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Ever since FINA announced in July that it favored morning finals for the Olympic swimming events at the 2020 Summer Games in Tokyo, and then Tokyo organizers confirmed that decision this week, calls have gone out across the comments, and social media, that this was another case of “FINA choosing money over athletes.”
There seems to be an overwhelming opinion that morning finals are worse for the swimmers than evening finals. In Rio, the claim was that night-time finals were worse for swimmers than evening finals.
It’s starting to make me wonder when we decided that the hours between 6PM and 8PM are the peak moments for athletes to swim fast. Studies has shown that individual athletes have different times where they perform better based on genotypes and circadian rhythms – but that peak performance time is not universal. Some have disputed the findings, but basically, night owls’ performance peaks at around 8PM, while early birds tend to perform better “mid-day.” Skeptical or not, there’s no definitive science available yet as to whether athletes are universally better off competing mid-day or in evenings. Swimming does probably tend to self-select, at least in the United States, toward early-birds, as compared to other sports.
While not universal, as a sport swimming has decided that morning practices are a part of our culture, with some arguing that they’re better than evening practices. And yet, with such a huge portion of our athletes training in the morning, why do we decide that morning competition is somehow a bad thing? I think there’s an argument to be made that the traditional evening final is as much about the money (it’s harder to get fans to show up in the mornings than evening) than is a morning final.
The last time this was done at a meet of this scale, the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, was when Michael Phelps won his 8 gold medals – which, unless you were a swimmer who won a silver medal in one of those races, was universally ‘good for swimming’ on a metaphysical level. But, looking even competitively, there were 19 World Records broken in those finals. Yes, the suits – but those suits were also worn in prelims, and everyone still managed to get faster in finals. We’re talking about elite athletes in the prime of their physical conditioning – who can react to and adapt to change much more quickly than the rest of us can.
Below, I’ll lay out some arguments in favor of each case, and leave it to you to decide. We’re trying to come up with a way to parse data and get some more definitive answers (there aren’t a lot of international samples to choose from, but there are some lower-level meets, like high school state championships, that could provide relevant data). In the meantime, it’s possible that morning finals are worse for swimmers, but to me, it’s not as definitive as some of the rage-Tweets have made it sound, and warrants more investigation before it warrants more emotion.
Meanwhile, we’d love to hear from international-caliber athletes about what concerns you have about racing in finals. Please email us [email protected] if you have thoughts to share.
Why Morning Finals Might be Good for Athletes
- With morning finals, athletes actually get a longer rest period between prelims and semi-finals and finals. If semi-finals and finals are the more important races (we must be operating under the assumption that they are, or this debate wouldn’t matter), then this should be a good thing. In London, where swimming had an ‘idealistic’ 10AM start time for prelims and 7:30 start time for finals, athletes were left about seven-and-a-half hours between prelims and finals. If flipped, athletes would’ve been left about 12 hours between prelims and finals – time for a full sleep, to refuel, to rehydrate, to relax, to get treatments.
- I’m confident, though I can’t prove it, that more swimmers are training at 7 or 8 in the morning than are training at 8 or 9 at night. If athletes are used to training within a few hours of waking up, why would competing at those times be a problem?
- Interviews and media work for top athletes can take up a significant amount of time after finals’ sessions. By moving those finals sessions to the morning, that media time can be taken mid-day, rather than late into the night. While athletes will (sometimes) still need recovery time between the morning and evening sessions even when they’re flipped, this should be a more predictable routine mid-day than late at night; and if there’s lost ‘recovery time’ with all of the post-finals requirements on athletes, that lost time is before prelims rather than before finals. (Sidebar: I’ve been trying to determine all day if there’s more drug testing after prelims than finals. I can’t find any published data, and anecdotal results have been a mixed bag. If there’s more testing after finals, that’s another point in the tally of morning finals, for similar reasons as above.)
- Swimmers now won’t have to swim the morning after the Opening Ceremonies. Many swimmers skip the march because they have to be up and racing early the next day. With it flipped, the racing starts the next evening. Some swimmers will still skip the opening ceremonies to save their tapers, but the shift at least allows for a little more freedom in that regard.
- If we hone in on athletes who have designs on semi-finals finals, that group will, by definition, have to race twice in the same day on fewer occasions. Under the traditional format, athletes who advance to semi-finals (or finals in cases of the 400 IM and 400 free) by definition have to race twice in the same day. Some athletes with bigger schedules (think Hosszu, Ledecky, Dressel) will still have to swim finals and come back later to swim prelims, but that will be a far less-common occurrence, and for that matter will have the more important races first, and the races where top athletes can afford to cruise after.
- McDonald’s, which typically is a big player in the dining at the athletes’ village, serves healthier breakfast than lunch or dinner (and as much as we’d all like to believe that they’re not, many athletes are definitely eating McDonald’s at the Olympics – so much so that the McDonald’s had to put a soft cap in Rio on the number of items an athlete can order at one time: 20).
Why Morning Finals Might be Bad for Athletes
- They’re used to competing in evenings. Most major meets have evening finals. Athletes’ race-day routines are built around morning prelims and evening finals. With sufficient warning, it shouldn’t be difficult for wealthier nations to come up with a plan to adjust those routines (and to practice those new plans). But perhaps it could negatively-impact athletes from smaller federations with fewer support structures in place.
- It ‘makes sense.’ For some top athletes, it will make more sense in their heads to cruise in prelims, as kind of a warm-up swim for the harder push they’ll need in finals.
- If we make the leap that there is more anxiety and nervousness for athletes before a semi-final or a final than there is before a prelims swim, having that break between the two be the overnight shift could impact the ‘long’ sleep, as compared to just making it hard for athletes to nap between sessions.
- Morning rush hours in Tokyo tend to be worse than evening rush hours (though usually for Olympics, there’s designated lanes and traffic management plans that make this not-an-issue).
Would it make sense to run Trials the same way…to make sure the best AM swimmers are there?
From our club….swimmers always compete best in the timeframe that’s most similar to their typical training time. We’ve switched practice times in the weeks leading up to big meets on different schedules so their bodies could “adjust.”
If I got it right, you say that athletes “daily peak” is between mid day and 8pm. So for me it only makes sense to do the finals in that period – this is in the afternoon or evening. But never in the morning.
And some readers already made another graet point comparing beijing with london.
Sharkspeed – the study found that in a small group of lacrosse players tested, their peaks w ere either mid day, or between 6pm and 8pm. But, this was a small study, in a different sport, where training isn’t done at the same times of day, and so it’s just one sample.
I don’t think we’re going to get scientifically unimpeachable data on this between now and Tokyo, unfortunately. So, it’s just a matter of collecting a lot of smaller, flawed data points.
Aren’t there some studies out there that support optimal physical ability after being awake 8-10 hours? It’s why we typically see better swims at night?
Is it really to cater to the American fans though, or is it just what NBC wants? I honestly hate watching the tape delay. I want to see it live.
Won’t we finally admit NCAA system trains swimmers for fast swimming in the morning? The point system encourage swim fast in the morning. All those swimmers being ridiculed in comment section here for swimming faster in the morning than in the afternoon!!! Little did they know they have honed their skill for the biggest stage in swimming!
I was originally thought of this as a joke but there may be some truth to it. NCAA swimmers has to learn to focus on one swim at a time (with short turnaround, individual + relay swims), and go fast in the morning as it counts more. We seriously heard it so many times from NCAA champions explain this mindset in post race… Read more »
Athletes develop a routine and that includes sleep, eat, warm up, race prelims, rest, eat, warm up and race finals. Over and over a swimming career. They make it to the Olympics and now it needs to be tweaked. At some point it is going to affect someone that can not adjust. Sure these are pros and many can adjust but it is not taking their preference in mind. If you had to have a heart surgery would it be ok if the doctor perform yours at a time he normally goes to bed. I bet you rather not right?
As much as the decision wasn’t the one I wanted, I don’t see why it should hinder performance greatly.
From a UK perspective; most of our top swimmers who will head of Tokyo are full time, well funded athletes. If they can’t adapt adequately, they need to take a look at how they’ve approached the situation.
Adaptability is part of being a professional.
The dedication of Olympic competitors is extreme. I would expect any Olympic competitor to adjust their home training schedule, so that their “body clock” was on Tokyo time, weeks before the Olympics. This is a four year + commitment for most participants, and getting your body clock in sync seems like one of the easier training adjustments.
Ledecky having to swim a 200m / 1500m double is more concerning. Katie is amazing, but I would prefer to see her only need to swim one event per day. I imagine NBC would also prefer to have Ms Ledecky to feature on more days of competition. She will certainly be getting lots of media attention.