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2024 Paris Olympics Day 2 Overreaction: A Meet by Any Other Name

2024 PARIS SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES

The following article is my opinion and does not necessarily represent the views of SwimSwam as a whole.

It’s been two 5am wake-ups in a row, which I haven’t done since [name redacted] broke the rules during training camp at [place redacted] so [organization redacted] gave us the earliest practice slot as punishment. All that to say, apologies if I am not as sharp this morning.

It’s still hard to believe the Paris Olympics are happening right now. I think Yanyan put it best re: how surreal it is to see swimming be mainstream:

So, onto the musings.

What’s in a Time?

This morning, only the women’s 100 breast took a faster time than Tokyo to earn a second swim, and even then by just a hair. By that metric, both the men’s and women’s 200 free, men’s 400 IM, and men’s 100 backstroke all regressed.

But did they?

It’s easy to forget that times are not the only measure. If swimmers were perfectly repeatable machines, prelims would be totally unnecessary because we’d all know Ariarne Titmus has the worldrecord.exe program downloaded and Mollie O’Callaghan does not. Why not stop there? There’s no need for competition — we can just stare slack-jawed at a 1:52 and find it unbelievable.

My point being: it’s prelims, it’s a meet that only happens once every four* years, and the swim streets say the pool is questionable. (More on the pool later.)

Even if the times weren’t quite there — outside of Hubert Kos, who popped a Hungarian record in the 100 back, and Tatjana Smith (née Schoenmaker), who topped the women’s 100 breast in 1:05.00 — there were a number of converging story lines that will write their conclusions over the next few days.

Daiya Seto, despite being slower than his Tokyo prelims time, made the 400 IM final after a heartbreaking 9th-place finish three years ago. David Popovici aka Chlorine Daddy made his Paris Olympics debut in the 200 free. Li Bingjie had a redemptive swim after missing the 400 free final yesterday.

I have no doubt these athletes will be faster through the rounds, but even if my powers of prophecy are flawed, it just means they’re human. And that’s what makes sport interesting at the end of the day, that it’s a human out there performing these amazing feats.

What’s in a Pool?

Emma Weber‘s cap, apparently.

Ah, the wonders of a live broadcast. Unfortunately the linked video above does not include the yellow circle the NBC commentators drew over this man’s swimsuit as he bravely ventured forth to retrieve a lost cap. It’s moments of levity like these that remind me that this is still just a swim meet where normal swim meet things can happen.

There has been a lot of chatter about the quality of the pool lately, from the depth to the massive puddles visible on the deck, but I often find myself thinking it could be so much worse. (I once swam backstroke in a pool while they were actively drilling holes for the flag poles on deck.)

Of course, it’s the Olympic Games, which carries an amount of prestige not present in other competitions. It should be held in the best pool on the planet, equidistant from every nation to mitigate jet lag, and a five minute downhill stroll from the athletes’ village.

It’s even more a testament to these athletes’ abilities that they’re performing under subpar conditions. At the end of the day, as Lukas Märtens said emphatically last night, it’s about the race. Years from now, people will remember who stood atop the podium and not that their long arms skimmed the bottom of the pool during their stroke.

Parting is Such Sweet Sorrow

Put simply, I am excited to soak in the remaining seven days of swimming. I will be sad when it ends. This is the most coverage our sport gets, and it brings more than athletes together. While there’s room for criticism on administrative aspects of the event, that doesn’t take away from the fact it’s a swim meet and an opportunity to share the sport we love with the general population.

How often can you tell your grandma to turn on the TV, swimming is on? Not a trick question, it’s every four years. So enjoy it while it lasts!

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Zach
1 month ago

IDGAF about the race I want to see fast times 😭😭😭

NoFastTwitch
1 month ago

Keep writing, Laura – I really like your contributions

Diehard
1 month ago

Two comments:
1. You can’t compare Paris am prelims to Tokyo pm prelims! Just apples to oranges!

2. They don’t give out semi swims or final swims or medals based on time. Stop talking about whether that matters. It still top 16 or top 8 or 1st, 2nd or 3rd that get medals!!! It doesn’t affect one swimmer more than others! In 10 Or 20 years from now, you are going to tell someone you were an Olympian, or an Olympic finalist or an Olympic medalist! Not that you went a 1:05.2 when you think you should have been a 1:04.9!

Steve Nolan
1 month ago

Years from now, people will remember who stood atop the podium and not that their long arms skimmed the bottom of the pool during their stroke.

Yes, but also, no.

When everyone’s just swimming sorta slow overall it does take some of the excitement out of it. (A rec league I used to coach for moved their end of season meet to a pool with lower than regulation blocks, and it was a Mondo Bummer when barely anyone PR’d.)

Revsticky
Reply to  Steve Nolan
1 month ago

Agreed. I enjoy the races but I also love to see the transcendent performances. The “one moment in time” type things. When someone went faster a month ago it kind of takes away from the epicness, or adds to the ironic tragedy like Carson foster in 2021.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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