Water ballet
Introduction
Water ballet, also called synchronized swimming is a water sport that requires flexibility, agility, precise timing, and holding breath underwater. This sport is performed mostly by women and shows choreographed moves in the water. It is a combination of dance and gymnastics that take place underwater. In 1984, water ballet became an official Olympic competition.
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Basic Parts
The competition consists of two parts:
- Technical exercise
- Free exercise
The judge judges the technical and artistic quality of the routines performed by the swimmers and gives them points with a maximum of 10 in total. The swimmers can get penalized if they touch the bottom of the pool or if they hold the edges.
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Rules
All participants in water ballet must perform a freestyle routine and a combined routine. For individual swimmers, they perform 7 mandatory routines for 2 minutes. When they perform in pairs, they must perform 9 routines with a margin of 10 seconds. When team competitions are held, they need to perform 19 different elements, a circular formation, and a straight line within 2 minutes. Lastly, for the freestyle routine, the swimmers have 6 and 8 minutes. Some things to be cautious about is the swimmers cannot be out of the water for more than 10 seconds and cannot touch the bottom of the pool.
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Location
For water ballet, competitions are held in 10 10-meter-long long by 3-meter wide pools and with a minimum depth of 1.8 meters. In the Olympic games, however, the depth is 3 and 2.5 meters.
Work cited
Solis, K T . “What Is Water Ballet? (with Pictures).” Sports N’ Hobbies, 23 May 2024, www.sportsnhobbies.org/what-is-water-ballet.htm#:~:text=Water%20ballet%20is%20the%20original%20term%20for%20synchronized. Accessed 25 May 2024.
Briceño V., Gabriela. (2019). Synchronized swimming. Recovered on 23 February, 2024, de Euston96: https://www.euston96.com/en/synchronized-swimming/