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Shallow Olympic Pool in Paris May Be Slowing Athletes Down Big Time

Shallow Olympic Pool in Paris May Be Slowing Athletes Down Big Time
Clay Walker

Al Bello/Getty
A shallow pool at the Paris Olympic Games may be slowing swimmers down—resulting in sluggish times and fewer record-breaking performances.

The pool at París La Défense Arena is 2.2 meters deep (7.2 feet)—a whopping 3 feet shallower than pools at previous games, according to The Wall Street Journal.

In a sport often decided by milliseconds, the faster rebound of waves from the swimmer’s movements reverberating off the shallower bottom may be slowing this year’s athletes down, the Journal concluded after consulting multiple experts in the field.

The pool itself was constructed on a rugby pitch usually home to the Racing 92, a French rugby club.

“To go deeper, they would have had to do significant modifications, and structurally, there are some concerns,” Olympic pool designer John Ireland told the WSJ.

World Aquatics, the organization that regulates Olympic pools, ruled in 2023 that the minimum depth for a pool at any future games needed to be 2.5 meters—but Paris got its pool approved four years earlier, so it was not held to this standard.

Despite the speculation about the underwhelming scores, an Olympic spokesperson told the WSJ that “Paris 2024 has received no reports of athlete complaints over the depth of the pool.”
Summary
Shallow Olympic Pool in Paris (2.2 meters deep) may be slowing swimmers, causing slower times and fewer records at the 2024 Games compared to previous events. The pool was built on a rugby pitch, and structurally modifying it for a deeper depth posed concerns. Despite speculation about
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ID: bb5237bc-30e5-4153-a4df-7fa651e4e5d3

Category ID: article

Created: 2024/07/30 20:29

Updated: 2025/12/08 11:48

Last Read: 2024/07/30 20:29