ISHOF announces Masters Hall of Fame Class of 2026  

ISHOF is proud to announce the Masters International Swimming Hall of Fame (MISHOF) Class of Honorees for 2026.  The Class of 2026 includes four Masters Swimmers, and one Masters Water Polo Player. We will also be inducting one Masters Swimmer and one Masters Artistic Swimmer from last year who were unable to attend.

MISHOF’s Class of Honorees includes swimmers, Ellen Reynolds (USA), Kirsten Cameron (NZL), Eiji Nomura (JPN), Toshio Tajima (JPN) and Hiroshi Matsumoto (JPN), Artistic Swimmer, Joyce Corner* (CAN), and Water Polo Player, Georgy “Mishi” Mshvenieradze. “It’s quite a remarkable group”, said Bruce Wigo, ISHOF Historian, and former CEO; “We look forward to welcoming them all to Fort Lauderdale this May and celebrating them all during our Honoree weekend!”

Kirsten CAMERON (NZE) Masters Swimmer

Kirsten is still relatively new to Masters Swimming.  She did not even begin swimming competitively until she was 30 years old.  She joined a Masters Club in Wellington, New Zealand, and that was the beginning of her swimming career.   Yet, at 52,  she already has 24 Masters World Records and 1033 World Points. A New Zealander, who began competing in the 30-34 age group, she is currently swimming in the 50-54 age group.  

Kirsten left New Zealand and is currently living and swimming in Eindhoven, Netherlands. Prior to that, she was in Great Britain, in the area of Leeds initially, then Newcastle-Upon-Tyne and has also swum for a Melbourne swim club.  She enjoys open water swimming and was part of a group of masters swimmers who attempted to break the English Channel relay record.  She has also competed on the Open Water World Cup Circuit. Since COVID saw her return to open water, most recently she has focused on longer events which have included completing Ulswater, Lake Zurich, Capri-Napoli and the challenging Vidosternsimmit and is planning to swim Lake Malawi.

She has been in the Top Ten 18 times,  and in world rankings, she has a total of 70 Number 1, 11 Number 2, and 9 Number 3 in the freestyle events.  Kirsten has attended three FINA World Championships, Stanford, 2006, Perth, 2008, and Gothenburg, 2010, swimming all freestyle events while winning all gold, 10 medals in total, breaking world records while doing it.

Eiji NOMURA (JPN) Masters Swimmer

Eiji Nomura of Japan began his Masters career swimming in the 30-34 age group. During his Masters career, he has competed in five age groups ranging from the 30-34 through the 50-54 age group.  He has broken 22 FINA Masters World Records in the butterfly, freestyle, and I.M.  events.  He has 889 points and has been in the Top Ten 18 times.

In World Rankings, he has a combined total, long and short course, of 61 – Number 1, 21 – Number 2 and 18- 3 Number 3 in the butterfly, freestyle and I.M.

Nomura also holds many Japanese records, including the fastest 25m butterfly (Masters SC  40-44 men), 100m butterfly (Masters LC 40-44 men), 200m freestyle (Masters LC 45-49 men), 50m freestyle (Masters SC 45-49).

He has not competed in any FINA Masters World Championships, accumulating all of his 889 world points by breaking world records and setting world rankings.

Ellen REYNOLDS (USA) Masters Swimmer

Ellen Reynolds, new to the women’s 60-64 age group in 2024, has set an unprecedented 26 Masters World records this year between long course and short course meters, solidifying her legacy as an extraordinary Masters swimmer. She’s also been a part of five world-record-setting relays as a member of Team Redbird Masters.

Her records span a remarkable range, from the shortest sprints, like the 50 backstroke and fly, to the grueling 1500-meter freestyle, showcasing her versatility. Despite her impressive achievements, Ellen remains humble and focused on enjoying the sport.  

One of the more interesting stats is that Ellen holds a world record in every event except the 50 free, 50 breast, 100 breast, and 200 fly. And she didn’t just break these world records—she demolished them by large margins.

Just as impressive, Ellen has balanced a demanding career as a pediatric surgeon with her swimming for many years, but has just retired in September after 25 years in the field. Her work ethic as a surgeon often influenced her approach to swimming. This year, Ellen isn’t just grateful for her fast swimming. She said, “I’d like to say thank you to all of the volunteers running the swim meets. I couldn’t have done it without them!”

Toshio TAJIMA (JPN) Masters Swimmer

Toshio Tajima is a Japanese Masters swimmer who competes in the breaststroke and butterfly events. He has broken a total of 21 world records; Some of his records were broken up to 14 years ago and seven of them are still standing.

He has competed in seven different age groups beginning in the 60-64 age group through 90-94 and he has been in the Top Ten 32 times.  He has been in the world rankings since 1985 with a combined total of 45 – Number 1, 22 – Number 2 and 11 Number 3 in the butterfly and breaststroke events.

Tajima competed in six FINA Masters World Championships: 1986, Tokyo; 1988, Brisbane;  1990, Rio; 1998, Casablanca; 2000, Munich;  and 2002 Christchurch, winning 2 gold, 2 silver and 3 bronze medals.

Mr. Tajima stopped competing in 2019, where he was swimming in the 90-94 age group.

Georgy “Mishi” MSHVENIERADZE (RUS) Masters Water Polo Player

Georgy Kahaber Mshvenieradze is a 65-year old Soviet water polo player, born in Tbilisi, the Capital of Georgia. His father, Peter, was the captain of the USSR water polo polo team throughout the 1950’s and appeared in three Olympic Games. “Mishi”, as he is known by his friends, and his brother Nugzar followed their father into the sport. In the 1980’s, Mishi was the top 2-meter offensive player in the world. He won the team gold medal in the 1980 Olympic Games and bronze in the 1988 Olympic Games.

Mishi was known for his strength on the 2-meter line, his ability to score under heavy contact, his positional and tactical intelligence and his natural leadership ~ a combination that defined the center forward role in the 1980’s and remains a benchmark for modern coaches and players.

Mishi has been active in Masters water polo since 2000, and his team has won seven gold medals and one silver in FINA/World Aquatics World Masters Championships competition.

He and his team, Moscu 04 also won gold in 2009 at the Copa de Espana Masters event in the 40+ age group, competing in Tenerife, Spain. Mishi has competed for three different clubs, while competing in Masters:   WP Moscu04, Dynamo Masters, and Europa Sporting Roma. 

Joyce CORNER (CAN) 2025 Masters Synchronized Swimmer

Canadian, Joyce Corner attended her first FINA World Championships in 1992 in Indianapolis, where she and her teammates came away with a bronze medal in the trio 65+ event. Four years later, Corner walked away with her first World title in the duet. She continued attending Masters World Championships, mostly bringing home gold medals. In all, she won ten World Championship gold, five silver, and one bronze.

In the mid-2000’s Corner formed a new club, the New Wave Synchro Masters, where she coached and competed as a member in her last two appearances at Worlds in 2004 and 2008.

Joyce has been involved in just about all areas of synchronized swimming. She was on the Canadian Synchronized Swimming Committee for countless years and represented Canada in Masters FINA meets when present. She was the Canadian representative to the FINA Masters Synchronized Swimming Committee which helped develop the requirements when FINA transitioned from a figure competition to a technical program. 

She was a FINA-rated “A” international judge, and she has judged Pan American Games, World Aquatics Championships, the Olympic Games in Seoul in 1988, as well as many other events in Canada and around the world.

Joyce Corner will always be remembered for all her many contributions to Masters Synchronized Swimming as an athlete, judge, official, administrator, coach, lecturer, and much, much more.

Hiroshi MATSUMOTO (JPN) 2025 Masters Swimmer

Hiroshi Matsumoto, born in 1936, began swimming in high school.  There were no pools where he lived, just a pond with hundreds of frogs.  And a few snakes.

When he was in his early 20s, he moved to the area in Japan where Mt. Fuji is, to take a job, as a lumberjack.  There was a 50-meter pool near his office.  For nine years,  he swam there almost every day in the summer.

At 27 years old, he married his wife, Katsuko. At the time, she could not swim at all. But later she started swimming with her husband, and eventually she was part of a world record setting mixed relay with Matsumoto.

In his late 50’s, Matsumoto joined Masters Swimming.  When he reached his 60’s, he started breaking national records, even though he was diagnosed with cancer, and needed surgery in his mid-60s.  In his 70’s, he started breaking world records.

Matsumoto competes mainly in the butterfly and the freestyle events. His favorite stroke is the butterfly, but at 84, he had a terrible accident and tore up his shoulder; the doctors said he might not swim again. He is swimming again and breaking records, but only in the freestyle events.

Matsumoto has broken over 100 national records and 28 world records. He has been in the Top Ten for 27 years and has accumulated 945 world points.

He has attended four FINA/World Aquatic World Championships, winning two gold and three silver: 2002: gold (50m butterfly 65-69); 2006: silver (50m butterfly 70-74); 2008: gold (50m butterfly 70-74); 2023: silver (50m free, 100 free 85-89).

Matsumoto still keeps hope that he is going to swim butterfly again someday.

#ISHOF #Masters