Showing posts with label Rostislav Vitek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rostislav Vitek. Show all posts

Saturday, September 26, 2009

World Open Water Swimming Man Of The Year Nominees

You can vote for the 2009 World Open Water Swimming Man of the Year in a worldwide poll here. The winner will be announced on January 1, 2010.

These awards are not necessarily for the best athlete, but are meant to honor the man who (1) best embodies the spirit of open water swimming, (2) possesses the sense of adventure, tenacity and perseverance that open water swimmers are known for, and (3) has most positively influenced the world of open water swimming in 2009.

We salute all the nominees who have enjoyed remarkable careers in the sport as athletes, coaches, promoters, race directors and/or administrators. Congratulations to everyone.

The 10 male nominees, listed in alphabetical order, are as follows:

1. Flavio Bomio (Switzerland), European & Global Administrator
2. Colin Hill (Great Britain), Visionary Innovator and Successful Promoter
3. Thomas Lurz (Germany), World Champion Professional Swimmer
4. Kevin Murphy (Great Britain), Hall of Famer King of the Channel
5. Bob Placak (USA), Generous Visionary and Promoter
6. Scott Rice (New Zealand), Innovator and Branding Expert
7. Petar Stoychev (Bulgaria), Dominant Professional Marathon Swimmer
8. Rostislav Vitek (Czech Republic), Fast Channel Swimmer
9. Rick Walker (USA), Quick-thinking FINA Referee and Long-time Coach
10. Douglas Woodring (Hong Kong), Race Innovator and Ocean Protector

1. Flavio Bomio (Switzerland), European &Global Administrator

There is no downtime for Flavio between his role as the LEN Technical Open Water Swimming Committee chairman and his role at the Honorary Secretary of the FINA Technical Open Water Swimming Committee. Between organizing some of the world’s most competitive and interesting open water races and team time trial relays in Europe and the world-class FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup and the FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix circuits, Flavio’s familiar presence and decades of expertise are a pillar of strength for swimmers and race directors around the world. His experience is invaluable and his generosity of time and talents is appreciated by many. The multi-lingual, gregarious Flavio always has a smile on his face and time for others as he helps steer the sport on its upward trajectory. Flavio has served as a judge at every World Championship and European Championship since 1999 – one of the most difficult tasks in the sport – as well as coached athletes to numerous medals in international competitions, including 3 Olympics. Due to his nearly five decades of selfless devotion, Flavio is nominated as the 2009 World Open Water Swimming Man of the Year.

2. Colin Hill (Great Britain), Visionary Innovator and Successful Promoter

Colin of Nova International has truly brought open water swimming to the masses. Not only does Colin head up a team that has moved mountains to bring the world-class swimmers from around the world to compete in televised and heavily marketed one-mile races throughout Great Britain, but he also managed to attract thousands of newcomers to each of the four major open water swimming events put on by Nova International. The Great North Swim, the Great London Swim, the Great East Swim and the Great Scottish Swim bundle great websites, great promotions, great courses and great fanfare to create fantastic competitions where none existed before. It is no wonder that up to 6,000 swimmers do these races under the television lights with their friends, family and co-workers. His drive to make open water swimming accessible and popular in Great Britain – for people of all ages, abilities and backgrounds – is an achievement powered by his energy and vision. In the build-up to the 2012 London Olympics and the power of the current crew of British swimmers, Colin’s timing could also not be better. It is due to his innovative promotions for the sport and his entrepreneurial spirit that Colin is nominated as the 2009 World Open Water Swimming Man of the Year.

3. Thomas Lurz (Germany), World Champion Professional Swimmer

Olympic bronze medalist Thomas has been the fastest, most dominant 5K and 10K swimmer on the planet this year. He not only won the 5K and 10K races at the 2009 World Swimming Championships, but he also won the professional FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup races in New York City (USA), Copenhagen (Denmark), Varna (Bulgaria), Annecy (France), Setubal (Portugal) and Chun An (China). As he wraps up his FINA World Cup season title, he continues to travel the world in search of world-class races. Generous with his time with the media and fans, Thomas is a gracious champion, always complimentary to his competitors. For proving himself capable of swimming fast in warm water, cold water, flat water and rough water and representing his country and the sport with his trademark professionalism and versatility, Thomas is nominated as the 2009 World Open Water Swimming Man of the Year.

4. Kevin Murphy (Great Britain), Hall of Famer King of the Channel

Kevin is an everyday man-turned-superman with 34 English Channel crossings to his name including three double-crossings, and dozens of other significant marathon achievements ranging from 23 miles in Loch Ness, 42 miles in River Thames, 21 miles across Lake Tahoe (USA), 21 miles across the Catalina Channel, 30 miles along the Lake Michigan shoreline in Chicago, 28 miles around Manhattan Island, 48 miles across Lake Balaton (Hungary), 30K across Lake Como (Italy), 23 miles from Capri to Naples, 42K in the Marathon du Saguenay, 25 miles from Majorca to Minorca and incredibly tough swims in the Irish (North) Channel, Bristol Channel, around Isle of Wight, across Sydney Harbour for at least 73 swims over 16K over his 40-year career. Kevin continues to represent the sport in various lands, to numerous groups and on myriad media, including the TV show, The Great British Body where he was chosen to represent the British male because of his extraordinary achievements. As he recovers from a recent heart attack and for his continued excellence and participation in the sport, Kevin is nominated as the 2009 World Open Water Swimming Man of the Year.

5. Bob Placak (USA), Generous Visionary and Promoter

Californian Bob continues to give back to the sport of open water swimming after founding the RCP Tiburon Mile and 2009 was another typical year. Year in and year out for the past ten years, Bob continues to make his presence known to newcomers to the sport as well as the world’s elite athletes at his RCP Tiburon Mile. Besides offering the sport’s richest cash prize (US$10,000 to both the male and female winners), Bob’s generosity (over US$1,000,000 to local charities) and post-race spread is simply incredible. His attention to detail and genuine care for all athletes, young and old, elite and inexperienced, are unparalleled. He offers a wetsuit division for newcomers uncomfortable with the cold water in the San Francisco Bay, but he also has remained true to the traditions of the sport by limiting the type of swimsuits in the elite division. Bob transports dozens of national, world and Olympic champions from around the world to compete in his race, but he also hosts Special Olympians. Bob and his full-time staff prepare year-round for the magical open water swimming spectacle in San Francisco Bay. Bob also sponsors all-star relay teams at the Trans Tahoe Relay and the Maui Channel Swim that have built a solid record of success. It is for Bob’s selfless devotion to the athletes and to the sport that he is nominated as the 2009 World Open Water Swimming Man of the Year.

6. Scott Rice (New Zealand), Innovator and Branding Expert

Scott is relentlessly innovative in promoting open water throughout his home in New Zealand for competitors of all ages, abilities and backgrounds. He owns the Sovereign New Zealand Ocean Swim Series, a fantastically marketed and branded open water swimming tour in Auckland, Paihia, Wellington, Christchurch, Mt. Maunganui and North Shore City that has rapidly grown and offers something for kids to masters. He co-brands affiliated projects like Sovereign OceanKids, the blueseventy Golden Goggles Club, the Tag Team Relays, the Auckland City Swimming Family Competition. 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. For his passion and his hands-on planning and execution of innovated, mass-participation races in New Zealand, Scott is nominated as the 2009 World Open Water Swimming Man of the Year.

7. Petar Stoychev (Bulgaria), Dominant Marathon Swimmer

Petar, Bulgaria’s Olympic flag bearer in Beijing, won his ninth consecutive FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix, an unprecedented string of professional marathon swimming dominance that is longer than the streaks held by the legendary pro marathon stars like John Kinsella, Paul Asmuth and Shelley Taylor-Smith. His reign over the longest and toughest marathon swimming circuit over the past 9 years is incredible, especially when one considers how close marathon races are nowadays. As the reigning English Channel record-holder, Petar also competed at several FINA 10KM Marathon Swimming World Cup races and was inducted in the International Marathon Swimming Hall of Fame. The only person to ever swim the English Channel under 7 hours, Petar won the 30K FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix in Ohrid Lake(Macedonia), the 32K Traversée Internationale du lac St-Jean (Canada), the 34K Traversée Internationale du Lac Memphrémagog (Canada), the 15K FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix in Sumidero Canyon (Mexico) and the 57K Maraton Acuatica Rio Coronda (Argentina) Grand Prix and was fourth in the FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix in Viedma (Argentina). For his continued demonstration of superior marathon swimming abilities in all types of competitions, Petar is nominated as the 2009 World Open Water Swimming Man of the Year.

8. Rostislav Vítek (Czech Republic), Fast Channel Swimmer

33-year-old Rostislav had a summer to remember. Only one week after his very fast English Channel crossing, the fourth fastest swim in history in 7 hours and 16 minutes, the Olympic 10K Czech swimmer who won a prestigious professional marathon swim, the 36K Maratona del Golfo Capri - Napoli. He also finished eighth in the 25K world championships in Rome and won both the 5K and 20K races at the Czech Open Water Swimming Championships, his tenth long-distance swimming championship in the last 12 years. He won the overall Czech Cup for the sixth time by winning 19 of 22 races. He also finished third in the 57K Maratón Acuática Internacional Santa Fe – Coronda(Argentina) and fifth in the 15K FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix - Rosario (Argentina). As he travels the world, competing in professional marathon swims and proving himself among the fastest channel swimmers of all time in the pantheon of open water swimming, Rostislav is nominated as the 2009 World Open Water Swimming Man of the Year.

9. Rick Walker (USA), Quick-thinking FINA Referee and Long-time Coach

Over his career, Rick has coached dozens of USA Swimming national open water teams at world championships from 1991 - 2008. His experience in all types of conditions and with hundreds of elite athletes in various kinds of situation is a knowledge base possessed by few. Rick drew upon his experience and acted quickly to prevent disaster at the 2009 World Swimming Championships in Rome where he saved an Australian athlete during the 25K event. Knowing the potential for danger in the sport is one thing, but more importantly, acting in a quick manner is what Rick is all about. Besides his new role as a FINA referee and USA Swimming delegate, Rick continues to be an advocate for open water swimming in the college ranks. He integrates open water swimming into his collegiate program at Southern Illinois University and started the Great Saluki Pool 1650/Open Water Festival, combining the best of pool and open water swimming for college swimmers. It is for Rick’s quick thinking as a referee and his innovative thinking as a college coach that leads to his nomination as the 2009 World Open Water Swimming Man of the Year.

10. Douglas Woodring (Hong Kong), Race Innovator and Ocean Protector

Douglas has been crossing the Pacific Ocean to share his time between organizing unique swims in Hong Kong and promoting the health of the oceans through the Project Kaisai which calls into attention the plastic vortex in the Pacific Ocean. Douglas has brought a bit of green to the open water swimming world 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 promotional touch, his advertising prowess and his love of the sport and the ocean have created opportunities to do well in and for the open water from his 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. For his marketing flair and passionate enthusiasm, combined with a deep care for the environment, Douglas is nominated for the 2009 World Open Water Swimming Man of the Year.

Copyright © 2009 by World Open Water Swimming Association

Friday, September 25, 2009

Mastering Open Water In Europe

Over 4,000 athletes attended this year's biennial LEN-organized XII European Masters Championships were held in Cádiz in southern Spain this year. The open water race was held this past weekend and was originally scheduled for a 5K, but weather conditions dictated the race be changed to 3K. The conditions, of course, did not deter the 21 swimmers over 70 years old who participated in the 3K swim.

Olympic 10K swimmer Rostislav Vitek of the Czech Republic won overall finishing in 33:19.

The next World Masters Championships will be held in Gothenburg, Sweden in July-August 2010. Glen Christiansen, ­ ranked number 1 in the world in 1981 in 100-meter breaststroke, a 13-time world masters champion who has broken over 50 world masters records, will conduct 3 world masters swim camps at the T3 Training Centre in Tenerife between November 2009 and February 2010.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

An Incredible Summer Of Racing For Vitek

What a summer it has been for Rostislav Vitek (shown on left). After winning the 36K Maratona Del Golfo Capri-Napoli, finishing third in the 57K Maratón Acuática Internacional Santa Fe - Coronda, and finishing 8th in the World Swimming Championship 25K, he swam the fourth best time in history in the English Channel.

Rostislav recently won both the 5K and 20K races of Czech Open Water Swimming Championships in Lipno, securing his tenth title over the last 12 years. He will wrap up the Czech Cup for the sixth time due to his 19 victories in 22 races on the Czech Open Water Seriesthis year.

In the 5K national championship, the 33-year-old Rostislav closely won over Jakub Fichtl who competed in the 5K and 10K races at the 2009 World Swimming Championships and Jan Posmourny.

He won over Libor Smolka (shown on left) in the 20K race.

On the women's side, Silva Rybarova won her first national title in the 5K. But 15-year-old Lenka Sterbova won in the 20K after her mother, also named Lenka Sterbova, won the 20K title in 2008 at the age of 36.

In another comeback story, the eighth-place 5K finisher was 41-year-old Michael Drozd who won FINA World Cup marathon swims in the 40K Lac St-Jean and 40K Lac Memphremagog race in 1997, the 88K Parana swim in 1996, was second in the 26K Swim Across The Sound (USA) and third in the 36K Atlantic City (Marathon in 1997.

The top 5 men in the 20K Czech Championships were:

1. Rostislav VÍTEK, 4:13:47.2
2. Libor SMOLKA, 4:28:33.1
3. Jan POŠMOURNÝ, 4:35:54.4
4. Josef KUČERA, 4:44:41.1
5. Michael MRŮZEK, 4:52:35.6

The top 5 women in the 20K Czech Championships were:

1. Lenka ŠTĚRBOVÁ, 5:01:39.5
2. Hana NOVÁKOVÁ, 5:03:33.1
3. Tereza MRŮZKOVÁ, 5:20:52.7
4. Helena GILIKOVÁ, 5:42:00.7
5. Tereza SKUHROVÁ, 5:50:35.1

The top 5 men in the 5K Czech Championships were:

1. Rostislav VÍTEK, 1:01:21.9
2. Jakub FICHTL, 1:01:24.2
3. Jan POŠMOURNÝ, 1:01:27.5
4. Libor SMOLKA, 1:04:29.0
5. Adam VILČKO, 1:07:09.3

The top 5 women in the 5K Czech Championships were:

1. Silvie RYBÁŘOVÁ, 1:08:49.6
2. Lenka ŠTĚRBOVÁ (daughter), 1:12:56.8
3. Magda OKURKOVÁ, 1:13:28.7
4. Hana KŘEMENOVÁ, 1:15:02.1
5. Lenka ŠTĚRBOVÁ (mother), 1:17:15.1

Note: dalkove plavani = long distance swimming in the Czech language.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Czech Open Water Swimming

Olympian Rostislav Vitek placed 8th in the the 2009 World Swimming Championship 25K race and swam the 4th fastest English Channel swim of all time with a 7:16 crossing this summer.

Based on the Czech Republic's open water swimming website, there are many people who are also into open water swimming in the Czech Republic.

Check out the website here.

Photo by Quinn Rooney shows Rostislav at the 2009 World 25K Championships.

Copyright © 2009 by World Open Water Swimming Association

Friday, August 14, 2009

Feeding Fast

After today's two very fast times across the English Channel by Rostislav Vitek and Tomi Stefanovski, we thought we'd reprint one of our old feeding lessons:

When swimmers feed quickly, they use a four-step process: 1. Seek and Spot, 2. Reach and Roll, 3. Gulp and Go, 4. Toss and Turn.

Photos below are of the female swimmers during the 25K race at the 2007 World Swimming Championships (photos by Dr. Jim Miller).

1. Seek and Spot - as the swimmer approaches the feeding pontoon or escort boat, they lift their head to spot their coach and seek out exactly where they must go, taking into account surface chop, swells and their relative position in the water vs. the escort boat or feeding station.


2. Reach and Roll - as the swimmer approaches the coach, he/she reaches up to grab their cup or bottle, from a feeding stick or other means, as they roll over on their back or side. They resist the temptation to go vertical, to tread water, to eggbeater, to relax or to look forward towards the horizon. Instead as they roll over on their back, they continue their kick.

3. Gulp and Go - they firmly grab the cup, tilting the lip of the cup or bottle within their open mouth, and then gulp.

As long as a majority of the contents of the cup are consumed, the feeding is deemed successful.


4. Toss and Turn - after the contents of the cup or bottle are consumed, the swimmer immediately tosses the cup and turns to go.

The swimmer assumes that the cup will be picked up by his/her coach or volunteers at the race or on the escort boat.

Once this skill is practiced and the timing with the swimmer's coach is perfected, the process often takes no more than 2-3 seconds from the time the athlete reaches for the cup and he/she is back on their way.

In the Reach and Roll phase, it is important to grab the cup so the swimmer's palm of their hand covers the top of the cup, especially when there is surface chop or ocean swells.

The hand on top often prevents the contents of the cup from spilling (too much).

In the Gulp and Go phase, the swimmer can also consume an aspirin, piece of chocolate, banana or gel that is pre-mixed inside their drink, so they are simultaneously consuming both solids and liquids - thereby, saving time and eliminating the need to use two hands and going vertical (see top photo above).

Fast Times On the Channel

Rostislav Vitek of the Czech Republic, an Olympic marathon swimmer, finished a very fast English Channel swim today in 7 hours and 16 minutes, according to first-hand reports from his escort boat.

Macedonian Olympic swimmer Tomi Stefanovski (see below) also finished in a fast time of 7:42.

Tomi became only the third Macedonian to achieve this accomplishment, after Niko Nestor in 1959 and Atina Bojadzi in 1969, according to the Macedonian International News Agency.

Upper photo by Quinn Rooney shows Rostislav at the 2009 World 25K Championships.

Monday, June 22, 2009

Vitek And Frediani Dominate In Capri-Napoli

Olympian Rostislav Vitek of the Czech Republic and home favorite Camilla Frediani won the 2009 Maratona Del Golfo Capri-Napoli, the fifth stage of the FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix.

Rotislav easily dominated the 36K ocean race in 6 hours and 42 minutes, 14 minutes ahead of second-place Andrea Volpini (6:56) of Italy. Italy's Edoardo Stochino (7:04), Argentina's Gabriel Villagoiz (7:08) and Syria's Mohammed Saleh (7:17) followed.

22-year-old Camilla won in 7:59, easily ahead of silver medalist Pilar Geijo (8:10) and Marianela Mendoza (8:30), both from Argentina, Italy's Laura Volpi (8:40) and Argentina's Noelia Petti (8:55).

Photo by Jiří Seidl.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Swimming in the Canyon and Enjoying Every Moment

Kimberly Plewa (shown swimming in New York on left) is the only American entered into the FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix in Sumidero Canyon race on April 18th in México.

The Sumidero Canyon race, #27 in the World's Top 100 Open Water Swims, is known formally as XX Maratón de Natación Cañón del Sumidero and is one of the world's most scenic marathon swims.

The 15K Maratón de Natación Cañón del Sumidero takes place on the Grjalva River and was started in 1989 as a memorial for first swim in 1960 by the Pañuelo Rojo (Red Handkerchief) team. The water temperature is approximately 25ºC (77ºF).

Iván López of México and Britta Kamrau of Germany are the defending champions. The Mexican national 25K trials for the World Swimming Championships will be held concurrently with the race.

In the 2009 race, Iván will be competing against Diego Nogueira of Spain, Emilio Angel Fransen of Argentina, Marcos Pinheiro of Brazil, Aleksey Akatiev of Russia, Damian Blaum of Argentina, Fouad Shaikh of Syria, Saleh Mohamed of Syria, Gasper Bohihc of Slovakia, Michael Dmitriev of Israel, Petar Stoychev of Bulgaria, Rodolfo Valenti of Italy, Gabriel Villagoys of Argentina, Rostislav Vitek of the Czech Republic, Rodrigo Elorza of México, Daniel Delgadillo of México and Luis Escobar of México

Kimberly and Britta, who has already won two races on the FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix circuit this year, will be competing against Yurema Requema of Spain, Esther Nuñez of Spain (shown on left), Ana Uvarova of Russia, Pilar Geijo of Argentina, Nika Kozamernik of Slovakia, Angela Maurer of Germany, Marinela Mendoza of Argentina, Patricia Castañeda of México, Odette Saldivar of México, Alejandra González of México, Lily Anzueto of México and Zaira Cárdenas México.

Esther, who was third overall in the 2008 FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix, had some good advice for newcomers into the sport, "Enjoy every moment, every movement in solitude, and every goal you reach even if it is small, as only you know how difficult it was to achieve it."

Photo of Sumidero Canyon by Dr. Jim Miller.

Monday, February 2, 2009

Stoychev Starts Off in 2009 Where He Finished in 2008

Courtesy of WOWSA, Huntington Beach, California.

Petar Stoychev won the 36th annual 57 km (35.4 mile) Maratón Acuática Internacional Santa Fe - Coronda in 8 hours 53 minutes 11 seconds over Argentinian Damián Blaum (8:53:13), Rostislav Vitek of the Czech Republic (8:53:18), Rodolfo Valenti of Italy (8:53:20) and Andrea Volpini of Italy (8:55:18).



20-year-old Linsy Heister of the Netherlands, who continues to improve after her 4th-place finish in the 25 km at the 2008 World Open Water Swimming Championships, upset two-time winner Britta Kamrau, finishing in 8:55:27


The incredible Petar Stoychev finished strong, picked up right where he finished in 2008. His first victory comes only a few months after he wrapped up his 8th consecutive FINA Open Water Swimming Grand Prix title in 2008 (his 8th consecutive circuit champinship). The exciting finish can be seen below:



Photo from the Maratón Acuática Internacional Santa Fe - Coronda website. Photo of Linsy Heister by ANP.

Copyright © 2009 by World Open Water Swimming Association

Friday, August 1, 2008

The Mamas and The Papas

Although several teenagers qualified for the Olympic 10K Marathon Swim, there are 2 mothers and 3 fathers who also qualified for the historic event. We previously reported incorrectly that there was only one father (Petar Stoychev) and two mothers (Angela Maurer and Edith van Dijk).

However, in addition to Petar, Angela and Edith who are all pulling double-duty as parents and world-class athletes, the top open water swimmer from the Czech Republic Rostislav Vitek (shown on left) and France's Gilles Rondy are also proud fathers of young children.

A French-language interview of Rondy is here.

Photo by Javier Blazquez of Edith with her daughter after winning a bronze medal in the 25K World Open Water Championships in Seville.

Copyright © 2008 by World Open Water Swimming Association