SportsIrish swimming champion hospitalized after Seine River race

Irish swimming champion hospitalized after Seine River race

Daniel Wiffen, Ireland's first-ever Olympic gold medalist in swimming, has been hospitalized due to illness. Earlier, he competed in a 6-mile race in the Seine River.

He swam in the Seine at the games. He ended up in the hospital.
He swam in the Seine at the games. He ended up in the hospital.
Images source: © Getty Images, Instagram | Luke Hales

4:03 PM EDT, August 12, 2024

Daniel Wiffen was supposed to be the Irish team's flag bearer during the Olympics' closing ceremony in Paris. Still, he ended up in the hospital due to a mysterious illness. He shared the news about his health via social media.

Thanks everyone who reached out, I’m incredibly disappointed to miss out on the opportunity to be flag bearer last night. Yesterday I rushed to hospital as I was very unwell with a bug that I am being treated for, and am feeling better now, - he wrote on Instagram.

He achieved great success by securing gold in the 875-yard freestyle and bronze in the 1640-yard event. However, his debut in open water, swimming over 6 miles in the Seine, ended in 18th place, leaving him extremely exhausted.

Irish Olympian hospitalized after competition in the Seine River

After the race, Wiffen confessed that it was his first and last time in such a competition, describing the difficulties he experienced as some of the worst in his career. Despite the setback, he emphasized that his decision to leave open-water swimming was not related to the quality of the river's water.

The quality of the water in the Seine had already been a topic of discussion before the Olympics. Since 2015, the French have invested over a billion pounds in the operation to clean the river. However, many athletes complained about feeling unwell after the events. From their accounts, some experienced nausea.

One athlete even said that while swimming, he "saw and felt things he would rather forget".

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