Rise of the "Professional" Masters Swimmer?

Some elite masters swimmers appear to be almost quasi "professional" in terms of the time and energy they devote to the sport and my impression is that there are more and more of such swimmers competing in masters now. At least in my two masters age groups to date, women's 40-44 and 45-49, there is a true professional swimmer (KPN), past Olympians swimming amazing times, professional triathletes and professional engine builders. (My spies tell me about their yardage.) Times across the board in my age group were much faster this year than last year. Not sure about the men's times or other women's times. Is it similar? It seems like a massive amount of time is involved to put in all the yardage, weights, drylands, stretching, RC exercises, cross-training necessary and to go to all the PT, ART, orthopod and massage appointments. Their dedication is admirable. But I have difficulty fitting this all in. :violin: I'm sure most others must too. Life and kids definitely interfere with even getting to practice, wholly apart from a total devotion to swimming. So I can't out-train anyone. Am I only imagining that masters swimming is getting more competitive? The phenoms are all just genetically talented swimmers? Thoughts anyone? JUST TO BE PERFECTLY CLEAR, I AM NOT CRITICIZING ANYONE, JUST ASKING QUESTIONS.
Parents
  • Nah, you've just got to swim a real event instead of the 50 or 100 free! oh Kirk, you're funny! my times fall off terribly above 100... even going from a 50 to 100 is not pretty. alas, I don't train that much either... Rich, if you could count higher than 6, I might be offended by your post... personally, I like watching the races and times posted by those quasi-pro swimmers (and the non-quasi-pro-exceptionally-speedy ones like Fort). They are inspiring and give me hope that I still have years to improve! :)
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  • Nah, you've just got to swim a real event instead of the 50 or 100 free! oh Kirk, you're funny! my times fall off terribly above 100... even going from a 50 to 100 is not pretty. alas, I don't train that much either... Rich, if you could count higher than 6, I might be offended by your post... personally, I like watching the races and times posted by those quasi-pro swimmers (and the non-quasi-pro-exceptionally-speedy ones like Fort). They are inspiring and give me hope that I still have years to improve! :)
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