You are working on Staging1

U.S. Olympic Swimmers David Johnston, Luke Whitlock Test Positive for COVID-19 in Paris

Sources tell SwimSwam that two U.S. Olympic swimmers, distance specialists David Johnston and Luke Whitlock, have tested positive for COVID-19 in Paris.

The news comes on the heels of British breaststroker Adam Peaty testing positive for COVID-19 on Monday, just hours after tying for silver in the men’s 100 breaststroke and sharing the podium with American Nic Fink.

Sources say that both Johnston and Whitlock have been moved to a hotel to isolate while coaches closely monitor the entire distance group. Whitlock had been staying in an Olympic Village apartment along with Hunter Armstrong, Thomas Heilman, Aaron Shackell, Matt Fallon, and Ivan Puskovitch.

Johnston’s status for his only pool event, the men’s 1500 free, is now up in the air. Fortunately, he’ll have a few days to recover before heats take place on Saturday, August 3rd. However, the prospect of pulling off a pool/open water double and swimming the 10km soon after dealing with COVID-19 seems like a tall task at this point. Johnston was added to the open water roster in late June courtesy of his 1500 free time.

Whitlock is said to be experiencing mild symptoms such as coughing, but the 18-year-old Florida commit (’24) already raced in his only event, placing 15th in the men’s 800 freestyle heats on Monday morning with a time of 7:49.26 — four seconds slower than his personal-best 7:45.19 from last month’s Olympic Trials.

Unlike the past two Olympics, athletes in Paris are not bound by COVID-19 restrictions. A USA Swimming spokesperson told SwimSwam that there is no mandatory masking or testing in place right now for American swimmers.

“We encourage our athletes to do whatever makes them the most comfortable, working with the team doctors,” USA Swimming communications director Jake Grosser said.

As of Tuesday morning, before news of Johnston and Whitlock’s positives broke, at least seven Olympians had tested positive for COVID-19, including Australian swimmer Lani Pallister. Australia also had five members of its women’s water polo team contract COVID-19 before the Olympics even started.

Update: European junior champion Vlad Stancu of Romania has also announced that he has tested positive for COVID-19, withdrawing from the men’s 1500 free later this week.

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.

Several members of the U.S. team were reportedly already staying in hotels outside of the Village, which could help limit the spread of COVID-19 through the team. 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.

In This Story

160
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

160 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Katie
1 month ago

If Johnston doesn’t start the 1500, he’s not eligible to compete in open water. The “added entries” criteria for OW requires that athletes “start” the 800 or 1500. It doesn’t require that they finish. (I know that seems like a weird distinction in pool swimming, but it’s because of the number of sports in which DNF is more common like skiiing where an athlete is DNF as soon as they miss one gate – so IOC uses “start” rather than “finish.”)

JustATSTParent
1 month ago

I’ve been told by a reliable source DJ is out of the 1500

Just A Swammer
1 month ago

Hope Whitlock and Johnston are OK. Really does seem like we’re getting some sort of spreading event of COVID-19 here. Heard from my Finnish friend that 200 breast Tokyo bronze medalist Matti Mattsson contracted the virus.
https://www.is.fi/urheilu/art-2000010595579.html

Aquaman
1 month ago

Slow pool, fast virus

Susan
1 month ago

I am a swimmer..retired coach..I had the Covid vaccine..3 of them..yes I got Covid..as did every single person I know..the vaccines really got rolling as Covid was mutating to less severe symptoms..so the cases were milder due to the virus itself? Or the vaccine? Obviously the vaccines did not prevent Covid..my age demographic would be considered high risk..we all trained through mild Covid symptoms..no one got long Covid..but one woman got long flu. There is still so much misinformation on the internet about Covid, that it is hard to make sense of it.
Like many viruses, some people will get sicker than others..some people will cough after a flu for months! That is accepted. Or feel weak after a… Read more »

Observer
Reply to  Susan
1 month ago

It’s not so much about the COVID virus itself as it is being sick. Pretty damn likely you will not be at your best if you aren’t feeling 100% healthy. If you have an illness and are even remotely possibly contagious – it makes sense to be concerned and it makes sense for it to be newsworthy.

Gulliver’s Swimming Travels
1 month ago

We sure sacrificed a lot to create the illusion that there hasn’t been unmitigated COVID spread all over the globe this summer. Imagine if the delegations actually had their athletes wear masks as a basic preventative measure. How many more athletes would we have seen at full strength? Humans are ridiculous.

Jas Friedman
Reply to  Gulliver’s Swimming Travels
1 month ago

We could clean the air, or allow better ventilation and better airflow. Daily testing, twice a day. No one has to get vaccinated, if they dont want to. Masking should be encouraged.

Katie
Reply to  Jas Friedman
1 month ago

USOPC supplied air conditioning but not air purifiers… 🙁

swimmer
Reply to  Gulliver’s Swimming Travels
1 month ago

i thought we knew masks didnt work?

Gulliver’s Swimming Travels
Reply to  swimmer
1 month ago

Well that’s just objectively ridiculous.

Sapiens Ursus
Reply to  swimmer
1 month ago

The virus lives in your saliva. Try spitting wearing an N95 and see how it goes…

This is centuries old knowledge ffs is there any level of stupid right wing populism will not go to?

Gulliver’s Swimming Travels
Reply to  Sapiens Ursus
1 month ago

I didn’t realize just how much of it infected (…) the swimming community. I like imagining they all have the same politics as Braden.

Coach
Reply to  Sapiens Ursus
1 month ago

Wait Fauci is a right wing populist? He did say that masks won’t work on national TV. That much is not debatable, just go to Youtube. I guess by centuries you mean 4 years, or are you actually calling him a right wing populist? And what does populism have to do with masks? A truly mind boggling comment all around

Kristiina
Reply to  Braden Keith
1 month ago

Only 20% expecially omicron. Only illness person isolation and testing working

Susan
Reply to  Braden Keith
1 month ago

I respectfully disagree..the Cochran report was the largest study conducted. They found masks made little difference in the spread. And again, the virus had mutated , and naturally there were less hospitalizations. There is no way to prevent viruses from spreading..the best we can do is get sleep, eat well, and know that viruses are contagious BEFORE symptoms!! Most people will go out with a sore throat..( very contagious) yet the coughing is usually dead virus..unless you have a fever etc.
So the swimmers will swim with a cold, flu, or Covid if they can.. and remember, there are 14,000 athletes!

Jess
Reply to  Braden Keith
1 month ago

Don’t confuse them with science. It’s way over their uneducated heads.

Former swimmer
1 month ago

As a swim fan, I’m just really sad. Athletes and fans and parents wait four years for this and it’s just been one thing after another and it’s not stopping

AndyB
1 month ago

Do we know how many have tested positive across all sports?

Katie
Reply to  AndyB
1 month ago

Contact in Paris says with no testing or reporting requirement, it’s impossible to know but “bad with the possibility of nightmare” if it keeps spreading through teams. 🙁

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 »