2024 PARIS SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES
- Pool Swimming: July 27 – August 4, 2024
- Open Water Swimming: August 8 – 9, 2024
- La Défense Arena — Paris, France
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One of the most important aspects that the Organizers had to take care of in order to best welcome the 10,000 athletes competing in the 2024 Paris Olympics is certainly the food.
Athletes (and swimmers in particular) are always hungry, and diet is an essential part of preparation for a week of competition for which they have been training for years (perhaps their entire lives). However, within days of the opening of the Olympic Village in Paris and before the action has even begun, controversy is erupting over food reserves in the dining hall.
The main athlete restaurant lives in the heart of the Olympic Village, north of Paris, is currently one of the largest in the world with 3200 seats.
For the entire period of the Games it will remains open around the clock, guaranteeing 40,000 meals a day, all according to a menu of more than 500 recipes, half of which are vegetarian, to meet every need, through about 50 hot dishes.
The space is divided into six sectors: two dedicated to French gastronomy, two to international cuisine, one to Asian cuisine, and finally an African-Caribbean option.
The organizers planned for an average of 2 1/2 daily meals per athlete, and 600 tons of food daily, but apparently the calculation was wrong.
The last few days have seen a shortage of eggs and meat, products loaded in protein for vegetarian and omnivorous athletes. In the early days of the village’s opening there was an onslaught of eggs and grilled meats, forcing the chefs to ration them.
Automatically the contingency plan was triggered, with supplies being increased to match supply to demand.
The advantage is that 80% of the food comes from suppliers within a 250-kilometer radius, in line with sustainable economic principles.
But some teams were not satisfied with the proposed solutions and called in their chefs to make up for the lack of food in the Olympic village
Andy Anson, chief exec of the British Olympic Association told The Times,”Our athletes have decided they would rather go and eat in our performance lodge in Clichy, so we are having to get another chef to come over as the demand is far exceeding what we thought it would be”.
Anson told there are “usually two or three issues at the start of every Olympic Games, but the food in France is proving a major problem in the camp.
“There are not enough of certain foods: eggs, chicken, certain carbohydrates. And then there is the quality of the food, with raw meat being served to athletes,” he said. “They have got to improve it over the next couple of days dramatically.”
Clichy is home to Team GB’s high performance center in France and is about 4km away from the Athletes’ Village. It takes about 15 minutes to reach by car or 45 minutes on foot in the northern neighborhoods of Paris.
Bus Shortages
Athletes have also been concerned over the lack of transportation to venues, with many, including Olympic gold medal winning swimmer Maggie McNeil, posting videos of crowded busses with athletes crammed onto floor seats.
The athlete village is located about 10 miles (15km) from La Defense Arena, where the pool swimming competitions are taking place. Athletes have reported on social media up to a two hour trip to get from the village to the pool because of traffic and lack of busses.
“half of which are vegetarian” ???? Seriously???
There might be a trend in vacationing tourist preferences, but sports performance at decent level requires 2-2.5 grams of protein per 1 kg of body weight. Most animal sources (meat, chicken, eggs) are only 25% of protein by weight. It’s quite hard to eat that much of animal based food to fulfill the requirements. From my understanding, famous statements about consuming 10,000 kcal a day come not from being super hungry, but form intentionally overeating to keep muscle synthesis and metabolism at high levels.
Plant based protein content by weight %% cannot be compared with meat/chicken/egg. On top of that it has far less essential aminos, and those are greatly skewed towards non… Read more »
The Louvre has a food court that’s pretty good.
You have the best name I have ever seen
Hey, SwimSwam, have you heard anything about how USA Swimming is dealing with this? Also has anyone every been late getting to pool for an Olympic race due to bus issues? I remember Janet Evans interview once that she had 45 minutes at Village to eat/rest due to bus getting lost, and drug testing.
Any people questioned why Novak Djokovic is NOT staying in the Olympic village.
These reports of dining and transportation issues are shocking to me, because everything else has been going so well. Not
And the gold medal for ineptitude goes to . . .
Mdme Hidalgo
In 1995, Tom Jager chose to represent the USA at the Pan-Am Games in Mar del Plata, Argentina, over a higher profile meet (Pan-Pac’s?). He said he wanted to replicate an Olympic Games environment leading up to Atlanta. In particular he was looking at the village distance to the venue, village noise, village food and transportation issues. These are issues at every Olympics.
To help alleviate these concerns, USA Swimming partnered with USA Track & Field and rented three multi-level condos directly across from the venues and housed the athletes that were competing the next day. This eliminated all three concerns (less my cooking!).
I wonder if they are doing the same this year?
As far as I know, the athletes are required to stay in the athlete village….not sure if team USA adheres to this or not, but it sounds like they do…I recall Phelps talking about the olympic village and several other USA swimmers staying there. The Lochte debacle of 2016 started at the olympic village before the left to go out on the town…so, I don’t see why team USA would not stay there (also comes off as ‘elitist’ to do something none of the other athletes are doing or allowed to do.)
Cough cough…. Basketball
They are not required to stay at the village but if they choose not to stay, they are then responsible for their own lodging, food and transit. US Mens basketball opted not to stay for example, I’m not sure if any others made the same choice.
The 1992 Dream Team stayed at a hotel while in Barcelona.
I have been to Paris many times, and traffic is horrible!!! Not surprised about the time to the pool..as far as food, the organizers obviously didn’t have a clue what athletes actually eat, and the amount!! And many Parisians like their meat very very rare!They can remedy that..Traffic?? Not so much!
Close D1 or D9 to nothing but essential/ emergency vehicles.
Charter buses for the swimming athletes to the swimming pool. State the departure times in advance.