It was fun to watch Susan von der Lippe swim the 100 fly in prelims. She moved up in the field roughly 30 places and finished 105 out of 137 to the best of my memory. I talked to her afterwards (she was hanging out at the motel pool with her kids and husband) and she thought it might have been close to her lifetime best (= her qualifying time) since she didn't swim much fly as a kid. Let's see what she can do today in the 100 ***.
Great to see world records in the first two final events. With all the records falling this year, I was not surprised to see two under the WR in the men's 400 IM - I'm betting this will happen more than once this year.
For me, the most exciting race was the 400 free. Great swims by the top four swimmers!
Also nice to see some swimmers move way up in the fields with some big time drops. Over 12,000 in the audience for both the prelims and finals yesterday. It took a while for the crowd to figure out how to cheer for people swimming breaststroke...
Parents
Former Member
I love this thread. Read it through twice!
How about some non-swimming Trials experiences? Were concessions good? What was the crowd like? What color T-shirt did you get? How did you fill non-swimming time? Did you get any autographs? Who'd you see in person? What was for sale in the aqua-what's-it-called? Trading cards? Details, please!
And.....next Trials, what would you have done differently/the same? My sister gave me all the details of her trip. Bottom line - she had such a great time she wants to go for the entire event next Trials!
Hmmm, let's see Michelle. Well, I was a bit surprised that Speedo was the ONLY shop in the Aquazone. Grace & I shopped there but she wears TYR goggles and couldn't score a set. I also use Keifer optical goggles and there were none even though this was run by Keifer. There were no bargain prices anywhere. No grab bags, no fire sales, nada.
They also seemed to have way underestimated how many of the Trials logo-specific T and sweat shirts they would sell. They re-supplied several times but many people still went away empty handed. We got a couple of the good ones on third supply just by being there when the boxes were opened.
The crowds were unbelievable, averaging about 20,000 per day and topping out at around 13,700 for one evening session. The poorest attended evening session was on the last day. But, at that point, they passed 160,000 total attendance, a number that was reported in the local papers as the goal attendance and well ahead of previous Trials.
As for non-swimming time, we trained at the Council Bluffs Y three times and at the Pinnacle Athletic Club once (swimming and weight lifting). The rest of the time we spent doing a lot of walking (one day over 7 miles) along the Missouri River path and downtown. The old section of downtown was about a 15 minute walk away and we ate in some nice restaurants (one Persian, one Indian and the Upstream Brewery) and sampled some great locally-made ice cream at Ted and Wallys (coincidentally, the names of two of our cats - one recently departed). The Upstream Brewery definitely brews good beer. It looked like there were a number of other restaurants that were worth trying but we just didn't have the time.
On a couple of days we ate lunch at the concessions which were pretty good. One served Omaha Steaks cheeseburgers and another served up his own smoked meats.
We spent quite a bit of time at the AquaZone but didn't try for any autographs. I did come into hand contact with Gary Hall Sr who was passing out Race Club info. Long lines for autographs and really tired parents trying to keep their kids happy. Several times the lines were so long that some in the queue didn't come away with anything. The swimmers were all pleasant and tireless in this effort. On one day we saw a bunch of teenies hanging around the swimmers entrance. In walks Phelps, slouched over and pretty well covered (we didn't know who it was) but they spotted him right away and snagged an autograph.
I can't think of anything we'd do differently if we come back. Maybe just spend more time downtown rather than driving in and out of the parking lots between sessions. We were both in the blue section on July 4 and came away with blue T shirts. Omaha seems like a really nice city with a local population that loves to support amateur athletics. One night a couple came in who didn't know anything about swimming but just came because it was there. They asked us who they should be cheering for and quickly got into the spirit of things. I'm one of those who thinks this might be a good permanent venue for the Trials. Lot's of hotels, not too many time zones to cross, plenty of restaurants nearby and interested locals.
I love this thread. Read it through twice!
How about some non-swimming Trials experiences? Were concessions good? What was the crowd like? What color T-shirt did you get? How did you fill non-swimming time? Did you get any autographs? Who'd you see in person? What was for sale in the aqua-what's-it-called? Trading cards? Details, please!
And.....next Trials, what would you have done differently/the same? My sister gave me all the details of her trip. Bottom line - she had such a great time she wants to go for the entire event next Trials!
Hmmm, let's see Michelle. Well, I was a bit surprised that Speedo was the ONLY shop in the Aquazone. Grace & I shopped there but she wears TYR goggles and couldn't score a set. I also use Keifer optical goggles and there were none even though this was run by Keifer. There were no bargain prices anywhere. No grab bags, no fire sales, nada.
They also seemed to have way underestimated how many of the Trials logo-specific T and sweat shirts they would sell. They re-supplied several times but many people still went away empty handed. We got a couple of the good ones on third supply just by being there when the boxes were opened.
The crowds were unbelievable, averaging about 20,000 per day and topping out at around 13,700 for one evening session. The poorest attended evening session was on the last day. But, at that point, they passed 160,000 total attendance, a number that was reported in the local papers as the goal attendance and well ahead of previous Trials.
As for non-swimming time, we trained at the Council Bluffs Y three times and at the Pinnacle Athletic Club once (swimming and weight lifting). The rest of the time we spent doing a lot of walking (one day over 7 miles) along the Missouri River path and downtown. The old section of downtown was about a 15 minute walk away and we ate in some nice restaurants (one Persian, one Indian and the Upstream Brewery) and sampled some great locally-made ice cream at Ted and Wallys (coincidentally, the names of two of our cats - one recently departed). The Upstream Brewery definitely brews good beer. It looked like there were a number of other restaurants that were worth trying but we just didn't have the time.
On a couple of days we ate lunch at the concessions which were pretty good. One served Omaha Steaks cheeseburgers and another served up his own smoked meats.
We spent quite a bit of time at the AquaZone but didn't try for any autographs. I did come into hand contact with Gary Hall Sr who was passing out Race Club info. Long lines for autographs and really tired parents trying to keep their kids happy. Several times the lines were so long that some in the queue didn't come away with anything. The swimmers were all pleasant and tireless in this effort. On one day we saw a bunch of teenies hanging around the swimmers entrance. In walks Phelps, slouched over and pretty well covered (we didn't know who it was) but they spotted him right away and snagged an autograph.
I can't think of anything we'd do differently if we come back. Maybe just spend more time downtown rather than driving in and out of the parking lots between sessions. We were both in the blue section on July 4 and came away with blue T shirts. Omaha seems like a really nice city with a local population that loves to support amateur athletics. One night a couple came in who didn't know anything about swimming but just came because it was there. They asked us who they should be cheering for and quickly got into the spirit of things. I'm one of those who thinks this might be a good permanent venue for the Trials. Lot's of hotels, not too many time zones to cross, plenty of restaurants nearby and interested locals.