Back on February 10-12, eight PCS swimmers, their coaches and parents made the trip across the water to compete in the 2012 SwimBC AA Short Course Championships in Chilliwack. The PCS team met some solid competition, with clubs from all across BC sending approximately 350 swimmers to the meet. The PCS team was represented by: Raymond Chou, Nathan Howe, Lia Lancaster, Fionnuala McKenna, Nick Nolt, Rachel Sawchuk, Riley Tesch, and Victoria von Sacken-Nash.
Rachel Sawchuk (13) saw our only podium finish with a bronze medal in the 100m FR.
Top 8 swims were posted by the following swimmers:
Lia Lancaster (11) - 8th place 50m FR
Nick Nolt (11) - 6th place 50m FR, 5th place 100m FR, and 8th place 100m FL
Rachel Sawchuk (13) - 5th place 50m FR, 6th place 400m FR, and 8th place 800m FR
Riley Tesch (13) - 6th place 100m BR
Victoria von Sacken-Nash (11) - 4th place 100m BR and achieved her AAA time with a swim of 1:31.11
Full results can be found on our Results page.
Congratulations to all the swimmers!
Pacific Coast Swimming is hosting a spring break camp March 19th – 23rd! Each day includes 2.5 hours of swim instruction along with other activities such as bowling and rock climbing.
Registration cut off is March 5th, but hurry, because limited spots are available. Cost of camp is $175, and extended hours are available for an additional charge.
Saanich Commonwealth Pool
March 19th – 23rd
9:00am – 3:00pm
For more information, or to register, please e-mail Kendall Houg at khoug@pacificcoastswimming.com. We hope to see you there!
Kendall Houg
Pacific Coast Swimming
khoug@pacificcoastswimming.com

UVPCS swimmer Richard Weinberger cruised to yet another victory this weekend in the Australia Open Water National Championships. Competing with some of the best open water swimmers from around the world, Weinberger pulled off an astonishing 42 second victory in the 10km.
A large group of competitors swam together for the first 5km, at which point the top three swimmers began to pull ahead by about 20 metres. Weinberger was trailing behind Australian swimmer Rhys Mainstone until around the 8km mark, where he took the lead for good. Weinberger won the gold medal with a time of 1:53:44.75, with Rhys Mainstone touching in at 1:54:26.27, and another Australian swimmer, Jarred Poort, taking the bronze in 1:54:39.35.
Day One:
Alex Kierstead advanced to youth final in 6th with a personal best.
Day Two:
Jon McKay set a new club record in 15-17 boys 400 IM breaking Nick Sinclair's record. Jon was 6th in the final in 4:31.89 narrowly missing the senior national standard.
From Coach Rod
Canada has never qualified a swimmer for any open-water event at the Olympics. Don't bet against Richard Weinberger of Victoria being the first Canuck to do so.
The rapidly emerging 10K star continues leaving a splashy imprint on the path to the 2012 London Summer Games. So much so he may be edging in to join pool swimmer Ryan Cochrane, triathlete Paula Findlay and rowers David Calder, Malcolm Howard and Lindsay Jennerich as an Island-based podium threat for London 2012.
Weinberger, who has yet to qualify for the Olympics despite recording some of the most impressive and noteworthy results of the past year, took another big stroke toward London by winning the bronze medal at the World Cup race Sunday in Santos, Brazil.
It was a near blanket finish as the UVic/Pacific Coast Club swimmer was across in two hours 11 minutes 42.34 seconds, behind world champion Spyros Gianniotis of Greece (2: 11: 39.51) and secondplace Nicola Bolzonello of Italy (2: 11: 41.44).
The race featured seven swimmers who have qualified for the Olympics and Weinberger placed ahead of six of them.
That followed Weinberger's victory last summer in the official Olympic test race in the Serpentine at Hyde Park and his gold medal in the 2011 Pan American Games at Guadalajara, Mexico.
"I'm very excited about this performance. It gives me a lot of confidence and it proves my strong results last year were no fluke,'' Weinberger said in a statement.
"To be racing side by side and keeping pace with a guy like [world champion] Spyros was exhilarating."
The 21-year-old Victorian already has accomplished that in beating Spyros Gianniotis - and also world championship silvermedallist Thomas Lurz of Germany - last year in the Olympic test race at London.
But that came after the 2011 world championships in Shanghai, from which the top 10 qualified for the Olympics. Weinberger was 17th at the worlds but has been torrid since.
The UVic economics major has certainly come a long way in the short time since winning two gold medals at the 2009 Canada Summer Games in Prince Edward Island.
"Richard can race with anyone," says veteran Victoria mentor Ron Jacks, who coaches Weinberger in open water.
Weinberger, who also trains at Saanich Commonwealth Place, is more used to the much colder waters of Elk and Thetis lakes than the warm waves of Brazil.
"The conditions were not in my favour, but still it is important for me to race in those kinds of situations," he added, in the statement.
"In London, the waters will be cold and flat and that'll be perfect for me."
Weinberger will be gunning for the last Olympic qualifier in June in Portugal.
Original story published Feb 1, 2012 by Cleve Dheensaw, Times Colonist
© Copyright (c) The Victoria Times Colonist
Richard Weinberger nabbed the silver medal today in the last of his week-long stretch of races, with a stellar performance in the 10km in Argentina. His main competition was once again World Champion Spiros Gianniotis, though this time Richard was even closer to touching him out for the gold medal.
The race was so tight that eight swimmers were challenging for the top spots up until the last 200m, with the last 75m coming down to Gianniotis and Weinberger, the difference between them being less than a second.
This 2nd place finish coupled with Richard’s bronze medal last week means he will be headed to Portugal in June for the Olympic Qualification race! Congratulations to Richard and Coach Ron Jacks!