student, Steven doesn't have time for other sports or even to attend all his classes due to the effort in swimmimg. "Most of the teachers understand," he says.
Rhonda Mayes, 13, Edmonton Keyano SC TAG Performances
Long Course 100 free 7) 1:01.20 50 free 200 free 26)2:14.90 100 free 400 free 43)4:48.32 200 free 100 fly 32) 1:09.82 100 fly 200 im 57)2:38.40
Short Course 5) 28.04
10) 1:00.95
11) 2:11.05 23) 1:09.30
Sprint specialist Rhonda Mayes just tries to do her best
The 13 year old sprinter from Edmonton Keyano SC specializes in the 50-100 free and some sprint fly. Top rated as 12 year old, Rhonda aims to make her mark on the national scene this year.
Like most sprinters, her strong point is racing. She loves to compete. Training is not her favourite activity. But in a race she becomes a different person and becomes very aggressive.
Kicking is her favourite type of training together with stroke drills. Rhonda prefers short course swimming mostly because of the extra turns.
She is interested in other sports, most notably baseball.
Rhonda Mayes
Scott Flowers
David Evans
Scott Flowers, 14, Olympian Swim Club TAG Performances
Long Course Short Course
100 free 7) 57.86 50 free 3) 25.93
200free 2)2:01.02 100free 4) 56.09
400free 3)4:12.47 200 free 1)1:58.96
1500fr 6)17:05.71 400 free 2)4:11.10
100back 1)1:03.28 1500fr 2)16:28.80
200back 1)2:12.97 100back 2)1:02.72
100 fly 5)1:02.75 200 back 2)2:12.35
200 fly 3)2:17.40 100 fly 1)1:01.00
200 im 3)2:20.56 200 fly 1)2:12.63
400 im 3)4:58.40 200 im 1)2:16.11
400 im 1)4:46.63
Edmonton Olympian's Scott Flowers is beginning to enjoy the sweet smell of success. His freestyle, butterfly and individual medley times are coming down quickly despite a major training lay-off in November due to chicken pox.
"This is our hard work season," says Scott who trains under coach Don Packer. By that he means daily double workouts totalling three-and-a-half to four hours, grinding out as much as 8500-metres in a single two-and-a-half workout Twice a week land training includes jogging and resistance work with surgical tubing or Swim Bench.
Last December, Scott took a week off school to compete at the Youth Cup in Etobicoke followed the next weekend by Pointe Claire's big age group meet. He sampled a few days training with the Pointe Claire Swim Club too.
"I do extra homework and I get all the stuff that I would miss," says Scott a grade nine student "I get A's in all my core subjects." He also finds time to build models and ski.
Scott's three years with the Olympians were preceded by two years with the Ottawa Kingfish and two seasons with a summer club in St. Albert {just outside Edmonton}. When Scott turns 15 in May he'll have logged almost eight years of training.
David Evans, 16, Edmonton Keyano SC TAG Performances
Long Course Short Course
1500fr 30)17:13.10 100br 20)1:10.24
200 back 48) 2:20.91 200 br 19)2:31.89
100 br 12)1:10.66 400 im 17)4:47.48 200 br 2)2:29.44 200 im 17)2:17.10 400 im 11)4:47.41
After two years in Edmonton, David Evans is aiming for a medal at the nationals.
Formerly from Thunder Bay in Ontario, Evans moved to swim with the Keyanos under coach Dave Johnson during 1980. He was 14 at the time, and was fortunate to be able to live with an aunt.
A breaststroke' specialist who is aiming to move up in the national rankings in the coming season his best showing was at the winter nationals with a 12th in the 200 breast
In early season training, Dave trains mainly freestyle, about 8000 metres daily. At the end of the season, near taper, the emphasis shifts to stroke sets. He can usually tell how he is doing by a set of 50's on very short rest. An example would be 3 sets of 4x50 breast with five second rests. He can usually keep the 50's around 37.
Dave figures to be down in the low 220's this winter, with luck even under 220.
The key to a good breaststroke, according to Dave, is "to get up" and get his body position above the water surface. He tries to train with good form by concentrating on the arm pull which he feels to be his strong point
Main rivals according to Evans are Darcy Wallingford from Sudbury, Rob Chernoff and Marco Veilleux, He feels that having the current world record holder Victor Davis in Canada makes everyone work harder.
ECONOMY BACKSTROKE FLAGS - (Not shown) Our economical backstroke flags made of lightweight plastic, red/white/blue in 31 M lengths. $22.99 each. SWL BACKSTROKE FLAGS - Our deluxe backstroke flags, heavy duty vinyl with strong nylon cord. Red/white/blue, 31 M lengths. $34.99 each.
SWL STADIUM CUSHIONS - Strong vinyl covering over soft filler. Ideal for the swim spectator at the next meet. Size 36cm x 36cm. $3.99 each.
SWL TOTE BAG — Our ever popular tote bag, manufactured of strong vinyl with cord around the rim for easy carrying. Size 28cm x 60cm x 20cm. $2.99 each.
SWL SENIOR SWIM EQUIPMENT BAG - Our most popular swim bag ever. Made of heavy duty nylon, large bag 52cm x 26cm x 30cm. Has 10cm end pocket, two way zipper for easy opening and closing, side pockets for hand paddles and goggles, and shoulder strap. Available in red/white, royal/ white, navy/white/red. (Special team colours available green/ white, brown/white, silver/navy, minimum quantity 20 bags.) $24.99 each.
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KIEFER COMPETITOR PACE CLOCK - This new, 80cm, octagonally-shaped battery pace clock is engineered for optimum visibility at great distances. The minute and second hands are of rust proof tempered aluminum and easily visible through the clear shatter-proof polyester lens. The clock is manufactured of heat resistant cross-link polyethylene. $293.00 each.
KIEFER ROLL-AWAY STAND - (Not shown) The convenient easy-to-use, roll away stand makes pace clock installation portability a snap. $60.00 each.
DI2ARD PACE CLOCK - The most popular Pace Clock. Has clear dial, readable over long distances with fraction second index. Four coloured sweep second hands and returnable minute indicator, reliable electric, synchron movement. Available in either wall or stand models 92cm diameter. $325.00 each.
THROW LINES/HEAVING BALLS - A sturdy inflated ball. Enclosed in a grasping net and 14M of poly life line which even children can throw with ease and accuracy. Double ball line. $24.75 each.
RING BUOYS - Flexible vinyl from: 47cm, 62cm, 76cm life ring, tough outer shell inner core made of rigid polyurethane, soft surface. Grab line made of nylon. Ministry of Transport approved. $49.00, 57.00, 75.00 each. RING BUOYS - Three 'Aero-O-Buoy' life rings to choose from: 52cm, 62cm and 76cm in orange. Tough outer shell resistant to vandalism with nylon grab line. Ministry of Transport approved. $37.75, 49.75, 72.75 each. SHEPHERD'S HOOK - 4.4M long pole with hook, 2 piece anodized shaft and hook head. Special safe guard head. $39.75 each.
TRAPEZE LIFE-SAVING POLE - With trapeze and, two- piece anodized aluminum. Four metres in length.$37.75 each. NON-CONDUCTIVE RESCUE POLE - (Not shown) Available in two sizes, made of Fiberglass, orange. Pole 3.7M or 5.2M long. $195.00 or 230.00 each
LIFE HOOK — (Not shown) with two bolts and wing nuts. Anodized double tube hook. $37.75 each. SPINEBOARD — Waterproof rescue spineboard constructed mainly of plywood with Fiberglass coating. Includes nylon mesh straps, multiple hand slipholes, to easily secure victims in transport. $169.00 each.
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