Full story:
www.swimmingworldmagazine.com/.../25369.asp
Excerpt:
Passages: Fran Crippen, 26 - FINA, USA Swimming Release Statements -- October 23, 2010
FUJAIRAH, United Arab Emirates, October 23. SHORTLY after the FINA Open Water 10K World Cup swim today in the UAE, United States swimmer Fran Crippen, 26, passed away after falling unconscious during the race.
With the water in the mid-to-high 80s, the competitors all finished and noticed that Crippen had not crossed the finish line. Meet management brought in deep sea divers, who found Crippen unconscious just before the final buoy nearly two hours later. He was transported to the Fujairah Hospital and later died according to information provided to Swimming World. Conflicting reports state that he was found dead on the course.
Crippen had shown signs of slowing down during the third lap of the five-lap race. When Crippen did not immediately finish, a fact noticed by teammate Alex Meyer who screamed for help, the competing swimmers rushed back into the water to help with the search.
Information provided to Swimming World demonstrates that the water was likely too hot for the event as several swimmers were treated for heat exhaustion after the race....
IMO, we see marathoners and triathletes actually bring themselves to collapse when the legs give out. If you do this in swimming you could slip under quite rapidly. If air is expelled, you sink like a rock. If you think you are being closely watched, you may not break stroke even while swimming in distress, then you won't have the energy to signal and then all of a sudden, you're under.
IMO, we see marathoners and triathletes actually bring themselves to collapse when the legs give out. If you do this in swimming you could slip under quite rapidly. If air is expelled, you sink like a rock. If you think you are being closely watched, you may not break stroke even while swimming in distress, then you won't have the energy to signal and then all of a sudden, you're under.