Into the swim of things
Mike Sciacca
It was just two years ago that Tori Smith was a beginning swimmer and
her brother, Joshua, couldn’t swim the width of a pool.
Today, the Huntington Beach siblings are forces to be reckoned with in
the water.
Tori and Joshua are members of the Green Valley Swim Team of Fountain
Valley. At the Southern California Swimming Championships held earlier
this month at El Toro High, the duo came up with six individual and one
team first place finish between them.
Tori, who will enter the third grade next week at Grace Lutheran
Elementary School in Huntington Beach, captured first place in the
25-yard freestyle, 25-yard butterfly and won the 50-yard freestyle by two
body lengths in the girls’ 7-8 division. The 8-year-old also swam the
butterfly leg on Green Valley’s winning medley relay team.
She was the individual high point winner at the 7-8 girls’
championships.
In addition, she never lost a single race in either the 25- or 50-yard
freestyle event during the season.
“Awesome,” was how she described her feelings of performing so well.
Her 6-year-old brother matched her feats.
Joshua said it was “pretty neat” to win the 25-yard freestyle, 25-yard
butterfly and the 25-yard breaststroke at the SCSC meet as well as being
the high point winner in the boys’ 5-6 division at the championships.
Again like his sister, Joshua never lost a single race in the 25-yard
free, 25-yard breaststroke, 25-yard butterfly and the 25-yard backstroke
during the swim season.
The Southern California Swim Conference features seven teams from
Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Newport Beach and Lake Forest.
Tori and Joshua also were named most outstanding swimmer in their
respective divisions by a 260-member strong Green Valley Swim Team
program.
“They both have the talent but to develop into really successful
swimmers, [but] takes a lot of time and hard, hard work,” said GVST Coach
Vladimir Saposhkov, a former Russian junior national champion and coach
of recent Olympic athletes. “It would take 10 years minimum in the water
to gain the skills needed to succeed in swimming. If Tori and Josh want
to pursue swimming and they work really hard over the next few years then
I think they can become very good at it.”
Saposhkov has coached the GVST program for the past five years and
says that both Smiths pay attention to their stroke and have good
technique -- “and not bad results, either.”
You’ve heard of home schooling? Well, this is a case of home pooling.
Once the Smith siblings got involved in swimming they worked on their
stroke technique in their home pool. They had some knowledgeable help
there too -- in their parents. Brad Smith swam at UC Santa Barbara and
their mother, Robin, swam in a masters league.
“Joshua literally couldn’t swim the width of the pool when he started
swimming two years ago and Tori was just a beginner,” Brad Smith said.
“In addition to their competing with Green Valley, Robin and I spend time
with the kids in our pool, helping them work on their strokes. Coach
Vladi (Saposhkov) has been great and the kids have come to love the
water.”
In his first year, when he won the program’s most dedicated swimmer
award, Joshua was the lone 4-year-old in the entire league to win a gold
medal by swimming the freestyle leg on Green Valley’s winning medley
relay team.
In Tori’s first year with the program, she was third in the 25-yard
butterfly and 25-yard freestyle, and was on Green Valley medley relay
teams that won both first and second place.
“They both have gotten off to a very good start,” Saposhkov said. “A
lot of attention is paid to kids starting at 5 or 6 years old and in my
opinion, kids need to be taught things at a very early age.”
Tori says she “taught my younger brother how to do the breaststroke
kick.”
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