Milan's Pool Season Heats Up: Record Entries and Breakthrough Performances Define the Week
Local swimmers smash participation records at Piscina Cozzi while regional championships deliver medal hauls that reignite the city's aquatic ambitions.
Local swimmers smash participation records at Piscina Cozzi while regional championships deliver medal hauls that reignite the city's aquatic ambitions.

Milan's swimming community has reached a crescendo this week, with the city's premier facilities reporting their strongest participation figures since the pandemic recovery began. The historic Piscina Cozzi in the Navigli district—home to competitive swimming since 1930—recorded over 850 registered swimmers across its summer leagues, a 23% increase from last season's comparable period.
The surge reflects renewed enthusiasm following regional championship results announced Friday, where Milan-based athletes claimed eight medals across age categories at the Lombardy Aquatic Championships held in Brescia. The standout performance came from the under-16 freestyle relay team from Società Nuoto Milano, who posted a regional record time of 3:48.2 in the 4x100m event. The achievement marks the first regional record set by a Milan club in three years, signalling a genuine resurgence in the city's competitive pipeline.
Beyond the traditional pool circuit, water polo has generated significant momentum. The men's Serie A1 squad AC Milan Nuoto concluded their pre-season campaign with a decisive 14-8 victory over Como this Saturday at the San Siro aquatic complex, demonstrating the tactical refinements expected to define their championship campaign beginning in September. Coaching staff reported satisfaction with conditioning levels across all positions.
Recreational swimming demand continues its upward trajectory across the city's network. Piscina Saini in Varese offers day passes at €15 for adults, while Piscina Scarioni maintains €12 rates for morning sessions—accessibility pricing that appears to be driving the broader uptick. Waiting lists for junior swimming lessons at both venues now stretch eight weeks, forcing administrators to schedule additional Saturday sessions.
Open-water enthusiasm has similarly accelerated, with the Navigli canal hosting 340 registered participants in this week's long-distance swimming clinic—a 40-person increase from June's previous outing. Organisers confirm three weekly sessions now accommodate demand from recreational and competitive swimmers preparing for the July open-water championships at Lake Como.
Industry observers note that Milan's investment in facility maintenance and coaching staff recruitment over the past eighteen months appears to be yielding tangible results. The city's position as a European sporting capital increasingly extends beyond football, with aquatic sports establishing themselves as genuine pillars of the local athletic identity. Administrators project continued growth through autumn, with additional competitive series scheduled through December.
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