U.S. artistic swimmer Anita Alvarez is OK after fainting at the end of her free solo final routine at the world championships in Budapest on Wednesday.
Solo artistic swimming is not on the Olympic program. “It was a good scare, I had to dive because the lifeguards didn’t do it,” Fuentes said, according to the newspaper. Spanish newspaper Marca reported that Fuentes, a retired Spanish Olympic artistic swimmer, was one of the people who dove in.
Two-time Olympics swimmer Anita Alvarez fainted and sank to the bottom of the pool during Wednesday's World Aquatics Championships in Budapest.
It remains unclear what caused Alvarez to collapse but the sport often requires swimmers to hold their breath. Alvarez, she said, taught the group a TikTok dance. “We have all seen images where some athletes do not make it to the finish line and others help them get there. Alvarez, from Tonawanda, N.Y., began artistic swimming, more broadly known as synchronized swimming until 2017, at the age of 5. Following the incident. Two-time Olympics swimmer Anita Alvarez fainted and sank to the bottom of the pool during Wednesday’s World Aquatics Championships in Budapest. Her coach on Team USA, Andrea Fuentes, dived in to save her, scooping her limp body up and rushing her back to the water’s surface.
American artistic swimmer Anita Alvarez was in danger of drowning after losing consciousness in the pool at the world championships in Budapest before being ...
"I jumped into the water again because I saw that no one, no lifeguard, was jumping in. She has to rest." It was a good scare, to be honest," Fuentes told Spanish newspaper Marca.
"I saw that the lifeguards were not jumping into the water because they were paralyzed," Team USA coach Andrea Fuentes said. Luckily for athlete Anita ...
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As U.S. artistic swimmer Anita Alvarez performed at the world championships, her coach noticed something was wrong: Alvarez was at the bottom of the pool.
“Whether that’s in the water for me or on the sidelines will be determined by myself and expert medical staff,” Alvarez wrote. “I appreciate all of the messages of support and hope everyone can respect that my team and I still have 2 more days of competition to be focused on here in Budapest.” “Anita has been evaluated by medical staff and will continue to be monitored” USA Artistic Swimming said in a statement posted Thursday to
It has been revealed that the swimmer who was rescued in dramatic fashion at the world championships on Thursday stopped breathing for at least two minutes, ...
I think it was the craziest and fastest free dive I've ever done in my career. "Anita feels good now and the doctors also say she is okay. A fellow athlete also swam across to assist in the rescue as distraught US spectators looked on. I'm like that, I can't just stare. They didn't react," Fuentes told Diario AS. "But we were able to take her to a good place, she vomited the water, coughed and that was it, but it was a big scare."
American swimmer Anita Alvarez was rescued from the bottom of the pool by her coach at the FINA World Aquatic Championships in Budapest, Hungary, ...
Anita feels good now and the doctors also say she is okay." "We sometimes forget that this happens in other high-endurance sports. Later, came the lifeguard."
Anita Alvarez, an American artistic swimmer, lost consciousness while performing her solo routine in Budapest. She was “fine” afterward, her coach said.
Our sport is no different than others, just in a pool, we push through limits and sometimes we find them.” Fuentes was hailed for her quick thinking, but she knew what to do because she had done it before. On Wednesday, Fuentes, dressed in shorts and a T-shirt, saved Alvarez again. Alvarez is a two-time Olympian. She finished ninth in the duet event at the 2016 Rio Games and placed 13th in the competition at the rescheduled Tokyo 2020 Games last summer in Japan. She is competing in the world championships for the fourth time. She did not rule out having her returning for the team event later this week. Fuentes said Alvarez, who was treated by medical staff, had gone about two minutes without breathing as water filled her lungs.
U.S. artistic swimmer Anita Alvarez is OK after fainting at the end of her free solo final routine at the world championships in Budapest on Wednesday.
Solo artistic swimming is not on the Olympic program. Anita feels good now and the doctors also say she is okay.” And that’s literally the last thing I remember, actually.” Two people dove in to help get her out of the pool, including U.S. head coach Andrea Fuentes, a retired Spanish Olympic artistic swimmer. Our sport is no different than others, just in a pool, we push through limits and sometimes we find them. It’s such a simple, small arm, but I was giving everything until the very end, and I did that, and then I remember going down and just being kind of like, uh-oh, I don’t feel too great.
The 25-year-old dual-Olympian has thanked her supporters after a medical emergency in the pool at the FINA World Championships.
"You see this happening in our sport, and for free divers also. There's no option that you're going to go down to relax." "I'm used to seeing them every day. Fuentes says there were lifeguards on patrol at the event, but told MARCA that "I had to jump in because the lifeguards weren’t doing it". I see them more than my kids. The USA artistic swimming team said in a statement that watching the incident was "heartbreaking for our community", but that Alvarez was "already feeling much better".
Anita Alvarez, a Team USA Artistic swimmer who was dramatically rescued by her coach after fainting during the world aquatics championships in Budapest on ...
"Like, my best one by far and not only just how I performed, but just that I was actually enjoying it and really living in the moment, too," he said. "It all happened really fast." "Just so grateful to have her as a coach."
Artistic swimmer Anita Alvarez, who was dramatically rescued from the bottom of the pool after fainting during the world aquatics championships, ...
Anita feels good now and the doctors also say she is OK.” I think it was the craziest and fastest free dive I’ve ever done in my career. “We sometimes forget that this happens in other high-endurance sports. They didn’t react,” Fuentes was reported as saying by Spanish newspaper MARCA. I’m like that, I can’t just stare. She has been fully evaluated by both our team doctor and event medical staff.
An unconscious woman is pulled from a swimming pool by three people and lifted onto a. Anita Alvarez was lifted out of the water and received medical attention ...
Earlier this week, the Team USA swimmer was saved from the water by her coach after she fainted and sank to the bottom in the artistic swimming solo free final. - Alvarez said she was healthy and hopeful of competing in the women's team free final FINA has banned artistic swimmer Anita Alvarez from further participation in the 2022 World Aquatics Championships after she fainted in the pool in Budapest during her routine.
Read how the team were able to manage a ninth-place finish despite losing Alvarez less than two hours before the women's team free final.
It’s important that we keep the philosophy that nothing will stop us and if it doesn’t happen for us now, it’s going to be later." so I knew it was not ok. "I saw it almost before it happened. We had to rearrange everything, and we did our best with a swimmer who has never been on this team. “The American culture is that it’s always better to try, than not try. It was not even a failure because we lost Anita literally one-and-a-half hours before, and we practised with her.