Abstract

BackgroundThe aim of the present study was to investigate participation and performance trends regarding the nationality of successful solo swimmers in the ‘English Channel Swim’.MethodsThe nationality and swim times for all swimmers who successfully crossed the 33.8-km ‘English Channel’ from 1875 to 2013 were analysed.ResultsBetween 1875 and 2013, the number of successful female (571, 31.4%) and male (1,246, 68.6%) solo swimmers increased exponentially; especially for female British and American swimmers and male British, US-American and Australian swimmers. Most of the swimmers were crossing the ‘English Channel’ from England to France and most of the competitors were from Great Britain, the United States of America, Australia and Ireland. For women, athletes from the United States of America, Australia and Great Britain achieved the fastest swim times. For men, the fastest swim times were achieved by athletes from the United States of America, Great Britain and Australia. Swim times of the annual fastest women from Great Britain and the United States of America decreased across years. For men, swim times decreased across years in the annual fastest swimmers from Australia, Great Britain, Ireland, South Africa and the United States of America. Men were swimming faster from England to France than from France to England compared to women. Swim times became faster across years for both women and men for both directions.ConclusionsBetween 1875 and 2013, the most representative nations in the ‘English Channel Swim’ were Great Britain, the United States of America, Australia and Ireland. The fastest swim times were achieved by athletes from the United States of America, Australia and Great Britain.

Highlights

  • The aim of the present study was to investigate participation and performance trends regarding the nationality of successful solo swimmers in the ‘English Channel Swim’

  • In 1923, the American Henry Sullivan was the third swimmer with 26:50 h:min

  • For men (Figure 9B), the fastest swim times were achieved by athletes from the United States of America (507 ± 28 min for repeated athletes and 518 ± 33 min for non-repeated athletes), Great Britain (527 ± 21 min and 551 ± 29 min, respectively) and Australia (562 ± 66 min and 569 ± 73 min, respectively)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The aim of the present study was to investigate participation and performance trends regarding the nationality of successful solo swimmers in the ‘English Channel Swim’. One of the most famous open-water ultra-distance swimming events is the ‘English Channel Swim’ [6,8]. When all qualifiers for ‘Ironman Hawaii’ were considered, US-American athletes were dominating both participation and performance [22]. This was most probably due to more qualifying races and more slots in the United States of America than in other countries [22]. This overview shows that successful participants in ultraendurance events such as long-distance triathlons and duathlons seem to compete very near to their domicile

Objectives
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call