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What Other Olympic Schedule Changes Could Be Made To Benefit Star Swimmers?

The news that the Olympic swimming schedule had a pair of minor changes caused quite the stir on Wednesday, particularly because superstar Leon Marchand‘s conflict with the finals of the men’s 200 fly and 200 breast had been alleviated.

Marchand will still have both finals during the same session, but rather than being back-to-back, there will now be four events and seven total heats between them, one of which is the women’s 1500 free final.

CHANGES MADE

  • On Day 5, the women’s 200 fly semis and men’s 200 breast final will swap places. This makes the 200 fly the third event of the night and the 200 breast the seventh.
  • On Day 6, the men’s 50 free semis will be the third race of the night (originally sixth) and the women’s 200 back will be the fifth (originally third).

Although the majority of fans are critical of the change, with the general sentiment being that the organizers shifted things around for one star swimmer who happens to be from the host country, it does beg the question of what other changes could be made to help the sport’s bigest names.

Below, we’ll look at some superstars and how slight changes in the current schedule could help them alleviate a conflict. Since it wasn’t done in the move made on Wednesday, we won’t switch the day of an event, just simply shifting around the timing of them in their given sessions (unless otherwise noted).

FULL PARIS 2024 OLYMPIC SWIMMING CALENDAR

Session Event
Day 1 Prelims Women 100m Butterfly
Women 400m Freestyle
Men 100m Breaststroke
Men 400m Freestyle
Women 4x100m Freestyle
Men 4x100m Freestyle
Day 1 Finals Women 100m Butterfly Semi-Final
Men 400m Freestyle Final
Women 400m Freestyle Final
Men 100m Breaststroke Semi-Final
Women 4x100m Freestyle Final
Men 4x100m Freestyle Final
Day 2 Prelims Men 200m Freestyle
Men 400m Individual Medley
Women 100m Breaststroke
Men 100m Backstroke
Women 200m Freestyle
Day 2 Finals Men 400m Individual Medley Final
Women 100m Butterfly Final
Men 200m Freestyle Semi-Final
Women 100m Breaststroke Semi-Final
Men 100m Backstroke Semi-Final
Men 100m Breaststroke Final
Women 200m Freestyle Semi-Final
Day 3 Prelims Women 400m Individual Medley
Women 100m Backstroke
Men 800m Freestyle
Day 3 Finals Women 400m Individual Medley Final
Men 200m Freestyle Final
Women 100m Backstroke Semi-Final
Men 100m Backstroke Final
Women 100m Breaststroke Final
Women 200m Freestyle Final
Day 4 Prelims Men 200m Butterfly
Men 100m Freestyle
Women 1500m Freestyle
Women 100m Freestyle
Men 200m Breaststroke
Men 4x200m Freestyle
Day 4 Finals Men 100m Freestyle Semi-Final
Men 200m Butterfly Semi-Final
Women 100m Backstroke Final
Men 800m Freestyle Final
Women 100m Freestyle Semi-Final
Men 200m Breaststroke Semi-Final
Men 4x200m Freestyle Final
Day 5 Prelims Women 200m Breaststroke
Men 200m Backstroke
Women 200m Butterfly
Day 5 Finals Women 100m Freestyle Final
Men 200m Butterfly Final
Women 200m Butterfly Semi-Final
Women 1500m Freestyle Final
Men 200m Backstroke Semi-Final
Women 200m Breaststroke Semi-Final
Men 200m Breaststroke Final
Men 100m Freestyle Final
Day 6 Prelims Women 200m Backstroke
Men’s 50m Freestyle
Men’s 200 IM
Women 4x200m Freestyle
Day 6 Finals Women 200m Butterfly Final
Men 200m Backstroke Final
Men 50m Freestyle Semi-Final
Women 200m Breaststroke Final
Women 200m Backstroke Semi-Final
Men 200m Individual Medley Semi-Final
Women 4x200m Freestyle Final
Day 7 Prelims Men 100m Butterfly
Women 200m Individual Medley
Women 800m Freestyle
Mixed 4x100m Medley
Day 7 Finals Men 50m Freestyle Final
Women 200m Backstroke Final
Men 200m Individual Medley Final
Men 100m Butterfly Semi-Final
Women 200m Individual Medley Semi-Final
Day 8 Prelims Women 50m Freestyle
Men 1500m Freestyle
Men 4x100m Medley
Women 4x100m Medley
Day 8 Finals Men 100m Butterfly Final
Women 50m Freestyle Semi-Final
Women 200m Individual Medley Final
Women 800m Freestyle Final
Mixed 4x100m Medley Final
Day 9 Finals Women 50m Freestyle Final
Men 1500m Freestyle Final
Men 4x100m Medley Final
Women 4x100m Medley Final

KAYLEE MCKEOWN

  • McKeown was affected by the schedule change on Wednesday, as she will now only have the semis of the men’s 200 IM in between the women’s 200 back semis and the final of the 800 free relay. Of course, McKeown was not a lock to swim the relay, and there’s no doubt she can cruise through the 200 back semis and make the final, but it still dims the chances she’ll end up in the relay final.
  • The first schedule change that would help McKeown would be moving the semis of the women’s 100 back to the end of Day 3 if she wanted to race the 400 IM. As it currently strands, the 400 IM final is the first event of the night, and the 100 back semis are third. McKeown is elite in the 400 IM, ranking #3 in the world in 2023, but has not raced it at either the Olympics or World Championships in her career.
  • The other move is essentially reversing what was done yesterday—if the 200 back semis were pushed to the top of the order on Day 6, it would leave a big gap prior to the 800 free relay.
  • On Day 7, the 200 back final and 200 IM semis are already separated by two events, but one more could be added if the 200 back kicked the session off rather than the men’s 50 free final.

REGAN SMITH

  • The only conflict Smith would’ve had was alleviated with the Day 6 change, as she now has three events and four heats between the final of the 200 fly and the semis of the 200 back. Before the schedule was shifted, only the men’s 200 back final was between the two.

SUMMER MCINTOSH

  • The swimmer with the obvious conflict as it stands is McIntosh, who, even if she took on six individual events, would only have one real conflict on the schedule. She would have four doubles during finals sessions, but two of them are separated by the maximum amount: On Day 3 the final of the 400 IM is first and the final of the 200 free is last on the schedule. On Day 6, the final of the 200 fly is first and the 800 free relay is last on the schedule.
  • The only issue is the one that came up when she dropped an 8:11.39 swim in the 800 freestyle in early February. On Day 8, the final of the 200 IM and 800 free are back-to-back. Moving one race to the start of the session would help, but realistically this is one scenario where changing the day of one of the events is probably the only way to fix her issue (though having the 200 IM at the start of the session, then the final of the men’s 100 fly, the 200 IM medal ceremony, the semis of the women’s 50 free, and the 100 fly medal ceremony, would probably give her enough time to challenge for an 800 free medal).
  • The other double McIntosh might end up having is the finals of the 400 free and 400 free relay on Day 1. Only the semis of the men’s 100 breast is between them, but McIntosh has had quick turnarounds and produced strong relay splits, especially over 100 meters, previously.

CAELEB DRESSEL/MICHAEL ANDREW

  • This scenario no longer really applies, as Andrew has said he’s not focusing on the 200 IM this year and Dressel never really took the event on with full force in long course. But there are only two events between the semis of the men’s 50 free and 200 IM, and that could be doubled if the 50 was moved to the top of the order.
  • A more common double that both swimmers have had in the past is the 100 fly and 50 free, which coincide on Day 7. The men’s 50 free final and the 100 fly semis are separated by two events, but a shift could see that extended to three events if the 100 fly semis were moved to the end of the session (of course, that would put the women’s 200 back final even closer to the 200 IM semis, hurting someone like Kaylee McKeown, so there’s no right answer here).

200 BACK/200 IM

  • The classic Ryan Lochte double that we never got to see Michael Phelps take on, the finals of the men’s 200 back and 200 IM are no longer in the same session, but the 200 back final and 200 IM semis are (with men’s 50 free semis and women’s 200 breast semis in between). Moving these events to different days was an obvious change to make, especially when Paris 2024 extended the schedule to nine days, but they remain together.
  • The same goes for the women, with the 200 back final and 200 IM semis separated by just two events. This is one double that Kaylee McKeown will likely take on, and even swimmers like Regan Smith and Summer McIntosh could realistically be in the final of both races if they chose to/qualified at their Trials.

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CJ j
8 months ago

This is going to sound crazy, but follow me. Spread out the freestyle distance, 1 heat of either 8free or mile between every event. Distance swimmers can request the day they want and it provides an automatic extra 15ish minute break between all other events. The drama of very, very slowly watching that leader board change would be amazing.

Last edited 8 months ago by CJ j
kurtmillshanson
8 months ago

no semi finals in any events. bring in the 50 form strokes & get rid of that mixed medley relay.

snailSpace
Reply to  kurtmillshanson
8 months ago

Mixed med is arguably the most fun event out of all of them.

Troyy
Reply to  snailSpace
8 months ago

Purists hate it but the general viewers love it.

CasualSwimmer
8 months ago

50 free/100 fly would also conflict with Maxime Grousset

Pan Fan
8 months ago

I also submit separating the w100 breast and w200 free to so, using the same logic and reason of some people in this sub, Siobhan Haughey can swim both 100 breast and 200 free at her best.

Steve Nolan
Reply to  Pan Fan
8 months ago

oh no that sounds awful everyone hated it when she just did it at world’s nooo

(Maybe you’re a sub, don’t assume everyone else is.)

STRAIGHTBLACKLINE
8 months ago

I don’t think it’s a huge issue but it’s odd that only two events separate the men’s 800FS and 4X200FS. Many of the top 800 freestylers are also amongst their nation’s best in the 200 e.g. Maartens from Germany, Aubry from France, Winnington from Australia(and potentially Short) …. It’s also weird that the semis of the100FS and 200BF are in the same session given the high high crossover between these events and the 200FS. I don’t know for which other day they could be scheduled but at least the 800FS could be moved to the start of the day’s program to give more recovery time for the relay.

1650 Onetrick
8 months ago

This is a problem that can definitely be mathematically solved. We can use data from a bunch of historical meets to figure out what proportion of swimmers do each combination of events. From there, consider every possible order of events over the 9 days and select the one which has the least proportion of swimmers be forced to do a double. Only problem is, idk how to pick the best schedule besides trying every single one.

I did this with NCAA’s event order because there’s only 72,072 ways to arrange the 13 individual events into 3 days of competition with 3, 5, and 5 events for each day, and it turns out the optimal order of events is the… Read more »

Troyy
Reply to  1650 Onetrick
8 months ago

Marchand definitely not gonna like that.

Pan Fan
Reply to  1650 Onetrick
8 months ago

It’s not gonna favor Marchand

ooo
Reply to  1650 Onetrick
8 months ago

It is tough problem. If I find the time I’ll try to give a go. I’d like to follow the steps outlined in the other thread. i.e. 18 months before the game a preliminary schedule is given where the events and days are assigned. This could be based as you said in a minimization of the correlations that exist between events. Then with the help of the knowledge gathered in the following year the order of events can be adjusted. (What happened this year, really, which to my eyes makes a lot of sense)
The criteria here could be the maximization of the recovery given to the swimmers likely to be involved in the semis and finals. This will… Read more »

Nick the biased Aussie
8 months ago

Get rid of 200 semis and add in the 50 strokes

Steve Nolan
Reply to  Nick the biased Aussie
8 months ago

I used to be in favor of adding stroke 50s, but I sorta soured on that pretty hard.

Just too many good reasons to keep em out: there are already too many swimming events – and the 50s don’t really select for meaningfully different swimmers – and just as races…they’re not nearly as exciting as what we already have. (And when they’re shot like they were at this last WC meet, impossible to parse.)

Last edited 8 months ago by Steve Nolan
snailSpace
Reply to  Steve Nolan
8 months ago

Thank you!

I am so tired of people pushing the 50s to replace the 200s. Like, dude, stroke 200s highlight stroke technique the best while the 50s all need the same skillset. They aren’t long either – you can pay attention for ~2 minutes.

Oceanian
Reply to  snailSpace
8 months ago

50m races are sooooo soooo boring for the main. I can accept the 50 Free at an Olympics but really…

In track & field maybe they should add 50m sprints and 50m hurdles so some of those athletes get a chance of a bonus medal/gold with very little extra specific training.

A stupid idea but 50m races on the track would get far more interest/TV ratings than any 50m swimming event.

Steve Nolan
Reply to  snailSpace
8 months ago

Yuppers! They’re fine for WCs, if anything we should cut back on Olympic events.

(My hot take in the comments of the other post about this event order change re: swimming events already being too similar stands here, too. If we really wanted these events to not be so redundant they’d be like 75s, 150s and 300s or something.)

snailSpace
Reply to  Steve Nolan
8 months ago

Yeah they are fine for Worlds and they do have their own charm, but come on.
Lol nice hot take! I would watch those tbh at the World Cup or Duel in the pool or some such.

Oceanian
8 months ago

No schedule changes are needed. Swimming already has more athletes competing in multiple events (and then relays) than any other Olympic sport.

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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