24 - WM Hunt) 01mm OWedneaday. May a. 2013 Five years later ROW working back from the brink 87mm ~ '* 2:3? if: j‘:“-, - - ‘ -. . : s, " ' .‘ e f“! E‘- ï¬ne. i ‘ ‘ “It was perfect timing after i retired in Chomsky ï¬â€˜ if g ., . " $3. .~‘ _' . - ï¬g fie? -;~" 2012," said Bartoch, a member of Team . inkâ€. u , - ‘ ;_ 1. “u , ‘ “353.5251? “5“ Canada at the 2012 Summer Olympic Games, Once a year for most ofthe last two if; ’, J, " '“ â€in .'.;i~â€";%_’~"' ' «a, in London. England. ‘I wanted to get my decades. Barry Hanson has hem book- ' Vi, i‘ ' ~ ' foot in the door and pay my dues a little bit." ing it from Bermuda to Canada witha singu- fl ' v. ' ». Despite being short of Olympic and lar focus . _ f}? _ fl "" national standards (the laurier pool has six To ï¬nd time in a long-muse pool. .' ’ M y, , , 50-metre lanes instead of eight), Franklin Up until recently, the tiny Norfli Atlantic ~ ' ' he†» g and Bartoch said the chance to work at a islamloflthecoestofthegolmuhsbeen ‘ '_~ ’ - Iong-ooursefacilitywasapanoftheatuac~ stocked solely with sh t-coune sites. don in comingtoWaterloo and Lauder. We national squads oentrewith the , * Franklin said it has given the club a British territory's first long-course pool was - A, . chance to expand its 208-member base by scheduledtoopenthisflpril a “‘-. ' anotherZOperoentinthefutureand retain As a result. it left Hanson, his Dolphins L." b. it 7 ' some of the older athletes by having Laurier Swim Team and other Bermudian clubs _ â€f ---. k , rigitin theirownbackyard. looking afar for long-course action in order .1, Whether they can get back to the heady to qualify for the Caribbean and Central days of the late 19703 and early '80s, when American swimming championships. More Region Of WOO 5M"! Club‘s Adam Mackenzie PM!!! toward the finish line 60009 the Heinbuch. Davis, Jim Hen. Kevin Auger and often than not, that path led to Waterloo and Bennett (awl May MW Meet Band-over boys loo-metre freestyle 3' the burner Athlet- Mike West qualiï¬ed for the Montreal and the longâ€"course pool that houses the Region K Complex Los Angela games. or the early 2000s, when of Waterloo Swim Club at the laurier Athlet- m“ "mm†Fratesi, Beavers, Jennifer Button. Takashi ic Complex. spearhead a campaign of likeminded aquat- the aging former national satellite training Yamamoto and Jessica Thomela represented ‘The atmosphere is relaxed and everyone ic clubs to save the laurier pool from being centre. the club in Sydney and Athens. is another is exceptionally friendly.†Hanson said while mothballed. a move that may have threat- Since then, ROW has been attempting to matter. watching his charges power through the ened the vibrancy of a program that once build up its base up again, hiring former With Swim Canada pulling back its main pool ‘s 50 metre circuit during last weekend‘s housed a string of Olympic swimmers from Pointe-Claire (Que) Swim Club head Russ training centres to Montreal and Toronto. it's Bennett Capital May Money Meet. “And Dave Heinbuch and Victor Davis to Jenn Franklin as a full-time coach in September no sure thing. But at least local athletes have there is a big. close connection with Bermu- Fratesi and Keith Beavers. of 2011 and former two-time Olympian Joe 3 place to start. da and Canadian universities" That legacy was saved in 2009 when a Bartoch. a Canadian record-holding butter- “i don't know if we'll ever have a situation However, it wasn’t that long ago when partnership between Wilfrid laurier Univer- fly specialist, as an assistant head coach in like that again, where we are producing Waterloo was under the threat of losing its sity, various levels of government and local October of 2012. Olympic athletes year after year.†past presi- own long-course pool. aquatic groups. including ROW, chipped in Both split time coaching the Wilfrid lau- dent Tracy Bennett said. “But without a pool. It's been ï¬ve years since ROW helped more than $4 million for a long-term ï¬x of rierUniversityswimmingprogram aswell. we’d neverh'iow.’ loinusforfliezo13 Wiftqilizmgg WRIME r IF Kitchener Waterloo 3 , . _{ i. we“ DINNER . June 1, 2013 W ' ’ l " A Waterloo Public Square . - 75 King Street South 1 MM: 9:00 am J on. m 10:00 am '- ALS, or Lou Gehrig‘s disease, is a fatal and rapidly progressive a " neuromuscular disease affecting more than 1,000 individuals and families living in Ontario. There is no cure or effective treatment and 8096 of those w. affected die within 2 to 5 years of diagnosis ~ A 6 The WALK for ALS increases awareness of the disease, raises money for equipment and support services for those living with ALS in Ontario and funds essential research to ï¬nd a treatment and a cure. Proof-veld m: [out w: F I TN ES S. y m rm THIS AD BROUGHT TO YOU BY OUR 1°C“. GROUP OF HE'SPA'EIS ' h ‘ -- Mome- wmniIb‘c‘imomcw Kitchener-M mmmtmm ~~.m ï¬_m