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Masters swimming

Competitive swimming for over 25 year olds


Summary

Competitive swimming for over 25 year olds

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 (Canada, United States, United Kingdom and Australia) or 20 years old (Europe).

In Canada ten thousand swimmers in more than 250 clubs are organized within the Masters Swimming Canada organization. In the United States around sixty thousand masters swimmers are supported by U.S. Masters Swimming, in more than 1,500 masters swimming clubs or workout groups.

Rules

The rules and distances are nearly the same as for senior swimming, but "breaststroke kicking movement is permitted for butterfly", and meet programs include mixed relay events (2 men / 2 women). The latter one is now copied by seniors.

Age categories

Individual swimmers compete within age groups of five years, determined by the swimmer's age on 31 December current year (in U.S. for meets held in non-metric pools, the age is determined as of the day of the competition). The age groups are: A:25–29 (years old), B:30–34, C:35–39, D:40–44; E:45–49; F:50–54, G:55–59; H:60–64, I:65–69, J:70–74; K:75–79; L:80–84, M:85–89, N:90–94, P:95–99, Q:100–104, R:105–109 and so on at 5-year increments as necessary. In 2014 Jaring Timmermann from Canada, at the age of 105, set a world record as the oldest, but he died the same year.

For Masters relay events, the age groups are determined by the combined age of the team participants in 40 years increments. This allows swimmers of different ages to compete together in a team, as long as each swimmer is Masters (at least 25 years old). Combined age groups are: A:100–119 (years old), B:120–159, C:160–199, D:200–239, E:240–279, F:280–319, G:320–359 and so on if ever necessary.

Description

Masters swimming is a fast-growing leisure activity, particularly in North America and Australia but also in Europe. Most towns or cities now have masters clubs. Typically these are friendly and welcome newcomers. The minimum requirements to join a masters club vary widely, anywhere from the ability to swim one length of the pool to the ability to swim a kilometre without stopping. Club members will follow a set of different drills and swims each time typically covering anything from 1.5 km to 3.5 km per one-hour session. Each club will have lanes and so whilst the younger and faster swimmers who are competing nationally and regionally are at one end, the other lanes are for hobbyists who may have taken up swimming quite recently.

U.S. Masters Swimming is the governing body of masters swimming in the United States, sponsoring competition at all levels. In addition, it sponsors programs for non-competitive "fitness" swimmers who train primarily for the health benefits that the activity offers to the aging athlete. Masters Swimming Canada is the governing body of masters swimming in Canada, listing swim clubs, competitions and provincial master swim associations.

FINA World Masters Championships

FINA organizes the FINA World Masters Championships since 1986, but 2 editions were held in the pre-FINA era:

  • 1978 – Toronto, CAN (non-FINA)
  • 1984 – Christchurch, NZL (non-FINA)
NumberYearLocationDates
11986JPN Tokyo, Japan12–16 July
21988AUS Brisbane, Australia10–15 October
31990BRA Rio de Janeiro, Brazil6–13 August
41992USA Indianapolis, USA25 June – 5 July
51994CAN Montreal, Canada4–10 July
61996GBR Sheffield, Great Britain23 June – 3 July
71998MAR Casablanca, Morocco19–30 June
82000GER Munich, Germany29 July – 4 August
92002NZL Christchurch, New Zealand21 March – 3 April
102004ITA Riccione, Italy1–13 June
112006USA Stanford, USA4–17 August
122008AUS Perth, Australia18–25 April
132010SWE Gothenburg and Borås, Sweden27 July – 7 August
142012ITA Riccione, Italy3–17 June
152014CAN Montreal, Canada27 July – 10 August
162015RUS Kazan, Russia5–16 August
172017HUN Budapest, Hungary7–20 August
182019KOR Gwangju, South Korea5–18 August
192021JPN Fukuoka, Japan2–11 August
202023QAT Doha, Qatar23 Feb – 3 March
212025SGP Singapore7–14 August

Records

As in senior swimming, there are world records for masters swimming, but they can only be set in a sanctioned masters meet. Official list of Masters swimming records are available at the FINA website masters section.

References

References

  1. "Masters Swimming Canada: My MSC".
  2. "Let's Get Started – Frequently Asked Questions".
  3. (Jan 8, 2015). "PART VIII FINA MASTERS RULES 2015 – 2017". Fédération internationale de natation (English: International Swimming Federation).
  4. "MASTERS SWIMMING RULES (MSW)".
  5. (5 November 2014). "Nov 2014: Winnipeg's Jaring Timmerman, swimming world record holder, dies at 105". Winnipeg Free Press.
  6. "Home".
  7. "FINA General Masters Rules". [[FINA]].
  8. "Records".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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