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Unvaccinated US swimmer sparks debate as Olympics start

Published:Saturday | July 24, 2021 | 12:07 AM
In this June 19, 2021, file photo, Michael Andrew participates in the men’s 50 freestyle during wave 2 of the United States. Olympic Swim Trials in Omaha, Nebraska. A debate is fomenting between former gold medallist Maya DiRado and some American swimmer
In this June 19, 2021, file photo, Michael Andrew participates in the men’s 50 freestyle during wave 2 of the United States. Olympic Swim Trials in Omaha, Nebraska. A debate is fomenting between former gold medallist Maya DiRado and some American swimmers over Andrew’s decision not to be vaccinated against the COVID-19 virus on the eve of competition at the Tokyo Olympics.

TOKYO (AP):

A debate is brewing between former gold medallist Maya DiRado and some American swimmers over United States medal threat Michael Andrew’s decision not to be vaccinated against the COVID-19 virus as he prepares to compete at the Tokyo Olympics.

DiRado sparked the discourse this week with a lengthy thread on Twitter in which she wrote that she is “disappointed” in Andrew’s decision to compete unvaccinated and his reasoning behind it.

Andrew revealed earlier this month that he is not vaccinated, after being asked about his status by a reporter.

“My reason behind it is, for one, it was kind of a last moment. I didn’t want to put anything in my body that I didn’t know how I would potentially react to,” he said.

“As an athlete on the elite level, everything we do is very calculated and understood. For me, in the training cycle, especially leading up to trials, I didn’t want to risk any days out. There were periods where you take a vaccine, you have to deal with some days off.”

Andrew said he has no plans to be vaccinated in the future.

“We feel very safe and protected knowing that we’re minimising risk as much as possible,” he said, citing daily testing during the Olympics.

Tokyo Olympic organisers and the International Olympic Committee (IOC) did not make it mandatory for athletes to be vaccinated to compete. Just over 20 per cent of the Japanese population is fully vaccinated. The IOC has reported 13 positive cases among all athletes in Japan.

About 100 of the 613 US athletes in Tokyo are unvaccinated, the US Olympic and Paralympic Committee’s medical chief said yesterday. Andrew is the only member of the US swim team to publicly reveal that he is not vaccinated.

“That Michael would make a decision that puts even a bit of risk on his teammates for his own perceived well-being frustrates me,” DiRado wrote.

She is one of three athlete representatives on USA Swimming’s board of directors, having retired after the 2016 Rio Games, where she won four medals, including two golds.

The top Americans - Caeleb Dressel, Katie Ledecky, Lilly King and Simone Manuel - have all said they are fully vaccinated.

Former gold medallist Anthony Ervin tweeted to DiRado that Andrew had COVID-19 in December “and thus has a natural immunity”.

Andrew’s teammate, Tom Shields, criticised DiRado’s stance.

“What part of that responsibility involves shaming one of our Olympian’s (sic) on the eve of competition?” Shields tweeted.

Andrew dominated at the US trials last month with impressive times in qualifying for the 100-metre breaststroke, 200 individual medley and 50 freestyle, to earn his first Olympic berth.

The online back and forth was surprising, as the American swimmers typically present a positive and united front at the Games while emphasising team success over individual accomplishment.

“Michael is allowed to make his own decisions and I can guarantee you that none of us here are holding any decision like that against him,” teammate Patrick Callan tweeted. “He is still doing everything in the best interest of this team.”