So, now that we are on the countdown to May 09 - who is coming and what do you plan to swim?
This will be my first US Master's National meet, and it happens to be happening in my back yard (at least very close to where I grew up and swam USA club). Over is San Luis Obispo now, but it's a short hop, skip, and jump over the foothills to Clovis!
Well, if 2/3 are held in the western and central US, that also appears to mean in this instance that 2/3 are held in the eastern and central US... Here's the list from an earlier post breaking it down:
East coast
Ft Lauderdale 1998 LC
Baltimore 2000 LC
Rutgers 2003 LC
Savannah 2004 LC
Ft Lauderdale 2005 SC
Coral Springs 2006 SC
Central
Indianapolis 1998 SC
Minneapolis 1999 LC
Indianaplois 2000 SC
Cleveland 20002 LC
Indianapolis 2004 SC
The Woodlands 2007 LC
Austin TX 2008 SC
West Coast
Santa Clara 1999 SC
Santa Clara 2001 SC
Hawaii 2002 SC
Federal Way 2001 LC
Tempe 2003 SC
Mission Viejo 2005 Lc
Federal Way 2007 SC
Mt Hood 2008 LC
I think Minnesota and Texas are each a push for east and west coasters (Texas may be a little closer for the west coasters while Minnesota a little closer for the east coasters, but both are in about the middle of the country.) Cleveland and Indy are much closer to the east coast than the west. Yeah, there doesn't seem to be any northeast meets, but I have no idea why this is the case. Hopefully bids are not being ignored. It certainly appears that the east coast has received their fair share of the meets.
I'm not sure if having most of the meets where most of the USMS members are located is strictly a superficially good thing either, but it's not really worth debating. There is no right answer to that question. I would say that the west coast dominance in your age group probably has very little to do with a possible national championship location bias and almost everything to do with the fact that there are just more west coast swimmers in USMS. As for the reason for the larger west coast participation in USMS, I bet it has to do with the fact that we swim outdoors year-round. Indoor pools are miserable compared to training under an open sky. Swimming in a heated pool on a cool, rainy day is actually kind of fun.
I was really just responding to your point about 40% participation justifying 40% west coast national locations. Nothing else really. I think everyone expects to travel for most big or nationals meets. I think it would just be a bit more fair to use an even geographic distribution to the extent possible (as I said). I think you probably just have more pools and more pool time out west. I'm not a huge fan of swimming outdoors myself.
some girl: warm down is overrated. I'd love to have a meet in Boston.
Well, if 2/3 are held in the western and central US, that also appears to mean in this instance that 2/3 are held in the eastern and central US... Here's the list from an earlier post breaking it down:
East coast
Ft Lauderdale 1998 LC
Baltimore 2000 LC
Rutgers 2003 LC
Savannah 2004 LC
Ft Lauderdale 2005 SC
Coral Springs 2006 SC
Central
Indianapolis 1998 SC
Minneapolis 1999 LC
Indianaplois 2000 SC
Cleveland 20002 LC
Indianapolis 2004 SC
The Woodlands 2007 LC
Austin TX 2008 SC
West Coast
Santa Clara 1999 SC
Santa Clara 2001 SC
Hawaii 2002 SC
Federal Way 2001 LC
Tempe 2003 SC
Mission Viejo 2005 Lc
Federal Way 2007 SC
Mt Hood 2008 LC
I think Minnesota and Texas are each a push for east and west coasters (Texas may be a little closer for the west coasters while Minnesota a little closer for the east coasters, but both are in about the middle of the country.) Cleveland and Indy are much closer to the east coast than the west. Yeah, there doesn't seem to be any northeast meets, but I have no idea why this is the case. Hopefully bids are not being ignored. It certainly appears that the east coast has received their fair share of the meets.
I'm not sure if having most of the meets where most of the USMS members are located is strictly a superficially good thing either, but it's not really worth debating. There is no right answer to that question. I would say that the west coast dominance in your age group probably has very little to do with a possible national championship location bias and almost everything to do with the fact that there are just more west coast swimmers in USMS. As for the reason for the larger west coast participation in USMS, I bet it has to do with the fact that we swim outdoors year-round. Indoor pools are miserable compared to training under an open sky. Swimming in a heated pool on a cool, rainy day is actually kind of fun.
I was really just responding to your point about 40% participation justifying 40% west coast national locations. Nothing else really. I think everyone expects to travel for most big or nationals meets. I think it would just be a bit more fair to use an even geographic distribution to the extent possible (as I said). I think you probably just have more pools and more pool time out west. I'm not a huge fan of swimming outdoors myself.
some girl: warm down is overrated. I'd love to have a meet in Boston.