Sunday, December 16, 2018

Practice Schedule for Weeks 6 & Winter Break

Monday
6:00am Lift and Swim
3:45-6:00pm (The 3 Questions)

Tuesday
6:00am Lift and Mental Training
3:45-6:00 Buffering Tuesday

Wednesday
6:00am Lift/swim Pool
3:45-6:00pm Picture Day (Make Sure You Have Your Meet Suit)

Thursday
3:45-5:30pm
5:30-6:00 YOGA

Friday
3:45-6:00pm

Monday (Christmas EVE)
8:00-11:00am

Tuesday CHRISTMAS
NO PRACTICE

Wednesday
8:00-11:00am

Thursday
8:00-11:00am

Friday
8:00-11:00am

Monday (New Year Eve)
8:00-11:00am

Tuesday (New Years)
NO PRACTICE

Wednesday (Back to School)
6:00am Lifting/Swim
3:45pm Practice
5:30pm Tentative YOGA

Thursday January 3rd
Rock County Championships (Home)
Report and Set up 3:45
Warm-up 4:30
Meet 5:30
Est. Finish: 7:00

Friday
Madison West and Janesville Parker at Parker
Get out of class 3:00
Bus 3:15
Meet at 5:30
Est. Finish 7:30

Marquette University High School Invitational
Walter Schroder Aquatic Center, Brown Deer Wisconsin
Divers Included
Team Meeting 7:30am
Bus 7:45am

1
0:00 AM Dive sheets due
10:00 – 11:00 SWIM and DIVE Warm-ups
11:00 Dive coach’s meeting –
11:00 AM Swim Coach’s Meeting
11:15 AM Swim and Dive Competition
3:00 PM Estimated end time

TIDE finishes 2018 Strong (Weekend Summary)

The BTIDE men finished the 1st half of the their 2018-19 campaign strong with meets at Verona and our own College Events Invite.

Though the TIDE lost to #2 Verona the #4 Knights swam very well and gave the Wildcats a very good meet setting 7 varsity records for short course meters. 

Notable Swims:

200 Medley Relay: 2nd place New Varsity Record 1:56.64
Anthony Jacobson, Ben Levy, Ben Saladar, Nathan Sill

50 Free: 2nd Place New Varsity Record 25.96 Nathan Sill

100 Fly: 2nd Place New Varsity Record 1:01.84 Ben Saladar

400 Free: 2nd Place New Varsity Record 4:42.74 Anthony Jacobson

200 Free Relay: 2nd Place New Varsity Record 1:45.61
Ben Saladar, Max Saladar, Nathan Sill, Anthony Jacobson

400 Free Relay: 2nd Place New Varsity Record 3:57.24
Ben Saladar (New Varsity Record on lead off swim 58.22)
C.J. Light, Anthony Jacobson, Nathan Sill.

Beloit College Events Invitational (6th Annual)
The BTIDE finish 4th at its own 13 team invitational Saturday. #2 Verona won the meet, with defending meet champ Waukesha South finishing 2nd, Sauk Prairie 3rd, with the Knights finishing 1 point behind for 3rd. 
Though the TIDE did not win any 1st places, they had several 2nd place finishes and one new school record in the 400 Medley Relay. The TIDE also medaled in 12 of the 16 events.

Notable Swims/Medalist: 
400 Medley Relay: 2nd Place New Varsity Record 3:55.15
Anthony Jacobson, Ben Levy, Ben Saladar, Nathan Sill.
Anthony Jacobson, Ben Saladar, Nathan Sill, Ben Levy

50 Free: 2nd place Nathan Sill 
100 Back: 2nd place Ben Saladar
100 Breast: 5th place Ben Levy
400 Free Relay: 5th place
Max Saladar, C.J. Light, Ivan Perez, Ben Levy.
100 Free: 4th C.J. Light
200 I.M. 2nd Anthony Jacobson, 6th Max Saladar
200 Free Relay: 5th Place
Max Saladar, Jack Johnson, Ivan Perez, Nathan Sill
100 Fly 4th Ben Saladar, 6th Ben Levy
800 Free Relay: 4th Place
Anthony Jacobson, C.J. Light, Nathan Sill, Ben Saladar

Final Score:
Verona/Mount Horeb     670
Waukesha South .          420
Sauk Prairie                   302
Beloit Memorial            301
Waunakee                      273.5
Badger                           262
DeForest                        260
Janesville Parker           203.5
Janesville Craig            128 
Whitewater                     95
Rockford Auburn           75
Delavan Darien              37
Platteville Lancaster      19

The TIDE's next meet is January 3rd for the Rock County Championships, at the BMHS Natatorium 5:30.

The men will going into heavy training the next two weeks for winter break training. 

Beloit Proud
Beloit Strong
Swamily

Sunday, December 9, 2018

Week 5 Practice Schedule

Monday:
6:00am Lifting and Swimming
3:45pm Swim Goal Reflection

Tuesday:
6:00am Lifting and Mental Training
3:45pm Swimming

Wednesday:
6:00am Lifting and Swimming
3:45pm Swimming

Thursday:
3:45pm Swimming
5:30 YOGA

Friday:
Verona Dual Meet
2:15pm Get out of class
2:30pm Bus
Pool Opens 4:15pm
Meet 5:30
If we have time, I'd like to stop at Culver's after the meet. Bring $$$$$

Saturday:
Beloit Invitational
Team Meeting 8:00am
Warm-up 8:30am
Meet 10:00am
Est. Finish 2:30pm

All Swimmers not in the meet are expected to time or 
work other jobs.
This meet has become a destination invitational in the state and we want our best foot forward.
We need everyones help to make this meet successful. 

Beloit Proud!!!
Beloit Strong!!!

Weekend Summary 1 & 1 in duals, 4th at Parker

The TIDE had a very solid weekend...

Friday night the TIDE swam a double dual with Middleton and Madison LaFollette. The Knights split beating LaFollette and losing to Middleton. The score does not show how well we swam. We started out the night with our 200 Medley Relay finishing second, but breaking the sophomore record in the event. Members of the relay were; Ben Saladar, Anthony Jacobson, Kana Wong, and Jack Johnson.
Ben Saladar also broke the sophomore records for the 50 Free and 100 Free leading off the 200 and 400 relays. The TIDE took the time to play with their lineup and found some new events for a lot of our kids.

Notable Swims:
200 Medley Relay 1:47.49 New Beloit Sophomore Record
Ben Saladar, Anthony Jacobson, Kana Wong, Jack Johnson

50 Free: 1st Place Ben Saladar 22.81
100 Fly: 3rd Nathan Sill 1:00.24
500 Free: 3rd Anthony Jacobson 5:23.69

200 Free Relay 3rd 1:35.65: . Ben Saladar New Sophomore Record 22.52
Ben Saladar, Max Saladar, Caleb Otto, Anthony Jacobson

100 Breast: 3rd Nathan Sill 1:10.46

400 Free Relay 2nd 3:37.93 . Ben Saladar New Sophomore Record 50.06
Ben Saladar, Jack Johnson, Ben Levy, CJ Light


Janesville Parker Relays

Saturday the TIDE traveled to Janesville Parker for the oldest continuous swim meet in Wisconsin. The TIDE had an outstanding day with it's young team. Finishing 4th of 9. The TIDE had 4 medaling relays and almost 100 percent season best swims and many lifetime best swims. Finishing 8 Relays in the top 6 in 10 of the events.

The Knights started of by finishing 4th in the 200 free relay 1:32.83 
8th Fastest in School History
Ben Saladar, C.J. Light, Anthony Jacobson, Nathan Sill

300 Back Relay: 3rd,  2:53.53 New School Record
Max Saladar, Anthony Jacobson, Caleb Otto, Ben Saladar

300 Breaststroke Relay: 4th
Nathan Sill, Anthony Jacobson, Max Saladar, Ben Levy

300 Fly Relay: 3rd 2:47.43 New School Record
Nathan Sill, Kana Wong, Ben Levy, Ben Saladar

THE TIDE's NEXT MEET is at VERONA FRIDAY 5:30
SATURDAY the BELOIT INVITATIONAL 10:00AM

Beloit Proud
Beloit Strong



Wednesday, December 5, 2018

Intermediate TIDE Wins 10th Straight Dual City Title

Beloit Intermediate TIDE boys swim team won it's 10th straight Dual City Title last night. It is was our 11th overall title.

The TIDE only won three 1st places but showed superior depth, in securing the win.

The TIDE started out with a bang, by winning the 200 Medley Relay in 2:06.10, an new program record, by over 3 seconds. Members of the Relay: Aiden Donovan, Kai Wong, Ben Sill, Chris Ludlum. The TIDE's other 1st Places: 200 Free of Aiden Donovan and 50 Breaststroke of Kai Wong.

Our great depth is what won the meet, with every TIDE scoring swimmer finishing in the top 6, with many events all swimmers placing in the top 4.

Results:
200 Medley Relay
A Relay 1st 2:06.10 NR: Aiden Donovan, Kai Wong, Ben Sill, Chris Ludlum
B Relay 4th 2:28.78: George Mulenga, Aidan Greenlee, Ayden Wehrli, Braden Krause

200 Free
1st 2:24.38 Aiden Donovan  Top 10 All-Time
2nd 2:28.22 Sean Goodspeed

100 I.M.
2nd 1:09.02 Kai Wong  Top 10 All-Time
6th 1:22.68 Ayden Wehrli

50 Free
2nd 25.25 Ben Sill    Top 10 All-Time
3rd 29.99  Braden Krause

50 Fly
2nd 28.19 Ben Sill   Top 10 All-Time
4th 32.40 Aiden Donovan

100 Free
3rd 1:05.34 Sean Goodspeed
4th 1:09.24 Anthony Severson

50 Backstroke
3rd 38.89 Chris Ludlum
5th 39.27 George Mulenga

50 Breaststroke
1st 35.41 Kai Wong  Top 10 All-Time
4th 44.41 Aidan Greenlee

200 Free Relay
A Relay 2nd 1:59.73: Chris Ludlum, Sean Goodspeed, Ayden Wehrli, Braden Krause
    Top 10 All-Time
B Relay 3rd 2:08.89: George Mulenga, Victor Sandoval, Aidan Greenlee, Anthony Severson.


Final Score:
Beloit Intermediate TIDE   364
Janesville Marshall             327
Janesville Edison                299
Janesville Franklin             264





Saturday, December 1, 2018

Week 4th Practice Schedule

Week 4 Practice Schedule

Monday
6:00-7:15am (Swimming w/mixed lifting)
3:45-6:00pm (Personal Goal Setting) 1st 20 minutes of Practice.

Tuesday:
6:00-7:15am (Lifting/Swimming)
3:45-7:00pm 
Team Goal Setting 3:45-4:15 (Team Study Area)
Middle School Boys Conference Championships
All High School Swimmers are expected to work meet. 

Wednesday:
6:00-7:15am (Swimming w/mixed lifting)
3:45-6:00pm 

Thursday: 
3:45-6:00pm (Varsity & J.V.)

Friday: 
Middleton and Madison LaFollette Double Dual
4:00pm Warm-up
5:30pm Meet

Saturday:
8:00 - 9:15am (Varsity Practice)
9:30am Bus Leaves
11:00am Parker Relays (Varsity Only) Line up will be Posted early in week.

Summary 1st Meets of the Season

Heartland Arrowhead Scrimmage

This was the 1st scrimmage in several years for our team. It was nice to have and we worked out a lot of bugs, with a lot of new swimmers. Graduating 12 seniors from last years team we have a lot of holes to fill. After watching our young team, I'm very impressed by our talent, we just need to grow up. The future of TIDE swimming stays very bright. The Intermediate school program and our BTIDE USA program is paying off great dividends. We no longer have to totally rebuild, we just need to wait for them to grow up... This will be a great year by the time we get to February.

Tuesday night we won all three varsity relays and two individual events. I was also impressed with our talent skill level of our skilled events (IM, Fly, Back, and Breast). Our only true weakness is the 500 free and veteran depth in the freestyle depth.

We also saw our 1st divers for the 1st time in 5 years. They are all freshman and show great promise.

Notable Swims/Diving

200 Medley Relay: 1st Place 1:43.80
Anthony Jacobson, Ben Levy, Ben Saladar, Nathan Sill

50 Free: 1st Place, Nathan Sill 22.80  3rd Max Saladar 24.80

Nathan Sill


Diving: 2nd Place, Eli Miller 154.80 pts.  3rd  Ben Johnson 124.00 pts.

100 Fly: 1st Place, Ben Saladar 55.40  3rd Kana Wong 1:01.09

100 Free: 2nd Place Ben Levy 53.80

200 Free Relay: 1st Place 1:34.08
Ben Saladar, Max Saladar, Anthony Jacobson, Nathan Sill

100 Breast: 2nd Ben Levy 1:08  3rd Place Max Saladar 1:11.09

400 Free Relay: 1st Place 3:30.55
Ben Saladar, C.J. Light, Anthony Jacobson, Nathan Sill


Sun Prairie Dual Meet


Though we we are a young team, I was very happy with our overall passion that we swam with. The score does not show how well we swam overall. Again I'm impressed with our skill events, out scoring the Cardinals in the Fly, Back and Breast. We also had very strong I.M. swims. I do believe when we meet up in the conference meet in 3 months the outcome will be different.

Notable Swims/Diving:

200 Medley Relay: 2nd Place 1:43.60
Anthony Jacobson, Ben Levy, Ben Saladar, Nathan Sill

Diving: 1st Ben Johnson
Ben Johnson


100 Fly: 1st Ben Saladar 54.79  3rd Kana Wong 59.76 (Kana's time joins TIDE all-time list).

200 Free Relay: 2nd 1:40.50
C.J. Light, Ben Levy, Kana Wong, Max Saladar

100  Back: 1st Ben Saladar 57.52 (New Sophomore Record)

100 Breast: 2nd Ben Levy 1:07.70  3rd Max Saladar 1;09.88


Saturday, November 24, 2018

Week 3 Now it Begins (The Tests)


 

Week 3
November 26-30th

Monday 
6:00-7:15am  Morning Practice (Lifting/Swim)
3:45-6:00pm Afternoon Practice

Tuesday
No Morning Practice
Heartland Arrowhead Scrimmage (Home)
3:45pm  Finish Pool Set Up
4:00pm Warm-up 
5:00pm Meet
6:45pm Approx. Ending

Wednesday
6:00am Morning Practice (Lifting/Swim)
3:45-6:00pm Afternoon Practice

Thursday
3:45-5:30pm Afternoon Practice
5:30-6:00pm YOGA
Image result for sun prairie high school
Friday
Sun Prairie Dual Meet (Home)
3:45pm Pool Set-Up
4:15pm Warm-up
5:30pm Meet
7:00 Approx. End

Things to Focus on this Week:
Racing
Better Turns
Better Finishes
Getting Stronger

Beloit Proud!!
Beloit Strong!!

Sunday, November 18, 2018

NO MORING PRACTICE MONDAY NOVEMBER 19, 2018

2nd Week Practice Schedule (Alumni Meet & Thanksgiving)

Monday
6:00-7:15am (Lift & Swim)
3:45-6:00pm

Tuesday
6:00-7:15am (Lift & Swim)
3:45-6:00pm

Wednesday
8:00-10:30am
4:30pm Team Meeting
5:00pm Warm-Up
6:00pm Purple & White/Alumni Meet

Thursday
Thanksgiving
No Practice
Family/Rest/Eat Lots

Friday
8:00-11:00am

Becoming Beloit Strong
Beloit Proud

Friday, November 9, 2018

1st Week of Practice Schedule H.S. Boys

Monday 11/12
6:00am Varsity (In Pool)
3:45pm J.V. & Varsity
6:00 Practice Ends

Tuesday 11/13
6:00am Varsity Balcony Strength Area/Swim after
3:45pm J.V. & Varsity
6:00pm Practice Ends

Wednesday 11/14
6:00am Varsity (In Pool)
3:45pm J.V. & Varsity
6:00pm Practice Ends

Thursday 11/15
6:00am J.V. & Varsity (In Pool) Everyone Practices
3:45pm Set-up for Middle School Meet. High School Team is required to help with meet.
Will be over by 6:00pm
No Night Practice Thursday

Friday 11/16
3:45pm J.V. & Varsity & Middle School we will be practicing together. 
This is a full Swamily practice. Building for the Future.
Practice will be over by 5:00/5:10.
The BTIDE is swimming in a meet in our pool this weekend. STAT is hosting the meet. 

REMEMBER: IF YOU ARE ON TIME YOUR ARE LATE!!!!

BECOMING BELOIT STRONG!!!! 

Saturday, November 3, 2018

Sectional Round Up Great Day for Beloit

Middleton Sectional 2018

The Lady Knights swam a typical sectional meet by a Beloit team and did themselves and their fans proud. The women finished 11th as a team, but is not indicative of the quality of swimming by our team. Swimming in the toughest sectional in the state, the speed of swimming at this meet was insane. But we wouldn't swim anywhere else. Though we did not qualify any state swimmers this year the future is very bright.

The team swam 17 of 18 life-time or season best swims, by considerable improvements. The Relays all swam best times that also were 3 of the best relays swims in our teams history. This was done by a very young team, with only two seniors on our sectional team. The Knights will be returning 9 of the 12 relay legs.


Final Results:

200 Medley Relay: 10th place 1:55.83 3rd Fastest Time in School History
Lulu Champeny-Johns (11), Sydney Prowse (10), Amya Bessel (12), Jayda Bessel (10)

200 Free
Krissy Landon (9) 2:12 .97  7 second improvement
Kate Gianvecchio (12)  2:14.49  6 second improvement

200 I.M.
Katie Landon (11) 2:18.64  7 second improvement 3rd fastest school history.
Bea Champeny-Johns (11) 2:29.13  6 second improvement Top 20 time school history

50 Free
Prasia Jackson (10) 27.34  .3 improvement

100 Fly
Katie Landon (11) 1:02.93 Top 10 all Time 4 second improvement
Amya Bessel (12) 1:03.94  Top 10 all Time 1 second improvement
Lulu Champeny-Johns (11) 1:06.33 Top 20 all Time 3 second improvement
Prasia Jackson (10) 1:07.08  Top 20 all Time  2 second improvement

100 Free
Jayda Bessel (10) 57.42  second improvement
Bea Champeny-Johns (11) 58.43 2 second improvement
Sydney Prowse (10) 1:00.08 4 second Improvement
Makenzie Jacobson (9) 1:00.33  3 second Improvement

500 Free
Caroline Santas (11) 5:58.47 15 second improvement Top 20 All Time

200 Free Relay:13th place 1:46.68 10th Fastest All Time
Jayda Bessel, Makenzie Jacobson, Prasia Jackson, Amya Bessel

100 Back 
Lulu Champeny-Johns (11) 1:04.33 6th Fastest All Time
Noa Levy (10) 1:06.98 Top 20 All Time

100 Breast
Sydney Prowse (10)  12th Place, 1:13.23 3rd Fastest All Time, New Sophomore Record
Kate Gianvecchio (11) 1:16.44 9th Fastest All Time

400 Free Relay: 8th Place, 3:51.55,  6th Fastest All Time
Jayda Bessel, Lulu Champeny-Johns, Bea Champeny-Johns, Amya Bessel

Congratulation Ladies
Beloit Strong
Beloit Proud

Friday, October 19, 2018

High Boys Swim Team Meeting October 30th 6:00pm


BTIDE Home
BMHS Natatorium

Parents and Athlete Meeting
Monday October 30th
6:00pm

Practice starts November 12
Varsity 6:00am
J.V. and Varsity 3:45pm

Beloit Proud
Beloit Strong

Middle School Boys Swim Starts Monday 10/22

Practice Starts Monday 6:00pm
BTIDE Home.
Sign up and Parents Meeting.

Defending The Pool!!!!

Beloit Proud
Beloit Strong

Sunday, October 7, 2018

Women 2nd at Beloit Fall Sprint Invite Meet Summary

Amya Bessel let the Knights to a second place team finish of 11 teams. Amya defended her title in the 50 Fly, a great way to end your senior Homecoming. 

The Knights show there great developing depth by Medaling in 12 of the 16 events. Our freshman and sophomores are really starting to become very competitive and supporting their upper class swisters. 


Amya Bessel 50 Fly

Medalist:
200 Medley Relay: 
A Relay 3rd Place; Lulu Champeny-Johns, Sydney Prowse, Amya Bessel, Jayda Bessel
B Relay 8th Place; Noa Levy, Kate Gianvecchio, Prasia Jackson, Makenzie Jacobson

100 IM: 6th Jayda Bessel

100 Free Relay: 
A Relay 3rd Place; Jayda Bessel, Lulu Champeny-Johns, Bea Champeny-Johns, Amya Bessel

50 Fly: 1st Amya Bessel, 7th Prasia Jackson
Amya Bessel Homecoming Queen

200 IM: 4th Katie Landon

100 Medley Relay: 
A Relay; 4th Noa Levy, Sydney Prowse, Prasia Jackson, Kate Gianvecchio

50 Back: 5th Noa Levy

200 Free Relay:
A Relay 7th: Prasia Jackson, Sydney Prowse, Bea Champeny-Johns, Katie Landon.

100 Fly: 7th Katie Landon

100 Breast: 4th Sydney Prowse

150 Free Relay:
A Relay 4th Place; Lulu Champeny-Johns, Jayda Bessel, Amya Bessel


High School Boys Swim Meeting October 30, 6:00pm BTIDE Home


Tuesday, September 18, 2018

Boys Swim and Dive Sign Up... Start NOW!!!

If you are planning to tryout or play boys basketball, girls basketball, boys hockey, girls hockey, wrestling, or boys swimming you need to sign up in Academic Affairs across from the Main Office. This is the first step to being ready for the first day of practice. Don't be left out, registration and physicals need to be done before you start. Take care of business and be ready for the season!

Saturday, September 8, 2018

Women Have Big Weekend!! Meet Summary

TIDE Women swim past Madison East; 
Both Varsity and J.V. win Big.

The Knights Varsity started their big weekend by beating Madison East 117-53 and the J.V. won 123-36.

The Varsity won 8 or 11 1st places and outscore East in all 11 events. Another plus for our program, our divers got to show off their stuff, diving for the first time in front of the home crowd, they did an amazing job. It was a total team victory as every varsity swimmer scored points.
Again our Relays out scored East 26 to 12, showing that our young team is developing the depth that we need to have to do well as a team at the end of the season.

The J.V. won took 1st place in every event and out scored East in every event.

The Knights are now have three wins and one loss on the season. This team is very young and is doing an outstanding job. A lot of our Freshman and sophomores are really stepping up and our Seniors and Juniors are showing great leadership.
Makenzie Flies the Dub

1st Places and Outstanding swims:

200 Medley Relay:
1st 'A' Noa Levy, Sydney Prowse, Praisa Jackson, Jayda Bessel 2:01.05
3rd 'B' Lulu Champeny-Johns, Kate Gianvecchio, Bea Champeny-Johns, Kristyn Landon 2:06.45

200 Free
1st Amya Bessel, 2nd Sydney Prowse, 5th Caroline Santas

200 I.M.
2nd Katie Landon, 3rd Bea Champeny-Johns, 4th MaKenzie Jacobson

50 Free
1st Jayda Bessel, 2nd Praisa Jackson, 4th Kristyn Landon

100 Fly
1st Amya Bessel, 3rd Praisa Jackson, 4th Lulu Champeny-Johns

100 Free
1st Jayda Bessel, 2nd Kate Gianvecchio, 3rd Noa Levy

500 Free
2nd Katie Landon, 3rd Bea Champeny-Johns, 4th Caroline Santas

200 Free Relay
1st 'A' Amya Bessel, Praisa Jackson, Bea Champeny-Johns, Jayda Bessel
2nd 'B' Kate Gianvecchio, Paige Kovac, McKenzie Jacobson, Katie Landon

100 Back
1st Lulu Champeny-Johns, 2nd Noa Levy, 3rd Makenzie Jacobson

100 Breast
2nd Sydney Prowse, 3rd Kate Gianvecchio, 4th Kassidy Thomas

400 Free Relay
1st "A' Amya Bessel, Katie Landon, Lulu Champeny-Johns, Sydney Prowse


Elkhorn Invitational 

The young Knights finished 3rd of 9 at the Elkhorn Invite. It was a total team effort with no First places but we podium in every event. Every swimmer had a least one swim that scored points.
Knights Varsity 3rd Place

Cool note: Four of the coaches in the meet today are Purple TIDE/Knight alumni. Beloit Memorial Head Coach Kim Waite and Assistant Brian Michels. Milton High School Head Coach Lindsey Hassenfelt. Delavan-Darin High School Assistant Lauren Gurholt.

Alumni now Coaches
Lindsey Hassenfelt, Lauren Gurholt, Kim (Orr) Waite, Brian Michels


Podium Swims:

200 Medley Relay
3rd: Lulu Champeny-Johns, Sydney Prowse, Amya Bessel, Jayda Bessel
8th: Noa Levy, McKenzie Jacobson, Praisa Jackson, Kristyn Landon

200 Free: 7th Bea Champeny-Johns

200 I.M.: 4th Katie Landon

50 Free: 6th Jayda Bessel

100 Fly: 4th Amya Bessel, 8th Katie Landon

100 Free: 8th Jayda Bessel

400 Free: 7th Sydney Prowse

200 Free Relay
2nd 'A' Amya Bessel, Katie Landon, Bea Champeny-Johns, Jayda Bessel

100 Back: 8th Lulu Champeny-Johns

100 Breast: 7th Sydney Prowse

400 Free Relay:
5th: Amya Bessel, Katie Landon, Lulu Champeny-Johns, Bea Champeny-Johns

The Knights next meet is Friday September 14th at Middleton 

Beloit Proud
Beloit Strong

Monday, September 3, 2018

TIDE gets by LaFollette

The TIDE beat Madison LaFollette 99-71.

The TIDE Varsity 200 Medley Relay of Noa Levy, Sydney Prowse, Praisa Jackson, and Jayda Bessel set a new Sophomore record in winning the the event in 1:59.37.

The Knights took 1st place in 6 of 11 events, they also out scored the Lancers 26-14 in the relays. The close meet was broke open by the Knights in the 100 Back and 100 Breast as the they went 1st and 2nd in both events and then followed up with a 1-2 finish in the 400 Free Relay.

The TIDE is getting a lot of depth points from their up and coming under class-women. 

1st Places and Top Swims:
200 Individual Medley: Katie Landon, 2nd Noa Levy
100 Free: Jayda Bessel
100 Back: Lulu Champeny-Johns, 2nd Noa Levy
100 Breast: Sydney Prowse, 2nd Kate Gianvecchio
400 Free Relay: 'A' Amya Bessel, Katie Landon, Sydney Prowse, Lulu Champeny-Johns. 2nd 'B' McKenzie Jacobson, Caroline Santas, Noa Levy, Krissy Landon.

The TIDE JV won 106-62. Winning 7 of 11 events.

The TIDE's next meet is this Friday at TIDE home vs. Madison East at 5:00pm.

Beloit Proud
Beloit Strong

Sunday, August 19, 2018

10 Things Swimmers Can Do for Exceptional Team Culture; Olivier Leroy

10 Things Swimmers Can Do for Exceptional Team Culture

A swim team’s culture can boost your chances of success in the water just as easily as it can hold you back. Here’s how you, the elite-minded swimmer, can do your part to create exceptional team culture.
Great team culture is one of those things that everyone wants, is fun to lob around as a goal for the club, and yet, is hard to pin down or measure.
But you know it when you see it.
Great culture is unmistakable: success is sustained no matter who swims there. The team performs consistently well. Athletes are motivated to be there.
Bad culture is hilariously easy to spot as well: The bad group body language. The inconsistent performances. The low motivation and lack of direction.
Culture is easy to talk about in the abstract. We all want it, after all. But intentions are not good enough. Great team culture isn’t something you talk about, what you think or what you plan on doing. Great team culture is what you do.
Here are ten things swimmers can do to their part in creating a culture where they and the whole swim team are successful.

1. It starts with ownership.

It can be easy to look at the coach as the be-all and end-all for team culture, but at some point, athletes need to step up as well.
The reality is this: an environment that encourages risk-tolerance, is psychologically safe and promotes excellence benefits you just as much as it benefits anyone else.
Don’t wait for other swimmers to be the ones to step up. Yes, it can feel scary stepping up and taking the lead. It takes a lot to be the one to suggest to do one more rep above and beyond what is expected.
It can feel like you are the odd swimmer out by doing the workout properly and not complaining. This is okay—being excellent isn’t normal.
While your coach lays out the workouts and sets a standard for what is expected, it’s still on you to deliver on those expectations.

2. Embrace the newbies.

When a swimmer first joins your group or lane they are most receptive to the tone and attitude of the group. It’s your chance to make a great first impression and set the standard of what is expected.
Welcoming the new swimmers to the group also gives you a chance to remind yourself what kind of expectations you would like to have of the team and group.

3. Work with the younger swimmers. 

Many of my favorite memories as a young age grouper were when the older swimmers—who I idolized—took a few moments of their practice to ask how my workout was going, to give me a quick pointer, or to encourage me to try a harder interval.
You don’t need to be a world record holder to have a serious impact on other swimmers in the pool.

4. Struggle together.

Getting through it together matters. Some of my favorite memories from my age group days have nothing to do with personal best times or records. They stem from the times where as a lane or as a group we persevered through a set or a workout.
It felt like it was us against coach or us against the workout. We didn’t always win, but on the times we did it brought us together.
Struggling through stuff together encourages cohesion. There’s no faking the bond that comes from throwing down on Hell Week together and coming through mostly unscathed.

5. Put the backstroke flags away.

When practice ends do you scurry to the locker room or are you helping put the lane ropes away? The backstroke flags? The yard sale of equipment behind the blocks?
You shouldn’t have to wait for anyone to ask you to help with this stuff.
The New Zealand All-Black rugby team, arguably one of the most dominant teams on the planet, clean their own locker room after games. Not assistants, or a janitor, or stadium staff—these revered professional athletes take it upon themselves to “sweep the sheds.”
Stepping up and taking care of your training and competition environment isn’t a chore—it’s showing that you care enough about the culture and the environment to spend a sliver of your time looking after it.
When you care for your environment you develop team-building pride for your crew.

6. Stand for your teammates.

Here’s a simple goal statement for you and your group: On this team we cheer for each other like crazy.
Get your cold, water-logged shorts off those chilly metal bleachers and stand up for your teammates when they are on the block. We’ve all experienced the chills and goosebumps before a big race when your squad gets up and does a banger of a cheer for you right before the whistle.
Make that the standard for your team. Not only will you swim hilariously well, but you’ll have every other team looking over in envy.

7. Get on board with the buddy system.

Accountability can work from a host of different directions. Here are some of the examples you are most familiar with: your parents getting on your case about working hard, and your coach on your case for showing up to practice.
But accountability seems to take on a different shade when it’s coming from one of your peers. After all, you are in the chlorinated trenches together. So there’s a kinship and an understanding there.
Partner up with a teammate who has similar goals as you (maybe not the exact same event) and work together to be more consistent in training.

8. Address what’s hurting the team quickly and together.

Problems happen to every club, good or bad, tiny or super. It’s how quickly and in what manner they are addressed that makes all the difference.
Here are some ways to stay on top of adversity and use it to help propel the group further:
Team captains. Weekly team meetings can help keep the ship on course through the season. Captains also manage some of the intra-personal stuff that can bubble up into real problems. They can help mediate issues and provide an added layer of accountability within the team.
Evaluation. Where can we improve as a group? What are we doing that is totally working? Quick evaluations done regularly can help the group from drifting off mission and stay focused.
Peer help. How can you help someone else in the group to be successful? We don’t need to go this alone—when a group of swimmers gets together and supports each other some insanely awesome stuff starts to happen. Risk tolerance goes up (you feel more comfortable going all out on your goals when you know you have people behind you).

9. Effort is always louder than talk.

At the end of the day, all the rousing speeches, the pep talks and the fancy championship banners don’t matter a chlorinated lick if you aren’t leading by effort.
This point is particularly applicable to swimmers who aren’t naturally extroverts. Generally we view leaders in the pool as being really vocal: but words don’t mean much if they don’t match up to the effort that is being put forth in the water.
In fact, it’s your actions that are the true barometer of your leadership abilities. You can rah-rah your teammates until you’re blue in the face, and talk about having a high expectation of excellence, but without the matching effort it’s got the opposite intended effect.
Look, no one is perfect. No disputing that. You’re human, which means that you are indebted the same amount of off days as every other swimmer on the team. But if you are leading, and the expectation is that you want an all-in effort from other swimmers in the group, you better be bringing the noise in the pool as well.

10. Leadership is found in the quiet moments.

Listening to a teammate who is having a rough day or a bad practice. Giving another teammate a reassuring pat on the back after a bad race. Pushing a teammate to a breakthrough performance in training even though your workout isn’t going as great as you’d like.
Leadership is found just as much, if not more so, beyond the rah-rah speeches and the boisterous cheers. It’s in the countless little moments where success and failure happen on your way to championship season.
This is great news for the quiet swimmer who prefers to lead by example. You can be a world-class introvert and still lead like a champion.

Women Open with Win!! (Meet Summary)

TIDE Women opened the 2018 Season with a win over rival Janesville Craig 89-81. Weather forced the meet inside to TIDE Home at BMHS Natatorium. So the team swam it's meet without practicing inside yet this season. Being indoors invigorated the team, and help bring this young team together.

The Knights are very young this year with only 2 varsity seniors. It is exciting to see so many freshman, sophomores, and juniors stepping up. With most of our number 3 swimmers in each event scoring.
The team collected six 1st places, while winning 7 of the events and tying Craig in two. 

It was a very exciting meet with no more than 4 points separating the teams through out the meet, until Beloit went 1, 2, 5 in the 100 Back, breaking the meet open.  
Also the TIDE relays out scored Craig 26 -16. With all 3 'B' relays scoring. The 'A' 200 Medley Relay started the season with the 9th fastest time in school history.


Amya Bessel swimming Fly leg,  swims into her waiting sister Jayda
200 Medley team swam the 9th fastest in school history.
Photo Credit: Maria Jacobson

1st Places and other top Swims:

200 Medley Relay:
'A' 1st  Lulu Champeny-Johns, Sydney Prowse, Amya Bessel, Jayda Bessel.
       9th Fastest School History 1:58.81
'B' 3rd; Noa Levy, Kate Gianvecchio, Praisa Jackson, Makenzie Jacobson  2:02.48

200 Free: 1st Sydney Prowse 2:11.75, 3rd Amya Bessel, 5th Bea Champeny-Johns.

200 I.M.: 2nd Katie Landon 2:25.96

50 Free: 2nd Jayda Bessel 27.05, 3rd Praisa Jackson, 5th Kristyn Landon

100 Fly: 2nd Amya Bessel

100 Free: 1st Jayda Bessel 59.40

500 Free: 1st Katie Landon 5:58.94

200 Free Relay: 
'A' 1st Makenzie Jacobson, Sydney Prowse, Praisa Jackson, Katie Landon 1:53.11
'B' 3rd Bea Champeny-Johns, Kristyn Landon, Caroline Santas, Paige Kovac.

100 Back: 1st Lulu Champeny-Johns 1:06.88, 2nd Noa Levy 1:0742, 5th Kristyn Landon 1:14.91

100 Breast: 2nd Sydney Prowse 1;16.25

400 Free Relay:
'A' 2nd Amya Bessel, Bea Champeny-Johns, Katie Landon, Jayda Bessel 3:59.65
'B' 3rd Lulu Champeny-Johns, Noa Levy, Katie Gianvecchio, Caroline Santas

The Knights Next Meet is Friday August 24 at Sun Praire 

Beloit Proud
Beloit Strong

Monday, August 13, 2018

35 Ways to Rule the Pool by Olivier Leroy

35 Ways to Rule the Pool

1. Streamline. When you push off and you are diving into the water you are moving at lightspeed. Pack your arms and elbows in and keep that speed going for as long as possible.
2. Pop out of your breakouts. Explode out of your streamline into your first couple strokes. Good training habits matter.
3. Do one thing better today. Excellence doesn’t happen in fell swoops; do one thing better today than you did yesterday. Repeat as necessary.
4. Forget best times. Develop a routine and a schedule that leaves no choice but success.
5. Sleep more. Yes, it’ll require managing your time. But it’s worth the recovery and rest. Among the things you can do to recover and swim faster sleeping more is the easiest.
6. Surround yourself with like-minded athletes. Fast swimmers create a big wake. You can either surf it and go along for the ride or let the wave swallow you.
7. Stay ahead of injuries. Getting hurt will happen. Swimmer’s shoulder, in particular. Stay ahead of them by implementing a fast and simple pre-hab routine.
8. Don’t complain. It serves nothing. It’s not fair for others too.
9. Count your strokes. Swimming fast requires swimming with efficiency. Step one is knowing how many strokes you are taking per lap.
10. Count your fly kicks too. How many underwater dolphin kicks are you doing off each wall? Two? Three? Set a minimum threshold and stick to it.
11. Maximize your time in the pool. You don’t necessarily need more workouts, you need to be more focused with what you already have.
12. Don’t worry about what other swimmers are doing. At the end of the day, it’s You vs. You. No one else.
13. Hammer your weaknesses. There are areas of your training you avoid because you “suck” at them. Punish them with consistent attention.
14. Challenge yourself. Break out of your comfort zone. Try that breathing pattern. Do an off-stroke for the main set. Reach a little further.
15. Be grateful. We get to swim. Remember that especially when times are tough.
16. Master the fundamentals. Whenever you are struggling, go back to basics. Technique, consistency, attitude.
17. Be the swimmer you want to be daily. Being that awesome swimmer doesn’t happen at the end of the season. It happens today with your attitude, preparation and habits.
18. You won’t always feel like it. Do what has to be done even when you don’t “feel like” doing it.
19. Train around injuries. One of the benefits of swimming? If your legs are out of commish, get some pull in. Shoulder down for the count? Strap on some fins and do some vertical kick.
20. Have a plan. When you have a plan for your swimming you are more likely to walk on deck with purpose and focus.
21. Be the influence you want to be. What’s your idea of a perfect teammate? There’s no reason you can’t embody those characteristics yourself. A rising tide raises all ships (and especially yours).
22. Learn from your mistakes. It’s human nature to trip up in recurring ways. When you break the pattern and crack the chains of your habitual missteps you create an environment for massive momentum.
23. Work hard. You can’t control talent. Or genetics. But you know what you have control over? Effort.
24. Tackle big things one small step at a time. Olympians aren’t built overnight. Aim for progression and improvement, not overnight results.
25. Track the things that are mission-critical. If it matters to your swimming, you should be logging and tracking it. Period.
26. Keep things as simple as possible. Instead of drawing up a laundry list of 100 things you want to improve start with one thing. Nail it. And then move on to the next thing. When we complicate things we get overwhelmed.
27. Perfection vs. Excellence. Greatness comes with blemishes, setbacks and disappointments. It’s okay for things not to go perfectly.
28. Ignore the naysayers. Challenging goals are hard enough, nevermind in the face of unqualified criticism. Block ’em out.
29. Go the extra mile. If you do the same as everyone else, you will get the same results as everyone else too. Don’t be afraid to push things a little further.
30. Train like you wanna race. Don’t wait until race day to swim with the tempo, technique and speed you want. These are things that are developed during practice.
31. Refuse to wait. Your goals will not wait for you. Tomorrow is already a day too late.
32. Do what you say you will do. Keep your commitments with your team, your coach, and yourself. When you keep your word it builds integrity, which powers the belief that you can achieve big things.
33. Be coachable. We don’t know it all. Be humble enough to know when you are coming up short. Listen to constructive criticism with an open mind.
34. Be the example. Actions will always have more impact than all the talk in the world.
35. Be deserving of success. Yes, you deserve it just as much as the next swimmer. So why not you?