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Going for a dip in the Seine on a hot summer’s day has been the pipedream of many a Parisian since swimming in the river was formally banned a century ago.But floating on your back under the Eiffel Tower could very soon become reality thanks to investments linked to this month’s Paris Olympics. Weather permitting, the river will be the star of the opening ceremony of the Games on July 26 and will then host the triathlon and the swimming marathon.

Then, if all goes well, next summer Parisians and tourists will be able to dive in too.

Like Zurich and Munich before it, Paris has been reclaiming its river with one of three new urban “beaches” to open under the windows of its historic town hall next year, with another almost at the foot of the Eiffel Tower.

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Nearly 30 more — complete with pontoons, showers and parasols — are planned for the suburbs and along the Marne, which flows into the Seine just east of the French capital.

Once regarded as an open-air dump, former French president Jacques Chirac first floated the idea of swimming in the Seine in 1990.

But it was the current mayor Anne Hidalgo who really ran with the idea, making it a pillar of her Olympic bid in 2016.

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Some 1.4 billion euros ($1.51 billion) has been spent on colossal public works to counter pollution, with Hidalgo vowing to swim in the Seine next week to prove its cleanliness.

But with the capital suffering an exceptionally wet start to the year, causing regular discharges from the city’s sewerage system into the river, the mayor has had to repeatedly delay taking to the water.

The Seine’s water quality fluctuates sharply after major rainstorms, which lead to untreated sewage being released, meaning there is still suspense about whether the Olympic swimming can take place.

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Disastrous Olympic test events last August first raised doubts over whether the triathletes and marathon swimmers will be allowed to race for gold in the Seine.

Most of the events had to be cancelled because the water failed to meet European standards on two bacterias found in faeces.

Unusually violent downpours and a faulty valve in the sewage system were blamed.

But it prompted the reigning Olympic marathon swimming champion Ana Marcela Cunha to call for a “plan B”.

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“The health of athletes should come before everything,” the Brazilian great told AFP.

In recent weeks, the river has continued to fail pollution tests, although dry weather forecast for the next few weeks should help raise standards.

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Only a handful of people swim in the river regularly and their testimony is not always reassuring.

Lifeguard Gaelle Deletang, 56, a member of the French capital’s aquatic civil defence team, got “diarrhoea and a rash” after swimming in the Seine in central Paris last winter.

Several other volunteers “had a bug for three weeks… and everyone had stomach upsets”, she added.

Young adventurer Arthur Germain — who happens to be the mayor of Paris’s son — also came across “zones where I had trouble breathing” from both industrial and agricultural pollution when he swam the whole 777-kilometre (482-mile) length of the Seine in 2021.

In deepest rural Burgundy — days before he got anywhere near Paris — he measured levels of faecal matter well above EU limits for swimming. Further north he swam past farmers spraying pesticides by the riverbank.

His “worst day”, however, was a few kilometres downstream from the capital as he passed a sewage works at Gennevilliers.

Yet the quality of the water has been on a steady upward curve.

Five major anti-pollution plants have come on stream ahead of the Games, while wildlife is returning and the quantity of garbage floating in the waterway has fallen.

Remi Delorme, captain of a boat that has been fishing rubbish from the river since 1980, has seen progress.

His 20-metre (65-foot) catamaran Belenos sucks up rubbish, from dead leaves and plastic bags to bicycles.

Delorme, 36, has seen it all. “Scooters, sofas, dead animals, and once or twice a year, human corpses. You get used to it,” he told AFP.

But year after year, the rubbish the boat hoovers up has been falling, from a high of 325 tonnes to 190 tonnes in 2020.

The push to make the Seine swimmable for the Olympics has accelerated a French government plan to limit waste water and sewage getting into both it and the river Marne.

A 2018 law obliges the boats and barges that line the Seine to be hooked up to the city’s sewers to stop them flushing directly into the river. Officials says almost all are now following the rules.

“Uncontrolled flushing has a major impact on faecal bacteria in the river,” said Jean-Marie Mouchel, professor of hydrology at the Sorbonne University.

Another problem was leakage from sewage pipes from some 23,000 homes in the suburbs, with shower and toilet water being discharged directly into the environment.

Officials have been going door-to-door offering subsidies to get them fixed and threatening penalties if they are not.

“We have gone from 20 million cubic metres to two million cubic metres of discharges into the Seine per year in recent years,” said Samuel Colin-Canivez, head of major works for the Paris sewer network.

Hydrologist Jean-Marie Mouchel has seen big signs of improvement in the river’s health, with better “oxygenation, ammonium and phosphate levels”.

While the Seine “has not become a wild river again”, it now has “more than 30 species of fish, compared with three in 1970”, said the professor.

Bill Francois, who fishes up to five times a week near Pont Marie in the historic heart of Paris, caught a surprisingly large catfish the day he talked to AFP — the likes of which he never expected to find in the Seine.

The 31-year-old physicist also hooked a small perch, which are becoming more and more numerous. Half a century ago “there were none left”, he said.

Other fish that need far higher water quality are also returning, he said, as well as “insects, crustaceans, little shrimps, sponges and even jellyfish”.

For microbiologist Francoise Lucas, who has been following efforts to clean the Seine for years, the weather will ultimately decide the fate of the Olympic events on the river

“Everything that could be done (technically) has been done,” Lucas told AFP.

Upstream from the capital, one of the newly modernised sewage plants is using an innovative treatment method based on performic acid — an “organic disinfectant” — according to Siaap, the body that deals with the Paris region’s waste water and sewage.

It insists the acid is safe and “rapidly disintegrates even before coming into contact with the natural environment.”

Not far away, a new stormwater control station has come online. Dug deep underground at Champigny-sur-Marne to the southeast of Paris, it is designed to stop the river being polluted by heavy downpours.

As well as catching the stormwater, it filters and cleans it to remove floating debris and counters bacteria with ultraviolet lamps before the water is released into the Marne.

And as a final safety net to avoid a recurrence of the failed Olympic test events last summer, a huge new stormwater cistern has opened at near Austerlitz station on the eastern edge of central Paris.

Fifty metres (164 feet) wide and 30m deep, it can hold the equivalent of 20 Olympic swimming pools worth of water.

A veritable underground cathedral, it is there to stop stormwater flooding the sewers and overflowing into the Seine.

Even so, “statistically there are a few rainstorms a year for which it won’t be totally sufficient”, admitted prefect Marc Guillaume, Paris’s top state official.

“We had forgotten about the Seine,” said Stephane Raffalli, mayor of the riverside Paris suburb of Ris-Orangis, where one of the nearly 30 new urban beaches will open next year. “There are people who have lived here for years who have never walked along the banks of the river.”

Yet suburbanites were still swimming in the Seine until the 1960s and right up to the 1970s in the Marne, where riverside lidos called “Little Trouville” or “Deauville in Paris” did their best to summon up the holiday atmosphere of English Channel beach resorts.

In Champigny-sur-Marne, the old “beach” had “a kind of small pool where children were able to touch the bottom,” recalled 74-year-old Michel Riousset. “Everyone had their own cabin.”

Ris-Orangis hopes to have its old river pool complete with cabins, first built around 1930, back in service next year.

“We have conducted pollution studies over a long period, and it is safe” to swim in the river, the mayor insisted.

With climate change, and the prospect of summer temperatures hitting 50 degrees Centigrade (122 Fahrenheit) in Paris, the need for somewhere to cool off in summer has never been greater.

But some have already taken the plunge. On a warm evening last July about 20 swimmers were enjoying the Seine off the Ile Saint Denis, where the Olympic Village has been built.

Josue Remoue swims in the river three times a month from May to October.

“I’ve never been sick,” said the 52-year-old civil servant. “The water is dodgier at the edge, generally I don’t linger there.” And he never “goes underwater”.

Remoue takes to the water on Sundays or in the evening to avoid barge traffic.

On the night AFP joined his group, the water was a bit earthy but not murky. With the temperature at 25C, the scene along the riverbank was almost bucolic despite the nearby tower blocks.

“It’s completely different from swimming in a pool,” said Celine Debunne, 47, as she emerged from “a super two-kilometre swim…. I love swimming like this.”

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Controversial tennis ace Novak Djokovic has once again got attention for all the wrong reasons after he had a temper tantrum when the Wimbledon dared to chant his opponent’s name.It seemed the crowd were simply cheering ‘Ruuuuuuune’ for his opponent Holger Rune but Djokovic, as he often does, saw things differently, claiming they were boos for him.Novak Djokovic’s status as one of this century’s greatest athletes is undisputed – not a description that could ever be applied to his views on health and science as he often dabbles in quackery.His obsession with turning himself into a tennis god has dragged him at times into the realms of faddism and pseudo-science, much to the shock of many of his fans.A few even think people are conspiring against Djokovic, who has a reported net worth of around £200million, owns two New York penthouses, a luxury Miami beach flat and a Marbella mansion. Novak Djokovic had a temper tantrum on Centre Court at Wimbledon last night The controversial tennis star has a variety of whacky views when it comes to health and science His obsession with turning himself into a tennis god has dragged him at times into the realms of faddism and pseudo-science, much to the shock of many of his fans It is just the latest controversial episode involving Djokovic and his wife Jelena (right) On Monday, it seemed the crowd were simply cheering ‘Ruuuuuuune’ for his opponent Holger RuneBut Djokovic, as he often does, saw things differently, claiming they were boos for him His conspiracy theorist wife Jelena Djokovic watched her husband throw a hissy fit at Wimbledon on Monday evening On Monday evening, the seven-time champion turned his on-court interview into a rant about what he felt were boos directed at him during his straight-sets win.’To all the fans that have had respect and stayed here tonight, I thank you from the bottom of my heart and I appreciate it,’ he began. ‘And to all those people that have chosen to disrespect the player – in this case me – have a goooooooood night.’His rather non-plussed BBC interviewer Rishi Persad said: ‘I am hoping they were just commenting on Rune, and they were not disrespecting you.’Djokovic – who has a track record of taking on crowds – was having none of that. ‘They were. They were [disrespecting me],’ he insisted. ‘I am not accepting it. No no no. I know they were cheering for Rune but that’s an excuse to also boo. The seven-time champion turned his on-court interview into a rant about what he felt were boos directed at him Novak Djokovic pretends to play the violin for his daughter as he celebrates winning against Denmark’s Holger Rune The tennis star’s wife Jelena Djokovic looked slightly uncomfortable as Djokovic took on the crowd His outburst came after he saw off Holger Rune in straight sets to move into the quarter-finals ‘Listen, I have been on the tour for more than 20 years. I know all the tricks. I focus on the respectful people that pay for the ticket, and love tennis and appreciate the players. I played in much more hostile environments, trust me – you guys can’t touch me.’Rune himself said: ‘I mean, if you don’t know what was happening, probably it sounded like boo. But if we all know what happened, it was my name.’Djokovic won the match 6-3, 6-4, 6-2 and put in by a distance his best display of the Championships so far. Rune was poor, losing the first 12 points of the match and never really recovering.In his press conference later, Djokovic stood by what he had said.’When I feel a crowd is stepping over the line, I react,’ he said. ‘I don’t regret my words or actions on the court.’He also tweeted a photo after the game of him stretching for a ball across the court, with the caption: ‘Sliding into quarters. Goooooooooooood night.’ Nick Kyrgios – who is also known for his on-court meltdowns, told BBC Sport afterwards: ‘It wasn’t [booing] but I think crowds all around the world need to understand that Novak doesn’t need more of a motive to play better. 

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‘He’s driven, one of the best players in the world and I’ve seen it time and time again, the crowd try to poke the bear and that’s not what you want to do against Novak.’He loves it. I try not to poke the bear when I play him… and I really struggle with that. Obviously it cost me my Wimbledon final.’He doesn’t need more of a motive to go out there and prove to someone he is the greatest of all time.’Clare Balding also waded in, saying: ‘When Sue Barker came out the other day people were shouting ‘Suuuuuuuuuuuue’. I don’t think it’s booing.’ Djokovic’s relationship with the crowd has not always been a friendly one. After beating Roger Federer in the 2019 final, his former coach Boris Becker said he deserved more respect from the crowd who had backed the Swiss star. Djokovic was annoyed with the Wimbledon crowd throughout the match, and would not accept the explanation from a BBC interviewer that they had only been backing his opponent Djokovic has not always had the best relationship with the crowd. He is seen blowing them a kiss here after winning match point against Rune Djokovic pretends to play a violin during his celebrations as he booked his place in the quarter-finals. He has revealed it is a tribute to his daughter who has been playing the violin for six months Djokovic was informed that the crowd were likely shouting ‘Runeeee’ but he did not accept this And two years ago, he was booed after blowing a kiss to fans following his semi-final win over Briton Cameron Norrie.Last year, he also played up to the crowd as he took on 20-year-old Spanish star Carlos Alcaraz in the Wimbledon final. With the crowd backing underdog Alcaraz at times, Djokovic again blew kisses at the fans. He was also met with boos during the final when he dented the net post by smashing his racket in frustration, argued with the umpire and glared at the Centre Court crowd.And in January, the tennis superstar screamed at fans to ‘shut the f*** up’ as he hit out at new rules allowing fans to move around between games at the Australian Open. In Wednesday’s quarter-final, fortunately Djokovic will not face a player with a single-syllable surname containing the letter u or a double o. It will be easy to distinguish between boos for him and support for Alex de Minaur.

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But he pair do have history after clashing over Djokovic’s vaccination saga during the pandemic.Aussie star De Minaur was one of the most vocal players in world tennis addressing Djokovic’s deportation and ban from playing in the Australian Open.’Look, Australians have gone through a lot,’ he said at the time. ‘There’s no secret about that. They’ve had it very tough. They’ve done a lot of work to protect themselves and their borders.’He also laughed upon finding out Djokovic had failed in his appeal and was to be deported from Australia while in a press conference with fellow Aussie Jason Kubler.When Djokovic beat him last year, he told reporters: ‘I don’t have any relationship with him.’I respect him as a rival, a colleague, as I respect everyone. I have no problem contacting him, congratulating him, Et cetera.’But I don’t have any other relationship. I don’t have any communication with him. He showed in 2022 what he thinks about me.’Of course, Djokovic has some immensely enviable qualities – from his linguistic ability, speaking seven languages, to his sporting might of his 24 Grand Slam wins, including seven Wimbledon titles.Yet that prowess doesn’t always seem to stretch to the credible. With his self-styled health entrepreneur Chervin Jafarieh he promoted the idea that the power of positive thought could cleanse polluted water into the kind that was safely drinkable.Meanwhile, his wife shared the conspiracy theory that Covid was linked to 5G telecommunication masts.His anti-vaxx views became apparent in 2022 when he posted a triumphant-sounding Facebook update that he had circumvented vaccine requirements for an undisclosed reason and was heading for Australia – which prompted public fury and his eventual deportation.This brutal collision with public opinion had been a long time coming, a course plotted since the onset of the pandemic.Soon after it broke out he took part in a live Facebook discussion with other Serbian sportspeople.’Personally I am opposed to vaccination and I wouldn’t want to be forced by someone to take a vaccine in order to be able to travel,’ he said. ‘But if it becomes compulsory, what will happen? I will have to make a decision.’ The roots of his beliefs on health are entrenched beyond Covid, back to the beginning of the last decade. It was then that he diagnosed himself as having a wheat allergy by pressing a slice of bread into his stomach.In 2016 he began working with Spanish coach Pepe Imaz, a strong believer in meditation whose theories extend to, literally, the power of hugging trees. He instituted the ‘peace and love’ gestures that accompany the Serb’s post-match victories.When Djokovic began developing elbow problems the following year he tried holistic cures before eventually opting for conventional surgery. He later revealed that he cried for three days afterwards at his failure to solve the issue through natural medicine. Djokovic thinks the ‘Bosnian pyramids’ near Sarajevo give off a mystical energy; here Semir Osmanagic, an archaeologist famous for his unorthodox theories on them, stands near one By then he was already a strong believer in using hyperbaric chambers – where his body is exposed to pure oxygen at a much higher pressure than normal – actually bringing a mobile version on a lorry to be parked up at Flushing Meadows for the US Open.It was not until the virus stopped the world in its tracks that the full extent of his left-field views became more evident.And then came his organisation of the ill-fated Adria Tour, a series of exhibitions around the Balkans which stuck two fingers up at any Covid restrictions. Jelena Djokovic has been shamed for spreading a 5G conspiracy on social mediaInstagram produced a ‘False Information’ warning on a video she posted back on April 1, 2021 Djokovic’s online chats with Chevrin Jafarieh (bottom) became notorious in the pandemic Amid nightclub carousing and close quarters games of basketball many of its participants – including Djokovic and his wife – tested positive for the virus. The experience chastened him, but it has not dampened his enthusiasm for spiritual searching. He is, for instance, a regular visitor to the ‘Bosnian pyramids’ which some believe give off a mystic energy.These are a set of pointed hills which a local archaeologist claims are man-made, an idea condemned as a complete hoax by other experts. The Serbian (far right) hosted the ill-fated Adria Tour event in the middle of the pandemic – and it had to be ended prematurely after a number of the players contracted the virus Djokovic (left centre) and fellow tennis stars partied in a Belgrade nightclub in June 2020, with some of the players taking their shirts off during the riotous evening Djokovic lashed away a ball in anger at a line judge in the 2020 US Open fourth round After hitting line judge Laura Clark in the throat, the world No 1 was disqualified from the event Away from the sport’s rectangles many have already condemned him, although his views on vaccines are more nuanced than sometimes portrayed.At the ATP Tour event in Belgrade in 2022, which he and his family own, he arranged for those who wanted the jab to be able to get it on site.It should also be said that no athlete is recorded as having given more to charity through the pandemic than he has done. There is also his work in trying to drive through a tennis players’ union at no gain to himself, being as wealthy as he is.He has always insisted that his vaccine stance is about freedom of choice and what someone puts inside their body. Given the opportunity he missed out on in Melbourne in 2022, his continuing stance could be seen as one of principled self-denial, as well as self-defeating.One group who will always support him, if he ever returns, is the large Serbian population of Victoria. A few of them have been known to attend the Australian Open wearing T-shirts bearing a slogan that has never seemed more appropriate: ‘Novak Against The World.’

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Jamie Davis is leaving USA Volleyball to take over as CEO of USA Water PoloJuly 8, 2024, 4:12 PM ET• 2 min readIRVINE, Calif. — Jamie Davis is leaving USA Volleyball to take over as CEO of USA Water Polo.Davis’ appointment, effective Oct. 1, was announced by USA Water Polo on Monday. The hiring of Davis was unanimously approved by the organization’s board of directors at a recent meeting.“Jamie’s vision and leadership will be instrumental in guiding the organization into its next chapter,” Bill Smith, the chairman of the USA Water Polo board, said in a release. “We are confident that his contribution will drive USA Water Polo to new heights.”Davis is replacing Chris Ramsey, who announced in December that he is retiring after the Paris Olympics. Ramsey is among the longest-tenured leaders for the U.S. governing bodies in the Olympic movement.Davis, a former TV and sports business executive, was hired as USA Volleyball CEO in 2017. During his time at USA Volleyball, membership grew from 339,000 in 2017 to 435,000 this year. USA Water Polo has about 50,000 members.“I am honored to join USA Water Polo and look forward to working with the talented athletes, coaches, staff, and the wider water polo community,” Davis said. “Together, we will continue to promote the growth and excellence of this sport.”___AP Summer Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games

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IRVINE, Calif. — Jamie Davis is leaving USA Volleyball to take over as CEO of USA Water Polo.Davis’ appointment, effective Oct. 1, was announced by USA Water Polo on Monday. The hiring of Davis was unanimously approved by the organization’s board of directors at a recent meeting.“Jamie’s vision and leadership will be instrumental in guiding the organization into its next chapter,” Bill Smith, the chairman of the USA Water Polo board, said in a release. “We are confident that his contribution will drive USA Water Polo to new heights.”Davis is replacing Chris Ramsey, who announced in December that he is retiring after the Paris Olympics. Ramsey is among the longest-tenured leaders for the U.S. governing bodies in the Olympic movement.Davis, a former TV and sports business executive, was hired as USA Volleyball CEO in 2017. During his time at USA Volleyball, membership grew from 339,000 in 2017 to 435,000 this year. USA Water Polo has about 50,000 members.“I am honored to join USA Water Polo and look forward to working with the talented athletes, coaches, staff, and the wider water polo community,” Davis said. “Together, we will continue to promote the growth and excellence of this sport.”

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LJUBLJANA, Slovenia (WKRC/CBS Newspath) – Volleyball players from different countries gathered together to play the sport in an unusual location for the court.The event was called Volleyball on Water. It was hosted by Slovenia’s capital, Ljubljana. The court was partially submerged, sitting a few centimeters beneath the surface of the city’s Ljubljanica river.”It’s something completely new,” said Tadej Bozenk, a player from Slovenian. “You do not train like this every day or rather you cannot train this way.”Bozenk said that players mostly came for the fun and the challenge of competing in a different environment. The event’s organizer, Tomaz Pancur, said it was the fourth version of Volleyball on Water and the second version of the tournament layout.”It’s the only event of its kind in the world,” said Pancur. “You can only see this in Slovenia. We invite 16 male and female volleyball players from the whole world. We also have two pairs of Slovenians. We put them all in pairs and we watch them in the court in the center of Ljubljana.”The tournament lasts for two days and during the night, the court transforms into a LED-lit battleground.

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