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Swimming World Weekly Splash

Why I Shouldn't Have Quit Swimming, Brooke Forde: No Issue Racing Against Lia Thomas, New Hokie Pool Record, CSCAA Selects Scholar All-America Teams, and Americans Lose Out at Worlds Postponement

Why I Shouldn’t Have Quit Swimming

First let me start off with why I did quit.

As a kid, I hated swimming. I would cry when my parents dragged me to the pool for basic safety lessons. They used to bribe me with White Castle Sliders out of desperation. Fast forward a few years, and I had somehow found myself on a competitive team. It was so ironic. I attended my first meet at 12 years old, which was relatively late compared to my peers. Leading up to my first race, the 100 breast, my nerves were off the charts. Behind the blocks, I was seriously considering making a run for the parking lot. After the race, I met my dad in the locker room. I still felt uneasy, but I vividly remember saying, “that was actually kinda fun!”

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Brooke Forde: ‘I Will Not Have a Problem Racing Against Lia Thomas at NCAAs’

A handful of U.S. National Team swimmers and past Olympic gold medalists have given their opinion on whether transgender swimmer Lia Thomas deserves to be permitted to compete in women’s events on the NCAA level, but none of Thomas’ potential collegiate rivals have spoken out previously. However, Stanford fifth-year swimmer Brooke Forde chimed in this week as she passed along comments to her father, Sports Illustrated writer Pat Forde, to share on the Yahoo Sports College Football podcast.

Brooke Forde wrote that she has “great respect” for Thomas and admiration for Thomas’ courage in becoming one of the first trans female athletes to race at a high level in swimming. She added that “treating people with respect and dignity is more important than any trophy or record will ever be.”

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Youssef Ramadan Sets 100 Fly Pool Record in Virginia Tech Romp over Penn State

Virginia Tech’s Youssef Ramadan swam a pair of school records and won three events as the Hokies swept Penn State in a pair of decisive wins.

The No. 13 ranked Va Tech men scored a 196.5-103.5 win, while the women coasted to a 213-83 victory.

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CSCAA Selects 728 Teams From 450 Colleges as Scholar All-America Teams


The College Swimming and Diving Coaches Association of America (CSCAA) has selected 728 teams from 450 institutions to the Scholar All-America Team for the Fall 2021 semester. Teams were selected on the basis of their Fall 2021 grade point averages and represent 18,029 student-athletes. Of these teams 519 earned a GPA of 3.30 or above making them eligible for the Intercollegiate Coach Association Coalition All-Sport Academic Standings.
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American Swimmers Lose Big With No World Championships in 2022

The World Championships will not happen in 2022. FINA has yet to confirm the postponement, but it now seems inevitable that the Fukuoka meet will be pushed back for a second time after it was originally delayed to May 2022 to accommodate the also-rescheduled Olympics.

Ironically, for most of the world’s top swimmers, the decision is no big deal. No Worlds in May? Fine, there’s still another international championship meet to come after that. Swimmers representing British Commonwealth nations (including Australia, Canada and South Africa) will compete in the Commonwealth Games in early August, and many top Australians were considering skipping World to concentrate on the Commonwealth Games. The European Championships will also be in August, and the Asian Games are set for September.

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