Category Archives: Open water swimming

Nathan Adrian back in area for Swim Across America

Back in July I wrote this blog post about Nathan Adrian’s participation in the Swim Across America to benefit Seattle Cancer Care Alliance and to honor his friend and teammate Matt Benoit, who died of cancer in April.

Well, the swim is Saturday at Luther Burbank Park, Mercer Island, and it looks like it’s going to be a gorgeous, and warm, day.

Nathan was in Seattle today, he co-hosted Evening Magazine and was on one of the local TV stations to promote Saturday’s event.

Here’s a link that was posted on his Twitter page;

And the full link is here…

Also, here is a link to Nathan’s SAA page. He is swimming the half-mile distance, which starts at 8:30 a.m.

Bremerton Y hosting open water swim in August

The Bremerton YMCA will be hosting the Wildcat Lake Open Water swim Aug. 27 at Wildcat Lake County Park.

“It is the only officially organized open water swim this side of the Puget Sound and we are expecting around 400 swimmers,” said Bremerton YMCA assistant aquatics director Greg Mackem. “It will be a fun event that will include a wildcat mascot rooting swimmers on and other fun entertainment.”

Mackem said he wants to encourage swimmers in the older age groups to participate and the event will have plenty of lifeguards and safety precautions available.

 

The event will feature a 1-mile swim and a 1/2-mile swim.

Check-in opens at 7:30 a.m.  The 1/2 mile race starts at 9 a.m., the 1-mile race will start at approximately 9:45am.

It is open to all ages and there will be prizes for the following, both male and female, in the following age groups: 14 & Under, 15-19, 20-24, 25-29, 30-34, 35-39, 40-44, 45-49, 50-54, 55-59, 60-69, 70-79 and 80 & Over. There is a separate division for those wearing wetsuits.

 

Registration is now open and includes early bird and other discounts:

Now until July 31

$30 – 1/2 Mile or 1 Mile  ($25 for youth-under 18 and seniors-60 and over)

$40 – Both Races ($35 for youth-under 18 and seniors-60 and over)
August 1-August 22

$45 – 1/2 Mile or 1 Mile  ($40 for youth-under 18 and seniors-60 and over)

$55 – Both Races ($50 for youth-under 18 and seniors-60 and over)

Additional Discounts

*Current YMCA members (in Pierce & Kitsap Counties) receive additional $5 off entry fee.

*New Bremerton Family YMCA memberships are eligible on same day to receive a FREE entry.

 

AP Investigation: Olympic teams to swim, boat in Rio’s filth

This. Wow.

Great Associated Press investigative piece on the filthy waters in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, a year out from the Olympics.

I don’t see how it’s possible at this point that the waters will be safe and clean for anyone in the next year. I can see this becoming a huge problem for Brazil and the IOC.

(And think about the millions of people, including children, subjected to this disgusting water right now!)

AP Investigation: Olympic teams to swim, boat in Rio’s filth
BRAD BROOKS, Associated Press
JENNY BARCHFIELD, Associated Press

RIO DE JANEIRO — Athletes competing in next year’s Summer Olympics here will be swimming and boating in waters so contaminated with human feces that they risk becoming violently ill and unable to compete in the games, an Associated Press investigation has found.

An AP analysis of water quality revealed dangerously high levels of viruses and bacteria from human sewage in Olympic and Paralympic venues — results that alarmed international experts and dismayed competitors training in Rio, some of whom have already fallen ill with fevers, vomiting and diarrhea.

It is the first independent comprehensive testing for both viruses and bacteria at the Olympic sites.

Brazilian officials have assured that the water will be safe for the Olympic athletes. But the government does not test for viruses.

Extreme water pollution is common in Brazil, where the majority of sewage is not treated. Raw waste runs through open-air ditches to streams and rivers that feed the Olympic water sites.

As a result, Olympic athletes are almost certain to come into contact with disease-causing viruses that in some tests measured up to 1.7 million times the level of what would be considered hazardous on a Southern California beach.

Despite decades of official pledges to clean up the mess, the stench of raw sewage still greets travelers touching down at Rio’s international airport. Prime beaches are deserted because the surf is thick with putrid sludge, and periodic die-offs leave the Olympic lake, Rodrigo de Freitas, littered with rotting fish.

“What you have there is basically raw sewage,” said John Griffith, a marine biologist at the Southern California Coastal Water Research Project. Griffith examined the protocols, methodology and results of the AP tests.

“It’s all the water from the toilets and the showers and whatever people put down their sinks, all mixed up, and it’s going out into the beach waters. Those kinds of things would be shut down immediately if found here,” he said, referring to the U.S.

Vera Oliveira, head of water monitoring for Rio’s municipal environmental secretariat, said officials are not testing viral levels at the Olympic lake, the water quality of which is the city’s responsibility.

The other Olympic water venues are under the control of the Rio state environmental agency.

Leonardo Daemon, coordinator of water quality monitoring for the state’s environmental agency, said officials are strictly following Brazilian regulations on water quality, which are all based on bacteria levels, as are those of almost all nations.

“What would be the standard that should be followed for the quantity of virus? Because the presence or absence of virus in the water … needs to have a standard, a limit,” he said. “You don’t have a standard for the quantity of virus in relation to human health when it comes to contact with water.”

Olympic hopefuls will be diving into Copacabana’s surf this Saturday during a triathlon Olympic qualifier event, while rowers take to the lake’s water beginning Wednesday for the 2015 World Rowing Junior Championships. Test events for sailing and marathon swimming take place later in August.

Over 10,000 athletes from 205 nations are expected to compete in next year’s Olympics. Nearly 1,400 of them will be sailing in the waters near Marina da Gloria in Guanabara Bay, swimming off Copacabana beach, and canoeing and rowing on the brackish waters of the Rodrigo de Freitas Lake.

The AP commissioned four rounds of testing in each of those three Olympic water venues, and also in the surf off Ipanema Beach, which is popular with tourists but where no events will be held. Thirty-seven samples were checked for three types of human adenovirus, as well as rotavirus, enterovirus and fecal coliforms.

The AP viral testing, which will continue in the coming year, found not one water venue safe for swimming or boating, according to global water experts.

Instead, the test results found high counts of active and infectious human adenoviruses, which multiply in the intestinal and respiratory tracts of people. These are viruses that are known to cause respiratory and digestive illnesses, including explosive diarrhea and vomiting, but can also lead to more serious heart, brain and other diseases.

The concentrations of the viruses in all tests were roughly equivalent to that seen in raw sewage — even at one of the least-polluted areas tested, the Copacabana Beach, where marathon and triathlon swimming will take place and where many of the expected 350,000 foreign tourists may take a dip.

“Everybody runs the risk of infection in these polluted waters,” said Dr. Carlos Terra, a hepatologist and head of a Rio-based association of doctors specializing in the research and treatment of liver diseases.

Kristina Mena, a U.S. expert in risk assessment for waterborne viruses, examined the AP data and estimated that international athletes at all water venues would have a 99 percent chance of infection if they ingested just three teaspoons of water — though whether a person will fall ill depends on immunity and other factors.

Besides swimmers, athletes in sailing, canoeing and to a lesser degree rowing often get drenched when competing, and breathe in mist as well. Viruses can enter the body through the mouth, eyes, any orifice, or even a small cut.

The Rodrigo de Freitas Lake, which was largely cleaned up in recent years, was thought be safe for rowers and canoers. Yet AP tests found its waters to be among the most polluted for Olympic sites, with results ranging from 14 million adenoviruses per liter on the low end to 1.7 billion per liter at the high end.

By comparison, water quality experts who monitor beaches in Southern California become alarmed if they see viral counts reaching 1,000 per liter.

“If I were going to be in the Olympics,” said Griffith, the California water expert, “I would probably go early and get exposed and build up my immunity system to these viruses before I had to compete, because I don’t see how they’re going to solve this sewage problem.”

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A “HUGE RISK” FOR ATHLETES

Ivan Bulaja, the Croatian-born coach of Austria’s 49er-class sailing team, has seen it firsthand. His sailors have lost valuable training days after falling ill with vomiting and diarrhea.

“This is by far the worst water quality we’ve ever seen in our sailing careers,” said Bulaja.

Training earlier this month in Guanabara Bay, Austrian sailor David Hussl said he and his teammates take precautions, washing their faces immediately with bottled water when they get splashed by waves and showering the minute they return to shore. And yet Hussl said he’s fallen ill several times.

“I’ve had high temperatures and problems with my stomach,” he said. “It’s always one day completely in bed and then usually not sailing for two or three days.”

It is a huge risk for the athletes, the coach said.

“The Olympic medal is something that you live your life for,” Bulaja said, “and it can really happen that just a few days before the competition you get ill and you’re not able to perform at all.”

Dr. Alberto Chebabo, who heads Rio’s Infectious Diseases Society, said the raw sewage has led to “endemic” public health woes among Brazilians, primarily infectious diarrhea in children.

By adolescence, he said, people in Rio have been so exposed to the viruses they build up antibodies. But foreign athletes and tourists won’t have that protection.

“Somebody who hasn’t been exposed to this lack of sanitation and goes to a polluted beach obviously has a much higher risk of getting infected,” Chebabo said.

An estimated 60 percent of Brazilian adults have been exposed to hepatitis A, said Terra, the Rio hepatologist. Doctors urge foreigners heading to Rio, whether athletes or tourists, to be vaccinated against hepatitis A. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also recommends travelers to Brazil get vaccinated for typhoid.

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UNDER A MICROSCOPE

The AP commissioned Fernando Spilki, a virologist and coordinator of the environmental quality program at Feevale University in southern Brazil, to conduct the water tests.

Spilki’s testing looked for three different types of human adenovirus that are typical “markers” of human sewage in Brazil. In addition, he tested for enteroviruses, the most common cause of upper respiratory tract infections in the young. He also searched for signs of rotavirus, the main cause of gastroenteritis globally.

The tests so far show that Rio’s waters “are chronically contaminated,” he said. “The quantity of fecal matter entering the waterbodies in Brazil is extremely high. Unfortunately, we have levels comparable to some African nations, to India.”

Griffith, the California expert, said the real concern isn’t for what Spilki actually measured, noting that “there are very likely to be nastier bugs in there that weren’t searched for and that are out there lurking.”

There is no lack of illness in Rio, but there is a severe shortage of health data related to dirty water, medical experts said.

The maladies often hit people hard, but most don’t go see a doctor, so no data is collected.

Globally, however, rotavirus accounts for about 2 million hospitalizations and over 450,000 deaths of children worldwide each year, according to the World Health Organization.

The AP testing found rotavirus on three separate occasions at Olympic sites — twice at the lake and once at a beach next to the Marina da Gloria, where sailors are expected to launch their boats.

Mena, an associate professor of public health at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston and an expert in water quality, conducted what she called a “conservative” risk assessment for Olympic athletes participating in water sports in Rio, assuming they would ingest 16 milliliters of water, or three teaspoons — far less than athletes themselves say they take in.

She found “an infection risk of 99 percent,” she said.

“Given those viral concentration levels, do I think somebody should be exposed to those amounts? The answer is no.”

The AP also measured fecal coliform bacteria, single-celled organisms that live in the intestines of humans and animals. Fecal coliforms can suggest the presence of cholera, dysentery, hepatitis A and typhoid.

In 75 percent of the samples taken at the Olympic lake, the number of fecal coliforms exceeded Brazil’s legal limit for “secondary contact,” such as boating or rowing — in two samples spiking to over 10 times the accepted level. The Marina da Gloria venue exceeded the limit only once, while at Rio’s most popular tourist beach, Ipanema, fecal coliforms tested at three times the acceptable level in a single sample. At Copacabana, the AP tests found no violations of fecal coliform counts.

Fecal coliforms have long been used by most governments as a marker to determine whether bodies of water are polluted because they are relatively easy and cheap to test and find. Brazil uses only bacterial testing when determining water quality.

In Rio, the fecal coliform levels were not as astronomical as the viral numbers the AP found. That gap is at the heart of a global debate among water experts, many of whom are pushing governments to adopt viral as well as bacterial testing to determine if recreational waters are safe.

That’s because fecal coliform bacteria from sewage can survive only a short time in water, especially in the salty and sunny conditions around Rio. Human adenoviruses have been shown to last several months, with some studies even indicating they can last years.

That means that even if Rio magically collected and treated all its sewage tomorrow, its waters would stay polluted for a long time.

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“A WASTED OPPORTUNITY”

In its Olympic bid, Rio officials vowed the games would “regenerate Rio’s magnificent waterways” through a $4 billion government expansion of basic sanitation infrastructure.

It was the latest in a long line of promises that have already cost Brazilian taxpayers more than $1 billion — with very little to show for it.

Rio’s historic sewage problem spiraled over the past decades as the population exploded, with many of the metropolitan area’s 12 million residents settling in the vast hillside slums that ring the bay.

Waste flows into more than 50 streams that empty into the once-crystalline Guanabara Bay. An eye-watering stench emanates from much of the bay and its palm-lined beaches, which were popular swimming spots as late as the 1970s but are now perpetually off-limits for swimmers.

Tons of household trash — margarine tubes, deflated soccer balls, waterlogged couches and washing machines — line the shore and form islands of refuse.

Starting in 1993, Japan’s international cooperation agency poured hundreds of millions of dollars into a Guanabara cleanup project. The Inter-American Development Bank issued $452 million in loans for more works.

A culture of mismanagement stymied any progress. For years, none of four sewage treatment plants built with the Japanese funds operated at full capacity. One of the plants in the gritty Duque de Caxias neighborhood didn’t treat a drop of waste from its construction in 2000 through its inauguration in 2014. For 14 years, it wasn’t connected to the sewage mains.

By then, the Japanese agency rated the project as “unsatisfactory,” with “no significant improvements in the water quality of the bay.”

As part of its Olympic project, Brazil promised to build eight treatment facilities to filter out much of the sewage and prevent tons of household trash from flowing into the Guanabara Bay. Only one has been built.

The fluorescent green lagoons that hug the Olympic Park and which the government’s own data shows are among the most polluted waters in Rio were to be dredged, but the project got hung up in bureaucratic hurdles and has yet to start.

“Brazilian authorities promised the moon in order to win their Olympic bid and as usual they’re not making good on those promises,” said Mario Moscatelli, a biologist who has spent 20 years lobbying for a cleanup of Rio’s waterways. “I’m sad but not surprised.”

As the clock ticks down, local officials have dialed back their promises. Rio Gov. Luiz Fernando Pezao has acknowledged “there’s not going to be time” to finish the cleanup of the bay ahead of the games.

Rio Mayor Eduardo Paes has said it’s a “shame” the Olympic promises wouldn’t be met, adding the games are proving “a wasted opportunity” as far as the waterways are concerned.

But the Rio Olympic organizing committee’s website still states that a key legacy of the games will be “the rehabilitation and protection of the area’s environment, particularly its bays and canals” in areas where water sports will take place.

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Associated Press sports writer Stephen Wade and senior producer Yesica Fisch contributed to this report.

AP: Nyad believes maturity helped achieve record swim

Here’s the story from the Associated Press’ Jennifer Kay on the triumphant swim of Diana Nyad who on Monday completed the 110 mile swim from Cuba to Florida without a shark cage.

 

KEY WEST, Fla. — The clocks Diana Nyad uses to time her training swims show that she’s a slower swimmer than she used to be. That’s only natural: At age 64, she acknowledges she is no longer the “thoroughbred stallion” she was “back in the day.”

And yet, the endurance athlete says she felt stronger than ever when she completed her successful effort to become the first person to swim 110 miles from Cuba to Florida without a shark cage.

“Now I’m more like a Clydesdale: I’m a little thicker and stronger — literally stronger, I can lift more weights,” Nyad told The Associated Press in a one-on-one interview Tuesday, a day after she finished her 53-hour, record-setting swim.

“I feel like I could walk through a brick wall. … I think I’m truly dead center in the prime of my life at 64.”

Nyad isn’t alone among aging athletes who are dominating their sports.

Earlier this year, 48-year-old Bernard Hopkins became the oldest boxer to win a major title, scoring a 12-round unanimous decision over Tavoris Cloud to claim the IBF light heavyweight championship.

Tennis player Martina Navratilova played in the mixed doubles competition at Wimbledon in her late 40s, and hockey legend Gordie Howe played in the NHL in his 50s.

Thousands of U.S. athletes, including 60-year-old Kay Glynn, also compete during the Senior Olympics.

Glynn, of Hastings, Iowa, has won six gold medals in pole vaulting at the Senior Olympics and set a new pole vaulting world record for her age in the 2011 National Senior Games.

Older athletes tend to find more success in endurance events than power events such as sprinting and other sports that rely on “fast- twitch” muscle fibers, which are more difficult to preserve later in life, noted Wojtek Chodzko-Zajko, a physiologist at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

But just because Nyad was swimming rather than pounding her joints against the concrete doesn’t mean she didn’t achieve a remarkable feat, Chodzko-Zajko said.

“This ultra, super-length swimming is brutal regardless,” he said, adding that another reason athletes are able to endure is because they often train smarter and have a mental concentration that is well honed over decades.

“She’s one of any number of people who are redefining what happens with aging,” said Dr. Michael J. Joyner, an anesthesiologist and exercise researcher at Mayo Clinic.

“If you start with a high capacity, you have some reserves,” Joyner said. “You can lose some absolute power, but what you lose in power you can make up for with experience and strategy and better preparation.”

Nyad first attempted swimming from Cuba to Florida at age 29 with a shark cage. She didn’t try again until 2011 when she was 61.

She tried twice more in the past two years before beginning her fifth attempt Saturday morning with a leap off the seawall of the Hemingway Marina into the warm waters off Havana. She paused occasionally for nourishment, but never left the water until she reached the white sand beaches of the Keys and waded ashore.

Nyad says her age and maturity should not be discounted when measuring her most recent success.

“It’s not so much the physical,” she said. “To my mind all of us … we mature emotionally … and we get stronger mentally because we have a perspective on what this life is all about,” Nyad said.

“It’s more emotional. I feel calmer, I feel that the world isn’t going to end if I don’t make it. And I’m not so ego-involved: ‘What are people going to think of me?'” I’m really focused on why I want to do it.”

Australian Susie Maroney successfully swam the Straits in 1997 at age 22 with a shark cage, which besides protection from the predators, has a drafting effect that pulls a swimmer along.

In 2012, 49-year-old Australian Penny Palfrey swam 79 miles toward Florida without a cage before strong currents forced her to stop. This June, Palfrey’s countrywoman Chloe McCardel, 28, made it 11 hours and 14 miles before jellyfish stings ended her bid.

Nyad admitted Tuesday that she was glad when McCardel didn’t make it before she had had a chance to, but she did add, to laughter from her team, that “I didn’t want her to get bitten by jellyfish or die or anything.”

Nyad said Tuesday that that she wasn’t finished with marathon swims. She plans to swim for 48 hours straight, accompanied by celebrities swimming laps alongside her, in a specially designed swimming pool that will be erected in New York City next month to raise money for Hurricane Sandy survivors.

Although the swimmer insists she wasn’t trying to prove anything as a 64-year-old — “I didn’t do this because I was in my 60s. I just happened to be in my 60s,” she says — she acknowledges that her success is having an impact, “not just on people of my generation but on younger people.”

“I have a godson who’s 14 and he texted me yesterday and said, ‘I’m never in my life again going to call someone in their 60s old. It’s over. You just proved that youth doesn’t have anything to do with age.'”

And at one point during her AP interview Tuesday, the bronzed, muscular athlete couldn’t resist sharing a message of encouragement and solidarity with those of her generation:

“Baby Boomer power!” she declared, with a triumphant fist pump.

 

USA Swimming announces 2013-14 National team

There were really no surprises as to who will represent USA for the upcoming season whether in national or international competition.

Ryan Lochte, Nathan Adrian of Bremerton, Cullen Jones, Matt Grevers, Natalie Coughlin and Missy Franklin.

Here’s the press release from USA Swimming:

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Headlined by 2013 world champions Missy Franklin (Centennial, Colo.), Matt Grevers (Lake Forest, Ill.), Katie Ledecky (Bethesda, Md.) and Ryan Lochte (Daytona Beach, Fla.), USA Swimming today announced the 112-member roster of the 2013-14 USA Swimming National Team.

Additionally, USA Swimming named over 100 of the nation’s top 18-and-under swimmers to its 2013-14 National Junior Team roster. Gunnar Bentz (Atlanta, Ga.) and Becca Mann (Homer Glen, Ill.) qualified for the squad in five events apiece.

Fresh off winning four medals at the 2013 FINA World Championships, Lochte qualified for the National Team in a team-best five events – 100m free, 200m free, 200m back, 100m fly and 200m IM. Franklin, who became the first woman to win six gold medals at a single FINA World Championships, made the National Team in four events – 100m free, 200m free, 100m back and 200m back.

Ledecky, who won four gold medals and set two world records at 2013 Worlds, earned a National Team roster spot in the 200m, 400m and 800m free events. The reigning world and Olympic champion in the 100m back, Grevers made the squad in the 100m back and 100m free.

Other swimmers to qualify for the National Team in at least three events include: Elizabeth Beisel (Sanderstown, R.I.; 200m back, 200m IM, 400m IM), Tyler Clary (Riverside, Calif.; 200m back, 200m fly, 400m IM), Maya DiRado (Santa Rosa, Calif.; 200m free, 200m fly, 400m IM), Sarah Henry (Garner, N.C.; 400m free, 800m free, 200m IM, 400m IM) and Megan Romano (St. Petersburg, Fla.; 50m free, 100m free, 100m back).

Swimmers were selected for the USA Swimming National Team based on their times in Olympic events from the combined results of the 2013 FINA World Championships, the 2013 Phillips 66 National Championships, the 2013 U.S. Open and the 2013 World University Games. Swimmers with the top six times in each event made the National Team, however, relay lead-offs and time trials were not included.

The 2013-14 National Junior Team is comprised of athletes with the six fastest times, in Olympic events only, from the combined results of all USA Swimming or FINA sanctioned meets from Jan. 1, 2013, to Sept. 2, 2013. Also, all members of the 2013 FINA World Junior Championships team are included on the roster. The complete roster for the 2013-14 USA Swimming National Junior Team can be found online.

Phelps Swimming offering Open Water instruction for pool swimmers

The headline at swimswam.com was a little misleading, but Michael Phelps Swimming is entering the world of Open Water swimming by offering three-hour instructional clinics for pool swimmers who want to make that transition.

There will be two clinics offered at Mercer Island and Bellevue.

Here’s the link for more information.

 

AP: FINA preparing to set open water temp limit

Honestly, I just shake my head. Think about. If you’re just recreational swimming to beat the heat, would you want to swim in water that was nearly 88 degrees? Now think about the high-intensity training and elite-level athletes who are exerting themselves in that water?

Anybody know what the water temperature is for the pool? Is it the same? Cooler? Hotter? What gives FINA?

Here’s the story from Andrew Dampf of the Associated Press:

ROME  — Swimming’s governing body is preparing to set a fixed maximum water temperature that doesn’t meet U.S. standards that were introduced after the death of American swimmer Fran Crippen.

At meetings in Barcelona this week, FINA is about to set an upper limit of 87.8 degrees for open water events.

USA Swimming set a domestic limit of 85 degrees in the wake of Crippen’s death during a sweltering 10-kilometer race in the United Arab Emirates in October, 2010.

“The safety of our athletes is extremely important to USA Swimming. When it comes to international open water competition, we would advise our athletes not to compete if the water temperature is above 29.45 degrees (Celsius) ,” USA Swimming said in a statement to The Associated Press on Tuesday.

“If the athlete does decide to swim, USA Swimming will ask them to sign a waiver and release,” the statement continued. “That being said, our on-site staff will carry out their normal roles as long as U.S. athletes are competing regardless of conditions.”

Previously, FINA had only a suggested limit of 86 degrees.

FINA’s technical open water swimming committee recommended the new limit Tuesday following a study by the University of Otago in New Zealand, in collaboration with the IOC and the International Triathlon Union.

“They told us 31 and that’s what we decided on,” FINA executive director Cornel Marculescu told The AP by phone. “It’s not a matter of being happy or not happy. It was a scientific study and that’s what we are following.”

The limit is expected to be approved Wednesday in a vote by a FINA congress that is open to two delegates from each of the 203 recognized national swimming federations.

FINA’s minimum temperature of 60.8 degrees remains in place.

The world championships open in Barcelona on Saturday with the men’s and women’s 5-kilometer open water events in the city’s harbor, just like at the 2003 worlds in Barcelona.

“They have already tested the quality of the water and it is fantastic in the harbor,” Marculescu said.

More events such as the 10K, 25K and team event will follow.

Hot water was also an issue at the last worlds in Shanghai two years ago, when the 25K race continued even though the water temperature climbed above the supposed safe point. Ten of the 29 men who started the race dropped out, including defending champion Valerio Cleri of Italy, as did four of the 21 female starters.