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Samantha Arsenault was born in Peabody, Massachusetts on October 11, 1981, the second of four siblings to Jeanne and Edward Arsenault, who owned an auto-body shop. She began swimming at the age of 8 at the Beverly YMCA, only five miles from her home, as the Peabody YMCA lacked an indoor pool, required for her year round training.
NAIA Women's Swimming and Diving Championships, since 1981; NCAA Division I men's swimming and diving championships, since 1924; NCAA Division I Women's Swimming and Diving Championships, since 1982; NCAA Men's Division II Swimming and Diving Championships, since 1964; NCAA Men's Division III Swimming and Diving Championships, since 1975
The Spring meet began as a 25-yard (short course) meet, while the Summer meet was long course. Prior to USA Swimming's creation in the late 1970s, the meet was run by the AAU. Phillips 66 began sponsoring the meet in 1973, which continues through today although the branding of the sponsorship changed to ConocoPhillips in the early 2000s. This ...
Chillicothe senior Ryan Blum competes in the boys 100-yard butterfly event during the Cavaliers' home opener against Unioto, Hillsboro and East Clinton on Dec. 6, 2023 at the Ross County YMCA in ...
The meet began Tuesday and concludes Saturday. "This is the most swimmers I've ever sent," Bremerton YMCA swim head coach Marilyn Grindrod said. "They are a wonderful group of young people to work ...
The NCAA Division II women's swimming and diving championships are contested at an annual swim meet hosted by the National Collegiate Athletic Association to determine the individual and team champions of women's collegiate swimming and diving among its Division II members in the United States and Canada.
About 400 first-grade students in Plain Local schools are getting free swim lessons through a partnership with the YMCA of Central Stark County.
She swam for the Flushing YMCA for several years under Jess Brown, the Director of Athletics. [1] [2] Swimming as the Metropolitan American Athletic Union champion for the Flushing Y, at a New York Athletic Club meet on June 29, 1956 at the age of 13, Burke captured the 100-meter backstroke event in a time of 1:29.3. [3]