100 Meters For Sailors, Obstacle & Underwater Races: Unknown Disciplines In Olympic Swimming

This article originally appeared in the 2024 Olympic Preview edition of SwimSwam Magazine, courtesy of author Aglaia Pezzato. Subscribe to the SwimSwam Magazine here.

In 2022, nearly two years from the beginning of the Paris Games, the new swimming competition program was announced. The schedule was extended and expanded to nine days of competitions, plus two days dedicated to open water marathons. Nine days out of 16 total days of the Olympics. (if we exclude the day dedicated to the opening ceremony and some rounds of tournaments that are held before the official start). Swimming, therefore, occupies more than half of the Olympic time, albeit sharing this space with numerous other sports but knowing that a lot of media attention is focused on the pool finals. Nine days to decree 35 Olympic titles: 17 female, 17 male, and one mixed. The latest addition to the Olympic program was the 4×100 mixed medley, introduced at the Tokyo 2020 edition along with parity in the longer freestyle events that now see both men and women competing in the 800 and 1500.

Although we are now accustomed to thinking and defining some events as Olympic distances, and especially considering with some skepticism those that remain non-Olympic such as the 50 breaststroke, backstroke, or butterfly, we should not imagine that the Olympic program has always been as we see it today — quite the opposite.

Let’s start from the beginning, namely from the first modern edition of the Olympic Games, Athens 1896. On this occasion, there were four swimming events, reserved only for male athletes, like all the other disciplines of this first Olympic edition, which took place on April 11, 1896, in the bay of Zea, in the cold waters (13°C/55°F) and rough sea near Piraeus, Greece. Nearly 20,000 spectators attended the races. The distances in the program were 100 meters, 100 meters for sailors, 500 meters, and 1200 meters.

The swimming race reserved for sailors (exclusively Greek) is a curious competition never repeated in Olympic disciplines. It should be noted that the winner, Ioannis Malokinis, swam the 100-meter freestyle in a time almost double that of Hajós, the winner of the race for the same distance open to all. There was also supposed to be a 500-meter freestyle race for sailors, but it was not held for unknown reasons.

After the first edition of 1896, for a few more years Olympic swimming experimented with distances and types of races that now sound strange to us, such as underwater swimming in Paris 1900, where the result was a score combined from the meters swum and the time of apnea endurance. The discipline had little success because spectators could not see the progress of the race, and it was removed from the program. Paris 1900 was also the only edition for the 200-meter obstacle race, which consisted of climbing a pole, passing over a row of boats, and then swimming back under the boats.

The 1904 edition in St. Louis was the only occasion when races were held in yards, creating Olympic champions with bizarre distances like the 880-yd. freestyle or 440-yd. breaststroke, mostly borrowed from the American standards in athletics at the time (because they were approximately equivalent to their meters-based cousins).

To see women compete in an Olympic program for the first time, we had to wait until 1912, in Stockholm. On that occasion, 27 swimmers representing seven nations made their debut in the only individual race scheduled, the 100 freestyle. Four teams instead took part in the 4×100 freestyle relay.

To see a program truly like what we are used to seeing today, we need to jump to Mexico City 1968 when 11 new events were introduced compared to Tokyo ’64, bringing the total to 15 men’s and 14 women’s events. The only differences remaining were the 800 freestyle reserved for women, the 1500 freestyle for men, and the 4×200 freestyle relay, which was only for men. The 4×200 freestyle relay for women at the Games was introduced in Atlanta 1996.

Currently, the World Championships program differs from the Olympics due to the presence of the 50-meter breaststroke, backstroke, butterfly, and in some continental competitions such as the Europeans, mixed freestyle relays.

We do not know if the IOC will again expand the already very extensive Olympic program, but for sure a lot has changed in the water under the Olympic rings’ shadow.

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Current coach
4 months ago

Anyone know how they measured the 440 / 880? 20 yard pool? Open water? Or like, was it actually a 400 meter swim they called the 440-yarder?

Dan
Reply to  Current coach
4 months ago

They used a 55yd pool

Bo Swims
Reply to  Dan
4 months ago

55 yard pools were used at the Commonwealth Games until the 60s

Blackflag82
Reply to  Current coach
4 months ago

It was also common place in 25y pools to have them swim an extra partial lap and end the race at the far flags. There are some videos on yt from NCAAs I believe.

Dan
4 months ago

From the 1920’s we also had the 400m Breaststroke (Men).
In the early days of the Olympics, most pools were temporary, either in a lake/river/bay or similar before being a temporary pool in a stadium and those were 100m long (except for St. Louise which was 55yds).

Oldswimmer
4 months ago

In 1960, at age 7, I watched my first swim competition while holding my breath from an underwater position. I watched my father at age 40, compete in an event called the “Men’s Plunge” at Ward Parkway Country Club in Kansas City Missouri. My father won the second-place trophy, which, although now broken, I still have.

According to a New York Times sportswriter, the Plunge for Distance was a contest that favored “mere mountains of fat who fall in the water more or less successfully and depend upon inertia to get their points for them.” Once called the “slowest thing in the way of athletic competition,” it is worth considering that The Plunge was an event at the 1904… Read more »

Oldswimmer
Reply to  Oldswimmer
4 months ago

Correction: 1904 St Louis Olympics

OldBulldog
4 months ago

Bring back the obstacle swim, I say! It would be better television than American Ninja Warrior.

About Aglaia Pezzato

Aglaia Pezzato

Cresce a Padova e dintorni dove inizialmente porta avanti le sue due passioni, la danza classica e il nuoto, preferendo poi quest’ultimo. Azzurrina dal 2007 al 2010 rappresenta l’Italia con la nazionale giovanile in diverse manifestazioni internazionali fino allo stop forzato per due delicati interventi chirurgici. 2014 Nel 2014 fa il suo esordio …

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