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Masters Swimming Canada is a Canadian organization that supports and promotes Masters Swimming nationally, in cooperation with provincial bodies and clubs. [1] Masters Swimming is a club-based organization that maintains a list of all Masters clubs in the country, and oversees structured swimming programs for adults which include competitions in pools or open water. The word "Masters" in Masters Swimming refers to age and not skill level. In Canada, swimmers must be 18 years of age to register as a Masters Swimmer. The slogan of Masters Swimming Canada is "Fun and Friendship, Health and Wellness, Participation and Achievement". [2]
Masters Swimming Canada is registered as a federally incorporated non-profit corporation and is governed by an elected board of directors. Registered Masters clubs are the voting members of the corporation. The board of directors acts as a policy-governance board with an executive director responsible for ongoing operations. It is a member of Swimming Natation Canada Inc., the national governing body for swimming in Canada.
Canada's first Masters Swimming club was established in 1971 by Hud Stewart, a professor at Osgoode Hall Law School and a Canadian track and field Olympian who had become interested in adult fitness. Stewart and his friend Al Waites had entered the second US Masters National Championship in Amarillo on May 7 and May 8, 1971, alongside 106 US swimmers. On his return to Toronto, Stewart established Canada's first Masters Club, "The University of Toronto Masters", swimming at Hart House and consisting primarily of university staff, as well as some older students who were not on the University swim teams.
Masters Swimming Canada oversees competition programs for Masters Swimming, including short and long course pool competition as well as open water events, maintaining a calendar of all sanctioned competitions, a database of competitive results, the national rankings, and the Canadian national Masters records. [3] The organization also, through Swimming Canada, maintains the Canadian Masters Swimming Rule Book, which governs all Masters swimming competitions in Canada.
Masters Swimming Canada organizes the annual Canadian Masters Swimming Championships. A bidding process is conducted each year for the selection of a local organizing committee.
The Million Metre Challenge is a Masters Swimming Canada program that allows swimmers to track their training by recording the number of metres swum in each workout online. As swimmers reach various milestone distances they receive recognition and awards. The program also has components involving total metres swum by clubs and virtual swims where individual and club metres achieved are plotted on maps. Swimmers can log distances by strokes, kicking, and drills, or by total metres, and can record further specifics or notes.
Like so much of master swimming in Canada, the history of tracking workouts has it roots in Ontario. A summary of that history is publshed on the Masters Swimming Ontario website.
Marilyn Grace Bell Di Lascio is a Canadian retired long distance swimmer. She was the first person to swim across Lake Ontario and later swam the English Channel and Strait of Juan de Fuca.
Medley Swimming is a combination of four different swimming styles—backstroke, breaststroke, butterfly, and freestyle—into one race. This race is either swum by one swimmer as individual medley (IM) or by four swimmers as a medley relay.
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Bluevale Collegiate Institute is a secondary school in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, run by the Waterloo Region District School Board. As of the 2019–2020 school year, Bluevale has an enrollment of 1,240 students. The school opened in 1972 under the direction of principal Robert Chilton, and vice-principal Charlie Wilson, initially with grades 9 through 11, adding grades 12, and then 13 in subsequent years. Bluevale's new school boundary took in students previously registered at Cameron Heights Collegiate Institute, Kitchener–Waterloo Collegiate, and Waterloo Collegiate Institute. As of 2022, the principal is Deborah Tyrrell.
U.S. Masters Swimming (USMS), founded in 1970, is a national membership nonprofit supporting masters swimming in the United States. The program began when the first National Masters Swimming Championships were held on May 2, 1970 at the Amarillo Aquatic Club pool with a few dozen swimmers. Captain Ransom J. Arthur, M.D., a San Diego Navy doctor, had persuaded John Spannuth, President of American Swimming Coaches Association, that the event would give older swimmers a goal for keeping physically fit. Arthur's mission of encouraging adults to improve fitness through swimming has grown over the years into a nationwide organization that currently includes more than 60,000 adult swimmers.
Masters swimming is a special class of competitive swimming for swimmers 25 years and older. Premasters is normally included as well, from 18 years old or 20 years old (Europe).
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Ellen Elizabeth King was a Scottish competitive swimmer who represented Great Britain twice in the Olympics, and Scotland at the inaugural British Empire Games. King was a versatile swimmer, and competed in various backstroke, breaststroke, freestyle swimming events.
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Marion Beverly Lay, is a former competitive swimmer who represented Canada in the 1964 Summer Olympics and 1968 Summer Olympics. Swimming the anchor leg for Canada's third-place team in the women's 4x100-metre freestyle relay, she won an Olympic bronze medal, together with teammates Angela Coughlan, Marilyn Corson and Elaine Tanner.
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