Malta Independent

The Iron Lady makes a huge splash - in and out of the pool

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Katinka Hosszu has a case full of medals. She wants so much more. From marketing marvel to ambitious businesswo­man to fledgling union organizer, the Hungarian swimmer known as the "Iron Lady" knows how to make a splash — in and out of the pool.

Along with American star Katie Ledecky, Hosszu is perhaps the biggest name at the world championsh­ips this week, the homecountr­y favorite whose face seemingly appears on every billboard around Budapest, whose every appearance at Duna Arena is accompanie­d by foot-stomping, flag-waving euphoria.

She lived up to the enormous expectatio­ns in her first event of the meet, winning the 200-meter individual medley Monday night.

"Katinka's Gold!" blared the front-page headline on the country's largest daily sports newspaper.

While Hosszu and her American husband-coach, Shane Tusup, have built a rapidly growing swimsuit and apparel company based on the "Iron Lady" moniker — it now has about 50 employees and is omnipresen­t in retail stores around Hungary — the 28-yearold has turned her sights to what she considers an even greater cause.

After governing body FINA changed its the rules to limit the number of events a swimmer could enter on the World Cup circuit, a capricious decision that seemed targeted specifical­ly at Hosszu and her grueling program (that's how she got her nickname, after all), the swimmer vowed to fight back.

"I'm obviously trying to do a lot more for swimming than what I do in the pool," Hosszu said. "I think it's important to put the same effort into it outside the pool."

She formed the Global Associatio­n of Profession­al Swimmers (GAPS) and quickly drew attention by persuading more than two dozen of her fellow competitor­s to come on board, including such major stars as Australian sisters Cate and Bronte Campbell, Britain's Adam Peaty, Sweden's Sarah Sjostrom and American Katie Meili.

Hosszu has been outspoken in her criticism of scandal-plagued FINA and seems intent on giving swimmers a much bigger voice in governing the sport.

"I've been talking to a lot of swimmers lately," she said. "I had no idea that all over the world, swimmers from different continents, we really speak the same language."

As swimming's first millionair­e based strictly on her race-prize earnings, Hosszu wants to spread the wealth to others. Given the sport's enormous popularity during the Olympics and financial strides it made while riding the wave of Michael Phelps, she sees no reason for so many accomplish­ed swimmers to be struggling to make ends meet.

"The main thing is for all these swimmers to come together," Hosszu said. "That's something that hasn't happened before. I think if we can put more effort into swimming, we can push the sport even further."

She's still a bit vague about her goals, but it's clear she wants to give swimmers the same sort of influence that athletes have in sports such as soccer and NBA basketball.

"I don't think swimming should be watched only during the Olympics," Hosszu went on. "We deserve to be treated as profession­al swimmers. We're partners in this relationsh­ip."

That Hosszu finds herself in such a prominent position would have seemed totally improbable after the 2012 London Olympics, when she was a medal favorite in several events but didn't make the podium at all. She likely would have retired from the sport if not for Tusup, whom she had first met when both were swimming for the University of Southern California.

Tusup took over as her coach, becoming well known for his boisterous antics on deck, and their personal and profession­al relationsh­ip yielded an Olympics of redemption in Rio de Janeiro last summer. Hosszu won three golds and a silver, more than any other swimmer in individual events.

"I wouldn't be where I am if it wasn't for Shane," Hosszu said.

Tusup returns the compliment, praising his wife for her commitment to the sport beyond winning more championsh­ips and selling more merchandis­e.

"It means so much more than a medal," he said. "At the end of the day, you're like, 'Great, I did all those hours for this?' The object itself is not that valuable. It's what it does and what it means. For us, it's the stories, the process, the journeys."

Hosszu's cause seemed to take on increased urgency during these championsh­ips.

At a meeting held last weekend in a luxury hotel along the Danube, FINA re-elected its 81year-old president, Julio Maglione, to a third term after changing the rules to remove the age limits. The organizati­on also retained another top official, first vice president Hussain al-Musallam, even though he bribery allegation­s.

In Hosszu's eyes, it's time for swimmers to start cleaning up the sport.

It's past time for them to get their rightful share.

"I'm not only talking about the top swimmers getting paid more," she said. "I'm talking about swimmers trying to be profession­al, trying to make money from swimming. It should be the goal that all people who make the semifinals can make a living from swimming and not have to worry about their next job. They can just focus on swimming — be like basketball players and football players, just focusing on their sport." is facing

4 world records fall on 3rd day of swimming worlds

Lilly King of the United States, Kylie Masse of Canada and Britain's Adam Peaty all broke swimming world records Tuesday at the world championsh­ips. Peaty, in fact, did it twice. Olympic gold medalist King eclipsed the 4-year-old mark in the 100-meter breaststro­ke, again beating Russian rival Yulia Efimova with a time of 1 minute, 4.13 seconds. The previous record of 1:04.35 was set by Lithuania's Ruta Meilutyte.

Masse took down a mark from the rubber-suit era when she won the women's 100 backstroke in 51.10 — 0.02 better than Britain's Gemma Spofforth's at 2009 worlds in Rome.

Peaty set a pair of marks in the 50 breaststro­ke, a non-Olympic event. He went 26.10 in the morning preliminar­ies, shaving 0.32 seconds off the standard he set two years ago in Kazan. He went even faster during the evening semifinals, touching in 25.95.

Five swimming world records have fallen in Budapest.

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