If you ask Tanner Alms, his initial success at the Class 1A swimming and diving state preliminaries on Friday was about 85 percent hard work and 15 percent hair.
As he touched the end of the pool and his name was announced as the first-place finisher in the 500-yard freestyle (4:50.78), a swarm of Red Wing swimmers -- resembling a bleached band of surfers -- shouted across the bleachers.
"Seeee!" teammate Alex Pearson crooned as he shook his head. "It's all about the hair! He dyes his hair and he drops three seconds."
It may seem like a strange thing to say after a solid finish. But for Red Wing's swimmers -- long- and short-haired, all of whom dyed their heads bleach blond -- the hue is more than a jolting sight, it's a respected tradition. Whenever the team makes it to the state meet, they go golden.
"It's just something to draw a little attention in school, to let it be known that you're on the team that has made it this far," said coach Gene Peterson, who swam at Red Wing and graduated in 2001, and who dyes his hair with the team. "I just look like a punk for three months out of the year."
And it seems his kids have all bought in to the idea.
"It definitely has something to do with it," said Alms, who also finished second in the 200 freestyle. "I mean ... it's good luck. It keeps the team going, and keeps us bonding."
Motivation paid off What was the difference between placing second in the breaststroke in last year's 2A state meet and breaking the all-time record in the preliminaries for Edina senior Max Cartwright (55.44)? Apparently, going to all the practices.