FINA Considers Tinkers To Swimsuit Regulations
Amy Shipley; Washington Post Staff Writer
Just weeks after adopting new rules designed to end the controversy over high-tech, full-body suits, FINA, world swimming's governing body, is having second thoughts and considering tinkering with its swimwear regulations as early as January, several U.S. and international officials said.
Since FINA decided in late July to allow only waist-to-knee textile suits for men and neck-to-knee textile suits for women, the governing body has been under pressure to make men's and women's swimsuits equal in size, the officials said.
"There's an enormous amount of pressure on the FINA Bureau now to have the body coverage be the same for men as for women," said Chuck Wielgus, USA Swimming's executive director. "We are very concerned that FINA might not stick with what was approved in Rome by the FINA Congress."
USA Swimming had put forth the proposed rule changes that were adopted by a nearly unanimous vote of the congress -- more than 200 member nations of FINA -- before this summer's world championships in Rome, but the national governing bodies for Britain and Australia kicked off a rethinking of the ban just days after the vote, officials said.
Both sent letters to the governing body proposing equal body coverage for men and women.
British Swimming Chief Executive David Sparkes said in an e-mail that the British governing body would take no action beyond the letter it sent, but added, "no doubt this matter will be given further consideration."
Said Swimming Australia spokesman Lachlan Searle: "Swimming Australia had raised with FINA in Rome the possibility of equality for male and female in neck-to-knee coverage in relation to the proposed new swimsuit ruling. However, at this stage we have had no advice from FINA that it has any intention of changing its proposed rule."
A spokesman for FINA said no such proposal was yet on the agenda of the next FINA Bureau meeting, tentatively scheduled for Jan. 15-16 in Bangkok. But the proposal would be added to the agenda if put forward by a FINA committee, and FINA's technical committee plans to consider it in November, according to Carol Zaleski, the chair of the committee.
Zaleski said FINA Executive Director Cornel Marculescu instructed her in an e-mail to add the suit issue to the technical committee's agenda.
"I truly don't understand where Australia and Great Britain are coming from on this," Zaleski said. "Why anyone is having second thoughts afterward I don't quite get. For me, it's common sense: Men's and women's suits have always been different for obvious reasons."
Zaleski said she did not know where the other 14 members of the technical committee stood on the issue.
She and other officials speculated that the coverage issue was less about equality of the sexes than sponsorship concerns -- and the legal ones that tend to arise when sponsors feel threatened.
Sponsor logos are readily visible on suits that extend over the chest, but they can't be seen well -- particularly when swimmers are still in the water -- on the men's waist-to-knee "jammers."
USA Swimming officials say the rules enacted this summer were designed to minimize the impact of suits and put the focus on the swimmer. That, they said, should be sport officials' highest priority.
Since FINA adopted the current ban, the NCAA and National Federation of State High School Associations put similar bans in place. USA Swimming, meantime, planned to formally adopt the ban at its annual meeting in September, setting an immediate implementation date.
September 2, 2009
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Former Member
No Beef but latest from FINA says at the momment men can only wear waist to knee but they may change the rule. I was wondering if they make that change will they take Johnny's gold away for using a high tech neck to hip suit. It is just - if it happens what will the end result be.
Back in the day, Fairfield University swimmers had prominent FU logos on the back of their briefs. Don't know if they still do that. Hope they do.
Don't forget the South Carolina Gamecocks!:D:D
img32.picoodle.com/.../f_gococksm_ea5f9fa.jpg
How can they say waist to knee for men ,but allow women to neck?
Probably because they feel that the purpose of a swimsuit is for modesty reasons, not performance-enhancement (I believe the revised rule says as much but I can't find it right now). How quaint.
They made such a bad job by allowing the rubber suits in the first place they are scrambling to fix their mistakes. I think we will be back to Nylon or Nylon/Lycra our poly suits only.
In case anyone misunderstands, the 'hell' to me is not whether tech suits or not, it is the endless gormless flailing by fina (they don't deserve capitals). A Sartre character in his play 'No Exit' declaimed 'Hell is other people'...naw, it is fina that deserves that slam.
Mr. Cruise, you are a magnificent educator!
1) I always thought it was Woody Allen or Emily Dickinson or perhaps a love child of the two who said "L'enfer, c'est les autres"--but it was not! As you correctly pointed out, it was the author of Nausea himself.
2) you have introduced a magnificent new word to the USMS lexicon: gormless, which at first I suspected was a typo. Not so!
gormless (comparative more gormless, superlative most gormless)
Positive
gormless
Comparative
more gormless
Superlative
most gormless
(chiefly British, of a person) Lacking intelligence, sense or discernment, often implying lack of capacity of will to remedy the condition.
(British) Inexperienced, naïve, innocent to the point of foolishness.
Thanks for making me feel gormless in my previously pseudo-intellectualism. Now that I know what gormless means and who said hell was other people, I have taken one giant step towards becoming less gormless, then lessor gormless, then least gormless, then peri-intellectualism--with my ultimate goal, of course, to someday be compared favorably to one absolutely ungormless Mr. Peter Cruise, a true and unmitigated intellectual!
If they change the rules so that men can have the same covering as women but keep the no zipper rule I believe all the companies will need a new design.Is there any current mens racing suit that covers the chest and does not have a zipper?
I suggest a one-shoulder-strapped body suit, not unlike the cave man clothing caricature. This would allow us quasi fatsos to easily don the thing, though it might expose one *** depending on the acuteness of the diagonal angle.
Perhaps Speedo could include a complimentary club with which we might bean women swimmers and drag them back to our lairs?