Champions Mojo for Masters Swimmers

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Rating
4.9
from
117 reviews
This podcast has
308 episodes
Language
Explicit
No
Date created
2019/03/28
Latest episode
2026/04/15
Average duration
15 min.
Release period
10 days

Description

Welcome Masters swimmers, triathletes, and anyone striving to live well and swim well! Hear powerful interviews with world-class champions, leading experts, and everyday heroes—sharing tips, tools, and stories to boost your motivation, training, and life performance. Hosted by Kelly Palace, Masters Swimming Champion, coach, author, and former NCAA Division I head coach. A podcast that champions you!

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Check latest episodes from Champions Mojo for Masters Swimmers podcast


Radical Body Confidence, Dropping 52 Pounds, and Building a Business: Stephanie Havelka, EP 309
2026/04/15
What we if women treated our bodies like a gift instead of a problem to fix? And men you'll want to listen up if you have ever been asked by a woman, do I look fat? You'll get the right answer in this episode!  After swim practice, we sit down with Stephanie Havelka, a true water woman whose life in sport spans competitive swimming, Kona Ironman, outrigger canoe racing around the globe, surf ski, and even Olympic Trials kayaking. She also happens to be the founder of Sportkini, a swimwear brand built for athletic women who actually move. She's also a  #1 ranked US Masters swimmer.  We talk about how a “champion mindset” transfers from one sport to the next: being coachable, staying curious, and using training as a tool for confidence. Stephanie shares the behind-the-scenes story of how Sport Kini started with sketches at 14, then took shape after a chance meeting with a top Australian swimsuit designer who taught her how to build suits that stay put, feel good, and hold up to chlorine, salt water and real adventure. If you’ve ever searched for athletic swimwear, sport bikinis, or a two piece swimsuit you can truly swim in, you’ll hear exactly what “function first” looks like. Then we go deeper into body confidence. Stretch marks, scars, changes, and the constant background noise of “should” do not get the final say. Stephanie lays out a simple, brave approach: wear what you want, try it a little at a time if you’re nervous, and get your mind off the suit so you can get back to the sport you love. She also shares how she lost 52 pounds by lowering stress and addressing an autoimmune flare cycle, and how that shift helped her return to training and post the #1 US time in the 55–59 SCM 100 free while still seeing big room to improve. If you know a masters swimmer, triathlete, paddler, or any active woman who needs a boost, share this conversation with them. Subscribe to Champions Mojo, leave a review on Apple Podcasts, and tell us what you’re learning to embrace in your own body. • Stephanie’s path from competitive swimming to Kona Ironman, outrigger canoe racing, surf ski and Olympic Trials kayaking  • Using a sport mindset to learn new skills, accept coaching and push through setbacks  • The long origin story of Sport Kini, from teen sketches to an Australia mentor to selling 700 suits solo  • Why athletic women need swimwear built for movement, real sizing and durable construction  • Body confidence as a practice, letting go of shame and wearing what you want  • Losing 52 pounds by lowering stress, addressing autoimmune flare-ups and making swimming fun again  • Current masters swim training, plus focusing on starts, turns and future meet goals  https://sportkini.com/ https://www.instagram.com/sportkini/ Would you consider leaving us a five star review on Apple? That's like getting a best time for us. Kelly and our team would be so grateful.  Email us at [email protected]. Opinions discussed are not medical advice, please seek a medical professional for your own health concerns. You can learn more about the Host and Founder of Champions Mojo at www.KellyPalace.com
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Warrior Techniques to Master Your Mindset with Chris Harris, EP 308
2026/04/02
We talk with Chris Harris, the Warrior Maker, an elite athlete, author and speaker, who has trained Navy Seals, Green Berets and professional athletes to have tough mindsets. He says it's about mastering the space between stimulus and response so pressure will stop running your life. We break down metacognition, subconscious habit change, and race ready mindset tools that help master swimmers stay resilient and perform on purpose.  • Chris’s turning point from homelessness to a mission of “sending down the rope”  • What “warrior” means as mindset rather than combat  • Slowing down the response and dropping the need for approval  • Metacognition as a tool for real time micro adjustments  • Autopilot behaviour and why fear based patterns feel automatic  • “Critical Carl” as the subconscious firewall that blocks unfamiliar change  • Getting into theta state through meditation, hypnosis, and planned repetition  • The MetaCue method using a future memory, gratitude, and a daily cue  • Resilience built on a clear why plus acceptance of inner rivals  • Ego, insecurity, and identity shifts that can derail performance  • Endurance racing as a long stimulus response gap that demands automation  • OODA (observe, orient, decide, act) loop thinking applied to sport and execution  Chris's book, The Book of Mindset is available on Amazon. Would you consider leaving us a five star review on Apple? That's like getting a best time for us. Kelly and our team would be so grateful.  Email us at [email protected]. Opinions discussed are not medical advice, please seek a medical professional for your own health concerns. You can learn more about the Host and Founder of Champions Mojo at www.KellyPalace.com
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Ironman Podium to All-American Masters Swimmer: Jane Esahak-Gage, EP 307
2026/03/24
After 17 Ironmans, a broken ankle might not feel like a full stop, but for Jane Esahak-Gage it becomes a pivot point. After decades of pushing her body through Ironman triathlon training and racing, she gets one piece of advice that changes her path: get back in the pool. What happens next is the kind of surprise many endurance athletes secretly hope for, a return to movement that feels healing instead of punishing.  Jane brings a rare perspective as a world-class long-distance triathlete who also thrives in masters swimming. We talk about her biggest triathlon highlights, how she and her husband George built a life around sport, and the day a bike crash with a red-light runner rewrote their story. The recovery, the fear that can linger around cycling, and the resilience required to keep showing up all surface in a candid, human way.  From there, we get practical about masters swim training and why it works. Jane shares her weekly routine, why intervals and stroke variety beat endless freestyle, a favourite set for sharpening 400 IM speed, and the strength training habits that support shoulder health and durability. If you care about longevity in sport, low-impact fitness, injury prevention, and rediscovering joy in training, this conversation delivers real takeaways you can use at your next practice.  If you enjoy the show, subscribe, share it with a training buddy, and leave a review so more swimmers can find us. What’s one change that made your training feel better overnight? Email us at [email protected]. Opinions discussed are not medical advice, please seek a medical professional for your own health concerns. You can learn more about the Host and Founder of Champions Mojo at www.KellyPalace.com
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World Records On The Unconventional Path: Doug Springer, EP 306
2026/03/11
Doug Springer is 80 years old, but looks and swims like he's 20 years younger. He joins us to unpack the swims that led to four world records, including a jaw-dropping 400 IM where he took 17 seconds off the world mark and cleared the national record by 35. If you love masters swimming, training for longevity, or simply want proof that performance doesn’t expire, this conversation delivers real fuel. We dig into the details that make Doug’s approach so fascinating. He’s a self-described breaststroker, yet he leans into unconventional solutions across strokes, including breaststroke kick during butterfly and a double-arm backstroke paired with that same kick. The bigger takeaway isn’t “break the rules,” it’s “know your strengths,” then build technique you can repeat under fatigue while protecting your shoulders and joints. For adult swimmers and older athletes, that mindset can be the difference between plateau and progress. Doug also shares a practical, repeatable masters swim training rhythm: sprint-focused days, distance-focused days, and a realistic weekly schedule built around work and recovery. We talk favourite sets, why 50s are a staple for many older swimmers, and how he helped build a thriving masters program in a retirement community, using USMS Adult Learn to Swim to welcome beginners and dual meets to make racing feel inviting. If you’ve ever wondered how to stay fast, connected, and motivated in the pool for decades, press play. Subscribe for more stories and coaching-grade tips, share this with a lane mate, and leave a review if the show helps you swim and live better. What’s one part of your training you’d change to swim strong for life? Email us at [email protected]. Opinions discussed are not medical advice, please seek a medical professional for your own health concerns. You can learn more about the Host and Founder of Champions Mojo at www.KellyPalace.com
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R.E.A.L. Confidence For Everyday With Simone Knego, EP 305
2026/02/26
Doubt shows up for everyone, even the most decorated athletes. We invited bestselling author and two-time TEDx speaker Simone Knego to break down a simple, durable system for building confidence that actually holds under pressure. Her REAL method—respect yourself, embrace your failures, ask yourself what you want, and live without limits—turns confidence from a fuzzy feeling into a daily practice you can train like endurance, breath control, or pacing. We start by redefining self-respect as the foundation of performance: recovery, sleep, and boundaries that protect your best work. Simone explains how setting limits at home, on teams, and at the office teaches others how to treat you. Then we reframe failure as data, not identity, and share practical ways to process a bad race or rough set without letting it define the next one. You’ll hear why giving yourself a “move on” date shortens the spiral and how to turn the inner critic into a useful coach. Asking what you truly want might be the hardest—and most freeing—step. Masters swimmers and weekend warriors alike feel the pull of old identities and outside expectations. We explore how naming your real goals changes your training, stress, and satisfaction. Simone also shares her quick “Control Alt Delete” mindset reset: catch the thought, tell a better story, and delete beliefs that don’t serve you. It’s a powerful pattern interrupt when stakes are high. Simone’s Kilimanjaro climb ties it all together. Training from flat Florida with breath-restriction work, loaded hikes, and strength, she learned to manage doubt one step at a time. On the mountain and during a painful descent, she discovered that going slower can reveal more—and that persistence is confidence in motion. We also talk openly about leaving an abusive relationship, repairing self-talk, and modeling respect for the next generation. If you’re ready to build unshakeable confidence without burning out, this conversation offers clear tools you can use today. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs a boost, and leave a quick review to help others find the show. What part of the REAL method will you try first? Email us at [email protected]. Opinions discussed are not medical advice, please seek a medical professional for your own health concerns. You can learn more about the Host and Founder of Champions Mojo at www.KellyPalace.com
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Balancing The Police Beat And Masters Swimming, Che'Rel Haywood, EP 304
2026/02/18
Sirens at night, blocks at dawn—this conversation follows Che'Rel, a 26-year-old police officer and lifelong swimmer from Trinidad and Tobago, as she threads two demanding worlds into one life of discipline and joy. We meet her on deck at Nova Masters in Richmond, fresh off a night shift, and explore how race-pace sets, team culture, and a stubborn sprinter’s mindset help her keep purpose front and center. Che'Rel walks us through the pivot from childhood education to policing, the reality of 6 p.m.–6 a.m. patrols on a busy corridor, and the mental gymnastics required to slide from high-stress calls into focused training. She traces her swim roots from a Caribbean school activity day to national teams and then to Hunter College, where the “individual sport” suddenly turned into a team mission. That shift unlocked leadership—rallying teammates before races, chasing championships, and learning how shared effort changes your ceiling. We also get into favorite and best events, from a love of breaststroke to the love-hate pain of the 100 fly, and why short, high-quality sets often beat long, unfocused yards for busy athletes. There’s a quiet heroism in her comeback story: a twisted ankle during the police academy that could have set her back to square one. Instead, swimming fitness and mindset carried her through to graduation. She offers a grounded look at early patrol experiences, including a tense de-escalation with a drowsy driver, and the satisfaction of staying calm under pressure. Along the way, Coach Mark Kutz’s mantra—“chump or champ today?”—becomes a compass for both the pool and the street. If you’re balancing shift work, training goals, or just looking for motivation to show up, this story is a blueprint for resilience, community, and race-ready focus. If this episode inspires you, follow the show, share it with a teammate who needs a push, and leave a quick review—tell us your favorite tough set and why it matters to you. Email us at [email protected]. Opinions discussed are not medical advice, please seek a medical professional for your own health concerns. You can learn more about the Host and Founder of Champions Mojo at www.KellyPalace.com
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Recovery Begins At Night: Rethinking Beds, Cooling, And Habits, Sleep Expert Derek Hales, EP 303
2026/02/10
Sleep is the most powerful legal performance enhancer you’re not fully using yet. We brought in Derek Hales, founder of NapLab and one of the most trusted voices in mattress testing, to strip away hype and show how smarter choices at night translate to stronger training, faster recovery, and better moods. We dig into the single biggest mattress mistake—price extremes—and map the sweet spot where quality and longevity meet: a queen in the $1,500–$2,000 range. Derek explains why most athletes thrive on a medium to medium-firm hybrid for balanced pressure relief, spine alignment, and airflow, and when memory foam’s contouring or latex’s buoyant feel makes sense. Sensitive to smell? We break down off-gassing, VOCs, and why natural latex still carries a rubber odor even if it’s less concerning than polyurethane foam. If you run hot, you’ll appreciate our deep dive on cooling—what truly works, what’s marketing, and how to build a cooler sleep system from the mattress up. We compare active cooling options like Eight Sleep, ChiliPad, and BedJet, weighing performance, noise, and cost so you invest wisely. Beyond gear, we focus on habits that move the needle: ideal room temps in the high 60s, blackout and fans for stubborn climates, consistent bedtimes, device-free wind-downs, and 5-minute mindfulness to quiet the mental to-do loop. Derek also shares intriguing evidence around Celliant fabrics for circulation and recovery, plus practical strategies for couples—from twin XL splits to separate rooms—so both partners get deep, uninterrupted rest. Whether you’re a masters swimmer or a wellness-driven listener, expect clear, actionable guidance to turn sleep into your competitive edge. If you enjoyed this conversation, follow the show, share it with a teammate who trains early, and leave a quick review—your support helps more athletes find the recovery they deserve. Email us at [email protected]. Opinions discussed are not medical advice, please seek a medical professional for your own health concerns. You can learn more about the Host and Founder of Champions Mojo at www.KellyPalace.com
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College Walk-On To Masters Swimming Champion: Med Student Bryanna Lacey's Comeback, EP 302
2026/01/29
26 year-old Bryanna Lacey is fresh off a Masters Meet High Point win and a year into a bold return to the sport she left behind seven years ago after an excellent college swimming career. We sit with her on the tiles at Fort Lauderdale Aquatic Center to unpack what it takes to walk on, walk away, and walk back stronger. Bryanna started late, carved out high school records, and earned her place at the University of Indianapolis by promising nothing but relentless effort. She battled through a rib injury to post best times and earn a team perseverance award, then stepped away for seven years while life moved—Virginia, Hawaii, and the intensity of medical school. The spark came back when she missed structure, competition, and the friends who make the grind worthwhile. Now she’s a third-year med student rotating in pediatrics, a masters distance swimmer chasing her college marks, and an open water age-group national champion with a 500 free that’s flirting with her old pace. We dig into the training that makes this possible: 4:20 a.m. alarms to medicate her epileptic dog, 5:30 practices, hospital shifts by 8, weekend doubles, open water miles, and the distance staples she loves—21x100s and 18x200s, often pulling to build rhythm and strength. She talks about balancing ambition with joy, using community as a performance tool, and why masters swimming turns structure into freedom. There’s room for the human details too—admiration for Katie Ledecky’s mindset and a home “Bree’s Bakery” where sourdough teaches patience and process. If you’re navigating a demanding career, plotting a comeback, or searching for a team that lifts you higher, you’ll find a playbook here: set a steady routine, choose a supportive lane, and chase progress without losing the fun. Enjoy the story, share it with a teammate who needs a nudge, and subscribe for more candid conversations from the pool deck. Email us at [email protected]. Opinions discussed are not medical advice, please seek a medical professional for your own health concerns. You can learn more about the Host and Founder of Champions Mojo at www.KellyPalace.com
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A Comeback Love Story And Ice Cream Challenge: Masters Swimming Champion, Joe Wotton, EP 301
2026/01/20
Ready for a great love story? Former national and world-record-holding Masters swimmer Joe Wotton joins us on deck to share the stories, nicknames, and love that shaped a champion’s life in and out of the pool. Joe Wotton, 66 years young, swims for Swim Melbourne Masters—the Mahis—and brings with him a lifetime in aquatics. His journey began in Massachusetts, continued in backyard pools after his family moved to Florida, and grew through high school swimming and water polo. One of the highlights of his early career includes racing at the Florida state championships alongside Olympic legend Rowdy Gaines, an experience he recounts with humility, humor, and deep appreciation for the moment. Service, Swimmer Motivation, and Staying in the Water Joe went on to swim and play water polo at the Air Force Academy, where he captained the water polo team, earned MVP honors, won a national title, and found success in sprint freestyle events. His career later came full circle when he returned to the Academy as a coach, using swimming as both motivation and connection with the athletes he led. Along the way, Masters Swimming became a constant thread—one that provided community, competition, and lifelong friendships wherever life and service took him. Nicknames, Teasing, and the Gift of Belonging One of the most entertaining threads in this conversation is Joe’s collection of nicknames, each tied to a distinct chapter of his life. As a young cadet, he was called “Stiletto” for his lean build. In water polo, his squinting without vision correction earned him the name “Squint.” Later, in a moment of good-natured teasing during weight training, an ironic Yoda impression led to the nickname “Power,” a call sign that followed him so persistently that some teammates assumed it was his actual last name. Even today, he still hears it called out in airports by fellow Air Force pilots. These nicknames aren’t just funny—they represent belonging, shared history, and the deep bonds formed through sport and service. His Greatest Comeback of All Is Love The most powerful comeback Joe shares, however, has nothing to do with swimming. He tells a beautiful love story about reconnecting with Debbie, the woman he dated in college but didn’t yet understand how to fully love. Years later, after both had gone through divorce, they found their way back to each other. More than 35 years into a happy marriage, Joe describes Debbie as his greatest accomplishment in life—a story that resonates deeply and reminds us that growth, timing, and second chances matter. Why Masters Feels Like Home Joe also speaks with gratitude about Masters Swimming itself, describing every meet as a kind of homecoming. He reflects on the joy of seeing familiar faces, encouraging one another, and sharing a love of the sport that transcends age and performance. Whether he’s training for the 50 freestyle, lifting weights, walking golf courses, or spending a month each year in the Florida Keys lobster diving with family, Joe radiates appreciation for a life well lived and shared. Email us at [email protected]. Opinions discussed are not medical advice, please seek a medical professional for your own health concerns. You can learn more about the Host and Founder of Champions Mojo at www.KellyPalace.com
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25-Year Break To Masters Swimming Podium: Lauren Anderson On Finding Herself Again, EP 300
2026/01/08
Lauren Anderson proves that speed and joy in swimming are still within reach after 25 years away from the sport. She rebuilt her training from the ground up, and made big time drops in her best events the breaststroke. Her story blends performance insights with honest life change, turning Masters swimming into a blueprint for structure, community, and a fresh start. Lauren is a member of the Palm Beach Masters. We dig into the practical tools that moved the needle: broken 200s tailored to breaststroke pacing, non-negotiable kick sets to power the second 50, and all-out block work that makes starts, turns, and breakouts automatic under pressure. Lauren shares why many Masters swimmers stall—too much freestyle, not enough stroke specificity—and how to fix it with simple, repeatable sets. She recalls a standout meet in Irvine, racing alongside elite talent, Gabrielle Rose, and explains how those moments of shared excellence energize training for months. Along the way, Lauren opens up about navigating divorce, moving, and starting a new job during COVID while rediscovering her athletic identity. The pool became a steady ritual and the Masters lane mates a vital community. If you’re ready to return to swimming, sharpen your breaststroke, or find structure amid change, this conversation gives you the mindset, the sets, and the spark to get going. If this story fires you up, follow the show, share it with a teammate, and leave a quick review on Apple to help more swimmers find us. What’s your best comeback moment? We’d love to hear it. Email us at [email protected]. Opinions discussed are not medical advice, please seek a medical professional for your own health concerns. You can learn more about the Host and Founder of Champions Mojo at www.KellyPalace.com
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Country Club Laps To Masters Swimming Champion: Peggy McDonnell’s Journey to All-American, EP 299
2025/12/30
She calls herself a swimming vagabond! The deck at Fort Lauderdale buzzes, and at 70-years old, Peggy McDonnell brings the kind of energy that makes you want to put on your goggles. She didn’t swim in high school or college. She found Masters after a move to Florida, chased a national title in the 200 IM, and shocked herself with an All-American time that arrived like lightning. Then life happened: knee surgery, a finicky neck, and an honest reckoning that made butterfly and breaststroke hard. Instead of stepping back, she pivoted—leaning into the 200 freestyle, rebuilding confidence, and choosing smarter, kinder training. We walk through how she trains mostly solo with plans from a trusted friend, then found a 20-year-younger partner who “busts her tail” and helped her return to racing after a multi-year competitive break. She shares practical details that Masters swimmers crave: three swim days a week, 3,400 to 3,800 yards when the stars align, and a simple long course test set that benchmarks fitness without breaking spirit. Her facility routine is a masterclass in persistence—Indian River State College, Leisure Square, and any open water that keeps the habit alive through closures, heater issues, and shifting schedules. It’s the consistency, not the perfect pool, that moves the needle. Peggy’s story widens beyond the stopwatch. She talks about a broken hand right as she aged up to 60 and still made nationals, her pick for a dream lunch with Mark Spitz, and two and a half decades of volunteering at a dog shelter that led to adopting a sweet, big shepherd after saying goodbye to a tiny chihuahua. And she lights up when recalling the “Golden Girls,” the relay crew who broke five yards records in a single season—only to be topped the next year, and loved the chase anyway. The throughline is grit with warmth: adapt your events, find a partner who pushes you, keep your rituals flexible, and let team joy carry you through. If you love Masters swimming, comeback stories, and practical training wisdom for aging athletes, you’ll feel right at home here. Listen, share with a teammate, and tell us the one adjustment you’ll make to keep your swim life strong. Subscribe, leave a quick review, and drop your next race goal—we’re cheering for you. Email us at [email protected]. Opinions discussed are not medical advice, please seek a medical professional for your own health concerns. You can learn more about the Host and Founder of Champions Mojo at www.KellyPalace.com
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Christmas Lights & Masters Swimming: Champion Kirk Clear, EP 298
2025/12/16
A special episode to get you in the Christmas spirit! We meet Kirk Clear, a force in U.S. Masters Swimming, an Air Force Veteran and a legend in his Florida community for something entirely different: creating a jaw-dropping, music-synchronized Christmas light display that brings joy to thousands each year. Kirk calls himself a "Crazy Christmas Light Illuminator." Kirk approaches the holidays the same way he approaches Masters swimming—with discipline, creativity, and a deep commitment to community. While many of us are winding down in December, Kirk is climbing bucket trucks, wrapping 50-foot palm trees in lights, syncing music, hosting snow machines for kids, and raising money for veteran-focused charities—all while still showing up at swim practice four to five days a week. Kirk is a member of the Swim Melbourne Masters. Recorded on deck at the Fort Lauderdale Aquatic Center during the Fall Classic Short Course Meters Meet, this conversation captures Kirk’s energy, humility, and unmistakable love for both swimming and service. In this episode, you’ll hear: How Kirk discovered Masters swimming in his early 20s—and why he’s still all-in 35+ years laterThe national Masters backstroke record he set by embracing change and opportunityWhy consistency, not excuses, is his approach to training—even after 19 surgeriesThe story behind his legendary Christmas and Fourth of July light shows (and why July is “Christmas season” for him)How giving back—to kids, veterans, and the swimming community—fuels his purposeWhy volunteering is essential to the future of Masters swimmingA reminder that staying young isn’t about avoiding wear and tear—it’s about doing what you loveKirk Clear is proof that excellence doesn’t have to be loud—but it can be brilliantly lit. Whether he’s flipping at the wall, mentoring volunteers, or turning his front yard into a Christmas masterpiece, Kirk shows us that passion multiplied by consistency can create something truly unforgettable. Perfect for the holiday season, this episode is about joy, service, resilience, and finding ways to light the way for others—in the pool and beyond. 🎁 Merry Christmas from Champion’s Mojo—and enjoy this inspiring conversation with Kirk Clear Email us at [email protected]. Opinions discussed are not medical advice, please seek a medical professional for your own health concerns. You can learn more about the Host and Founder of Champions Mojo at www.KellyPalace.com
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A PhD in Exercise Physiology Shares Masters Swimming Wisdom: Eddie Tiozzo, EP 297
2025/12/10
It's on deck with Eddie Tiozzo—age 52, former water polo player, and PhD in exercise physiology—to unpack how smart training, strong shoulders, and a dynamic mindset can carry you through decades in the sport. Eddie’s story moves from Croatia and Italy to Florida pool decks as a member of Swim Ft. Lauderdale Masters, and along the way he shows how curiosity and consistency beat rigid formulas every time. We dig into his favorite events—the 100 back and 100 IM—and the weekly plan that keeps him fast and healthy: four swims of 3–4.5K, two focused gym sessions, and one stretching session. Eddie breaks down why “broken,” varied sets trump cookie-cutter 10x100s, how to use bands effectively without ignoring weights, and the power of alternating lighter, high-rep days with heavier, low-rep sessions. If pull-ups are out of reach, he shares a scalable assisted variation that builds true pulling strength for better catch mechanics, stronger starts, and shoulder resilience. Beyond sets and reps, Eddie opens up about earning his PhD later in life, tackling an open water 10K as a dedicated sprinter, and why community keeps him coming back to the blocks. We swap notes on Federica Pellegrini, reading real books, and the quiet discipline that turns good habits into lasting performance. Whether you’re chasing a Masters best time, trying to stay pain-free, or craving a fresh training spark, you’ll find practical ideas you can apply at your next practice. If this conversation gave you a boost, follow the show, share it with a teammate, and leave a quick review on Apple to help more swimmers find us. Your support keeps the momentum flowing—see you on deck. Email us at [email protected]. Opinions discussed are not medical advice, please seek a medical professional for your own health concerns. You can learn more about the Host and Founder of Champions Mojo at www.KellyPalace.com
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New York City Shines for Masters Swimming Star Eve Maidenberg, EP 296
2025/12/03
Want to know what it takes to get faster with less time and more life on your plate? We sit with AGUA Masters swimmer Eve Maidenberg at the Fort Lauderdale Aquatic Center to unpack how a New York Youth Centered team culture, smart training, and relentless curiosity turned a once-retired age-grouper into a 49-year-old dropping times she never touched at 18. Eve opens up about AGUA’s unique mix of recent grads and seasoned pros, where mentorship flows both ways and great coaching keeps athletes engaged. We talk venues—Asphalt Green’s long-course pool NE uptown and a 25-yard setup downtown—and why variety matters for pacing, turns, and confidence. Then it’s 200 free nerdery: how to craft a painful-but-winnable race, why some elite swimmers breathe in and out of every wall, and when oxygen management beats rigid rules. If middle distance is your sweet spot, you’ll hear practical tactics you can apply in the next set. Training isn’t just more yards. Eve shares a weekly rhythm of six pool sessions, focused strength training three times a week, yoga for mobility, and spin when needed to build capacity without breaking down. We dig into favorite sets like descending-interval 200s and shotgun progressions, which force efficiency as the clock tightens and teach a fearless close. The conversation turns deeply personal as she recounts coming back from a hip stress fracture and a heart issue, the mindset shifts those injuries demanded, and how smarter planning turned setbacks into speed. You’ll walk away with concrete ideas for masters training, insight into pacing the 200 free, and a reminder that community is a performance tool. If you love swim strategy, resilient comebacks, and the spark of a team that shows up for each other, this one belongs in your queue. Enjoy the story, try the sets, and tell us how you’d pace your next 200. If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a teammate, and leave a quick review so more swimmers can find it. Email us at [email protected]. Opinions discussed are not medical advice, please seek a medical professional for your own health concerns. You can learn more about the Host and Founder of Champions Mojo at www.KellyPalace.com
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Trial Attorney Finds Solutions While Swimming: William Robinson, EP 295
2025/11/26
A pool deck can feel like a second home, and today’s conversation proves why. In this brand New episode we chat with attorney and masters swimmer William Robinson at the Fort Lauderdale Aquatic Center to trace a life shaped by laps: early lessons in New Haven, Connecticut with Olympic great Don Schollander, a joyful return sparked by his daughters, and a training rhythm that blends endurance heart with sprint ambitions. William shares the open water feat that tested his grit—a nine-mile lighthouse swim—and explains why the 50 free still calls his name as he chases speed, craft, and longevity. What stands out most is how the water sharpens his mind for the courtroom. William describes using swims as moving meditation, a place where arguments settle, focus deepens, and solutions surface. He walks us through his go-to set of 10x100 on a sustainable sendoff, the value of three to four weekly sessions at Victory Pool, and the quiet confidence that comes from realistic, consistent training. We also swap notes on heroes: Michael Phelps for his relentless range and Katie Ledecky for decade-long excellence and process-driven mastery. The heart of the episode is purpose. William celebrates his family, including a daughter who became the first Black woman to earn a PhD in nuclear engineering from MIT, and he channels that pride into advocacy for a more diverse aquatics community. From Florida to Texas, he sees momentum and calls on all of us to extend more invitations, build pipelines, and make the deck welcoming for every swimmer. If you care about performance, balance, and impact, this story offers a model: use sport to think better, live calmer, and open doors for others. If this conversation moved you, tap follow, share it with a teammate, and leave a quick review to help more swimmers and fans find the show. Your support keeps these stories flowing. Email us at [email protected]. Opinions discussed are not medical advice, please seek a medical professional for your own health concerns. You can learn more about the Host and Founder of Champions Mojo at www.KellyPalace.com
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Podcast reviews

Read Champions Mojo for Masters Swimmers podcast reviews


4.9 out of 5
117 reviews
Fullofspoilers 2025/10/30
So inspirational!
I love listening to this podcast, Kelly’s conversations are so motivating! The episodes are always filled with nuggets of inspiration and practical ta...
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The decender 2025/07/07
Swim Fan
Listening to this podcast has made me a better swimmer. I have decided to take off my snorkel and swim fast. My nickname is now the descender! Thank y...
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Mrbogey71 2024/07/17
Fun and informative podcast
I just found the podcast after beginning to swim Masters. Lots of great information and I enjoy the questions the hosts ask. Keep up the great work!
jmart444 2024/05/24
Fun, quick, informative
The host asks great questions. Lots of good takeaways. Well done.
Blakeybb 2023/07/18
Refreshing and Informative
If you’re looking for a podcast to lift you up and help you in your day-to-day life, or to become a better swimmer, this is for you! So helpful and fu...
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Llllllllllljkkkkk 2023/07/10
Inspiring and practical for anyone!
I am so glad I stumbled on this podcast when I decided to get back into swimming recently. I listen to this more regularly than any other podcast in m...
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Andy swims 2023/07/03
Best motivation podcast!
Take a listen & you’ll be hooked. I’ve been listening for a few years as Kelly & Maria interview athletes in the swimming world & beyond. Call me a bi...
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JoannaDag 2023/05/17
Rock on!
Champion’s Mojo is always a great listen and I love hearing about and from the many champions out there. The episode with Will Liebig was very inspiri...
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FLSwmgrl 2023/05/03
Champions Mojo
It is great hearing all the great info and takeaways from swimmers. The swimming community is so supportive of everyone in the sport. I gain so much i...
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JW - H2opolo guy 2022/12/19
Outstanding Insights - for Sports AND Life!
Kelly and Maria have a wonderful banter themselves and they also are terrific at getting their speakers relaxed while extracting outstanding insights ...
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