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Irish Olympic Champion Daniel Wiffen Too Ill To Carry Flag At Closing Ceremony

The closing ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games is now behind us, however, the night didn’t go exactly as planned for one gold medalist.

Ireland’s Daniel Wiffen, winner of the men’s 800m free, was set to carry his nation’s flag during the ceremony. However, the 23-year-old had to miss the entire event due to being ill

‘Thanks everyone who reached out. I’m incredibly disappointed to miss out on the opportunity to be flag bearer last night,” Wiffen wrote on social media.

‘Yesterday I was rushed to hospital as I was very unwell with a bug that I am being treated for, and am feeling better now. I hope everyone enjoys the evening.’

In addition to his pool events, Wiffen competed in his first-ever open water swim while in Paris. Swimmers who qualified and raced in the 800m or 1500m free were granted a slot in the 10k open water event in Paris.

Post-race, Wiffen said with a smile that he was ‘never doing it again.’

Although Wiffen doesn’t point to the cause of his illness, we’ve reported how multiple other open water swimmers have suffered various ailments. Germany’s Leonie Beck, for example, vomited nine times and also experienced diarrhea after competing in the Seine River.

The water quality of the Seine came into concern in both the lead-up to the Paris Olympics as well as during potential training sessions and competitions in the last two weeks.

Over a billion euros were spent on the cleaning of the river in hopes of its ability to host the competitions. Swimming in the river was banned since 1923. In late June, the river failed a water quality test as it reported E. Coli levels that were 10x above the acceptable limit. (Swimswam)

We’ve since seen Wiffen land in Dublin along with his teammates and visually appears to be doing better.

 

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Sven
3 months ago

“to swim in the Seine is to swim insane”
-Eleanor Roosevelt

David S
3 months ago

Did he swim in the open water?

Rob
3 months ago

Bad pint, clearly.

Do you ever wonder, like
3 months ago

No need to put Leonie on blast like that omg 💀💀

Spectatorn
3 months ago

Literally a billion euros down the drain.

Yikes
Reply to  Spectatorn
3 months ago

I guess the lesson is don’t F up the environment in the first place bc it’s damn near impossible to fix later

Sapiens Ursus
Reply to  Yikes
3 months ago

It’s not impossible at all

We just gotta stop pretending money is anything other than an arbitrary means of exchange with ourselves. Whatever arbitrary sum is attached to something has no bearing on the human effort that goes into it.

A society that cares enough to take action can solve it. A society that treats the issue like a minor inconvience they just need to allocate the funds for so they can look away and expect it to magically disappear…

Which is why I actually think it’s a good thing this and other greenwashing stunts around these games faceplanted. People, especially younger people, do care and they aren’t drinking the kool-aid. Furthermore, they’re curious about the question is… Read more »

Boknows34
3 months ago

I hope he gets the honour at the Opening Ceremony in LA.

Andysup
3 months ago

He clearly was not as familiar with Open swimming events. He did not know that was not a Baby Ruth floating by him at the feeding station. Swimming in the Seine added new risks that you do not normally have to cover in the pre race debriefing.

John26
3 months ago

Partied too hard?

oxyswim
Reply to  John26
3 months ago

He was just trying to kill the e.coli with alcohol

junglejane
Reply to  John26
3 months ago

yet another one of the many open water and triathlon swimmers who got sick from swimming in the Seine.

SwimGuy
Reply to  John26
3 months ago

mate I’ve participated in some absolute ragers in college and not once did I ever get sent to the hospital. The Seine is the culprit

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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