Adriel Sanes Tokyo Olympic “B” qualifying time of 2:14.26
Sanes makes Olympic time at 2021 UANA Qualifier Adriel Sanes finally achieved one of the biggest goals of his swimming career — getting a chance to compete in the Olympics.…
Sanes makes Olympic time at 2021 UANA Qualifier Adriel Sanes finally achieved one of the biggest goals of his swimming career — getting a chance to compete in the Olympics.…
The St. Croix Dolphins Swim Team traveled to Atlanta, Georgia to compete in the 2014 SCAT Georgia Open Swim Meet from February 15-16. The competition was attended by 30 different…
The Virgin Islands Swimming Federation sent two of their National Swimmers, Caylee Watson and Victor Torres, to represent the Virgin Islands in the 15th FINA World Championships in Barcelona, Spain…
The Virgin Islands Long Course Swimming Championships were held at the Dolphins Pool on St. Croix this past weekend May 18-19, 2013. Forty four St. Croix Dolphins swimmers competed alongside…
The Virgin Islands National Swim Team traveled on March 28th to April 3rd to compete in the XXVIII CARIFTA Swimming Championships held at the National Stadium Pool in Kingston,…
The Federation attended two world competitions, the FINA World Long Course Championships and the FINA JR World Championships.
The St. Croix Dolphins have 108 competitive swimmers, 145 in the Learn to Swim program and 25 in the Masters Program. The Dolphins have had various local meets and three…
Bryson Mays swam his way to one gold medal and two silvers to lead a U.S. Virgin Islands contingent of 14 swimmers that competed at the XXVI CARIFTA Swimming Championships last week in Barbados.
As a team, the USVI finished 11th out of the 17 countries that took to the pool for four days of fierce competition. Before the team left last week, USVI coach John Vasbinder described the event as one of the top age group swim meets in the Central American and Caribbean region.
Mays entered the meet as the top seed for the 200- and 400-meter Individual Medley races. He took first in the 400 IM in 4 minutes and 42.81 seconds, and barely missed another gold in the 200 IM when Suriname’s Diguan Pigot touched a fraction of a second faster.