This pic was part of a bodies-in-motion series by Jerry Cooke which is described on his home page.

The one above has appeared before (in an issue of SI), but the photographer’s home page includes another one which I have never seen, and which gives a better look at her breasts. I wonder how many more there are.

UPDATE from the comments:

There are more out there.

Vanderbilt is known for having built a fashion empire, and for being Anderson Cooper’s mother.

She was the the great-great-granddaughter of a legendary figure from the robber baron era, the railroad and steamship magnate Commodore Vanderbilt. “Commodore” was a nickname, one that was once commonly given to boat builders. In reality Vanderbilt has never in the navy. He was however, one of the richest men in American history. Most lists (summarized by Wikipedia) place him third behind Rockefeller and Carnegie.

I forget his name, Gary something, but he kept that Koepka dude from winning three in a row.

When informed of the result, his parents said, “We have a kid named Gary? Cool!”

His name is actually Woodland, and he “suffered just four bogeys all week in finishing at 13-under 271, a stroke better than Tiger Woods’ winning total in his record 15-stroke romp at Pebble Beach in 2000.”

Unless you are a pitcher.

Padres, Rockies score modern-era most 92 runs in 4-game set.”

Yesterday’s fourth game was 14-13, and that was not the highest scoring game of the series, which was the second game at 16-12!

“Colorado’s Charlie Blackmon became the first player since at least 1900 with 15 hits in a four-game series.” Blackmon came into the homestand batting .295 on June 8th and is now hitting .336. Blackmon’s lifetime batting average is .304, consisting of .350 at home and .260 on the road. This year he is hitting .450 at Coors with 13 homers, compared to .233 with two homers on the road.

Blackmon actually led the NL in batting average in 2017, by hitting .391 at Coors, .276 on the road. That shows you the magic of Coors Field, the power to turn a completely mediocre hitter into a batting champ. Blackmon’s lifetime OPS on the road is .737, and he stands at .626 this year. The NL’s OPS average this year is .747 for all players – including pitchers!