In At The Deep End – Détails, épisodes et analyse

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In At The Deep End

In At The Deep End

Salim Ahmed

Sport
Société & Culture

Fréquence : 1 épisode/17j. Total Éps: 8

Transistor
Inspring journeys from the pool to the everyday. Hosted by Salim Ahmed, a lifelong swimmer and swim coach with over 22 years experience, the show dives into the human stories behind the sport. Not just times and techniques, but the moments when water became an anchor, a lifeline, or a turning point. Each episode features honest, intimate conversations with everyday swimmers, Olympians, well-known names and unheard voices, all united by the role swimming has played in their lives. These are stories of resilience and reinvention, of grief and joy, of quiet victories and near-impossible comebacks. From open-water epiphanies to childhood pool memories, In at the Deep End explores how swimming steadies us, challenges us and carries us through life’s waves. If you love inspiring stories with depth, this is where you dive in.
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Dernières positions dans les classements Apple Podcasts et Spotify.

Apple Podcasts

  • 🇨🇦 Canada - swimming

    05/06/2026
    #19
  • 🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - swimming

    05/06/2026
    #3
  • 🇺🇸 États-Unis - swimming

    05/06/2026
    #17
  • 🇫🇷 France - swimming

    05/06/2026
    #17
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - swimming

    04/06/2026
    #17
  • 🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - swimming

    04/06/2026
    #4
  • 🇺🇸 États-Unis - swimming

    04/06/2026
    #12
  • 🇫🇷 France - swimming

    04/06/2026
    #17
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - swimming

    03/06/2026
    #9
  • 🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - swimming

    03/06/2026
    #4

Spotify

    Aucun classement récent disponible



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Welcome to In At The Deep End

mercredi 4 février 2026Durée 01:56

Welcome to In at the Deep End, a new podcast hosted by swim coach Salim Ahmed.

In this trailer you'll get a glimpse into the kinds of stories featured on the show: honest conversations with people whose lives have been shaped by swimming in ways that go far beyond the pool. Stories about resilience, identity, loss, ambition and the moments when the water became a place to think, heal, push on or start again.

If swimming has ever meant more to you than just lengths and times, this is where it begins.

Be a part of the show: Here's how to get in touch...


Produced by The Good Studio - thegoodstudio.co.uk

Swimming as an escape from work in a war zone - with Dr Victoria 'Rosie' Rose

Épisode 1

mardi 10 mars 2026Durée 30:58

In this debut episode of In At The Deep End, host and swim coach Salim Ahmed welcomes his first guest, Dr Victoria Rose - or 'Rosie' as he knows her - a consultant plastic surgeon whose life is defined by two remarkable worlds: the operating theatres of London hospitals and the war-torn hospitals of Gaza.

Rosie shares her journey from dedicated runner to passionate swimmer, how a serious knee injury changed everything and why swimming has become a lifeline - not just physically, but mentally and emotionally - as she processes the harrowing work of treating children with blast, burn, and bullet injuries in one of the world's most dangerous conflict zones.

Key themes in this episode:

  • What plastic surgery really involves and why it has such an unfair reputation
  • The IDEALS charity and its decades of work supporting surgeons in conflict zones
  • Life in Gaza before and after October 2023 - the contrast between restaurants and rubble
  • The friendship and responsibility that drives humanitarian volunteers back into danger
  • The physiological magic of cold water and the body's response to immersion
  • Swimming as community, fitness and mental health support
  • Open-water swimming at Shepperton Lake, and the eureka moment
  • Swimming for body, mind and soul: resilience, mindfulness and showing up


Useful Links


Swimming & Open Water

Swim with Salim

Organisations Mentioned


Dr Victoria Rose


Be a part of the show: Here's how to get in touch...


Produced by The Good Studio - thegoodstudio.co.uk

When swimming becomes a breast cancer lifeline - with Dr Mei-Ling Lancashire

Épisode 2

mardi 24 mars 2026Durée 35:02

In Episode 2 of In At The Deep End, Salim is joined by Dr Mei-Ling Lancashire - GP, cancer survivor, single mum and swimmer. At the peak of her fitness, Mei-Ling discovered a breast lump and, as a GP with a background in breast cancer research, knew instantly what it meant. What followed was an aggressive diagnosis, gruelling chemotherapy, a double mastectomy and the challenge of holding everything together for her two young daughters.

Swimming became her lifeline. From a childhood passion, cut short by societal misconceptions, to a primal fear of deep water and, eventually, open-water sessions at Shepperton Lake, her relationship with the water has been anything but simple. And that's exactly what makes her story so powerful.

Key themes in this episode:

  • Childhood swimming talent ended by 1980s attitudes towards women athletes
  • Breast cancer diagnosis at peak fitness, and the shock of knowing immediately what it was
  • Staying active through chemotherapy and surgery as a single parent
  • Fundraising for Cancer Research UK and becoming the face of a national campaign
  • Overcoming a deep-rooted fear of open water
  • Nerve damage from surgery and chemo, and learning to reconnect with key swimming muscles
  • The role of Pilates in unlocking a better swim stroke
  • Swimming as the last sport standing when injury takes everything else away
  • What it truly means to thrive, not just survive

Useful Links

Swimming & Open Water

Swim with Salim

Cancer Awareness

Dr Mei-Ling Lancashire

Be a part of the show: Here's how to get in touch...


Produced by The Good Studio - thegoodstudio.co.uk

From operating table to open water - Adam Filby on liver donation, recovery and Ironman

Épisode 3

mardi 7 avril 2026Durée 42:13

In Episode 3, Salim is joined by Adam Filby - technology professional, fundraiser, triathlete and dad. 

In May 2017, on the same day the WannaCry cyberattack was tearing through NHS systems across the country, Adam was on an operating table donating part of his liver to his seven-year-old daughter Florence, who had been born with a life-threatening liver condition. He came round from the anaesthetic not in intensive care, but in a makeshift room in a hospital corridor, and within 24 hours had signed up for an Ironman.

Adam's relationship with swimming began years earlier, quietly shaped by the knowledge that one day his daughter might need him to be in the best possible shape. What followed was a journey from a man who could barely swim 50 metres, through triathlons, half Ironmans and four full Ironmans, to someone for whom the open water has become the place he finds the same peace he once found running through a forest the night before the operation. This is a story about love, purpose, the human body's extraordinary capacity to heal and what happens when you refuse to set a limit on what you might be capable of.

Key themes in this episode:

  • Biliary atresia, the rare liver condition Florence was born with, and what it means for families waiting for a transplant
  • Training for a triathlon in your early 30s with a quiet, deeper motivation behind it
  • What it's like to be on the transplant list - the waiting, the restrictions, the fear
  • The day of the operation - two theatres, a cyberattack, and a photo taken over a surgeon's shoulder
  • Going from lying in a hospital bed to completing an Ironman in five and a half months
  • How swimming and exercise became a vehicle for processing an enormous experience
  • The calm that open water gives and why Adam can no longer train in a pool
  • The case for living organ donation, and why fitness is no barrier to recovery
  • Finding purpose through sport: from proving something to simply thriving

Useful Links

Swimming & Open Water

Swim with Salim

Organ Donation

Adam Filby

Be a part of the show: Here's how to get in touch...


Produced by The Good Studio - thegoodstudio.co.uk

Breaking records at 95 and loving life - with the inspirational Jane Asher BEM

Épisode 4

mardi 21 avril 2026Durée 50:00

What does a life fully lived in the water look like? For Jane Asher, it looks like five world records broken in a single weekend, at the age of 95. A South London swimming legend and great-grandmother, Jane didn't even begin her competitive career until she was 55. Since then, she has become one of Masters swimming's most remarkable figures, currently holding world records in the 95–99 age group across the 50m, 100m, 200m, individual medley, and 50m backstroke.

In this conversation, Salim sits down with Jane to trace the extraordinary arc of her life, from clandestine boarding school pool sessions in 1940s Johannesburg and witnessing apartheid at close quarters, to coaching the next generation and returning to competition in her late 50s. Jane reflects on the joy that has kept her in the water for over eight decades, the friendships swimming has given her across the world, and why she still does tumble turns.

What's in this episode

  • Growing up on Zambia's Copperbelt and swimming at a Johannesburg boarding school in the 1940s
  • How apartheid shaped and troubled Jane's early life, and the moment swimming offered something different
  • Teaching herself to swim competitively at 40, then discovering the Masters swimming world
  • Building clubs and communities, from Jane's Extra Training sessions to the King's Cormorants in Wimbledon
  • Breaking five World Records at the recent Guernsey Masters meet
  • The meditative quality of swimming and why counting strokes keeps her present
  • Her advice to anyone over 60 thinking about getting in the water for the first time
  • Why Jane still gets up for a 9am swim three times a week.

Useful Links

Swimming & Open Water

Swim with Salim

Jane's record breaking achievements

Be a part of the show: Here's how to get in touch...


Produced by The Good Studio - thegoodstudio.co.uk

How cold water carried me through midlife - with Lorraine Candy

Épisode 5

mardi 5 mai 2026Durée 51:44

Lorraine Candy is one of Britain's most recognisable media voices. She is the former editor of Cosmopolitan, Elle and The Sunday Times Style, she's also a Sunday Times bestselling author and co-host of the hugely popular Postcards from Midlife podcast. But in this episode, it's not the magazine covers or the bestseller lists that take centre stage. It's the water.

Lorraine came to open water swimming at 47, after a panic attack during a sprint triathlon left her terrified and determined never to feel that way again. What followed was a decade-long journey that she describes, without exaggeration, as the single thing that has most improved her life. In this episode Salim and Lorraine talk about what cold water actually gave her during the hardest years of perimenopause, why community is the most underreported benefit of open water swimming, and how the two of them ended up working together on something many swimmers avoid facing: going faster.

It's a rich, honest conversation about bravery, belonging, and what it means to find a sport that will carry you through the rest of your life.

In this episode:

  • How a panic attack in a triathlon lake became the start of Lorraine's real swimming journey
  • Cold water swimming and perimenopause - the mental, physical, and community benefits 
  • Why the open water swimming community is one of the most inclusive and body-positive spaces Lorraine has ever found
  • The moment she realised she'd been "plodding forever" and the mindful approach to speed that actually worked
  • Favourite swims: Lake Geneva at sunrise, the Scilly Isles, swimming through a shoal of mackerel in Cornwall
  • Fantasy swims on the horizon: the Strait of Gibraltar and Alcatraz
  • Advice for midlife women and teenage girls - why getting in the water might be the best thing you can do for both of them

Useful Links

Lorraine Candy

Swimming & Open Water

Swim with Salim

Be a part of the show: Here's how to get in touch...


Produced by The Good Studio - thegoodstudio.co.uk


Trailblazing Olympian Alice Dearing: Burnout, belonging & The Black Swimming Association

Épisode 6

mardi 19 mai 2026Durée 57:11

Olympian. Marathon swimmer. History-maker.

In this episode of In At The Deep End, Salim sits down with Alice Dearing, the first black woman to represent Team GB in Olympic swimming.

But this conversation goes far beyond medals and Olympic qualification. Alice opens up about the emotional reality of elite sport: the burnout, the self-doubt, the pressure of representation and the strange tension between making history while simply wanting to perform well as an athlete.

Together, Salim and Alice explore:

  •  Alice’s journey from Birmingham swimming clubs to the Tokyo Olympics 
  •  Why she nearly walked away from swimming several times 
  •  The hidden mental toll of high-performance sport 
  •  The myths and stereotypes surrounding black people and swimming 
  •  The work of the Black Swimming Association
  •  The Soul Cap controversy before Tokyo 2020 
  •  Identity, belonging and what it means to represent Britain today 
  •  Life after retirement and Alice’s ambitions to shape the future of sport in the UK 

It’s an honest, thoughtful and timely conversation about water, identity, resilience and breaking down barriers.

If you enjoy the episode, please follow In At The Deep End, leave a rating or review and share it with someone who’d love it too.

Useful Links

Alice Dearing

Swim with Salim

Swimming & Open Water


Be a part of the show: Here's how to get in touch...


Produced by The Good Studio - thegoodstudio.co.uk


How Simon Griffiths built a magazine from scratch and got faster as he got older.

Épisode 7

mardi 2 juin 2026Durée 01:05:58

In 2011, there was no magazine for people who swam outdoors. No shared home for the stories, the training, the destinations, the growing community of people quietly falling in love with open water. So Simon Griffiths made one. As the founder and publisher of Outdoor Swimmer, he helped give a movement a voice, and in doing so built one of the most quietly influential publications in UK sport. But the story behind the magazine is more personal, and more compelling, than the cover lines suggest. Simon started Outdoor Swimmer in the aftermath of the worst thing that had ever happened to him, driven by a need to keep moving, to build something and to stay afloat. More than a decade on, he is still doing exactly that, now turning 60 with a personal best 100m time, training across every stroke and distance, and launching the Renaissance Swimmer Project, a new venture that asks what swimming might unlock in the rest of your life.

Together, Salim and Simon explore:

  • How a grief-driven idea became a landmark publication, and what it actually took to launch a magazine with no funding and a Google search.
  • Why the open water swimming community felt different from the start, and the names and early believers who helped the magazine find its feet.
  • What it means to get faster as you age, and how Simon broke a lifetime personal best in the pool on his 59th birthday.
  • The training principles that actually matter as you get older, including why sprint work is more important for long-distance swimmers than they think.
  • The case for swimming everything: why mixing strokes, distances, and environments makes you a better swimmer in all of them.
  • The Renaissance Swimmer Project, what it is, what it is not, and why Simon believes swimming is just the beginning of a bigger conversation about how we live.
  • Whether technology belongs in open water, from GPS goggles to coaching headsets, and where the line between useful and reductive sits.

Useful links

Swim with Salim

Be a part of the show: Here's how to get in touch...


Produced by The Good Studio - thegoodstudio.co.uk



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