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Norwalk, Conn., The Perfect Spot For China's Olympic Swim Team

Sun Yang and Yi Shiwen are among the 50 Chinese swimmers, coaches and staff currently training at Swim Seventy in Norwalk, Conn.
Ashlee Bunt
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Swim Seventy
Sun Yang and Yi Shiwen are among the 50 Chinese swimmers, coaches and staff currently training at Swim Seventy in Norwalk, Conn.

China’s Olympic swim team is training for the upcoming Rio 2016 Summer Olympics in a facility in Norwalk, Connecticut, called Swim Seventy.

Members of the team do laps in the facility’s 50-meter swim lanes. Among them is Sun Yang, who became the first Chinese male swimmer to win a Gold Medal in 2012. He doesn’t stop to chat between laps – he takes a breath and dives right back in.

These lanes are the crown jewel of the facility. Swim Seventy co-owner Toni Phillips says she had the Olympics in mind when she built Swim Seventy last year.

“We knew that to train for the Olympics you have to swim in a 50-meter pool for four hours a day. We’re the only pool on the East Coast besides North Baltimore that has 50-meter lanes available all day, every day.”

Being on the East Coast is important because an Olympic team wants to train somewhere close to the time zone in which it competes, so they don’t get jet lagged just before the games start. Yifan Lu is a coach with the team. He says there’s another reason – Norwalk’s small-town feel helps keep the team from distractions.

“We want to stay here, the main reasons, we want to keep very quiet. Our schedule very tough, no weekend, no Saturday, we always training from the morning to evening. We just want to swim very quick.”

Lu says the team was able to get away for a little fun to watch fireworks on the Fourth of July, and they even found a Chinese restaurant in Norwalk that made what they liked and could give them a little taste of home.

“It’s very good food after a full-out swim.”

The team leaves for Rio de Janeiro later this week. The Summer Olympics are scheduled to start on August 5.

Copyright 2016 WSHU

Davis Dunavin loves telling stories, whether on the radio or around the campfire. He fell in love with sound-rich radio storytelling while working as an assistant reporter at KBIA public radio in Columbia, Missouri. Before coming back to radio, he worked in digital journalism as the editor of Newtown Patch. As a freelance reporter, his work for WSHU aired nationally on NPR. Davis is a proud graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism; he started in Missouri and ended up in Connecticut, which, he'd like to point out, is the same geographic trajectory taken by Mark Twain.

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