You are working on Staging1

Yes, Swim Times Are Slow in Paris, But We Can Still Enjoy the Battles, the Stories, the Drama

2024 PARIS SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES

The times at this week’s Olympic Games are slow. That’s part of the story of swimming at these Olympics. We’ll probably continue talking about that this week, because this is swimming, but I won’t rehash every detail of that here.

Times do matter in swimming. As sports in general shift toward deeper analytics, times will continue to matter in swimming, with deference to the opinions of the organizers of the International Swimming League.

But they’re not all that matter. Especially not at the Olympics. Here, more than any other swim meet in the world, winning matters. A poll we conducted in 2020 revealed that 81% of SwimSwam readers would rather have an Olympic gold medal than a World Record, and I think that’s the right answer.

It’s not an either or. The best version of swimming at the Olympics has exciting gold medal winning swims, and fast times breaking World Records and National Records and Olympic Records (there have at least been a bunch of those this week). Those are the stories that capture the most attention from the general public and brings the most people into the sport. We can’t avoid learning why this meet has been slow and trying to correct it in future events.

At almost any meet in the quadrennial calendar, the hardcore swim fans would choose fast times before they would choose great races, if they had to. But the Olympics are different, and if our preference in the Olympics are upsets, come-from-behinds, battles down to fingernail touches…then these Games have delivered in spades.

David Popovici won the 200 free by .02 seconds, the smallest margin in Olympic history; Daniel Wiffen held off Bobby Finke‘s famous last-50 charge in the men’s 800; the men’s 100 breaststroke podium saw three swimmers separated by two hundredths; and the women’s 100 free saw the top four within .18 seconds.

Leon Marchand in front of a home crowd running down Kristof Milak, surging past him in the last 20 meters, after Milak looked like he might famously defy the critics of his focus leading into these Games.

While World Records capture literal headlines better than exciting races might, exciting races can pull eyeballs to the video side of the sport – which is an area where swimming really needs to grow and evolve.

Pan Zhanle‘s World Record in the 100 free on Wednesday saved this from becoming the first Olympics since 1952 without an individual World Record, and even then, the swimmers chasing him were generally well-shy of their bests. Even with Pan’s swim, the great stories and great battles in this meet have outweighed the records so far.

Those of you who read SwimSwam know the stories and have a head start. You know why Wiffen holding off Finke is so thrilling. You know why Nicolo Martinenghi out-touching Peaty for gold is such a thrill. You know why MOC versus Ariarne Titmus is such a big matchup. Grab those moments, lean into those moments, and find that joy even where the records aren’t falling.

Discuss the times, feel the races.

In This Story

36
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

36 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Swimmer
3 months ago

Jesse Owen’s story in 2024

BDD
3 months ago

Brett Hawke’s tirade on how Pan’s swim is impossible is just so inaccurate when you consider Popovici said this after the race.
“I think we can go ever faster. There are now people now alive and swimming who can do it. It’s just a matter of putting it together and doing it at the right moment.”

Grand Rapids Swimmer
3 months ago

Since when are Olympic records slow!!

Water
Reply to  Grand Rapids Swimmer
3 months ago

Roid rage is real

David S
3 months ago

The pool is slow, but if you swim angry like Pan you will crush

Salt
Reply to  David S
3 months ago

Swimming angry and doped to the gills gets that done

Sapiens Ursus
3 months ago

I have been plenty entertained, the only upsetting thing is how the IOC and organizers have treated the athletes.

Chad
Reply to  Sapiens Ursus
3 months ago

no ROC and everyone getting covid has been a bummer

Neptune
3 months ago

Winning times might not be meeting lofty expectations, but depth of times can still be improving

https://staging.swimswam.com/2024-paris-olympics-day-5-finals-fun-facts/#comment-1445422

Last edited 3 months ago by Neptune
Tom Dolan Fan
3 months ago

So what exactly allows Pan and Leon to post times that they did as opposed to everyone else?

Diehard
Reply to  Tom Dolan Fan
3 months ago

Media is exaggerating pool being slow! 95% of sports don’t even have WRs or fast surfaces. It rained the day of women’s road race. Olympic athletes all deal its same scenarios, all swimmers hare racing in the same pool and they give out medals based on who gets their hand on the wall first!!!! Simple!
American media is trying to disguise that USA men haven’t won an individual Gold yet! European men are just racing better at top. USA is doing fine getting plenty of medals and the races have been extremely well.
Get your hand on the wall before everyone else!

BingBopBam
Reply to  Tom Dolan Fan
3 months ago

It seems to be that, to some extent, getting out to an early, substantial, and sustained lead mitigated the shallow pool’s effects with regard to waves/currents due to the relatively unperturbed water they were swimming in.

Last edited 3 months ago by BingBopBam
CraigH
3 months ago

We can, but if makes me way less likely to tune in to watch Prelims if I know no big records could be broken.

Dan
Reply to  CraigH
3 months ago

you barely ever get a records in the prelims at any meet, I do wish there were a few more swimmers in each event (will have an opinion in another post).

SuperSwimmer 2000
Reply to  CraigH
3 months ago

As a general rule, records don’t really get broken in prelims anyway.

Diehard
Reply to  CraigH
3 months ago

I guess you don’t like 95% of sports that don’t have world records or any records!?

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, …

Read More »