Tom Dean Had COVID Twice in Leadup to Racing Under British 200 Free Record

2021 BRITISH SWIMMING SELECTION TRIALS

British swimmer Thomas Dean had COVID twice, he revealed in a post-race interview Sunday. In spite of those challenges, he still swam under the British Record and finishing second to Duncan Scott by .11 seconds.

When asked post-race what his plan was heading into the Olympics, the 20-year old Dean said that “I think just have a block to be honest, leading into summer. After having COVID twice, three weeks out of the pool each time, it’s been pretty brutal coming into trials, with some real disruptions. So, if I can get sort of a block from here to the summer, who knows what might happen.”

https://twitter.com/sirherb_the3rd/status/1383929856832917521?s=11

It is possible, though not common, to be reinfected with COVID-19 after developing antibodies following an infection.

Dean tells SwimSwam that his first infection came in September, the week before he was supposed to fly out for the International Swimming League season in Budapest (which is why he, and a few other British swimmers, arrived late).

He then contracted a second case, which he describes as “very severe,” over the New Year. He was out of the water for 3 weeks at that time and then had 3 weeks to rebuild his strength.

Dean says that rumors of a 3rd exposure that resulted in isolation are untrue, and that he’s only been out of the water twice.

Dean also swam best times of 3:47.48 in the 400 free for 2nd place and 48.51 for 3rd place in the 100 free.

Dean trains out of the Bath training center under coach Dave McNulty.

Also in the interview:

  • Scott indicates that he’s planning to race at the European Championships in May.
  • Dean says that “Duncan pulled him through” as he skipped from a personal best of 1:46 all the way through to 1:45.
  • Scott points out that it was his first tapered 200 freestyle since August 2019, so he was pleased with the swim.
  • Dean says the swim was better than he ever could have expected.

The full interview can be seen here, starting at the 4:30 mark:

https://twitter.com/britishswimming/status/1384060121509089285

In This Story

26
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

26 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Walter
3 years ago

Goodness gracious me, buckets of guts.

Ol' Longhorn
3 years ago

Covid obviously improves athletic performance. Who knew?

RUN-DMC
3 years ago

Great to see such a strong recovery from a severe case.

I wonder what kind of lung therapy he received?

Mich
3 years ago

Makes you wonder how much/if being out of the water for so much time helped, and if the importance of taking time off for a full-body recovery is underdone in swimming.

HJones
Reply to  Mich
3 years ago

Maybe its time for Eddie to try that 3-week out of the water taper??

Svird
Reply to  Mich
3 years ago

I think over training is unfortunately the norm in swimming. Full body rest is critical especially for older athletes. See: Phelps in 2015 having a great nationals after a “bad” year of training.

Maybe after the years cardio block swimmers should try taking a week or two off before going into the championship season preparation block?

Mr Piano
Reply to  Mich
3 years ago

Yeah I was gonna say. Everyone was like, omg 6 weeks off! You can get back to where you were within a couple months, and feel mentally refreshed after that.

Svird
Reply to  Mr Piano
3 years ago

I also follow track and field and recovery is MUCH more emphasized in that sport. I think it’s because in track it’s much easier to injure yourself due to the high impact nature of it. But still, I think swimming could learn from how other sports utilize rest and recovery to maximize performance. Swimming culture seems to be “grind body into dust for the entire year and then taper for 3 weeks”. Which may work for some people, but I think many could benefit from more recovery.

Swimmer2
Reply to  Svird
3 years ago

The yardage data and times for this past isl would be really interesting. Like who was swimming fast the whole time and who was worn down, and how much volume they were doing

AnEn
Reply to  Mich
3 years ago

I think for sprinters it isn’t as bad as for long distance athletes. I think maintaining strength at home is easier (at least cheaper) than maintaining endurance at home.

Luigi
Reply to  Mich
3 years ago

I have had a club manager telling me that young swimmers in his club did very well after forced long pauses due to Covid and that they were going to re-think their approach to competitive swimming training.

There's no doubt that he's tightening up
Reply to  Braden Keith
3 years ago

Michael Andrew?

Mich
Reply to  Luigi
3 years ago

I stopped swimming from March to November(8 months) completely b/c of covid+going away to college. I came back home and had 4 weeks of training(1:30 practices) then a 1 week taper and put up 2 best times in 100s I hadn’t dropped in for years.

That 8 month reset definitely helped and my stroke felt better than ever.

Togger
3 years ago

Even if each bout left no lingering effects at all, just the time out of the pool must have been a huge loss.

Matsumoto and Scott come into Tokyo as very safe bets for a fast swim, they’ve proved they can do it on the international stage and they’ve looked on very good form this year. If Haas drops a 1.44 in Omaha, throw him in the same bracket.

The more unknown quantities will be Dean (Covid, little international experience) and if any of the American college stars throw down big at Trials after 2 years hard training/growing without a long course taper.

Rapsys a bit in the middle. Proven quantity at big meets, but won’t have… Read more »

Jeff
3 years ago

On the note of Duncan Scott swimming at Euros next month I believe Chris Spice mentioned to Andy Jameson during the men’s 1500m freestyle that those who hit consideration times/got close and a few juniors will ALL be going to Euros as one of the targeted preparation meets in the build up to Tokyo. Not necessarily expecting fast times, I think it’s more to give them as much race prep as possible.

Dee
Reply to  Jeff
3 years ago

Yeah, they did the same in 2016. Our 4×2 finished sixth, Jame Guy missed the 400fr final etc… They won’t let them rest up at all, it’ll just be race prep for Tokyo.

Svird
Reply to  Jeff
3 years ago

Good idea. Not getting enough race experience contributes to underperforming at the big meet (looking at you aussies).

Robbos
Reply to  Svird
3 years ago

Haha. Did you see last World Championships

Corn Pop
Reply to  Svird
3 years ago

It helps if the comp is in Aust time & travel zone eg East Asia.

I suspect past Swim Aust personnel have used international comps to further their own networking & social lives . You are forgetting WHO are important .

AnEn
Reply to  Svird
3 years ago

I am not a fan of making unnecessary trips during this time, i think at an event like the european championships the risk of getting infected is higher and if you catch it, it might harm your chances in Tokyo. As an athlete i would only make the trip if i got vaccinated before.

Mr Piano
3 years ago

He’s the British Counterpart of Dean Farris

whever
Reply to  Mr Piano
3 years ago

Much better

Chalmers > Dressel
Reply to  whever
3 years ago

Tom Dean > Dean Farris

eagleswim
Reply to  Chalmers > Dressel
3 years ago

tom dean received multiple stab wounds to the abdomen in the ready room ahead of the race

Ol' Longhorn
Reply to  Mr Piano
3 years ago

Or bleach.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

Read More »