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A Quebec teenager died in Florida while swimming in the Gulf of Mexico with a high school swim team during spring break, authorities say.

The sheriff’s office in Pinellas County, just outside Tampa, said 17-year-old William Zhang was found by an underwater search and recovery team late Wednesday afternoon after he failed to return to shore after morning swimming drills.

College Notre-Dame, the private high school in Montreal where Zhang studied, said its students and staff have been deeply impacted by his death.

“Support resources are in place for the entire college educational community,” a spokesperson wrote in an e-mail.

“Out of respect for the family, we ask you to respect their privacy during this difficult ordeal that we are currently experiencing.”

The school’s swimmers and triathletes, as well as their coaches, have returned to Quebec, the school said. It declined to provide more information on the swim trip.

Police were called Wednesday morning after Zhang had not returned to shore at the end of drills. The news of a missing swimmer triggered a major search effort that included police, a fire rescue service, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and the U.S. Coast Guard, the sheriff’s office said.

Zhang’s body was found at 5:23 p.m., more than eight hours after he was reported missing.

Police said the swim coaches told them they had checked for riptides or other hazards in the water before drills started.

The death does not appear suspicious and the investigation continues, the sheriff’s office added.

Xavier Desharnais, a former high-level open water swimmer, said that swimming in oceans, lakes and rivers presents a separate set of challenges from the controlled conditions of a pool.

“You’re leaving an environment which is safe, which is secure, where you can see the bottom, see where you are and grab the wall at any time, for an environment where there is no bottom and nothing to hang on to, which is much more dangerous,” he said in a phone interview Friday.

While he isn’t familiar with the beach where Zhang died, he said similar ocean beaches elsewhere in Florida can have strong waves and currents.

Security measures, he said, include making sure a boat is always available for a rescue, attaching visibility buoys to swimmers and, above all, making sure there is someone watching the athletes at every moment, no matter how experienced they are.

“You can be the best swimmer in the world and still be carried away,” he said.

Quebec’s swimming federation – Federation de natation du Quebec – wrote on social media to express its sadness over Zhang’s death.

“Although William was not affiliated with our federation, his loss touches us, and the entire aquatic community is in mourning,” the federation wrote on Facebook.

The federation said it was working with local authorities to understand what happened and reminded athletes to make safety a top priority while training abroad.

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