Showing posts with label Alex Kostich. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alex Kostich. Show all posts

Monday, September 14, 2009

Gatormen Face Rough Water In La Jolla

Anne Cleveland reported from the yesterday's La Jolla Rough Water Swim, America's largest and oldest open water swim: "It was a close race for first in the 3-mile Gatorman all the way to the finish, but Deni Cullom finished 5 seconds ahead of Alex Kostich, followed by Catalina Channel men's record holder Todd Robinson."

"The first female finisher Dawn Heckman was not far behind in the usual choppy afternoon conditions."

"We had a high tide combined with a mixed predominantly west swell, causing some big surf at the finish. The lifeguards were working overtime keeping swimmers off the stairs near the finish. A nightmare for safety, but they got everyone in with no mishaps."

The top five Gatormen finishers in the 79th annual event included:


1. Deni Cullom 1:00:03
2. Alex Kostich 1:00:08
3. Todd Robinson 1:01:25
4. Samuel Morgan 1:01:38
5. Jerry Mahoney 1:02:58

1. Dawn Heckman 1:02:58
2. Lynette Lim 1:04:37
3. Jaqueline Corcoran 1:05:45
4. Amy Dantzler 1:09:24
5. Stacy Peterson 1:11:53

Photos of Deni Cullom by Howard Lipin of the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Perfect Temperature, Gorgeous Day, Flat Water In Long Beach

Double Pan American Games gold medalist Alex Kostich and former University of Florida All-American Dawn Heckman won the 5K Pacific Open Water Challenge going away today in Long Beach.

Under gorgeous blue skies in a flat rowing basin, the two swam a fast pace in the point-to-point course.

"I wasn't quite sure I was going to swim this morning," said Alex, a perennial top finisher in every open water swim he competes in. "I was a little sick this week and was here to cheer Dawn on - we train together on the weekends. But I entered this morning and just sprinted the first 800 meters to see how my body would react."

His body reacted well. Alex set off at an 82 strokes per minutes pace, separated himself from his competitors and then build the next loop with a 84 spm pace and finished with an 86 spm pace. "I felt great. It was a perfect temperature. I like swimming in open water without all the waves and surf like in the ocean."

In an earlier race, Dan Wegner (20:13) and Laurie Dodd (20:46) won the 1-mile race.

Photos courtesy of Super Kidz Photo with additional photos here.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

2008 World Open Water Swimming Man of the Year

The World Open Water Swimming Association will conduct a poll to select the 2008 World Open Water Swimming Man of the Year and the 2008 World Open Water Swimming Woman of the Year on January 1, 2009. This award will be based on the public poll posted here (to the left) at Open Water Source.

These awards are not necessarily for the best athletes, but are meant to honor the man and woman who (1) best embody the spirit of open water swimming, (2) possess the sense of adventure, tenacity and perseverance that open water swimmers are known for, and (3) have most positively influenced the world of open water swimming in 2008.

The top vote-getters in each region will also be honored as the 2008 Asia/Oceania Open Water Swimming Woman of the Year, the 2008 European Open Water Swimming Woman of the Year and the 2008 Americas Open Water Swimming Woman of the Year.

While the nominees have enjoyed long remarkable careers in the sport of open water swimming as athletes, coaches, promoters, writers, directors and/or administrators, please vote your choice based on their achievements during 2008.

The 14 male nominees, listed in alphabetical order, are as follows:

1. Dmitrij Belov (Russia), National Team Coach:

As he has for the past several years, Dmitrij led the powerful Russian open water swimming team at international competitions ranging from the 2008 World Open Water Swimming Championships and various FINA World Cup races to the European Open Water Swimming Championships and the Beijing Olympic 10K Marathon Swim event. As they have in the past, the Russian swimmers performed very well at all events using the classic Russian come-from-behind race strategy. With a strong cadre of experienced swimmers developed over time, Dmitrij’s swimmers have consistently finished at or near the top of the pack. An unsung hero in his own right, Dmitrij sets the foundation and direction for the unparalleled open water swimming program which the Russian swimmers continue to thrive.
[Photo of the victorious Russian National Open Water Team at the 2008 World Open Water Swimming Championships by Javier Blazquez]

2. Emilio Casanueva (USA/Chile), Sanctioning Body President:

Emilio is the founder and driving force behind the not-for-profit Santa Barbara Channel Swimming Association, the governing body of channel swimming between the California coastline and the marine sanctuary islands off the coast of Santa Barbara, ranging from 6-30 miles in distance. He organized major swims in 2008, including the 55-person 26-mile BIG SWIM, the 26-mile professional 6x6 Relay Race, and 3-mile and 10-mile coastal races in Santa Barbara. He was also the observer on 13 different solo crossings and did a 7 hour 45 minute solo swim himself across the 12-mile route from Anacapa Island to Oxnard. When he was not organizing races and crossing, Emilio organized weekly ocean swims and clinics in Santa Barbara and open water swimming trips to Baja Mexico, Chile and Guatemala through his Ocean Ducks Swimming Adventures. A man of boundless energy and selfless devotion to the sport, Emilio is doing a wonderful job helping swimmers in the beautiful Santa Barbara Channel paradise.

3. Sid Cassidy (USA), Chairman and Global Administrator:

Sid was everywhere in 2008 as the Chairman of the FINA Technical Open Water Swimming Committee. He was the starter at the Olympic 10K Marathon Swim, he coordinated operational details and overall strategy with the Beijing Olympic Organizing Committee and FINA, and he gave numerous talks, presentations and clinics from Minnesota and Las Vegas to Seville and Beijing. He refereed professional FINA races and educated swimmers, coaches and administrators worldwide. He helped adjudicate key issues and helped document the sport for the benefit of future generations as he embodied the spirit of an open water swimming enthusiast and volunteer. A man of dedication, perseverance and vision, Sid has seen the sport from the perspective of a pro swimmer in the 1970’s to his current position as the chairman of the world’s most powerful open water swimming organization. He has selflessly given his talents and energies to the sport and has made it stronger under his leadership throughout 2008.

4. David Davies (UK), Cross-over Olympian:

David had two important impacts on the open water swimming world in 2008: as the 2004 1500-meter bronze medalist, he was the highest-profile pool swimmer to cross-over and win a silver medal in the Olympic 10K Marathon Swim. Secondly, David swam fast – very fast from the start – to elevate the sport in terms of its athleticism and required aerobic conditioning. David, swimming courageously, literally pulled the entire field on an unbelievably fast pace throughout the entire 10K distance at both the 2008 World Open Water Swimming Championships and the Olympic 10K Marathon Swim in Beijing. He ended his season with an exciting victory in the Great North Swim. His presence as both a pool and open water swimming Olympic medalist and his boldness in trying to break the field have raised the bar for the current and all future generations of world-class open water swimmers.
[Photo of David Davies leading the Olympic 10K Qualification Swim at the 2008 World Open Water Swimming Championships by Javier Blazquez]


5. Sam Greetham, (Britain) LEN Open Water Committee Secretary and Director of British Swimming:

Soon after the 10K Marathon Swim was added to the Olympic program, Sam helped set in motion the strategy and develop plans at British Swimming that culminated in the most successful open water squad at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Identifying opportunities, events and swimmers, Sam helped lay a foundation that resulted in two silver medals (Keri-Anne Payne and David Davies) and a bronze (Cassandra Patten), as well as motivation for the next generation of British swimmers to take to open water swimming. In addition, Sam worked with his colleagues at LEN to create for the first time innovative individual and team trials at the 2008 European Open Water Swimming Championships.


6. Chad Ho (South Africa), Tough Teenager:

As the youngest male qualifier for the Olympic 10K Marathon Swim, Chad was in the middle of the lead pack during the 2008 World Open Water Swimming Championships, well-positioned to qualify for the Olympic 10K Marathon Swim, but he was kicked hard and his goggles caused a cornea tear, dashing his Olympic dreams in a split second. He faded to 35th place and had to return home to recover from a devastating swim and injury. Like Natalie du Toit though, Chad never gave up on his Olympic dreams. Unlike Natalie, however, Chad did not have the benefit of time; he only had a few weeks to mentally prepare for a last-chance Olympic qualification race. Chad had a miraculously fast last 1K to qualify for the Olympics where he later placed a very respectable 9th place. Chad’s determination and focus on his goals, despite physical obstacles and setbacks, are representative characteristics of courageous open water swimmers worldwide, no matter the age.

7. Alex Kostich (USA), Master Extraordinaire:

Alex traversed the world to swim very competitively against much younger swimmers in many of the world’s fastest short-distance open water swims. Alex, a multi-time winner in nearly all major short-distance races continues to work full-time at Sony Pictures while traveling to the St. Croix Coral Reef Open Water Swim Race, the Waikiki Roughwater Swim, the Pacific Open Water Challenge, the RCP Tiburon Mile, the La Jolla Rough Water Swim, and the Semana Nautica Ocean Swims, crisscrossing numerous time zones to swim and win in warm water, cold water, rough water and still water against all comers. His respect for the ocean and his love for racing are clear to all when he ends each competition with a large smile on his face, kind good words about his competitors and appreciation for race volunteers, whether he wins or finishes behind kids who were in grade school when he was starring at Stanford. For all those entering mid-life, Alex continues to represent "old-school guys" very well.

8. Thomas Lurz (Germany), Professional Swimmer:

Thomas traveled the world in search of world-class races, always competitive and always gracious in defeat. Thomas Lurz was the bronze medalist in the Olympic 10K Marathon Swim, won FINA 10K Marathon Swimming World Cups in Cancun (Mexico) and Dubai and was runner-up in Setubal (Portugal). He was second in the prestigious RCP Tiburon Mile in San Francisco, third in the rematch of Olympic medalists at the Great North Swim in England and was the 2008 world champion in the 5K and bronze medalist in the 10K in the pressure-packed races in Sevilla. He also had an outstanding meet at the 2008 European Open Water Swimming Championships in Croatia where he won the 10K and got a bronze in both the 5K and the 5K team trial. Traveling the world and representing his country and the sport with his trademark professionalism, composure and versatility are Thomas's characteristics to admire.

9. Randy Nutt (USA), Coach, Promoter and Race Director:

Randy brings passion and excitement to the sport, year in and year out with 2008 being no different. The Bermuda Round the Sound swim and his Bonaire EcoSwim in the Netherlands Antilles attract hundreds of people from around the world to the incredibly scenic waters. The joy experienced by first-time participants at these races results in many newcomers becoming open water swimming aficionados, ranging from young top-notch age-group pool swimmers to adult fitness athletes. Randy provides the widest range of distances in the open water swimming world, from 0.8K to 10K, including relays. He also conducted a National Geographic shark expedition to test out shark pods and shark repellent that attracted interest for obvious reasons. He continues to serve on the US Masters Swimming Open Water & Long Distance Committee and the other races that he organized and built (Swim Around Key West and the St. Croix Coral Reef Open Water Swim) continue to prosper. Randy conducts educational pre-race clinics and provides unsung personal advice constantly handed out throughout the year via email and telephone to people of all ages and abilities, resulting in two of the world’s most scenic and enjoyable open water swimming experiences.

10. Bob Placak (USA), Generous Visionary and Promoter:

Bob has been giving back to the sport of open water swimming for years, and 2008 was another typical year. Year in and year out, Bob continues to make his presence known to newcomers to the sport as well as the world’s elite athletes via the RCP Tiburon Mile. Besides offering the sport’s richest cash prize ($10,000 to the male and female winners), Bob’s post-race spread is, without question, the world’s largest and best gourmet food offering to open water swimmers. His attention to detail and genuine care for all athletes, young and old, elite and inexperienced, are unparalleled. Not only does Bob fly in dozens of world champions and Olympic medalists from around the world to compete in his prestigious race, but he also hosts Special Olympians and has generated over $650,000 in charitable donations. Although the RCP Tiburon Mile is only held on one day in October, the former national butterfly champion and his full-time staff prepare year-round for the magical spectacle in San Francisco Bay. In addition to this non-stop work on the RCP Tiburon Mile, Bob also manages all-star relay teams at the Trans Tahoe Relay and the Maui Channel Swim that have built a solid record of success. It is Bob’s selfless devotion to the sport and to the athletes that makes the sport richer in more ways than one.

11. Scott Rice (New Zealand), Open Water Branding Expert:

Scott is Mr. Open Water in New Zealand with a growing reputation throughout Asia and worldwide. He owns the New Zealand Ocean Swim Series, a fantastically marketed and branded open water swimming tour in Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch and elsewhere that has rapidly grown and offers more cash prize money than even the FINA World Cup and Grand Prix tour events. He co-brands affiliated projects like Sovereign OceanKids, the
blueseventy Golden Goggles Club and the Auckland City Swimming Family Competition. He helped win the bid for a new FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup that will be televised live in New Zealand. He also manages the Swim Festival in Wellington, the North Shore City Beach Series and a total of 21 ocean-related events per year. His robust business model, including ample television coverage, extensive community outreach and sister swims across the Pacific, is the envy of the industry. Built from the ground up, Scott has his hands in everything from TV commentating on the races to constantly over-delivering value to his race sponsors. The value of his passion and his hands-on work is readily apparent to everyone who participants in, volunteers for, sponsors, cheers at or watches his incredibly orchestrated events.

12. Petar Stoychev (Bulgaria), Record Holder:

Besides finishing sixth in the Olympic 10K Marathon Swim and competing in two Olympic 10K qualification races in Spain and Beijing, Petar won his eighth consecutive FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix, an unprecedented string of dominance. His reign over the longest and toughest marathon swimming circuit over the past 8 years is incredible, especially in a year when he also competed at the Olympics in the 1500-meter freestyle (15:28) and when one considers how close marathon races are nowadays. The English Channel record holder won the 57K Maraton Acuatica Rio Coronda (Argentina) Grand Prix, the 15K Maraton Acuatico International Ciudad Rosario (Argentina) Grand Prix, the 15K Maraton Patagones Viedma (Argentina) FINA Grand Prix, the 30K Ohrid Lake Swim Marathon (Macedonia) FINA Grand Prix, the 32K Traversée internationale du lac St-Jean (Canada) FINA Grand Prix, the 34K Traversée Internationale du Lac Memphrémagog (Canada) FINA Grand Prix, was second in the FINA 10K Marathon Swimming World Cup in Lac St-Jean (Canada) and was fifth in the 19K Sabac Swim Marathon (Serbia) FINA Grand Prix. No one has swum further than Petar in tough world-class races this year and his selection as the Bulgarian flag-bearer at the 2008 Beijing Olympics was only one of the well-deserved honors he received in 2008.

[Photo of Petar Stoychev in Beijing at the Olympic 10K Qualification Swim by Pei Qingsheng]

13. Douglas Woodring (Hong Kong), Race Innovator:

Douglas brought a bit of green to the open water swimming world in 2008 with his very creative 'Carbon-Neutral Option' at the 15K Clean Half, Asia’s only marathon swimming relay event. By enabling the relay swimmers to use outrigger canoes instead of a motorized escort boat in the 5-person ocean relay, Douglas generated great publicity for the sport and environmental awareness. His touch of the dramatic, his advertising prowess and his love of the sport are creating an open water swimming beachhead in Hong Kong. Douglas also organizes the shorter Shek O Challenge and is working on establishing a regional open water swimming circuit in Asia. His marketing flair is especially evident when one sees musicians entertain the swimmers ALONG the course on floating pontoons and DJ’s and dancing in post-race celebrations. A breath of fresh air and passionate enthusiasm, with a deep care for the environment, Douglas continues to develop the sport in the semi-tropical metropolis of Hong Kong.

14. Maarten van der Weijden (Netherlands), Olympic Champion:

The 2008 gold medalist in the Olympic 10K Marathon Swim truly performed in storybook fashion in Beijing. His hard-to-believe comeback from leukemia to Olympic stardom is pure Hollywood enhanced a heartwarming splash of reality, but Maarten’s outstanding performances were not limited to Beijing. At the 2008 World Open Water Swimming Championships, he showed his versatility with a 4th-place finish in the 10K, a bronze in the 5K and an exciting gold-medal performance in the 25K. Maarten applied his high-tech approach to his Olympic preparations, incorporating sleep in a high-altitude tent and adjusting his sleep and training patterns to Beijing time several months before the Olympics. Maarten is the most visible, humble and accessible ambassador of professional marathon swimming, and remains a gregarious symbol of determination and talent.

Copyright by Open Water Source

Saturday, September 20, 2008

California Swimming

California has been the training grounds to numerous great open water swimmers over the past 40 years: long-time English Channel record holder, Dr. Penny Lee Dean, world renowned Lynne Cox, the dominant professional marathon swimmer of the 1980s, Paul Asmuth, world champion Chad Hundeby, Olympic 10K marathon swimmers Mark Warkentin and Chloe Sutton and NCAA champion and masters pool and open water swimming legend Jim McConica, life guard legend hero and Olympic commentator Craig Hummer, and local ocean swimming champions Alex Kostich, Gerry Rodrigues, Lisa Hazen and Diane Graner.

Many of these individuals - and hundreds of thousands of others - have honed their skills at the local ocean races up and down the long coast of California, from La Jolla near San Diego to Aquatic Park in San Francisco Bay, as well as the numerous lakes and rivers throughout the state.

For a great open water swimming website with lots of photos from California open water swimming events, go to H2O Sports Photos.

Note: Californians have held the English Channel record for at least 26 years out of the past 36.

Monday, September 8, 2008

It Ain't Over 'til the Last Step

In the same way, gold medalist Larisa Ilchenko swam past Keri-Anne Payne and Cassandra Patten at the end of the women's Olympic 10K Marathon Swim and Maarten van der Weijden just nipped David Davies and Thomas Lurz in the men's 10K race in Beijing, Mission Viejo's Deni Cullom just got by Alex Kostich in the 3-mile Gatorman race at the 78th annual La Jolla Rough Water Swim.

Great photo by Peggy Peattie of the San Diego Union-Tribune captures the last few steps of the Gatorman race between Cullom (blue suit) and Kostich (black body suit).

Gatorman from Mission

Coming off of a very close second-place finish at the USA Swimming Open Water Swimming National Championships last month, Deni Cullom of the Mission Viejo Nadadores won the featured 3-mile Gatorman race at the 78th annual La Jolla Rough Water Swim.

17-year-old Cullom beat 5-time 38-year-old champion Alex Kostich of Los Angeles after swimming even with him for the first part of the race. "[Alex] had me going the entire way. I was worried until the last two steps of the race," said Cullom pictured on the bottom left in the famed Mission Viejo Nadadores distance training program below.

But the camaraderie between the competitors shined brightly after the tough race. "I'm really happy," said the smiling Kostich who finished in 58:32. "I'm glad there are these whippersnappers moving up and enjoying the sport."




But the masters got the upper hand over the teenagers in the women's race. 31-year-old Dawn Heckman, who trains with Kostich in Pasadena, won 1:01:05 over Olympic 10K swimmer Chloe Sutton, who trains with Cullom.

"I had no idea about my lead," said Heckman, a former 9-time All-American from the University of Florida. "I was just swimming to land."

As were the other 567 swimmers in the Gatorman...and 2,200 other swimmers in the shorter races in the beautiful La Jolla Cove just north of San Diejo.

Upper photo shows start of race and lower photo shows Dawn Heckman from the University of Florida swim team website.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

"Next Grant Hackett" Wins Waikiki Roughwater Swim

19-year-old Australian Trent Grimsey, who swam a 15:12.36 1500-meter freestyle at the 2008 Australian Olympic Swimming Trials, has found his niche in the Pacific, as he dominated the 39th annual Waikiki Roughwater Swim. Earlier this year, Grimsey also won the 2008 Oceania 10K Open Water Championships earlier this year in New Zealand.

Grimsey led a 1-2-3 Australian sweep in the men's race, winning the swim across Waikiki in 47 minutes 59 seconds. Grimsey took off from the start and won going away. "I kept looking around, thinking I went off course."

"Trent could be [Australia's] next Grant Hackett," said distant second-place Josh Minogue finisher. "He's really good. This is not surprising to us to see him that far ahead."

Brendan Capell placed third with a time of 52:27. John Flanagan of Honolulu was fourth in 53:45, Alex Kostich of California was fifth in 52:54, and defending champion Noa Sakamoto of Honolulu was sixth in 53:12.

Similarly, Luane Rowe from Sydney convincingly won the women's division, finishing eighth overall and more than eight minutes ahead of the second-place woman. "It's hard not to get distracted. The water is so clear, and you can see all the fish."

"The Australians were very, very impressive," Flanagan said. "Two of the guys just took off in the beginning, and I knew there was no way to catch them."

The other 740 swimmers from around the world who finished the race also thought so.

Photo of Waikiki Roughwater Swim wave starts from Swim Without Borders.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Summer Classics - Waikiki Roughwater Swim

The summer open water swimming season in the U.S. is coming to a climax. One of the great events is the Waikiki Roughwater Swim, now in its 39th year. Traditionally held on Labor Day, the 2.4-mile Swim, starts at one end of Waikiki Beach, under the foot of Diamond Head Volcano, and finishes at the other end at the Hilton Hawaiian Village.

Swimmers swim over beautiful coral beds and colorful marine life in a picturesque course. Swimmers may encounter a challenging swim if high surf and strong currents appear.

As many people know, the Waikiki Roughwater Swim is the inspiration behind the 2.4-mile swim leg of the Ironman Triathlon. The event has grown from a small local swim to a highly competitive swim that attracts participants of all ages and backgrounds from dozens of countries and every U.S. state. In 1970, the race saw 4 women and 32 men swim across Waikiki. Over 1,000 people now annually enter the race.

Alex Kostich, a multi-time winner and Pan American Games gold medalist, gives 10 tips on how to prepare for the race.

Photo of Waikiki Roughwater Swim start by Craig Kojima.

Copyright © 2008 by Steven Munatones

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Swimmers vs. Pirates in the Pacific






Like the upcoming Olympic 10K Marathon Swim in Beijing, the Pacific Open Water Challenge in Long Beach, California offered a strategic race with an exciting fight to the finish.

In a special Long Beach Sea Festival twist, hordes of pirates officially started the races with real muskets. To the delight of the crowd, the colorful pirates chased the swimmers into the water with shouts and scowls, brandishing their pistols and swords.

But, once in the water, it was game time. While many participants were entered in their first ocean swim and simply wanted to finish, others were looking towards the future.

Beginning in 2009, the Pacific Open Water Challenge will be one of the 14 cities around the world to hold a FINA 10km Marathon Swimming World Cup race. Next year's Long Beach stop on the FINA World Cup series will be on July 12th.

Two swimmers who are looking forward to participate in the World Cup entered the 5K race and went stroke-for-stroke for 51 minutes: Andrew Deters, a junior at Notre Dame who qualified for the U.S. Olympic Trials in the 1500 freestyle, battled Alex Kostich, a triple Pan American Games gold medalist and an All-American at Stanford.

From the start, Kostich set the pace in the choppy waters with Deters going right with him. By the end of the first of three loops, Kostich and Deters had clearly separated themselves from the 116-person field. “I knew he has more speed than me, so I was just trying to stay with him,” explained Kostich.

During the second loop, Deters never left Kostich's side and the two went at it mano-a-mano open-water style. Kostich would surge, then Deters would respond. Deters would throw in a move, then it was Kostich’s time to hang on. Punch, counter-punch. Back and forth it went throughout the race. “It was rough out there with the wind,” commented Kostich. “He’s good. I knew it would come down to the end.”

By the third and final loop, Deters and Kostich were navigating around the slower, less experienced swimmers people as hundreds of pirates and thousands of sightseers cheered from the pier, the shore and a pirate ship cruising nearby.

During the last mile, Kostich threw all kinds of open water racing tactics at Deters. He veered him to the left and then moved back on course. He’d fall back a bit and then drag off Deters' hip. He’d let Deters take the brunt of the waves. But, Deters hung on…and withstood every trick Kostich had in his new blueseventy suit.

With the last turn buoy in sight, Kostich let it all hang out and threw down a ferocious final sprint. But Deters lived up to his school’s Fighting Irish monicker. There was no way he about going to go down without a fight.

“I felt him at every stroke,” recalled Kostich. “It was tough. His hand kept brushing up against me." With the wind kicking up some mean surface chop, it was inevitable that the combatants would bump into each other.

They rounded the last turn buoy together, but took two separate lines to the beach finish. “I knew I had to take a chance and went a bit to the right,” said Kostich.

As Kostich headed right towards shore, Deters went at a slightly different angle. It was clear that they were sprinting at the same speed, but it was unclear who had the better line taking the winds, chop and currents into consideration.

With the pirates and crowd waiting in anticipation, Deters stood up first when he reached the sand. Kostich was only a few steps behind, but he gained some ground as he dolphined through the shallow waters. But, it was Deters’ day as he put on a spurt, running up the beach like a light-footed Notre Dame half back being chased by lumbering Stanford lineman.

Deters crossed in 51:13 with Kostich behind in 51:17.

It was an exciting ending for a day of competition and fun. And a precursor to an exciting FINA World Cup race in July 2009.

For final results and continued Mobile Open Water Alerts, go to
Pacific Open Water Challenge.

Photos by Brightroom.

Copyright © 2008 by World Open Water Swimming Association