Yesterday I swam the 2 mile pier to pier at Newport Beach. This was not my first open water swim. I have done many of them. However, yesterday was the first time I encountered such a disturbing experience.
There were 240 people in the race. Of course there was the usual bumping, clobbering, smacking, kicking, and pulling that goes on when ever this many swimmers are converging on one point. Anyone who has ever done an open water swim is used to this. But yesterday a male swimmer actually grabbed me from behind the neck, pushed me down under the water, and then kicked me in the head in order to swim over me. When I say he grabbed me by the neck -- I mean GRABBED HARD. This was not an accident, but a purposeful manuever to get ahead. When I came up for air I was pounded by the swimmer behind me (also a male) who actually apologized.
I finished the swim and I will do more of them. I am still stunned though and my neck hurts today. I am not so naive as to think this kind of stuff never happens, I guess I'm just blown away because it actually happened to me and I was not in any way in competition with this guy.
Thanks for letting me vent.
Kerri
Parents
Former Member
Originally posted by geochuck
This is written about in the Conrad Wennerberg book, "Wind Waves and Sunburn", a breif history of Marathon Swimming.
wow! I just put that book in my shopping cart!
irreklg, that must have been a terribly frightening experience. I'm glad to hear your reaction is to get back on the horse. Out of 240 swimmers, it takes only one to give you a bad bump. What a creep! I'm just wondering if he did the same to other swimmers during the race, and got back some of his medicine. He needs a lesson.
Question: if you get the number of a badly behaved swimmer like this one, can you report him/her to the judges?
Originally posted by geochuck
This is written about in the Conrad Wennerberg book, "Wind Waves and Sunburn", a breif history of Marathon Swimming.
wow! I just put that book in my shopping cart!
irreklg, that must have been a terribly frightening experience. I'm glad to hear your reaction is to get back on the horse. Out of 240 swimmers, it takes only one to give you a bad bump. What a creep! I'm just wondering if he did the same to other swimmers during the race, and got back some of his medicine. He needs a lesson.
Question: if you get the number of a badly behaved swimmer like this one, can you report him/her to the judges?