Missouri State Gets Verbal From Local Butterflyer Noah Witzki
NEW COMMIT: Liberty, Missouri’s Noah Witzki has declared his in-state verbal intention to swim for Missouri State next fall. He will join the class of 2023 and plans to major in cell and
NEW COMMIT: Liberty, Missouri’s Noah Witzki has declared his in-state verbal intention to swim for Missouri State next fall. He will join the class of 2023 and plans to major in cell and
NEW COMMIT: Miami University of Ohio has gained a new verbal commitment for the class of 2023 from Norwood, Mass. native Fitz Miller. Miller does his club swimming with Kingfish Swimming and
By Emily Thirion, Swimming World College Intern. Swimming is one of the most grueling, time consuming, and wholly demanding sports to exist. Those who begin age group swimming at a
NEW COMMIT: High school junior and Waynesville, Ohio native Owen Conley has announced his in-state verbal commitment to the Buckeyes as a member of the class of 2024. Conley swims year-round for Dayton
With a break in international meets and the college season still ramping up, the biggest story of the week was a former Olympic gold medalist giving birth to her first
(O’FALLON, Ill., Oct. 20) – The McKendree University swimming and diving program hosted four teams in a meet on Saturday afternoon. The men’s team swam against Saint Louis University, Southern
The European preliminaries of the FINA Men’s Water Polo World League 2019 kick-off tomorrow on Tuesday October 23 across various European cities. Fourteen (14) teams are taking part in the
FINA is delighted to announce the dates and hosts of the 2019 FINA Swimming World Cup, an annual competition launched in 1979 which gathers the world’s swimming elite in a
Each day through October 26, Swimming World will take you back 50 years to the 1968 Mexico City Olympics, and will re-tell the stories of those Games through archived meet
By Michael Randazzo, Swimming World Contributor Though he hasn’t donned a referee’s whites in almost a decade, Dr. Loren Bertocci’s influence on water polo—both in the U.S. and abroad—remains pronounced.