The 1-Mile Swim 2025 Open, held July 17-23 exclusively for donors and recipients, featured world-class times and fierce competition, once again proving that donating a kidney or receiving a transplant does not slow down athletic performance. Check out the 2025 Season Leaderboard, now updated to include 1-Mile Swim points.
Donor: Women
Speed was the name of the game in the women’s donor category, which featured standout performances from two former elite collegiate swimmers and an Olympic gold medalist. Hayley Martin, who swam at the University of Nebraska, took first place with a blazing time of 19:45, besting the previous Donor Games record by over a minute (and only 2:38 off of the U.S. Masters record in the 1650 yard). Second place went to former University of Texas diver Sofia Rauzi, who posted a remarkable time of 21:31 in her first-ever Open event. Donor Games regular Courtney Cox reminded everyone why she’s a perennial podium threat, delivering a stellar 23:30 to clinch third place. Two-time Olympian Crissy Perham brought her championship pedigree to the pool. A gold medalist in both the 4×100 free relay and medley relay at the 1992 Barcelona Games, Pelham delivered an impressive time of 25:09 to capture fourth place. Jacqueline Rutherford rounded out the podium with a strong time of 27:21.
Donor: Men
The competition ran hot in the men’s donor category, where every second counted and the podium was anything but predictable. Eric Walano kicked off the competition strong, grabbing the early lead with a time of 25:22. Defending 1-Mile Swim champion David Bodger set out to stay on top, reclaiming the lead with a commanding 25:15. Eric tried to take back the lead but fell just one second short on his second attempt, coming in at 25:16. Undeterred, Eric used his third and final attempt the next day to overtake David with a searing 24:50 time. Formidable Donor Games athlete Brandon Cullen added to the drama with a strong performance, securing third place with a time of 26:24. On the final day, with Eric out of attempts and no sign of a new submission from David, Brandon made one last push, shaving over a minute off his time—enough to capture second place with 25:05. Paul Savuto took fourth place with 25:47, and on the final day of the competition, Garet Hil took fifth with 28:09,beating his previous attempt by over two minutes.
Recipient: Women
Abigail Beckman-Green, who plans to swim at the World Transplant Games in Dresden, Germany this August, took the top spot for the second straight year with a blazing time of 21:13. Sydney McGuire took second place with an impressive time of 27:59. Danielle Fiorito, who won the category in the last two Donor Games Open events, landed in third place with 56:01. Danielle is currently on dialysis and waiting for a transplant. Read her story.
Recipient: Men
Liver recipient Leo Draham cruised to first place for the second straight year in the 1-Mile Swim Open with an impressive time of 24:59. Scott Claybrook and Andrés Falco had a tight race for second place, with Scott’s 32:50 time edging out Andrés by just 19 seconds.
Congratulations to all the athletes!
Final Competition Leaderboard
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