
You can officially swim in the Chicago River for the first time in 100 years
The last sanctioned swim here happened in 1926, before decades of sewage and industrial pollution made the idea of a mid-loop backstroke… inadvisable. Since then, the river's transformation, powered by the Clean Water Act, restoration projects and relentless local advocacy, has turned it into a surprisingly inviting urban waterway. It's now home to nearly 70 species of fish, beavers, turtles and, for one morning this fall, a small army of humans in swim caps.
The race will start at the Dearborn Street Bridge, wind east toward State Street, loop back west to Lake Street, and finish near the Clark Street Bridge. Two distances are on offer—one mile and two miles—and participants must be experienced open-water swimmers, triathletes or Olympians (no casual dog-paddlers allowed).
Safety is a top priority. More than 100 personnel, including 40 lifeguards, will patrol the route on kayaks, paddleboards, jet skis and boats. Swimmers will wear GPS trackers, the U.S. Coast Guard will close the course to other vessels and daily water-quality testing will continue right up to race day. If bacteria levels spike, the swim could be postponed or canceled.
The event is also a fundraiser. Proceeds will go toward ALS research at Northwestern University, youth swim education in underserved communities and programs aimed at closing the racial gap in swim access. Featured athlete Natalie Hinds, a U.S. Olympic bronze medalist, says the mission is personal: 'I care deeply about water safety, broadening access to swimming, and preventing drownings through community outreach and education.'
For spectators, the Riverwalk between Lake and Clark streets will turn into a festive viewing area, with food, drinks and a VIP party for those who want a fancier vantage point.
Applications to swim are open through 10pm Monday and there's no fee to throw your swim cap in the ring—just be ready to raise funds and meet the event's rigorous qualifications.
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The Herald Scotland
2 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
Keely Hodgkinson eases to victory in Lausanne
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Scottish Sun
2 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Gender row boxer Imane Khelif shows off dramatic new look after more than a year without returning to ring
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South Wales Guardian
3 hours ago
- South Wales Guardian
Keely Hodgkinson eases to victory in Lausanne
Hodgkinson, who has been recovering from a hamstring injury, returned after a 376-day absence in Silesia last weekend to set a world-leading run of one minute and 54.74 seconds, just behind her own national record. With the World Championships in Tokyo coming up next month, Hodgkinson laid down another marker as she made a strong finish in wet conditions to set a new meeting record of 1:55.69. Meeting record for @keelyhodgkinson! The 🇬🇧 star continues her comeback with an impressive 1:55.69 in the rain at #LausanneDL🇨🇭 #DiamondLeague📷 @chiaramontesan2 — Wanda Diamond League (@Diamond_League) August 20, 2025 Hunter Bell had been in second place down the home straight but faded in the closing metres as Switzerland's Audrey Werro ran her down to clock 1:57.55. Hodgkinson, 23, had looked in control from the opening part of the race, sitting second behind the pacemaker at the bell, which she took in 56.04 seconds. With only Prudence Sekgodiso for company heading into the final 300m, Hodgkinson soon pulled clear of the South African to coast towards another impressive victory. '(I feel) a little bit relieved,' Hodgkinson told BBC World Service Sport. 'I felt like this race was definitely going to be more of a challenge, but taking on a pace like that you've just got to run and forget about everybody else. 'I'm glad it paid off. I feel like I've really backed up my 1:54 with a solid 1:55. We are seeing improvements all the time, so I'm happy.' Just try and stop them 👊 Keely Hodgkinson clocks in a time of 1:55.69 in the women's 800m for a new meeting record 👏 With Georgia Hunter Bell following closely behind in a time of 1:57.55 🙌#LausanneDL — British Athletics (@BritAthletics) August 20, 2025 Hodgkinson added: 'I couldn't have asked for a better start – I'm a bit in shock myself. I train well, I train really hard for moments like this, but when it all comes together it makes it extra special. '(My coach) Trevor (Painter) said to me a few weeks ago 'you are actually ahead of schedule. I wanted you to be here by the time we are in Tokyo', so to be here now is amazing. 'Hopefully we can stay healthy and build on top of what we've got, and let's see what can happen.' Hodgkinson's training partner Hunter Bell, meanwhile, must now decide whether to have another crack at the 800m in Tokyo or focus on the 1,500m where she would be looking to add to her Olympic bronze medal from Paris. 'I wanted a bit quicker but it was hard today, hard to recover from the race a few days ago,' she said. 'I don't know (what distance), I'm going to decide this week. I'm running out of time to make a decision. Every day I change my mind.' Conditions worsened as the events went on, with Elise Thorner (9:21.74) finishing fifth in the women's 3,000m steeplechase, which was run through a downpour. Morgan Lake placed fifth in the women's high jump following three failures at 1.91 metres. With the run-up so wet, Ukraine's Olympic champion Yaroslava Mahuchikh decided to retire after two missed attempts. In the women's 200m, Dina Asher-Smith (22.64) was fifth and Daryll Neita (22.73) seventh, with American Brittany Brown winning in 22.23 secs. A first ever #DiamondLeague win for Josh Hoey! A rare defeat for @Olympics champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi in the 800m as Hoey kicks past him to clock 1:42.82.#LausanneDL🇨🇭 📷 @chiaramontesan2 — Wanda Diamond League (@Diamond_League) August 20, 2025 In the men's 800m, Max Burgin attacked around the final bend but then faded over the closing stages as he finish fourth in 1.43.44. Olympic champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi lost out to American Josh Hoey. Alastair Chalmers ran 49.92secs as he was fifth in the men's 400m hurdles. Men's 100m Olympic champion Noah Lyles came second as Jamaica's Oblique Seville clocked 9.87secs, with Britain's Zharnel Hughes fifth in 10.09.