On Tuesday, super-endurance swimmer Diana Nyad addressed both her critics and supporters in a round-table discussion, moderated by the great Steve Munatones, where she addressed many of the concerns that the open water swimming community had about her swim. Our Mike Lewis, who has been an “observer” on one of her 5 attempts, was a part of this round table that was picked up by major news outlets like CNN.
Mike wrote about his reflections and feelings after the roundtable here.
This discussion is not entirely settled, however. Nyad accurately and honestly answered all of the questions asked of her. If you are someone who still thinks that her swimming through currents was probably her hopping on a boat, if her being touched by doctors meant her being supported by doctors, or that she was somehow towed by a boat, then you’re flat-out calling her and her team liars. That is everyone’s right to do, but it would also be treating “lack of 100% proof that she didn’t do those things” as “proof that she did do those things,” in which case no amount of answers will satisfy you, with specific regard to this swim.
So, in my mind, we’re past that. You may not be past that personally, but for the sake of continuing the conversation, this post is past that.
Diana Nyad has swum from Cuba to Florida. She has swum from Cuba to Florida without a shark cage. She has swum from Cuba to Florida with a specially-designed, reportedly non-buoyant but still protective, FINIS suit, with a jellyfish mask, with shark divers, with a doctor, and with a strong current, but without climbing into a boat, being supported by anything but the water and her suit, and without being towed.
That full paragraph, taken in entirety, is an appropriate description of what she has done, and so long as it is expressed that way, there’s little to refute exactly that.
Here’s where the situation becomes more complex, though. For someone to have claimed a record, for someone to have claimed victory over an unconquerable feat, they have to follow a set of guidelines. Pool swimmers, to break a World Record, have to do so in an approved, legal suit. This is a guideline that has been set. Baseball players, to break a home run record, have to use a bat of a certain size and weight and made of certain materials. That is a guideline that has been set.
These open water challenges (the English Channel, the Catalina Channel, Cuba to Florida) are more on the new frontier, or the Wild West, of sports, however, which lends even further complexity to the debate, and why the debate is not a “done deal”. Open water swimming is like baseball in the 1880’s. The rules were evolving and changing, but there was a process by which rules became rules.
And that is what both sides of this debate, both Nyad skeptics and Nyad supporters, need to remember. Diana Nyad and her team do not get to unilaterally set the parameters of recognized records. They do, however, get a voice, and given how long she’s been a part of the open water community (40-some years), she gets a strong voice.
These things do matter. How long is this a record for? Is it only a record until someone else comes along and does the same swim, with doctors, with a jellyfish mask, with a FINIS suit, but without shark divers? Which of the multitude of assistances a swimmer can receive determines the difference between “gimmick swim” and “legitimate record-breaking swim”? Which criteria deserves its own record? The community has already decided that Susie Maroney’s 1997 swim of the same distance, but with a shark cage, is of a lesser value than Nyad’s with all of the above mentioned criteria. Where do those restrictions fall next? And make no mistake – there is a lot of money at stake here, so don’t brush aside the need for a clear definition, either.
The easiest (and laziest) rebuttal of the English Channel rules is to simply prey on the “English Channel” part of it and immediately declare them irrelevant. I think Mike Lewis framed them best when he said “this is a much greater distance than the English Channel, and thus needs its own rules,” but to try and say English Channel rules are completely irrelevant is flippant and cheap. They are a basis for great long-distance feats of swimming, and every conversation on open water rules should start there, and evolve as appropriate, just as any ruling by congress or the court system is supposed to begin with the Constitution and its amendments. The English Channel rules are the root of the sport, and the safer way to have this conversation is to start there and move outward to what’s acceptable, because starting with Susie Maroney’s swim, and start to hack things off that negate a swim leaves open the potential for a quagmire.
This conversation has moved beyond “haters” and “giving love” (which, in our eyes, is the easiest way to lose any argument – to say someone who thinks Nyad’s swim was illegitimate is simply an attempt to give a negative connotation to what that person is already saying themselves – that they disagree with what is being presented).
To quote Nyad herself: she did this swim “her way.” Just as Susie Maroney did it “her way”. Those words have rung a bit hollow on some of her fellow open water swimmers, especially when she took very public shots at Chloe McCardell and her team, who tried the swim in June without a jellyfish mask and were done in by a sting. But so long as Nyad, and her supporters, say that they did this swim “her way,” then there can be little to no debate. When she wants a record, though, she has to accept that she has to do things “everyone’s way”.
The conclusion may be just that, that she did. I am not here, in this editorialization, to say whether or not her way was the right way or the wrong way. Until we, as a group, as a community, determine what “the way” is, this is a swim that need live in context. Eventually, it will find its rightful home with permanent residence next to an asterisk, or permanent residence in the record books.
On a daily basis, the US Navy produce their maps of the Gulf currents. The most accurate are the ‘nowcasts’, which are the red links on this page:
http://www7320.nrlssc.navy.mil/GLBhycom1-12/navo/arc_list_glfmexspdcur.html
I ought to add that the US Navy’s daily maps of the currents show the distinct northward current which Nyad and crew speak about. Looking at other dates throughout the year, the Navy maps also indicate it is indeed rare.
In short, the Navy maps clearly support Nyad’s claim to the record.
Jiggs – congrats you got Saddam into the thread!
Swimming with one’s head above the water is a very important open water & survival skill because of pollution.
At the Maccabiah games bridge collapse in 97 several athletes went underwater in the polluted water & suffered extreme & frightening long term effects due to bacterial infections. Some spent time in & out of ICU for years afterwards barely beating death.
Perhaps Saddam was not only legit but wise. ( swimming head up is also how one manoeuvres through rips ) .
Diana I just don’t know but her tweets were mega obsessive – almost as bad as the Garret Webber ‘food is the staff of life ‘ mission.
Here’s an interesting brand new open water swimming world record:
The requirements are swimming 2km tied up in a bag… (Houdini-style)
Bulgarian man Jane Petkov made the distance in 2 hrs 45 mins.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-24047591
It’s like when Saddam Hussein swam across the Tigris River in the 90s. Everybody was all, “Yes he did” & “No he didn’t” & “He broke the rules” etc.
He totally did head up freestyle w/o goggles and wore a sun visor the whole way (and back).
The only issue of consequence, imo, are the currents. If there was little north bound current, then her speeds indicate that she drafted off the side of the boat (allowed by English Channel rules) or slipstreamed behind the boat (not allowed by English Channel rules).
The English Channel (EC) rules also forbid support kayaks from being in the water (even though the maritime authorities allow kayaks to cross the English Channel).
So in reality, when a swimmer says they will follow EC rules, Chloe McCardel for example, they probably do not really mean ‘yes to drafting, no to kayaks’ . What the swimmer probably means is that they will follow SBCSA rules which are similar, but disallow drafting of… Read more »
I do not think she did anything here worth celebrating to any extreme. Certainly nothing that would warrant a “big payday”.. I also do not see how setting your own rules, and then being evasive about what those rules were is all that noteworthy no matter how many times you have tried to do something…
Perhaps if this served mankind in some way I would be more impressed. I do not know…
“If you are someone who still thinks that her swimming through currents was probably her hopping on a boat, if her being touched by doctors meant her being supported by doctors, or that she was somehow towed by a boat, then you’re flat-out calling her and her team liars. ”
You make it seem like its a horrible thing to be a skeptic of a feat that this woman couldn’t possibly attempt again after four other fails. It can’t be proven that she did or did not cheat, aside from the jellyfish mask debate. So please do not look down upon those that seem to be realists and not optimists that believe she made a name for the sport of… Read more »
TG – if that’s what you got from that portion of this post, then that’s the interpretation you were looking for when you read it. Try taking a step back and not being so defensive, and you might see things differently.
Read the sentence again. If you’re saying that she did one of those things, and she said that she didn’t, then what are you doing? Declaring her a liar. Whether or not you think it’s a positive thing or a negative thing to call her a liar isn’t what I’m making it seem like, it’s how you feel about calling someone a liar.
If I believe that a person is lying, then I take no offense at someone saying… Read more »
Braden- why don’t you try looking at it from the critics side? We live in an age where anti doping tests are common at the elite level, where even the best cheat, such as Cameron van der burgh(don’t think I spelled his name right). Its only natural to be skeptical that a sixty four year old woman could swim that distance. Personally I believe she did it but it would be good to have have an article from the critics point of view.
Danm133 – again, you must be reading the whole post with a defensive eye. When read objectively, there should be no “critic versus not a critic” to it. She answered the questions. There’s not enough proof to prove she did it, there’s not enough proof to prove she didn’t do it. If you don’t believe her, then you’re calling her a liar. That has nothing to do with “critic versus not a critic” or any such point of view. Nowhere in the above post, nor in any comments, have I ever said that it’s not ok to be a critic or to believe her 100%, or to think she’s a liar, or not a liar.
Now, if everyone could stop… Read more »
Braden- Sorry you must have misunderstood me! I’m with you! I’m just saying that it would be interesting so have a critic write an article and present their point of view.