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Grant Shoults Back In Water After Shoulder Surgery

Stanford star and US National Teamer Grant Shoults is back in the water after undergoing a shoulder surgery at the very beginning of this year. Here is Shoults’ original statement announcing that he had undergone surgery on his shoulder and that it was successful:

“After 3 months of battling chronic pain, I underwent successful shoulder surgery. Thank you to my family, friends, teammates, coaching staff, athletic trainers, Dr. Geoff Abrams, the Stanford Medical staff, USA Swimming, and Dr. Warren Kramer as well as the Kramer family in their never ending support and dedication to my mental and physical health. I am excited to go through life pain free with the ultimate goal at getting back to the competitive level I was at in the water. Everything happens for a reason and this is just a testament to God’s plan. I am sure that this bump in the road will allow me to grow as an individual and as a athlete. As always, I will continue being my Stanford teammates’ biggest fan as we continue striving for our goals together in and out of the water.”

Shoults has been on the road to recovery the past couple months, and just about a week ago, he got back in the pool, or rather, the ocean for the first time since the surgery. On March 31st, Shoults uploaded a video on his Twitter and Instagram accounts showing his first strokes since the surgery three months prior. Shoults is swimming in the ocean in the video, and writes in the caption “labrum feels great”, and “It’s good to be back”.

Shoults is qualified to swim the 400 free at the 2019 FINA World Championships this July in Gwangju, South Korea. With roughly 3.5 months from the point where he took his first strokes to when World Champs start, it’s still possible, though certainly up in the air, whether Shoults will still compete in Gwangju. Anyone dropping off the World Champs roster has to do so by June 20th, that way the next swimmer in line can be put on the roster. In this case, Shoults backing out of Worlds would bump Conor Dwyer in.

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Justin Wright
5 years ago

Chris Wieser (3rd at nationals in the 400) is a prime option for the spot too. Heard he’s super cute too 🙂

Swimmer A
Reply to  Justin Wright
5 years ago

Can’t wait to see you swim the 2 fly this summer, mate. If this is the real Justin Wright I’m talking to here lol.

notoday
5 years ago

Dang shoulter injury

Hswimmer
Reply to  notoday
5 years ago

Hehehe

Speed Racer
5 years ago

Why would Dwyer be the bump in if he was not in the A final at Nationals last year?

Longhorn
Reply to  Speed Racer
5 years ago

Yes I’m so confused as to why it would be Dwyer???

Jiimbo
5 years ago

Dwyer doesn’t have the 400 fina A cut so technically I believe no one else can swim the 400 at worlds unless one of the athletes already going achieves the cut prior to the meet

50free
5 years ago

Isn’t Dwyer already in for the 200 free relay?

NCSwimFan
5 years ago

No offense to Grant at all, but this seems like a prime example of why the US needs to do World Champs Trials the year before the Olympics instead of relying on the past summer’s meets. Anything can happen going into an international competition, and that variability is taken down tremendously when the qualifying meet is done closer to the championships as opposed to farther away.

Hswimmer
Reply to  NCSwimFan
5 years ago

Exactly… I don’t understand it because a lot can happen in a year…

Superfan
Reply to  Hswimmer
5 years ago

We go thru this discussion every quad but the most important thing is what happens during the olympic year. Having an early Trials every summer isn’t worth the sacrifice. This way of picking the team gives everyone a full season to train the year before the Olympics, as well as giving everyone a chance to race internationally which probably helps with US at the Olympics!

SwimGeek
Reply to  Superfan
5 years ago

Exactly. There are always a few instances where early trials hurts us for Worlds. That is a KNOWN risk, and teh schedule is preferred anyway. Everyone focuses on the downside — but might there be a countering upside? This schedule allows for a full summer of training the year before the Olympics. We sacrifice a little 2019 success to gain 2020 success. And we’ve been VERY good the last 3-4 Olympics. Let’s stick with that…

Boomcobson
5 years ago

Tore my labrum and broke my collar bone this swim season as well and am finally able to start getting back in the water so I share his excitement! congrats to Grant wish him the best recovery and return to competition next season!

Superfan
5 years ago

Grant Shouts might be in better shape than Dwyer is right now! Just saying!

Togger
Reply to  Superfan
5 years ago

If you look closely on that pan out, you can just see Conor on the beach with a mojito.

Philip
Reply to  Superfan
5 years ago

Dwyer is on perpetual vacation.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  Superfan
5 years ago

thats fairly possible ….Dwyer has desapeared for a while

kanye west
Reply to  Superfan
5 years ago

He is probably hanging with zac Efron and his brother

Stat
Reply to  Superfan
5 years ago

If I was turning pro, I’d find out who his agent was post 2012. I’ve never seen someone gain so much popularity/deals/sponsors after a relay gold medal.

I’m not discrediting that a relay gold medal ain’t a massive achievement, he is just a genius at marketing himself

swimma
Reply to  Stat
5 years ago

you forgot that he’s like 6’5, chiseled and handsome lol

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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