2024 PARIS SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES
- Pool Swimming: July 27 – August 4, 2024
- Open Water Swimming: August 8 – 9, 2024
- La Défense Arena — Paris, France
- LCM (50 meters)
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- Prelims Live Recaps: Day 1 | Day 2 | Day 3 | Day 4 | Day 5 | Day 6 | Day 7 | Day 8
- Finals Live Recaps: Day 1 | Day 2 | Day 3 | Day 4 | Day 5 | Day 6| Day 7 | Day 8 | Day 9
Many themes wound up spanning the length of the 9-day Olympic swimming competition in Paris.
One of them was the fact that several podiums saw swimmers over the 20-something mark in terms of age, giving inspiration to athletes around the world in terms of career longevity.
For instance, the average age of the men’s 50m freestyle podium was 30. Winner Cameron McEvoy of Australia is 30, runner-up Ben Proud of Great Britain is 29 and bronze medalist Florent Manaudou of France is 33.
Sarah Sjostrom, the double champion in the 50m and 100m freestyle events on the women’s side, is 30 years of age as is Australian women’s 4x100m freestyle gold medal winner Emma McKeon.
Competing as a swimmer on the older age of the spectrum isn’t entirely new. We’ve seen American Dara Torres race in Beijing at 41 while 4 years earlier Dutch ace Inge de Bruijn topped the 50m free podium in Athens at nearly 31.
However, this fact doesn’t erase the awe and motivation others can draw from those who play the long game, sometimes waiting until the twilight of their career to reap an Olympic medal.
Kyle Chalmers of Australia said during the Paris competition that ‘he’s not retiring anytime soon.’
He followed that up by saying, “I’m only 26 and hoping to continue on.
“My mind is very strong, it’s just how long my body can keep up for. But I think I will continue to swim as long as I possibly can.
“I love coming to competitions like this and seeing my mates from all over the world. Hopefully I have a few more years ahead of me.”
Head coach Rohan Taylor relayed his thoughts on career longevity, commenting, “There’s a lot of support there to allow the athletes time to take a break and come back.
“We’ve seen examples of athletes taking time off and coming back and building back into peak performance. They are starting to realise they can extend their careers and I hope it continues.
McEvoy was one such athlete who took an entire year off swim training following the Tokyo Olympic Games. He wound up taking 2023 World Championships gold in the 50m free, silver this year in Doha and now his top prize, gold in Paris.
Taylor continued, “We are starting to see athletes performing extremely well at an older age. When I was swimming, I finished around 21 and thought that was old. Now the system is there to support it and I hope that will continue to happen.
“Talent doesn’t go away. Cam is an example. He went on a bit of a journey, we kept in touch and I said whatever we need to do to support you, we will. As long as I’m in the role I’m committed to that and we are committed to that as a sport.”
McKeon just announced her retirement and similar news may follow other nations’ athletes. But it remains that, as long as swimmers have a solid support system, a healthy body and mind, and the drive to continue, the elite-level precedent has been set.
I do, but there might not be a lot of people that do. Would been neat for people to see what they did.
Amanda won her first Olympic medals in 1996, and then won more in 2000, and 2004 before finishing her Olympic career in 2008 and finishing 5th in the 200 Breaststroke at the 2012 US Olympic Trials a little before turning 31).
bonk
At the age of 30, Katinka Hosszu won the W 200 IM and W 400 IM at the 2019 World Aquatics Championships.
At the age of 30, Federica Pellegrini won the W 200 FR at the 2019 World Aquatics Championships. Ironically, the aforementioned victory was Federica’s fastest textile performance (1:54.22) in the W 200 FR.
Speaking of ages, I nailed it in the comments here:
https://staging2.swimswam.com/a-closer-look-at-the-stealthy-six-set-to-disrupt-the-paris2024-olympics/#comment-991790
Pop and Richards went 1-2 in the 2 free, otherwise no one else on the list made an individual final.
(There are also a number of other gems, such as dudes pointing out Marchand, Liendo could be Doing Things by Paris, and that MA would miss the team, lol. Also not giving the guy that mentioned Alexy any credit b/c he also said Curtiss.)
Where do you even store a comment for 3 years?!
I made a calendar event, lol
(Tho it didn’t point to that comment, just the post.)
I appreciate the commitment
Wow didn’t even remember commenting there, feels like so long ago
But I was right about Manaudou lol
I long for a time where we’ll be able to see our previous comments all in one place
Truly, the dream. Actual accounts!
That would be good. It is impossible to look back at what one posts, particularly when there night be a thousand comments on an article.
Whether you’re Shirley Temple or Betty White, dream big!
Now just add the damn stroke 50s and we’ll see even more longevity in some of our best sprinters.
Explain yourselves, down-voters.
No more medal inflation!
Do you mean total number of medals or medal possibilities for individual swimmers?
Was looking around for other things so it took so long that I could not edit the last post:
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In some aspects I am for it, those are the fastest races for each stroke, the most sprinting we have in our sport.
The part of me that is against it is that I feel we are battling other issues first when it comes to our sport and the Olympics including that we have a lot of the spots that we have are being used for more than 1 or 2 relay swims. I think this issue could be harder to solve if we also deal with adding 50’s to the Olympics even thou those are related to… Read more »
Sure, take out semis then
There’s more than enough events in swimming. Think of the likes of Keely Hodgkinson, who’s just won Gold in the 800m. It is possible she may also do the 1500m at some point in the future, I suppose, but she only has the chance of one medal at a games.
50 free is 20+ seconds of power and technical excellence. That’s exactly what a healthy 40 year old still can do in this sport if they are motivated enough.
Dressel 50 free for LA is back on the menu
I’d love to see what he can do when I focuses on pure sprint training. I hope they’d be open to that in Florida