2009 USMS Long Course National Championships

2009 USMS Long Course National Championships Indianapolis, IN Thu Aug 6th - Sun Aug 9 RESULTS Psych Sheets
  • I enjoyed relay day despite swimming in the first event of the day and the last (including 2 in the middle). Sunday I did hurt but it wasn't until the 90 meter mark of the 100 fly. I also enjoyed meeting fellow forumites (Paul and Ahelee) and seeing great swims by Chris, Allen and others. 9 events still has me walking a little funny today but I'll heal. Congrats to all. Looking forward to Atlanta in the spring.
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    1 Ross, Michael S 41 MESC 2:17.50 2:15.75 26.49 58.44 (31.95) 1:40.70 (42.26) 2:15.75 (35.05) Ouch - I can feel for a fellow Breaststroke disabled swimmer :badday: Overheard by my hubby after that race, as Ross laid on the deck: Tuchler: "So, were you really dying, or were you just f***ing with me?"
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    I could not tell if he had taken my recommendation to try Prozac. I thought swimming was your Prozac.
  • Overheard by my hubby after that race, as Ross laid on the deck: Tuchler: "So, were you really dying, or were you just f***ing with me?" :lmao:
  • I have to say that Nationals was very exhausting. I hope to do Altanta but highly doubt that I will do P.R. Great time in Indy though. Great pool. Nice people. Fast times. What more could you ask for?
  • Former Member
    Former Member
    As far as I know, Ion is not actually banned.
  • I enjoyed relay day despite swimming in the first event of the day and the last (including 2 in the middle). Sunday I did hurt but it wasn't until the 90 meter mark of the 100 fly. I also enjoyed meeting fellow forumites (Paul and Ahelee) and seeing great swims by Chris, Allen and others. 9 events still has me walking a little funny today but I'll heal. Congrats to all. Looking forward to Atlanta in the spring. I would have figured out who you were so much easier Jeff had you told me you were the forumite with the "finish kiss from his curley haired child" profile photo! I LOVED RELAY DAY! So did maybe 90% of the swimmers I spoke to afterwards. I was tired at the end on Saturday. I think I actually stayed in and rested that night. Friday and Saturday at the end of the meet the pool was open for swimming. I was one of the last swimmers out of the pool at closing. (Thanks Indy SwimFit for keeping it open an hour after the meet ended!) By Sunday I felt back to normal. Totally worth it! A story I heard several times over, even outside my own team, was about swimmers planning and training together to go to INDY to swim club relays. That goal kept them on track to get to the meet when life tried to get in the way with distractions. I appreciate the flexibility of the USMS to try out different scenarios. But like I said before, it sure is hard to please everyone!
  • As far as I know, Ion is not actually banned. Apparently we only care whether he was wearing a tech suit ...
  • I too liked relay day. My friend Bill and I tried to recruit two more swimmers from our ENTIRE REGION to come swim relays, but we had no luck. Thus, we became Academy Bullet Carpetbaggers and met some of the nicest people between Beloit and Gary. It was fantastic. We even took war brides. At least in our imaginations. In any event, here is another aspect of relay day to add to the mix of opinions. For many of us on-the-cusp-of-mediocrity swimmers, our major opportunity to make the Top 10 occurs in the first year or two of aging up. This was my third year in my ridiculously difficult age group (I know, everybody SAYS there's is the hardest, but really, mine is the hardest.) If I squeaked into the Top 10 in anything, it will be a total fluke. However, the relays gave me a sense of having a chance! We were, in fact, national champions in the mixed freestyle relay for 189 or the 200 meters! Nobody will ever be able to take my 94.5 percent National Championship away from me! There are two aspects to relays that are particularly attractive to guys like me: It gives us the opportunity to benefit from the efforts of our betters. In the above particular case, for instance, I was able to swim with the legendary Leslie The Fortress Livingston. How I could cajole myself onto a relay with the likes of Leslie, I cannot divulge, because if anyone could do it, I am convinced everyone would do it, and my chance of repeating as a 94.5 percent National Champion would plummet. However, the bottom line here is that when it comes to relays, you don't have to be a great swimmer--you just need to shmooze great swimmers to be part of greatness. My teammates always accuse me of leaving too early in practice sets. Except for the person leading off a relay, going close to too early is a good thing. I would argue that my best swimming event is a relay precisely because I so regularly practice leaving as quickly as I can get away with. If relay day becomes a staple of national meets, and if I can line up the likes of Leslie for future relay efforts, I would be more likely to attend meets in the waning years of my age group dotage--years when greatness on the individual level becomes impossible, but greatness by standing on the shoulders of my superiors remains distinctly achievable. And on this final note, please let me quickly say to my Entourage buddies, Michael "Vince" Ross, Mike "E" Schmidt, and Hodding "Turtle" Carter Jr.: Could you please send me the forms necessary for joining Maine Masters? Your older, less talented brother, Jimmy "Drama" Thornton, is looking forward to our relay at SCM this December!
  • USMS does not impose any additional rules for USS meets: they are exactlyu the same as for USMS meets. Abd they apply for Top Ten submission as well as record applications. But at USMS meets the meet director and the TT recorder (usually) take care of everything for you.