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Swimmers Pieroni and Gatt Join the COVID List at the Olympics; Johnston Still Trying to Race

Swimmers Sasha Gatt of Malta and Blake Pieroni of the United States are the latest to test positive for COVID-19 at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, indicating continued spread of the virus throughout the athlete population, while American David Johnston, who tested positive earlier this week, is still trying to take a go in the 1500 free.

Gatt and Pieroni join at least five other swimmers who have tested positive for the virus that locked down the Tokyo 2020 Olympics but that is without universal protocols at this year’s Games.

Gatt, 19, is swimming at her second Olympics as Malta’s top swimmer. She finished 22nd in the 400 free and 33rd in the 1500 free at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics as one of the youngest competitors in swimming. In Paris, she was entered in only the 1500 as the 17th seed out of 17 entries, finishing 16th out of 16 swimmers after Australia’s Lani Pallister, who also tested positive for COVID-19, scratched the race.

A spokesperson for the Maltese Olympic Committee told the Times of Malta that Gatt tested positive after the 1500, but that her symptoms impacted her performance. Her time of 17:00.54 was well short of her lifetime best and Maltese Record of 16:38.75 done in 2021.

Pieroni is done competing and has been moved to a hotel further from the Olympic village to isolate. Swimmers who are done competing and test positive are being moved further from the Village and competition venues to free up more room for other athletes who are still racing.

Johnston, meanwhile, remains in a hotel near the Athlete Village, sources tell SwimSwam, and will still try to compete in the men’s 1500 free prelims on Saturday morning.

Johnston has a bit of a different calculus – while the 1500 free is his only pool swimming event, it is the event through which he qualified for next week’s open water 10km swim. According to World Aquatics rules, countries like the US that have zero or one swimmer qualify for open water via the traditional qualifying pathway (Ivan Puskovitch) are able to enter swimmers in the open water event that comes after the conclusion of pool swimming, but only if they hit an Olympic time standard in the 800 or 1500 and swim those races this week at the Olympics.

Pieroni joins a list of at least 11 aquatic athletes who have tested positive for COVID-19, including at least 5 members of the Australian women’s water polo team prior to the start of competition.

Other swimmers to test positive including superstar British breaststroker Adam Peaty after his silver in the 100 breast, the aforementioned Pallister, and European Junior champion Vlad Stancu of Romania, who withdrew from the men’s 1500 free.

There is no universal policy on athlete participation with COVID-19. The aforementioned Australian women’s water polo team, for example, continued training despite those five positive tests.

While the current strains of the COVID-19 virus generally have more mild symptoms than the strain that gripped the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, it is still dangerous for high-risk populations and can still create long-COVID symptoms, though research on long COVID is still evolving. COVID-19 spreads more easily than the common flu, and even medically-mild symptoms can still impact athletes’ performances at the Olympics.

 

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Kelsey
3 months ago

Don’t understand why they weren’t more vigilant masking given it’s the Olympics. Didn’t wear a mask caught covid after 4.5 years.

Jess
3 months ago

The numbers are probably higher with no requirement to report positive tests.

Lpman
3 months ago

Probably the slow pool giving everyone covid

Peaches
Reply to  Lpman
3 months ago

Or, everyone having Covid is making the pool slow

David S
3 months ago

Also, they’re worried about the covid virus, but let the triathletes swim in a septic tank basically. ☣️🦠

David S
3 months ago

Next time stay at private accommodation and wear N95 up ‘till moment of standing on blocks.

Mark M
Reply to  David S
3 months ago

Warming up in the warm up pool with said mask as well🤣

RealSlimThomas
3 months ago

Hypothetically, if Blake was a relay-only swimmer in an event that hasn’t competed yet, then what would happen?

There seems to be fairly strict rules that the relay-only swimmers HAVE to compete, but it would be in everyone’s best interest if he did not. Would the relay be disqualified? Would the US be “fined”? Maybe the IOC requiring him to isolate means no punishment?

Barty’s Bakery
Reply to  RealSlimThomas
3 months ago

There is a medical exemption where relay only swimmers don’t have to compete if they’re I’ll or injured

Xman
Reply to  Barty’s Bakery
3 months ago

Stick the sick folks in mixed medley

Katie
Reply to  RealSlimThomas
3 months ago

As Barty said, there’s a medical exemption. Here’s the specific language:

“If an NOC enters Relay-Only Athletes, these athletes must swim either in the heat or final of at least one relay event. Should a Relay-Only Athlete not compete, this will lead to the disqualification of the last relay team for which he/she was eligible to compete. This is not applicable in case of a medical injury or medical emergency after confirmation from World Aquatics.”

Jonathan
3 months ago

Every day I wake up dreading to read headlines that some major US athlete was forced to withdraw after getting COVID.

I wasn’t super worried about this back in Tokyo thanks to the strict protocols in place.

Oliver
Reply to  Jonathan
3 months ago

ThEy HaVE a COLD! They’re fine.

Random
Reply to  Oliver
3 months ago

Incorrect. Educate yourself on long covid please.

swimws
Reply to  Jonathan
3 months ago

And people still got covid in Tokyo with strict protocols…

Mr Piano
Reply to  Jonathan
3 months ago

It better not get our boy Caeleb

Jonathan
Reply to  Mr Piano
3 months ago

Maybe I’m overreacting to his performances on day 1, but I just can’t see Dressel winning an individual gold in Paris.

Outside Smoke
Reply to  Jonathan
3 months ago

Yes overreacting. Dressel wasn’t peaking for Day 1 and then holding that peak while not racing until Day 6.

UsedToBeFast
Reply to  Jonathan
3 months ago

I hope they stay out of the dining hall and find food elsewhere

AndyB
3 months ago

11 aquatic athletes. Anyone see a number of athletes overall?

AndyB
Reply to  Braden Keith
3 months ago

Thank you!

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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