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Author name: DNOWS

Steven Muñatones was an American water polo player, a collegiate swimmer, and an open water swimmer from Huntington Beach, California. He has been a coach, administrator, writer, race director, kayaker, paddler, official, observer, author, lifeguard, reporter, Olympic commentator, aquapreneur, and adviser in the the sport of open water swimming. He founded the World Open Water Swimming Association, Daily News of Open Water Swimming, Oceans Seven, WOWSA Awards, Openwaterpedia, KAATSU Global, and KAATSU Research Foundation and served as an ambassador for the American Heart Association. He has written over 21,344 articles on open water swimming, water polo, and KAATSU to date. He received the 1984 Harvard University John B. Imrie Award, 1990 Guinness World Record, 2001, 2005, 2007 USA Swimming Open Water Swimming Committee Award, 2002 Honor Swimmer, International Marathon Swimming Hall of Fame, 2007 & 2010 USA Swimming Glen S. Hummer Award, 2010 Irving Davids-Captain Roger Wheeler Memorial Award from the International Swimming Hall of Fame, 2016 Poseidon Award from the International Swimming Hall of Fame, 2018 Vermont Open Water Swimming Hall of Fame, 2019 Honor Contributor - Media of the International Ice Swimming Hall of Fame, 2022 Dale Petranech Award for Services to the International Marathon Swimming Hall of Fame.

Sidney Russell Does 2 To Add to Catalina’s 15

Over the last nearly 100 years of Catalina Channel swimming history, there have been over 800 solo one-way crossings of the channel, but only 15 successful two-way crossings. On Tuesday, mother-of-two 37-year-old Sidney Russell (37, USA, MSF bio here) completed a 27 hour 52 minute 64.6 km two-way crossing of the Catalina Channel from Palos Verdes Peninsula to Santa Catalina Island and […]

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Britta Schwengle Represents Aruba, Making Her Father Extremely Proud

In 1988, Roly Bisslik [shown below] became the first person to swim 30 km in over 10 hours from Venezuela to Aruba in a charity swim in order to raise funds to buy a piece of land to build an Olympic swimming pool for the community of Aruba, later named Piscina Olimpico Roly Bisslik.30 years later, Bisslik coached 5 swimmers to

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No Surprise: Moesha Johnson Leads Open Water Swimming Global Rankings

As of July 20th at the conclusion of the open water events at the 2025 World Aquatics Championships, Moesha Johnson (27, Australia, MSF bio here, World Aquatics bio here, @swimmer_moe) stood on top of the 5 km and 10 km podiums, as well of the World Aquatics global rankings (see below). Her 14,580 point total

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Germany Wins Mixed Relay, Florian Wellbrock Anchors Team to 4th Gold Medal at the World Championships

Unbelievable. Simply unbelievable. Four races and four gold medals. In clearly dominant fashion. Florian Wellbrock (27, Germany, MSF bio here, World Aquatics bio here, @flo.swim) was absolutely Phelpsian (Spitzian) in conditions that would be unfathomable in the controlled environment of a 50m pool: The first three German swimmers of Celine Rieder (24, World Aquatics bio here) + Oliver Klemet

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Alessandra Rossi Cima Becomes First Brazilian To Achieve The Oceans Seven

Alessandra Rossi Cima (Brazil, 50, MSF bio here, @ale_rossi_cima_swims) has traveled around the world enjoying aquatic challenges of all kinds, traveling from in her home training base in Dubai. Her latest stop was in northern Japan where she conquered the Tsugaru Channel between Aomori and Hokkaido. She is still in disbelief that she became the

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Karen Ennis – She Came, She Swam, She Will Return (to Tsugaru in her Quest for the Oceans Seven)

Karen Ennis (53, Great Britain, MSF bio here, IISA bio here) summed up her message on her escort boat, “I am so sorry.” Today simply was not her day across the Tsugaru Channel in northern Japan – which would have been her seventh of the Oceans Seven channels – to achieve goal is to become the

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