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Two decorated swimmers from the Tampa Bay region win an 8-mile swim in the Keys

Swimmers escorted by kayakers circle Alligator Reef Lighthouse during the Swim for Alligator Lighthouse open-water challenge Saturday, Sept. 9, 2023, off Islamorada, Fla., in the Florida Keys. The 8-mile roundtrip race attracted almost 400 swimmers divided into categories including solo and two-, three- and four-person relay teams.
Bob Care
/
Florida Keys News Bureau
Swimmers escorted by kayakers circle Alligator Reef Lighthouse during the Swim for Alligator Lighthouse open-water challenge Saturday, Sept. 9, 2023, off Islamorada, Fla., in the Florida Keys. The 8-mile roundtrip race attracted almost 400 swimmers divided into categories including solo and two-, three- and four-person relay teams.

Olympic gold medalist Brooke Bennett of Clearwater finished second overall behind Connor Signorin, a former All-American at the University of Florida who lives in Tampa.

A three-time Olympic gold medalist and a former college All-American won top honors Saturday at an annual 8-mile (13-kilometer) ocean swim around the Alligator Reef Lighthouse off the Florida Keys.

Olympian Brooke Bennett, 43, of Clearwater, was the top female swimmer, finishing second overall behind Connor Signorin, a former All-American at the University of Florida who lives in Tampa. While both excelled at competing in pools, the swim around the 150-year-old lighthouse presented a different challenge.

Top female and second overall finisher Brooke Bennett, 43, of Clearwater, Fla., completes the Swim For Alligator Lighthouse challenge Saturday, Sept. 9, 2023, in Islamorada, Fla. Bennett is a three-time Olympic gold medalist swimmer (1996 Atlanta and 2000 Sydney). She completed the race in 3:09:06.
Cory Knowlton
/
Fixed Focus Photography
Top female and second overall finisher Brooke Bennett, 43, of Clearwater, Fla., completes the Swim For Alligator Lighthouse challenge Saturday, Sept. 9, 2023, in Islamorada, Fla. Bennett is a three-time Olympic gold medalist swimmer (1996 Atlanta and 2000 Sydney). She completed the race in 3:09:06.

“You’re here amongst the sea life and this is your natural form of swimming — this isn’t pool swimming, this is as natural as it gets … beautiful,” said Signorin, 31, after finishing the race in 2 hours, 59 minutes, 44 seconds.

About 400 people participated in the race that raised money and awareness of the need to preserve the historic lighthouse and five other aging beacons off the Florida Keys.

The lighthouse was named for the U.S. Navy Schooner Alligator that grounded on the reef in 1822. Equipment was stripped from the vessel before it was blown up to prevent it from being used by pirates.

READ MORE: Rare good news for Florida's bleaching reefs: rescued coral from Miami spawn

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