Tennessee diving team earns two SEC annual awards

Dave Parrington and Bryden Hattie earn SEC annual awards.

Tennessee men’s diving earned two Southeastern Conference annual awards.

Vols’ diving coach Dave Parrington was named the conference’s Coach of the Year and Bryden Hattie was named SEC Male Diver of the Year.

Parrington was named SEC Coach of the Year for the 12th time and has earned the award more than any other coach since its inception in 1992. He has received the honor more than all other active coaches combined.

Hattie was named SEC Male Diver of the Year for a second consecutive season. He becomes the fifth athlete in conference history to be named Diver of the Year in consecutive seasons.

Hattie won the SEC championship on platform for a third time and also earned a bronze medal at the NCAA championships.

He was SEC Male Diver of the Week five times during the recently completed season.

Discover the majesty of scuba diving in the Maldives

Wade among the eels and coral.

Following a marble ray as it silently ripples just above the seafloor is something you can only do underwater. On my first ever open-water dive, I got to hover above rays, watch a hawkbill turtle eat, and swim among thousands of colorful fish. I saw why divers of all experience levels call the Maldives paradise.

I had hoped to finish my open-water diver certification before arriving in the Maldives. The training consists of an online learning module, confined dives in a swimming pool, then open-water test dives. I’d passed the e-learning and done the confined dives at home in Oregon with Ocean Paradise Dive and Travel, but I ran out of time to try the open-water dives. 

A turtle in front of a scuba diver underwater.
Photo by Ahmed Saamee

Try Scuba Diving program

Fortunately, the Sun Siyam resorts where I stayed had Try Scuba Diving programs for non-certified beginners. I had a chance to try diving once at the Siyam World resort and twice at another resort, Sun Siyam Olhuveli.

For Try Scuba Diving, an instructor works with one or two students. My first time out, I was one-on-one with Ahmed Saamee, a dive instructor at Siyam World, who goes by Sam. Two other people were supposed to go on our dive trip, but the others didn’t show. So, I wound up on a dive boat with Sam, the boat crew, and two additional scuba instructors who went along for fun. I couldn’t ask for a safer first time diving with all these pros.

Pool chairs on the beach.
Resort life at Siyam World. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

Since I wasn’t certified, the dive staff assembled my gear and helped me put it on. But because I’d already done a lot of coursework, Sam let me have a little autonomy. We reviewed basics like how to clear my mask if I got water in it, made sure I knew what I was supposed to breathe out of, and which button to press to add or subtract air from my buoyancy control device, commonly known as a BCD.

He reminded me to stay calm while diving. “Scuba is for being lazy,” he said. Once we got to a good dive spot and Sam and the other instructors had assessed the current, it was time to jump in.

Two divers sitting on a boat on the ocean.
Sam and I with our gear on. / Photo courtesy of Siyam World Dive Center

Take a giant step

I’ve seldom felt less graceful than I did while walking the short distance across the dive boat with a heavy cylinder on my back and ginormous fins on my feet. Once I reached the edge of the boat, I held onto my mask and regulator with my right hand and my weight belt with my left. Then, I took a giant step with my giant feet. I was in!

Sam let me slowly deflate my BCD with my left hand while I pinched my nose and gently blew to keep my ears from plugging. Down we went, a foot or so at the time. My first dive was very shallow. At about 15.5 feet, it was only slightly deeper than the swimming pool I’d trained in. But with a much better view.

A diver underwater.
Photo by Ahmed Saamee

Once we got horizontal, we slowly glided around, checking out the underwater world. The fish were amazingly beautiful. The coral wasn’t especially colorful, but the shapes were varied and interesting. One challenge of being underwater is communication. But some of Sam’s sign language I could easily understand, such as when he pointed at a moray eel and made a biting motion with his hand. Noted.

My buoyancy needed some fine-tuning. Too low, you damage the coral, or it scrapes you. But mostly, my body wanted to float up like a balloon. Throughout my time in the Maldives, helpful instructors would give me tips like exhaling more fully to sink or using my head to steer my body.

A moray eel underwater.
A moray eel. / Photo by Ahmed Saamee

Diving in the Maldives

The Maldives is one of those destinations that makes many “best of” lists for diving. I talked to several scuba pros about what makes this archipelago in the Indian Ocean so alluring. But first, I’ll mention one thing I like about it: nothing will eat you. True, the moray eel might want a nibble, and the triggerfish will defend its territory. Even so, you aren’t going to lose an arm to a great white.

“Maldives is one of the best destinations in the world for beginners to start their career. Because we have the easy access to the ocean and the shallow lagoons to practice,” said Ibrahim Maahil Mohamed, dive manager of the five-star resort Sun Siyam Iru Fushi. Meanwhile, advanced divers can swim in currents. “If you dive with the current then there’s high chances to see bigger animals, like sharks, rays, like schooling of fishes,” said Mohamed, widely known in dive circles as Token. “Long story,” he said of his nickname.

A school of eagle rays underwater.
Eagle rays. / Photo courtesy of Olhuveli Dive Center

Sam, Token, and Sun Siyam Olhuveli dive center manager Ahmed “Nafsu” Naffaz all come from the same island, Naifaru. This seemed like a strange coincidence to me in a country with almost 200 inhabited islands. But Nafsu explained. “We have the highest majority of divers in the whole Maldives,” he said. “When you look at a resort, there will always be one Naifaru guy.”

Island life is closely tied to the water. Many Maldivian men become fishermen or scuba instructors. “The first divemaster in the whole Maldives is also a Naifaru guy,” Nafsu said. “And I think because of that there’s a high influence in the island.” Nafsu first met Sam when they were both working on liveaboard dive ships. Sam and Token grew up together.

A school of sharks.
Photo courtesy of Olhuveli Dive Center

The Maldives’ advanced diving sites are special, according to Luca Diamante, an Italian marine biologist and scuba instructor at Sun Siyam Olhuveli. Deep drift dives of 25 or 30 meters, where divers take advantage of strong currents, yield especially good marine sightings. “In this area you can spot in the right condition hundreds of sharks, hundreds of eagle rays. You have a very nice cleaning station for mantas,” Diamante said. 

Cleaning station? He explained that small fish called cleaner wrasse clean the skin or gills of other animals. “And different communities are adapted to clean different animals. So there are cleaning stations for turtles, cleaning stations for mantas, cleaning stations for sharks. And all these animals, of course they move. But in every place they go, they have their own cleaning stations. Like public toilets.” Okay, once I’m certified, I need to return and watch a manta ray’s ablutions.

A manta ray in water.
A manta ray swims by to say hello. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

I greatly enjoyed the beauty and ease of resort life, staying in a lovely villa and strolling over to the dive center for an excursion. But the Maldives are changing. Now, there are more budget travel options. “Maldives is also a place where people can now do solo traveling or backpacking,” Nafsu said. He suggested staying on a local island, rather than a resort island, as a money-saving option. There, you’ll experience a little more of the local culture.

Advice for new divers

All the dive center instructors I met were pumped up about the Maldives, sea life, and diving in general. “People think that scuba diving is difficult or it’s dangerous to do,” Token told me. “But if you follow the rules and regulations, there’s no fear in it.”

Luca acknowledged newbies’ worries. “I mean, all this gear we use looks scary maybe at the beginning,” he said. And while some instruction is necessary, “It’s not like getting a university degree. It’s something you can do in three or four days.” As divers progress and get more experience and training, they slowly approach more difficult dives. “Diving is very hierarchical,” Luca said. “You have to learn everything step by step.”

Two divers in clear blue water.
Beginning instruction in a shallow lagoon at Olhuveli. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

Why not just snorkel? I love snorkeling and always felt that would be enough. But I spent more of my snorkeling time freediving to get a closer look. It started dawning on me that I wanted to go underwater and stay for a while.

Token explained why he finds diving superior to snorkeling, saying: “When you go underwater, you’re going into a peaceful world where there’s nothing to disturb you. It’s just yourself hanging out with the fishes and the beautiful marine life. And you’ll be moving underwater like a fish. You’ll be observing the fishes like a fish.” Token urges visitors not to settle for sitting around on the sand. “Other than just coming and enjoying the beaches or the luxurious villas, the best way to get yourself into some adventure is to explore the oceans.”

Disclaimer: While this article was not sponsored, Outdoors Wire did visit the Maldives during a press trip with Sun Siyam Resorts. As always, Outdoors Wire operates independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

See what it’s like to swim underwater with a jetpack

Race through the ocean.

When I first heard of the Cudajet (an underwater jetpack), I immediately wanted to try it. The idea is that you can get much farther freediving with a jetpack since we humans can only hold our breath for an average of 30 seconds to two minutes. Underwater jetpacks were originally designed for combat divers and rescuers. But if you’re lucky enough to make your way to Siyam World in the Maldives, you can try one.

My intro to the Cudajet began in the Siyam World dive center. My instructor, Mohamed Raif, who goes by Dan, showed me the sleek jetpacks. He explained that I’d wear a special vest with the Cudajet strapped to my back like a backpack. Oh, and a neoprene hood to cover my long hair. It was crucial not to let my hair get sucked into the Cudajet. I decided not to ask what would happen if it did.

A diver underwater wearing a cudajet.
Photo courtesy of Siyam World

Then we loaded up our Cudajets and took a golf cart to the end of a pier. Dan helped me get suited up in a vest, mask, and hood, then strapped the jetpack onto my back. It was a bit heavy. Next, he told me to stand on the end of the pier and jump off, executing a 180-degree turn in midair. I think this was to make sure the pack didn’t hit the piling in case I didn’t jump far enough. It was a little daunting, but I think I made it at least 120 degrees and wound up in the water, still alive and ready to go.

Next, I had to learn to operate the hand control. The jetpack has to be submerged in the water to work. So, if you want to move on the water’s surface, you lie on your back and cruise around looking up.

A person showing off the cudajet and explaining how to use it.
Dan introducing me to the Cudajets. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

The main way to use the Cudajet is to duck dive straight down. Once the jetpack is submerged, you turn it on and power down to your desired depth, then go horizontal, holding your breath and going as far as you can before releasing the button and surfacing. Easy, right? While Dan swam around like a dolphin, my first attempts involved more sputtering and confusion. I’d go down too fast, my ears instantly plugging, feeling out of control and having a hard time leveling out. Dan kept telling me to look up instead of down, but my neck didn’t seem to want to comply.

After a while, Dan had me try Plan B: starting on my back, leaning my head back, and going faster and faster until I was underwater face up, then turning over so I was prone. This worked better, and I became slightly more dolphin-like.

It was fun, and a little frustrating, but satisfying when I got it right. However, as I powered past three gorgeous eagle rays, I realized a jetpack was too fast for me. I’d rather slow down and watch the marine life than speed past it. But if you are a motor enthusiast who loves being in the water, this is the high-tech toy for you.

A diver doing a flip underwater while wearing a cudajet.
Photo courtesy of Siyam World

According to the Cudajet website, you can use it to dive down to 40 meters, and its top speed is 10 feet per second! You’d better practice holding your breath before you try this. And equalizing, or your ears will be in trouble. It weighs about 30 pounds and costs nearly $18,000. I definitely recommend visiting Siyam World and taking a lesson from Dan to see if you need a Cudajet.

Disclaimer: While this article was not sponsored, Outdoors Wire did visit the Maldives during a press trip with Sun Siyam Resorts. As always, Outdoors Wire operates independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

Divers encounter one of the ‘weirdest creatures in the ocean’

A dive company in Mexico on Tuesday shared footage showing clients swimming with a large sunfish that was alien-like in appearance.

A company that specializes in shark encounters off Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, shared footage Tuesday showing a large Mola mola swimming with divers.

“One of the weirdest creatures in the ocean, THE MOLA MOLA,” Cabo Shark Dive suggested via Instagram. “We often see Mola molas during our ocean safaris, and they are super COOL and friendly!”

Mola molas (ocean sunfish) are the largest bony fish on the planet and can weigh up to 5,000 pounds.

The docile creatures pose little threat to divers, however, as they roam pelagic currents slurping sea jellies, crustaceans, small fish and algae.

They’re most famous for their alien-like appearance, with truncated bodies that are smooth and flat on both sides, and large eyes.

The Monterey Bay Aquarium website describes the Mola mola as a fish that “looks like the invention of a mad scientist.”

–Footage courtesy of Jacob Brunetti/Cabo Shark Dive.

Marvel at these new underwater sculptures celebrating World Ocean Day

Happy World Ocean Day!

World Ocean Day is June 8, and the coastal city of Townsville in Northeastern Queensland, Australia, is doing something special to celebrate. The Museum of Underwater Art (MOUA) will be opening its new Ocean Sentinel snorkel trail.

The MOUA aims to inspire reef conservation by providing underwater experiences that engage people in cultural stories of the land and sea. The new snorkel trail consists of eight sculptures. These hybrids of human and natural marine forms represent marine conservationists — the ocean sentinels in the installation’s title. Most of the sentinels depicted are Australian.

“The stylised marine forms that surround and envelop them represent their particular field of study and expertise,” sculptor Jason deCaires Taylor explained in a statement. “The artworks aim to create an educational and informative introduction to Great Barrier Reef, celebrating its rich history and its connection to some of the world’s leading marine science institutions and its strong links to indigenous cultures and traditions.” 

Two people in orange hi-vis gear moving a large sculpture.
Workers move one of the sentinels. / Photo courtesy of MOUA

The artist is also an environmentalist and professional underwater photographer. Most of his work explores submerged and tidal marine environments.

deCaires Taylor sculpted the sentinels from a new high-grade, low-carbon concrete reinforced with marine stainless steel. Each sculpture is about 7 feet tall and weighs up to 2.8 tonnes. A low center of gravity helps each piece resist the ocean’s pull. The submerged sculptures will be set on barren stretches of the Great Barrier Reef off Townsville. deCaires Taylor hopes that, over time, marine life such as corals and sponges will colonize the artworks. 

“Like the Great Barrier Reef itself, they will become a living and evolving part of the ecosystem, emphasising both its fragility and its endurance.”

The new Ocean Sentinel installation is MOUA’s third art project installation around Townsville. Ocean Siren, the first MOUA project, is not underwater but stands alongside Townsville’s Strand Jetty. The sculpture changes color in response to water temperature variations. Divers and snorkelers can also visit deCaires Taylor’s Coral Greenhouse, about a two-hour boat ride off the coast from Townsville.

A man standing behind and looking up at a large human/marine sculpture.
deCaires Taylor stands beside one of his sentinels. / Photo courtesy of MOUA

Diving with a Purpose studies historic shipwrecks around the world

Discover tales of sunken ships, crashed planes, and more.

Ken Stewart first learned to scuba dive in 1989 and immediately became hooked. But by 2003, after almost 800 dives, his beloved sport had become a bit same-old, same-old. 

“All the fish start looking alike,” Stewart said. “If you go from Florida to any exotic country, you’ll say, ‘oh, man, that fish looks like the same fish, or the same corals.’ There were some places that look more exotic than the other. But after a while, it becomes repetitive.”

His diving life perked up when a documentary filmmaker named Karuna Eberl contacted him. By then, Stewart, a Nashville resident, was the Southern states representative for the National Association of Black Scuba Divers. Eberl asked Stewart to put her in touch with some Black divers willing to be interviewed for her documentary “The Guerrero Project.” The slave ship Guerrero, which has still not been found, sank in 1827 somewhere around what is now Biscayne National Park in Florida. 

Three divers underwater.
Photo by Tane Casserley

The project led Stewart to meet the late Brenda Lanzendorf, a park archeologist at Biscayne National Park. “We became instant friends,” Stewart said. “She had this infectious personality. She was unbelievable.” Lazendorf was congressionally mandated to monitor the 41 or so wrecks in Biscayne National Park. But she was a lone diver. And she needed a diving buddy.

Back home in Nashville, Stewart had an epiphany. He sent out an email to the divers who’d become involved in the Guerrero project. “I said, ‘Are you tired of the same old diving? Let’s dive with a purpose.’ And that’s exactly how it started.” Within a year, Lazendorf and Stewart had assembled the first Diving with a Purpose (DWP) program.

Diving with a Purpose today

Now about 20 years old, DWP is a leading volunteer underwater archaeology program. It provides education, training, and project support services for submerged conservation projects and heritage preservation. DWP focuses on the African diaspora but also works on many other shipwrecks.

More than 300 people have participated in DWP. Most are repeat attendees. Every year, a DWP group dives together in Florida, documenting wrecks. The program has expanded from Biscayne National Park to the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary run by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA).

Stewart is involved with DWP’s spinoff program, Youth Diving with a Purpose (YWDP), which trains young divers to be archeology advocates that help document shipwrecks. Additionally, DWP consults on projects worldwide.

Underwater archeology

If you’re like me, your first vision of diving into a shipwreck includes swimming around a whole ship on the seafloor, the vessel’s name clearly written on the side, and perhaps an old skeleton still at the helm. I probably saw this in a cartoon. 

In the Keys, any wooden ship that has sunk, it’s not intact,” Stewart informed me. In addition to deterioration caused by ocean activity, undersea worms eat the wood. Instead of an intact vessel, divers explore a field of artifacts on the ocean floor. “The worms can’t eat the artifacts,” Stewart said.

Divers map the artifacts with pin flags and strings called baselines. They use trilateration mapping, which lets them determine positions using distances from at least three known points. The baseline could be 300 yards long. The divers form groups of two to work sections of the wreck. While underwater, they’re mapping, writing figures down, and even doing in situ drawings that can involve staying in the same place for an hour or more.

A diver underwater taking notes.
Photo by Tane Casserley

Part of the process is figuring out what’s an artifact and what isn’t. Usually the artifacts have some kind of crustaceans on it, so it’s very difficult to determine what an artifact is when it’s on the ocean floor,” Stewart said. “Sometimes you can take your knife and you can hit the artifact. Oh, it sounds like metal. So you know Mother Nature didn’t make metal. So they’ll do that with every artifact along those 300 yards of baseline. Every one.” Before the divers resurface, they remove all the flags and the baseline. Two architects work with DWP to turn the divers’ info into site maps.

This kind of detailed work takes a special kind of diver. It’s not for everybody. Many divers prefer working with DWP’s conservation program, Stewart says, which is more hands-on and helps restore coral reefs.

DWP and the African diaspora

A lot of people contact DWP because they want to help document slave ships, Stewart said. However, not many have been found. Stewart has only conducted dives on three of them. “We’re laying the groundwork for people who want to be involved in the documentation of a slave wreck when and if another one is found,” he said.

The first slave ship Stewart dove was the Henrietta Marie, an English ship that carried captive Africans to the West Indies. It wrecked in 1700, 35 miles off the coast of Key West. Since it was on its way back to England, no Africans were on board. Treasure hunter Mel Fisher found it in 1972, and Stewart dove it in the late 1980s. 

“The eeriness of it is what kind of gets to you,” Stewart told me. 

Eventually, the cleaned-up artifacts toured the United States in a traveling exhibit called “A Slave Ship Speaks.” “The thing that really brings tears to your eyes, and everybody who has seen it, is the shackles for the children,” Stewart said. In his work with youth, Stewart tries to convey the horror of finding oneself enslaved. “I tell the children all the time, here you are walking down the street and then somebody snatches you up and takes you to another country. You never see your family again. Can you imagine that? And most kids can’t. Most people can’t.”

The National Association of Black Scuba Divers placed a plaque at the site of the Henrietta Marie. Divers can use GPS to find the plaque and the ship’s hull, which is encased in sand.

Two divers exploring an underwater monument.
Photo courtesy of Diving with a Purpose

DWP has also documented Tuskegee Airmen airplanes in Michigan’s Lake Huron. The men who flew these planes were the first Black military aviators in the country. During World War II, they escorted American bombers over Italy and protected larger bombers from German planes. Fifteen of the airmen died while training over the Great Lakes. DWP was able to document the plane flown by Lieutenant Frank H. Moody. The organization also helped raise funds to place a memorial to the Tuskegee Airmen beside Lake Huron.

As for the Guerrero, the wrecked ship that inspired DWP’s creation, divers are still looking. This July, YDWP is conducting what Stewart hopes will be the final search for the ship. “I’m bringing the crème de la crème, the best that I’ve got,” he said. “These kids are dynamic.” And if they finally find the Guerrero, DWP will have a whole new chapter in its documentation mission.

Want to help? Qualified divers with more than 30 dives (or 25 for youth) are welcome to get involved with DWP. You can also donate to Diving with a Purpose here.

Want to learn more about slave ships? The Africatown Heritage House in Mobile, Alabama, is opening its new exhibit documenting the Clotilda on July 8, 2023.

Meet the nominees for All-USA Today HSSA Girls Soccer Player of the Year

These 24 standouts will be honored as nominees for national Girls Soccer Player of the Year.

The USA TODAY High School Sports Awards is pleased to announce the 2021-22 All-USA TODAY HSSA Girls Soccer Team!

These 24 standouts will be honored as nominees for national Girls Soccer Player of the Year. The winner and three finalists will be revealed on July 31 during an on-demand broadcast. This year will feature top athletes in 29 boys and girls sports awards categories as well as special honors like Special Olympics Athlete of the Year, Rising Star and Play of the Year. 

All national nominees must register to provide show information and receive important updates regarding the show. To register, click on the “REGISTER” button on the event website.

Here are the nominees…

2021-22 All-USA TODAY HSSA Girls Soccer:

Sami Allen

F, Noble High School (Oklahoma) — SR

Lindsey Antonson

F, Wilsonville High School (Oregon) — SR

Natalie Bain

D, Notre Dame Academy (Kentucky) — SR

Caroline Betts

F, Christ Presbyterian Academy (Tennessee) — SR

Kayla Budish

F, Brookfield Central High School (Wisconsin) — SR

Ivey Crain

F, Pinecrest Academy (Georgia) — SR

Ami Davis

D, Yorktown High School (Virginia) — JR

Halle Engle

F, Mechanicsburg High School (Pennsylvania) — SR

Elise Evans

M, Woodside High School (California) — SR

Erynn Floyd

G, Wilton High School (Connecticut) — SR

Gaby Gonzalez

D, Staples High School (Connecticut) — SR

Riley Jackson

M, Blessed Trinity High School (Georgia) — SO

Ellie Johannes

F, Northwest Christian High School (Arizona) — JR

Emma King

F, Manchester High School (Ohio) — SR

Kelsey Major

F, St. Mary’s Dominican High School (Louisiana) — SR

Samara Nunn

M, Parkersburg South High School (West Virginia) — SR

Jordan Nytes

G, Grandview High School (Colorado) — SR

Ella Raimondi

M, Villa Maria Academy (Pennsylvania) — SR

Melina Rebimbas

M, Rutgers Preparatory School (New Jersey) — JR

Abby Reisz

G, Upper Arlington High School (Ohio) — SR

Eliza Rich

M, Lake Norman Charter (North Carolina) — SR

Ella Sanchez

M, Ballard High School (Kentucky) — JR

Sydney Watts

F, Aquinas High School (Kansas) — JR

Amelia White

M, Homestead High School (Indiana) — SR

Meet the nominees for All-USA Today HSSA Boys Swimming & Diving Athlete of the Year

These 24 standouts will be honored as nominees for national Softball Player of the Year.

The USA TODAY High School Sports Awards is pleased to announce the 2021-22 All-USA TODAY HSSA Boys Swimming & Diving Team!

These 24 standouts will be honored as nominees for national Softball Player of the Year. The winner and three finalists will be revealed on July 31 during an on-demand broadcast. This year will feature top athletes in 29 boys and girls sports awards categories as well as special honors like Special Olympics Athlete of the Year, Rising Star and Play of the Year. 

All national nominees must register to provide show information and receive important updates regarding the show. To register, click on the “REGISTER” button on the event website.

Here are the nominees…

2021-22 All-USA TODAY HSSA Boys Swimming & Diving:

Charley Bayer

East Grand Rapids High School (Michigan) — SR

Drew Bennett

Madison Memorial High School (Wisconsin) — SR

Michael Cotter

Green Hope High School (North Carolina) — SR

Charlie Crosby

Breck High School (Minnesota) — SR

Charlie Crush

St. Xavier High School (Kentucky) — SR

Liam Custer

Riverview High School (Florida) — SR

Andres Dupont Cabrera

Bolles School (Florida) — SR

Alec Filipovic

Saint Charles North High School (Illinois) — SR

Connor Foote

Alamo Heights High School (Texas) — SR

Landon Gentry

Patriot High School (Virginia) — SR

Roman Jones

Pingry School (New Jersey) — JR

Dawson Joyce

Seminole High School (Florida) — SR

Ryan Malicki

Carmel High School (Indiana) — SR

Rex Maurer

Loyola High School (California) — JR

Quintin McCarty

Discovery Canyon High School (Colorado) — SR

Kevin Mendez

Pine Crest School (Florida) — SR

Will Modglin

Zionsville Community High School (Indiana) — JR

Baylor Nelson

Community School of Davidson (North Carolina) — SR

Sam Powe

McCallie School (Tennessee) — SR

Will Scholtz

St. Xavier High School (Kentucky) — JR

Sebastien Sergile

Centennial High School (Georgia) — SR

Joshua Thai

Alhambra High School (California) — SR

Max Weinrich

Sherwood High School (Maryland) — SR

Josh Zuchowski

King’s Academy (Florida) — SR

Sunken Russian warship Moskva to become dive site?

After the sinking of the Moskva, a Ukrainian government official hinted that the Russian missile cruiser might become a dive site.

Russia on Friday confirmed that its flagship missile cruiser Moskva has sunk while the damaged ship was being towed in the Black Sea.

In response, Ukrainian Minister of Defense Oleksii Reznikov hinted that the Moskva might someday become a tourist attraction for scuba divers.

Reznikov tweeted: “A ‘flagship’ russian warship is a worthy diving site. We have one more diving spot in the Black Sea now. Will definitely visit the wreck after our victory in the war.”

 

Reznikov also claimed to be a veteran scuba diver, with 300 dives to his credit.

Russia stated that the Moskva was damaged by an explosion of munitions and a subsequent fire, while Ukraine claims to have blown a hole in the vessel’s hull with a missile strike.

It remains unclear what became of its crew of approximately 500 sailors.

–Image showing the Moskva is from Wikimedia Commons

Dave Parrington adds Colin Zeng to Tennessee staff

Dave Parrington adds Colin Zeng to Tennessee staff.

Tennessee diving head coach Dave Parrington announced the addition of Colin Zeng to his his coaching staff as a graduate assistant.

Zeng is a former Tennessee diver.

He was a three-time NCAA champion and two-time CSCAA Diver of the Year. Zeng is the only Vols’ diver to ever win a national championship in two different events.

He holds the program record in the 3-meter (495.15) and the platform (507.15). Zeng is the only UT diver to post a mark of 500 or more in program history.

Zeng was a two-time SEC Diver of the Year with the Vols and won medals at the conference championships.

Prior to his arrival at Tennessee, Zeng competed for three years with Ohio State, where he was a Big Ten and NCAA champion.