Ten Italians, Including Detti, Quadarella, Burdisso, Test COVID Positive

World champions Gabriele Detti and Simona Quadarella are among ten top Italian swimmers who tested positive for the coronavirus this week.

The Italian Swimming Federation (Federnuoto) announced the results of the test today. The ten athletes were at a high-altitude training camp in Livigno when they were tested for COVID-19. So far, Federnuoto says, all ten have asymptomatic cases. But the positive tests has forced the federation to suspend the camp, and the athletes remain in quarantine.

Here are the athletes who tested positive, per the Italian federation’s announcement:

  1. Gabriele Detti
  2. Simona Quadarella
  3. Federico Burdisso
  4. Martina Caramignoli
  5. Marco de Tullio
  6. Stefano di Cola
  7. Sara Gailli
  8. Edoardo Giorgetti
  9. Matteo Lamberti
  10. Alessio Proietti Colonna

Italy has been hit especially hard by coronavirus tests lately. Federica Pellegrini and Stefania Pirozzi both tested positive before departing for the ISL’s 2020 season. And national teamers Simone Sabbioni and Alice Mizzau both announced positive COVID tests via social media.

The altitude training camp began on October 11. It was originally scheduled to run through November 5, according to the Italian federation, but those plans are now scrapped amid the COVID cluster.

The coronavirus pandemic has disrupted training for athletes across the globe. For a number of Italy’s top athletes, pandemic restrictions were one factor that forced a mass withdrawal from the International Swimming League’s 2020 season in Budapest. This altitude camp was another factor, as it would have overlapped with the entirety of the ISL season.

Detti and Quadarella are both former world champions – Detti won the 800 free in 2017 and Quadarella the 1500 free in 2019.

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Gator
3 years ago

Praying for their speedy recovery!!

Hunter Wants His Laptop Back
3 years ago

If I were 20, I almost think I’d seek out a fraternity party to attend (and supply the beer to boot) just to get the coronavirus over with.

Eddie Morra
Reply to  Hunter Wants His Laptop Back
3 years ago

Amazing username, keep going !! Italian swimmers will be fine in a matter of days.

Hmmmm
Reply to  Hunter Wants His Laptop Back
3 years ago

And then you’d pass it along to someone else, who passes it along, and eventually it makes it to someone like me with a preexisting condition and you kill me.

But hey, at least you’d get it over with.

Hunter Wants His Laptop Back
Reply to  Hmmmm
3 years ago

@Hmmmmmm “… and you kill me.” Probably not. With a preexisting condition, I’m sure that you’re wise enough to stay home and shelter-in-place.

Anonymoose
Reply to  Hmmmm
3 years ago

the virus would kill you nonetheless, not some person.

meeeee
3 years ago

So? go home for 10-14 days and get back to it with little to no worry of getting it again.

Tomek
Reply to  meeeee
3 years ago

I completely agree IMHO

torchbearer
Reply to  meeeee
3 years ago

There is no proof having COVID gives you immunity from getting it again…and when you go home you may infect your parents or grandparents- who may die. This is not a joke.

Hiswimcoach
Reply to  torchbearer
3 years ago

WE CAN NEVER GO BACK TO NORMAL!!!

Ol' Longhorn
Reply to  Hiswimcoach
3 years ago

Scott Atlas speaks.

Corn Pop
Reply to  torchbearer
3 years ago

It has not wiped out the power gerionontolgy set in DC as we had hoped.

tea rex
3 years ago

This probably makes me a bad person, but when I see “Ten Italian Swimmers Test Positive” I’m glad it’s just for covid.
Honestly, speedy recovery.

Corn Pop
Reply to  tea rex
3 years ago

Be like the Austrians & hide the tubing up to a tree outside their hotel window.

Is it snowing yet because the spread in the US & Europe began in the snowfields in early 2020 .

leisurely1:29
3 years ago

Remember when Italy was a hotspot alllll the way back in January? Guess people forgot how serious it still is 9 months later…

Flynn
3 years ago

I think you are likely to see something similar happen in the U.S. with college teams when training really ramps up. Elite athletes tend to get less sick or are asymptomatic, so controlling the spread is impossible unless there are very small training groups.

DrSwimPhil
Reply to  Flynn
3 years ago

Training has been “ramped up” for quite a while at quite a few colleges

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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