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Athletes worried over conditions at marathon swimming test event

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The International Swimming Federation (FINA) officials have vowed to monitor the water conditions in Tokyo after several athletes voiced concerns following the marathon swimming test event at the 2020 Olympic venue recently.

National Daily gathered that despite the event at Odaiba Marine Park, part of the “Ready Steady Tokyo” series of test runs, starting at 7.00 a.m.,the temperature was already over 30 degrees Celsius in the Japanese capital city.

A total of 57 people have died across Japan as a result of a heat wave between July 29 and August 4 and the country’s main broadcaster NHK reports another 18,347 people have been taken to hospital, with temperatures remaining above 31 degrees Celsius since July 24.

“That was the warmest race I’ve ever done,” three-time Olympic medallist, Oussama Mellouli from Tunisia told Agence-France Presse (AFP).

“It felt good for the first 2km then I got super overheated.”

FINA rules state that athletes cannot race in open water swimming events when the water temperature is higher than 31 degrees Celsius.

FINA executive director Cornel Marculescu promised they would continue to examine how to best ensure athlete well-being, and said the start time in the Olympic event could be moved even earlier

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