The life-changing magic of Gen X moms who don’t give a damn
The last time Krista Johnston played water polo she was 10 years old in swimming lessons. Forty years later, looking for a workouonscreensn’t aquafit, she signed up for a Friday morning water polo drop-in at her local Kelowna, B.C., pool, expecting, at that hour, to swim with other people roughly her own age. Instead, she […]
The last time Krista Johnston played water polo she was 10 years old in swimming lessons. Forty years later, looking for a workouonscreensn’t aquafit, she signed up for a Friday morning water polo drop-in at her local Kelowna, B.C., pool, expecting, at that hour, to swim with other people roughly her own age. Instead, she stood poolside on the first day in her teal one-piece with tummy control, the only one with a float belt, watching super-fit, much younger swimmers expertly slinging the ball around. To flee or not to flee?
The dialogue in her head went something like this: Why am I embarrassed? Because I’m 50? Good for me. Because I have a little more around the middle? Well, I’ve had two kids. And then more loudly, insistently, this thought: I deserve to be here.
The women of Gen X (my friends and I included) share her defiance, as they arrive at middle age, their careers established, their families launched, or nearly so.
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Krista Johnston started playing water polo again at 50.Kathleen Fisher/The Globe and Mail
Our generation, now age 45 to 60, has officially hit the years of colonoscopies and mammograms. And we all know how it’s supposed to go. At the half-century mark, men get a power upgrade and become silver foxes. Women get turkey necks and bingo wings and become irrelevant, invisible and no longer you-know-what-able.
Gen X is having none of it. The mothers I spoke with for this story are starting businesses, taking up skateboarding, travelling with their adult children, dreaming up their next steps.
They are focused on personal agency and joy. They dropped more F-bombs than any batch of interviews I’ve done for a story. They’ve probably danced past midnight more recently than many twentysomethings.
The last thing they are is invisible or irrelevant. “Society wants to put us out to pasture,” says Ms.Johnston. “We’re not accepting that.”
Middle-aged motherhood has been long overdue for a female-friendly reboot, ideally a fearsome, liberated remake that stomps the crap out of what Ms. Johnston calls that “age-shaming baloney.”
This power move is already happening in Hollywood. Gen X directors and actors such as Nicole Kidman and Cate Blanchettare producing on-screen storylines where middle-aged moms have hot sex with besotted younger men, or team up to mastermind heists and criminal cover-ups.
Add to the movement Michelle Obama, who at 61 gets honorary Gen X status. When her absence from public events prompted rumours of a marriage breakup, the former first lady explained on a podcast in April, “I chose to do what was best for me, not what I had to do, not what I thought other people wanted me to do.”
Even Stacy London, who for years dictated fashion advice on her makeover TV show What Not to Wear, has now hit middle age and menopause with second thoughts about her previously critical assessments of women as frumpy and too flashy. She’s just launched a cleverly marketed mea culpa: a new TV show called Wear Whatever the F You Want.
Points for the pithy title, although this doesn’t make up for “No miniskirts after 35.” Also, quick question: If we’re wearing whatever we want, do we still need instructions?
Because telling Gen X what to do is not going to fly. Based on the conversations I had for this story, the Big Change fuelling all this ferocity is not hormones and empty nests and culture wars and grey hair. It’s the unsung superpower of middle-aged womanhood: You stop giving a damn.
In Langley, B.C., Darla Halyk, 52, has zero damns left to give. (The actual expression she used was much more on brand.) “I’m not the girl walking down the street concerned about what anybody thinks any more.” she says. “I speak my mind clearly if someone says something I disagree with and I don’t fear the repercussions of making them uncomfortable.”
And so, you won’t be surprised to hear that at the pool that day, Ms. Johnston decided no one would put her in a corner. She climbed down the ladder, while everyone else dove in, and chased the ball until she thought her lungs felt like they would explode. “I didn’t want to strut out there, you know, like, ‘I’m ready,’” she says, “But I had to.”
Had to, Ms. Johnston says, because she remembers the way her mom spoke wistfully about missed adventures, and then died at 65, before she felt free enough to do them. Because Ms. Johnston wants to set a more empowered example for her own kids, and for the younger mothers trying to break the rules behind her.
Because why did we all work so freakin’ hard just to slink away from life now?
This expletive-laced remaking of middle age was probably inevitable. What else would you expect from a generation that leans hard on sarcasm and surliness, chafes at dumb rules and knows the world is, sigh, unjust.
And who better to lead this modern new middle-aged motherhood franchise than Generation X, my small yet feisty cohort that has always punched above its weight?
We were the first large group of grade-schoolers who went home to empty houses, and the last teenagers to get up to no good without social-media surveillance. The first female generation to surpass our male peers in educational attainment. (Although we still earned less than them.) The first mothers to get one-year maternity leave, and the second sandwich generation, caring simultaneously for still-growing children and fast-aging parents.
We saw the Tiananmen Square student massacre and the fall of the Berlin Wall happen six months apart, and watched 22-year-old Monica Lewinsky get the blame for the blue dress, so we learned early that borders change and tyrants rise, and that Pity Him would come after #MeToo.
But we also raised our sons to hopefully understand consent in a way our own dates sometimes didn’t. We warned our daughters not to take abortion rights for granted. And we took them both to the therapy we never got.
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‘The fact that like we’re not looking like the Golden Girls any more is good, but it’s also bad. Because now we have Jennifer Aniston at 50,’ Ms. Halyk says.FELICIA CHANG/The Globe and Mail
We perfected motherhood hacks well before TikTok glamourized them. One mom I know simmered Bulls-Eye Barbecue Sauce on the stove for years to home-cooking acclaim. (In case you’re interested, she also cleverly stocks her car with the gum flavour nobody in her family likes so she’s never disappointed by an empty pack.)
Doing it all still broke many of us early. But there was a silver lining. At daycare, the kids with mismatched socks and single mittens were friendship beacons for frazzled moms barely holding it together and the resulting wine-soaked girls’ nightsweretraining for seizing our own identities in mid-life.
But this isn’t a fairy tale: Getting old also sucks. You ache in new places. Your girlfriends get cancer. Marriages unravel. Parents die. The kids leave. Illness derails your plans.
And more than you like to admit, you grieve for your prettier self.
“I didn’t think I would feel so sad about getting old,” says Ms. Halyk. “I didn’t think I was that vain. I have never been a high-fashion, wear-a-lot-of-makeup lady.” She hates that “a little bit of grey hair” makes her feel insecure. Some days, she catches her eyes in the mirror, unprepared for the reflection. “Like two days ago, I looked 10 years younger.”
Having hit middle age with independence and financial means, and still just enough insecurity, Gen X women have become a lucrative demographic. Menopause has gone mainstream, selling books and lux lubricants. From a new company started by Gen X actor Naomi Watts, there’s the Vag of Honor intimate moisture gel and the Oh My Glide play oil, a top seller, according to the website.Unfortunately, much like easy access to consistent medical care for a health issue guaranteed to affect half the population, neither are available in Canada.
Meanwhile, according to social media, a middle-aged woman’s wish list is reduced to miracle winkle cream, wall Pilates, incontinence underwear and pelvic floor therapy. That last one would feel like progress, if it wasn’t immediately followed by an ad of a plastic surgeon drawing on a woman’s face to mark the parts he would fix. (Only the neck, chin, cheeks, eyes, nose and forehead.)
“Pretending that it doesn’t ever bother us that our necks are getting saggy isn’t helpful,” says Krista O‘Reilly-Davi-Digui, a 53-year-old mom and wellness coach in Edson, Alta., who leads an online mentoring community for middle-aged women. At the same time, “If you stop spending 80 per cent of your waking hours hating your body, trying to change our body, trying to find clothes to make your body look a different way, you’ve got a lot of space now to do your creative work.”
Life also has a way of minimizing the smaller problems – and clarifying our priorities -by burdening us with larger loss.
Ms. Halyk, for example, abandoned her writing career after receiving death threats for telling a story about a sexual assault she experienced as a young woman. “You know, we all go through stuff,” she says. “You go though it, and you heal.”
Ms. O‘Reilly-Davi-Digui lost her 23-year-old son to suicide in 2019. In therapy, she worked hard on self-compassion, and how to carry a terrible grief that will be with her forever. “It was not a pretty journey,” she says. Feeling joy again was difficult and emotional work. She moved through it with thehelp of professional mental health care and women who gave her space to be honest – the kind of collective embrace, she says, we need to foster more in society.
Oorbee Roy, a Toronto mom who took up skateboarding in her 40s and is now known around the internet as Aunty Skates, has an inherited condition that means she could have a heart attack at any time.“I’m hyper aware of the fact that these are good years,“ and she refuses to waste them.
Early this year, Ms. Roy, 50, announced to her husband she would not be folding the laundry any more. “And he’s like, ‘But that‘s adulting,’” she recalls. She stood her ground: The clothes come out of the dryer, get dumped in a basket and she doesn’t care. “I don’t want to do all this mundane stuff any more.” Two weeks ago, however, she came home from visiting her mother, and her folded clothes had also been put away. “That,” she says, “was like foreplay.”
A laundry strike may not be world-changing, but Ms. O‘Reilly-Davi-Digui sees this middle-aged tension as our true selves saying, “Stop. No more devaluing myself, no more putting myself last, no more performing.“
This “reimagining of how we move through the world” can be messy, she says. Sometimes “you need to scream and get that rage out of your body.” (Insert F-bomb where appropriate.)
When I asked Gen X women for their best sources of perspective and meaning, they looked in two directions – their parents aging ahead of them, and their kids coming up behind. “I think we’re very lucky to be Gen X,” Ms. Halyk told me. “We’ve gotten to see history and the future, and really live in the line between them.”
From that vantage point, you see what it‘s like to get older, for better and worse. Maybe you start lifting weights, not so much to lose weight, but to dodge your mom‘s knee surgery at 70. Or you invest in friends who will remind you of past adventures when your memory fades like your father‘s.
With your kids, there’s common music and culture – a shortcut to closeness. You’ve likely been getting IT support from them for years already – why stop listening now?
Gen X moms are quick to say yes – to concerts with their kids, or pub nights with their millennial co-workers. When Ms. Halyk‘s daughter wanted to go with her to Disneyland for her 21st birthday, she made it happen, and even went on her most terrifying ride, the Ferris wheel. At work, younger colleagues have taught Ms. Johnston about bubble tea and the shows they liked, and energized her natural curiosity. “Sometimes, I would forget that I was more than twice their age.” And at water polo, the players were generous and welcoming; she was soon joining them for post-scrimmage conversation in the hot tub.
Ms. O‘Reilly-Davi-Digui says her daughters, both in their 20s, are a primary motivator for how she chooses to live. “I want something better for them, or at least, I want to model a brave way of being in the world.”
For Ms. Johnston, a more empathetic understanding of her mother also looms large in her decisions today. She sees now that her mom was forced to be the serious parent because of her fun-loving father, yet always pushed her daughters to be independent and adventurous. At 58, her mom went back to school, to upgrade her skills, an act of bravery her then 28-year-old daughter didn’t fully appreciate. And Ms. Johnston now clearly recognizes a yearning for what might have been, when her mom listened to accounts of her children’s travels.
She thinks of this when she sticks with water polo, when she proposes renting out the house and working on a sheep farm in Scotland, and realizes she would go, in a heartbeat, except her husband isn’t keen, and she still feels selfish spending money to chase her own desires.
“I’m not as brave as I think I am, or want to be,” Ms. Johnston says. And yet, this is now or never time. “Do I take a chance? Do you go out on a limb? Do I want to just be accepting things that I’m not okay with until I die?”
Her fear is that she’ll get to her mom‘s age, with the same regrets. “That definitely lights a huge fire under me.” Her mother‘s story also reminds her how abruptly that fire can go out. “I’ve survived. I’ve seen. I’ve done,” she says. “I’m lucky I’m here.”
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‘I think Gen Xers we’re a little bit reckless. We kind of fly under the radar anyway. So why not do whatever we wanna do?’ Ms. Roy says.Jess Deeks/The Globe and Mail
Every Halloween, Ms. Roy and husband host a rager in their home. They hire two bartenders, and glow-in the dark Jello syringes are the custom cocktail. They invite all the neighbours so no one calls the police. There’s dancing and karaoke, until the guests are sent home at 2 a.m. A couple of years ago, a younger mom in attendance found Ms. Roy, then dressed as the creepy, crooked-necked ghost from The Haunting of Hill House, and thanked her, proving it‘s possible to still have fun as an adult.
And yet, for years Ms. Roy sat on the sidelines, while her husband and children whizzed around the skateboard park, talking herself out of having fun by joining them. She told herself: “I won’t be very good. It‘s too late for me. I’m going to hurt myself. People will laugh at me.”
And then, at 43, she decided she wanted to be a participant in, not a witness to, her family’s life. The joy she felt from that first clumsy ride was unexpected. She thought, “I want more of this in my life,” And life, she realized, was a lot like skateboarding – you fall a lot, you think about what you did wrong, you go again. If you’re lucky, you eventually land the trick. “But it‘s really about the journey.”
Ms. Halyk, who handles accounts for a tax services company, is currently launching her own business, Pawsh Trail Co., a pet product line designed to help woman walk and care more easily for their large dogs
“I just see myself in my power, more than ever,” Ms. Halyk says. “You’re not strapped to the toddler or even the soccer practices. You have more you.”
More room, for “what next?” as Ms.O‘Reilly-Davi-Digui likes to say.
On that front, Ms. Roy is starting an Aunty Skates podcast. Ms. Halyk dreams of buying an acreage with her kids, and raising chickens and canning her own tomatoes. Ms. Johnston injured her rotator cuff during water-polo drills; she plans to return in September, but has joined a competitive dragon boat team in the meantime.
All this example-setting and boundary-moving, personal and public, is important: Middle age can be a grim and lonely place, the time of life with the highest suicide rates for women.
That‘s why women need to come together and share, says Ms. O‘Reilly-Davi-Digui, for their own benefit, but also so that their example trickles down. She notes that her 25-year-old daughter is following hormone specialists and pelvic floor therapists on Instagram. Her middle age has already shifted, just like Gen X evolved from the activism of their mothers’ generation.
“The more that we all practise a new way of being, we’re just sort of pinging off each other,” says Ms. O‘Reilly-Davi-Digui. “We’re creating a new cultural narrative.
We might wonder why we waited so long. Considering her own reasons, Michelle Obama suggested that women too often worry about disappointing people. “I could have made a lot of these decisions years ago, but I didn’t give myself that freedom.”
Giving yourself the freedom to choose is but one lesson of Gen X aging that‘s also a lifelong happiness practice. Among the others: Mind the hour, and be grateful for the day; learn from the people you value, young and old; be bold and brave and silly as often as you can.
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Ms. Roy with her kids Rohan, 12, and Avnee, 15, took up skateboarding when she was 43.Jess Deeks/The Globe and Mail
And then there’s this one, from which all of those others flow:
On a recent evening, I stood in a kitchen with a group of Gen X women. One mom, an accountant, described once begging the local baker to make three lasagnas in her own casserole dishes so she could pass them off as home made at the school bake sale – prompting laughter, à la “we’ve all been there.”
But in the pause that followed, a second mom, who had stayed home with her kids and whose talents I have long admired, quietly spoke up: She’d also felt judged, by the working-outside-the home moms, for bringing in the lasagna she supposedly “had so much free time” to cook herself. The moment landed hard: Mothers, of every age, get enough blame for being too warm, too cold, too absent, too present. Why do we add to it?
“We are all feeling the same way, and have come through so much,” says Ms. Halyk. “We need to be gracious with each other and ourselves.” If Gen X, while rebranding middle-aged motherhood, passes down any lesson, may it be this one.
Benjamin Riley Benjamin Riley of Tracy graduated from the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs with a Bachelor of Science Degree in Computer Science on May 29. Riley is now set to begin pilot training at Laughlin Air Force Base in Texas in August. Riley is a 2020 graduate of Tracy High, where he […]
Benjamin Riley of Tracy graduated from the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs with a Bachelor of Science Degree in Computer Science on May 29. Riley is now set to begin pilot training at Laughlin Air Force Base in Texas in August.
Riley is a 2020 graduate of Tracy High, where he played soccer, water polo, baseball and volleyball and was in the Ag/Sci Academy. He also achieved the rank of Eagle Scout in 2020.
• Contact the Tracy Press at tpnews@tracypress.com or (209) 835-3030.
MARIETTA, Ohio (WTAP) – Coach K’s volleyball camp is back for a twenty-eighth year at Marietta high school. Today marks the second day of action as athletes spanning grades three through twelve came to learn and compete. What started as a small camp has grown into a big event for the MOV with hundreds of […]
MARIETTA, Ohio (WTAP) – Coach K’s volleyball camp is back for a twenty-eighth year at Marietta high school. Today marks the second day of action as athletes spanning grades three through twelve came to learn and compete. What started as a small camp has grown into a big event for the MOV with hundreds of campers.
“It’s just. To me, I’m just amazed it’s been this long and we’ve stayed with Coach K’s camp for this many years and it just keeps getting, growing and growing,” Coack K said. “So I’m proud of it and all my assistants and all the helpers and the kids have come to camp. You know that’s important”
It’s been a positive first two days of camp as coach Kidder is happy with the attitudes of the campers and the progress they’ve made.
“All the campers did really, really well. There’s been, we’ve had a lot of kids here this week. In our first session we have about 80, 70 to 80 kids and our second session about 110 to 130 kids, about 40 or so in our third session. So there’s a lot of kids. But it’s well organized and I got a lot of help. That helps and I think the kids are learning and getting better. Fundamentals more than anything, the fundamentals and you know doing things the right way, having fun and enjoying the game. And again, I want the game to be fun for them. So that’s kind of what I wanted. I want them to learn the fundamentals.”
For John Glenn volleyball player Chloe Goff, this camp is a great opportunity to learn from a different set of coaches. She appreciates the fresh perspective Coach Kidder and his staff provide.
“This camp has been great,” says Goff. “It’s great to be out of my regular gym like get more perspective from different coaches and this is also where I play club, so it’s great to just be back in the gym with Coach Kidder and Fulton and the rest of the coaching staff. It’s great to just be in a new place like new perspective with different coaches. Just a different view on myself as a player and just to see my team again, it’s great. It’s definitely refreshing.”
As always, Coach K has a few of his Marietta players working the camp. They get to participate early and then do some coaching later on.
“I remember my first coach K camp. I was just so happy to be there and just really appreciative of all of like previous players getting to show me things that they can do and now being like on the other side and being older and being able to, you know, teach younger kids and like watch them make mistakes that I did when I was younger. It’s just super cool to be on the other side of it,” Wilkinson says.
At the conclusion of the camp, the players have a chance to win a plethora of prizes, so competition is sure to be high.
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Mets' Frankie Montas to make two more minor league starts
The Mets’ starting rotation could be back to nearly full strength in just a few weeks, but there are questions about what right-hander Frankie Montas will look like when he finally makes his long-awaited season debut. Montas will make two more rehab starts, including one Friday night with Triple-A Syracuse, before the Mets activate him […]
The Mets’ starting rotation could be back to nearly full strength in just a few weeks, but there are questions about what right-hander Frankie Montas will look like when he finally makes his long-awaited season debut.
Montas will make two more rehab starts, including one Friday night with Triple-A Syracuse, before the Mets activate him off the injured list. In four starts so far, the veteran righty hasn’t posted great numbers, allowing 12 earned runs on 16 hits over 12 innings (9.00 ERA), with two starts in High-A and two in Triple-A. Montas has allowed six home runs, walked eight hitters and struck out nine.
However, from the Mets’ perspective, numbers aren’t necessarily the best determination of what Montas is capable of doing. With the lat strain occurring so early during spring training, his rehab starts are essentially the equivalent of spring training games. Pitchers use early spring training games to work on specific pitches and situational aspects of the game before moving on to things like sequencing and execution in preparation for the regular season.
“I think he’s still feeling his way back,” Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns said Friday. “This was a fairly significant lat injury. He did a good job working through his progression, and I think he’s still searching a little bit. So we’ve got another one tonight, and then we’ll have another one, likely, I think next week. And those are two big, big outings for him.”
One of the reasons the Mets signed Montas to a two-year, $17 million contract over the winter was because of his health in 2024. After making only nine starts with the Yankees from the middle of the 2022 season to 2023, he was able to make 30 starts and pitch 150 2/3 innings in 2024 for the Cincinnati Reds and Milwaukee Brewers. His injury history naturally leads to more questions about his health, especially at 32.
The Mets have quickly become known for their ability to take injury-riddled pitchers and pitchers who have underperformed with other teams and turn them into All-Star caliber arms. They did it with Luis Severino last season, who made all of his starts with the Mets. Sean Manaea was a good example of this as well before he tweaked an oblique during spring training.
Still, with the success the pitching group has had in converting Clay Holmes to a starter and getting Griffin Canning to go from a 5.00+ ERA pitcher to one with a 3.22 ERA nearly halfway through the season, the Mets are confident they can work their magic on Montas as well.
“They have good stuff, they’ve had success at the major league level, and maybe there are things that they got away from, or maybe there were things that we noticed that we’ve helped them get a little bit better at,” Stearns said. “But the underlying commonality among all of them is that they’re talented. They’ve come in here and they’ve worked hard, and for the most part, we’ve had some decent results out of it.”
TRAINER’S ROOM
Center fielder Jose Siri had a setback in his recovery from a fractured tibia. New imaging showed the bone has not healed as the Mets had expected, which will require Siri to “back off” baseball activities. Siri has been hitting outside, going through a running progression and taking outfield jumps for about a month with the hope of returning by the end of the month. That timeline is no longer possible, and Stearns did not give an updated target date.
Tyrone Taylor will continue to get the bulk of the innings in center field, with Jeff McNeil seeing time there as well.
Outfielder/DH Jesse Winker (strained oblique) isn’t any closer to a return either. Stearns said Winker is still “weeks” away from a rehab assignment.
However, there is good news on the bullpen front for the Mets. They could get another leverage left-hander down the stretch if Brooks Raley continues to progress through his rehab from ulnar collateral reconstruction surgery at the current rate. Raley is currently throwing to hitters and could get a minor league rehab assignment as soon as next week.
The Mets won’t rush him back. Given the nature of the surgery the lefty underwent last April, Stearns expects them to use all 30 days allotted for a rehab assignment. But it could alleviate the need for the Mets to find a left-handed reliever at the trade deadline.
Currently, Jose Castillo is the only southpaw in the ‘pen, with A.J. Minter (lat surgery) and Danny Young (Tommy John surgery) both out for the season.
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Setúbal Soundbites | Open water athlete insights ahead of third World Cup stop
Preparations are well underway for the event, which will present different conditions for the athletes to those they experienced during the first two stops in Somabay and Ibiza. Five swimmers who are hoping to play a big part in Setúbal give us an insight into what we might expect. Kristóf Rasovszky – Hungary Image Source: […]
Preparations are well underway for the event, which will present different conditions for the athletes to those they experienced during the first two stops in Somabay and Ibiza. Five swimmers who are hoping to play a big part in Setúbal give us an insight into what we might expect.
Kristóf Rasovszky – Hungary
Image Source: Olympic champion Kristóf Rasovszky is among the stars set to compete in Setúbal (Luke Hales/Getty Images)
The reigning Olympic champion is no stranger to racing at this venue, having first competed here back in 2017. Although his sights are set on the World Aquatics Championships, the Hungarian open water stalwart says that a podium finish in Setúbal would be a great signifier before Singapore.
On how he’s feeling coming into this event: “I’m feeling really good, we had the European Championships two weeks ago which went really well so I hope I can do the same here and have a good race in the 10km and the knockout as well. I hope I can be on the podium; that would be a great sign before the Worlds.
“I’m really looking forward to racing here again because it’s one of my best venues where I compete. My first ever result here was sixth place last year. I’ve been on the podium almost every time so I’m really happy to be here and hopefully going to continue with this series being in the top six and maybe on the podium.”
On race tactics: “The water is going to be a bit chilly but it’s good for me so I’m happy with that. A big wind could come and make it a bit choppy so I’m preparing for a hard race. I think most of the best are going to stay together until the end but maybe there’s going to be a little pack on the front, like 10-12 swimmers that could get away from the big pack.”
On knockout sprint racing: “It’s a new format, I’ve done it already twice at Ibiza and the Europeans and it went quite well. In Ibiza I was fourth and in the Europeans I won. It’s really tactical and you have to prepare for everything. You have to focus on the places and in the 500 you have no time to be tactical, you just have to push it as hard as you can.
“The [new course] is not really a big change but hopefully it gives a better view for the audience to see the race results, especially for the knockout on Sunday. I hope a lot of spectators will be there and it’s going to be a great event this year as it has been.”
Enjoyment over pressure: “I’m just trying to enjoy it and be as good as I can. Right now I’m feeling like I don’t have too much pressure on me to win all the medals because I already got an Olympic gold so for my career, it’s my biggest achievement so far. Anything else that comes is a plus.”
Bettina Fabian – Hungary
Image Source: Bettina Fabian has six World Aquatics Open Water Swimming World Cup medals to her name (Emanuele Perrone/Getty Images)
Having carried her success as a junior into the senior ranks, Fabian admits that her first visit to Setúbal some three years ago came at a time when she considered stepping away from open water altogether. Now, the former world junior champion has six World Cup medals to her name, most recently taking silver and bronze in the 3km knockout and 10km at the previous stop, and says that Setúbal offers the perfect backdrop for learning.
On her growth in Setúbal: “When I was here for the first time it was the European Junior Championships and I was about to stop open water swimming. But after I came here one year later, I got fourth at my third World Cup so I would say that I’m getting better year by year here and I’m starting to like this venue and this place more and more. I’m actually very excited for tomorrow and hope that I will achieve an even better result than two years ago.
“Tomorrow, there are specific girls who can reach the podium, and I really hope that I can be one of them. I won’t say names because all of the athletes are so good here.”
On the racing conditions: “I’m excited for the conditions, it’s a very hard venue. I think this is the perfect place to teach people how to swim open water. I developed so much in the past few years by competing here so I’m just glad that I can race here every year and improve more and more during the years.
On looking ahead to Singapore: “[This race] is the perfect time slot because we are weeks before the World Champs and this is the last race that we wanted to participate in. After this race, we are going to a training camp and just focus on the preparation for the World Champs so that we can perform our best there.”
Dario Verani – Italy
Image Source: Dario Verani is set for his debut in the 3km knockout sprint event this weekend (Emanuele Perrone/Getty Images)
Fresh from his silver medal-winning performance in the 10km at the Ibiza leg of the World Cup, Verani is gearing up for a challenging weekend of racing; one that will also mark his debut in the 3km knockout sprint event this Sunday.
On racing in Setúbal: “I feel good, I love this place and every year we come here so I’m very happy to do the race. It will be a hard race because there are waves and cold water so it will be a good challenge.”
On the Italian podium clean sweep in Ibiza: “I felt good in Ibiza, I had a good race with my teammates Andrea and Giuseppe so I hope that here will be the same, but the race changes every time so we will see. My tactic is to stay on the group and then the last kilometre is a real race because the race pace is faster.”
On his 3km knockout sprint debut: “I will do it on Sunday for the first time because in Ibiza after the 10km I didn’t feel good. For this new race, it’s my first time and we will see the result but I hope it will be good. It’s a good way to change the sport because it’s important that more swimmers from the swimming pool come to our sport so it will be a good challenge and a good race.”
Caroline Jouisse – France
Image Source: Caroline Jouisse competed at the French Open Water Swimming Championships in Martigues last weekend (Clive Rose/Getty Images)
Open water veteran Jouisse has eight World Cup medals to her name, stretching back to the Lac St-Jean stop in 2019. Having come home sixth in the 10km event in Ibiza, she arrives in Setúbal with back-to-back racing under her belt, most recently doing the triple (10k, 5k, knockout) at the French Open Water Swimming Championships in Martigues last weekend.
On her preparation for this weekend: “My preparation had a lot of ups and downs because I didn’t go to the Europeans, but then I did the triple last week in our championships, so I’m pretty happy about that; I didn’t expect to win the knockout so that’s pretty cool.
On Setúbal as a favourite: “Coming here to Setúbal, I’m really happy about it because this is one of my favourite races. I know a lot of people hate it because there are waves and it’s cold and everything but I just love it. I always do good here so fingers crossed it’s going to happen again.
“The first time I ever competed here I finished sixth and that was my best result ever in a World Cup, so I always come in kind of confident because I did sixth, first and fourth. So I just have something special with this race, it’s always in my favour.”
On her unlikely love for knockout sprint: “I mean, I love it to be honest, coming from the 25km I would not expect myself to like that kind of race but I think for the public and the people to watch it, it’s really good to see the swimmers actually coming out of the water, seeing our faces, it’s really good for the people.
“I tried one strategy in Ibiza that didn’t work out, I didn’t make it to the final. I did another strategy last week at Nationals, which has less people of course. I’m going to try something else again this week so we’ll see.”
On back-to-back racing: “I was tapered for last week, not too much but I’m still in good shape. I did some big kilometres this week so we’ll see how I react but I think it’s okay; I’ve always been good at doing races back to back to back. I always perform doing that so I know I need that. Having Nationals last week, the week before another competition in the week and this week Setúbal will be fine.
“I loved cold water when I started open water but the older I get, the less I like it. It’s still fine for a race, I can put it aside like if it’s too hot or too cold, I can try to focus on something else but if I had to choose between Setúbal or Singapore, that’s Setubal 100%.”
Angela Martinez Guillen – Spain
Image Source: Angela Martinez Guillen is hoping to build on her success at the last World Aquatics Open Water Swimming World Cup in Ibiza (Tom Pennington/Getty Images)
21-year-old Martinez Guillen cemented herself as a serious contender over this distance in Ibiza where she took home gold in front of a home crowd. Despite it being her first time racing in Setúbal, the former European Junior silver medallist is hoping to emulate that performance.
On competing in Setúbal: “I’m very excited to compete here, it’s my first time and I hope to do the same like in Ibiza. I didn’t prepare especially for this competition so it will be a surprise for me.”
On her sprint finishes: “That’s always my tactic, sometimes I do it better or worse and I hope it will be better this weekend. I will swim the 3km knockout sprint and for me it’s new, I hope I will learn in that race.”
How to Watch NCAA Outdoor Championships, Men’s Day 2: Live Stream College Track and Field, TV Channel
By Ben Verbrugge is a freelance sportswriter with a journalism degree from CSU Dominguez Hills. He is a member of the Los Angeles media and spends most of his time covering the NBA, NFL, and MLB. When not writing, he is either playing or watching sports. Ben Verbrugge Contributing Sports Network news article Based on […]
Ben Verbrugge is a freelance sportswriter with a journalism degree from CSU Dominguez Hills. He is a member of the Los Angeles media and spends most of his time covering the NBA, NFL, and MLB. When not writing, he is either playing or watching sports.
Ben Verbrugge
Contributing Sports Network
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The NCAA Outdoor Championships continue on Friday in Eugene, Oregon, at Hayward Field, and you can catch all the action with FuboTV.
Mason Mangum of California competes in the men’s long jump during the Pac-12 Track & Field Championship at Hayward Field on May 14, 2022 in Eugene, Oregon. Mason Mangum of California competes in the men’s long jump during the Pac-12 Track & Field Championship at Hayward Field on May 14, 2022 in Eugene, Oregon. Steph Chambers/Getty Images
How to Watch NCAA Outdoor Championships, Men’s Day 2
Date: Friday, June 13, 2025
Time: 8:00 PM EDT
Channel: ESPN2
Stream: Fubo (Try for free)
After the completion of six events on Wednesday, Minnesota leads the way going into Friday. 35 teams have scored points after the first day of competition and will look to add to their totals with the finals of most running events on Friday.
In the 100m qualifier on Wednesday, Auburn’s Kanyinsola Ajayi was the only runner to break the 10-second mark, running 9.92 seconds. Jelani Watkins and Jaiden Reid of LSU followed right behind with 10.02 times.
In the 200m qualifier, Auburn once again came out on top. Makanakaishe Charamba ran 19.94 seconds, with Jordan Anthony of Arkansas and Garrett Kaalund of USC both running 20.01.
In the 400m qualifier, Samuel Ogazi from Alabama ran 44.77 seconds, while Gabriel Moronta of South Florida ran 45.10, and William Jones of USC finished third with a qualifying 45.12 seconds.
In the 4X100m relay, Auburn ran 37.97 seconds, while South Florida ran 38.12 seconds and LSU ran 38.14 seconds. In the 4x400m relay, Arkansas and USC both ran sub-3:03 times, with the Razorbacks qualifying for the final with the fastest time of 3:02.53, while the Trojans ran 3:02.76 and Texas A&M ran 3:03.09.
Live stream the NCAA Outdoor Championships, Men’s Day 2 on Fubo: Start your free trial now!
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