Belgians suspect dirty water for Laser sailor illness

Doctors for the Belgian Olympic medical team suspect the polluted water in Rio's Guanabara Bay is responsible for a serious illness that sapped the strength of sailer Evi Van Acker, according to her coach.

Published : Aug 12, 2016 01:28 IST , Rio de Janeiro

Evi Van Acker was stricken with a severe gastro-intestinal illness during training in July and despite a course of antibiotics her strength and stamina remain compromised.
Evi Van Acker was stricken with a severe gastro-intestinal illness during training in July and despite a course of antibiotics her strength and stamina remain compromised.
lightbox-info

Evi Van Acker was stricken with a severe gastro-intestinal illness during training in July and despite a course of antibiotics her strength and stamina remain compromised.

Doctors for the Belgian Olympic medical team suspect the polluted water in Rio's Guanabara Bay is responsible for a serious illness that sapped the strength of Evi Van Acker, the Laser Radial 2012 bronze medallist, her coach told Reuters .

Van Acker, who sits 10th overall after six of 10 preliminary races, was stricken with a severe gastro-intestinal illness during training in July and despite a course of antibiotics her strength and stamina remain compromised, said Wim Van Bladel, her coach in a phone interview in Rio.

Olympic organisers have faced harsh criticism for choosing Guanabara Bay as the sailing venue and for failing to meet promises to clean up sewage that contaminates the bay with bacteria and viruses and floating trash that threatens to slow or damage boats.

"The judgement of the medical team is that the water is the likely cause of her illness and continuing low-energy level. These diseases affect your muscles' ability to react," he said.

In a statement in Dutch, Belgian Olympic officials didn't mention the water, only saying Van Acker sickened several weeks ago, that her performance was compromised and she was undergoing an intense 36-hour treatment programme.

The Rio de Janeiro Olympic organising committee and World Sailing, the sport's governing body, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

World Sailing has said it regularly tests the water and that it is within international standards. Many sailors have said they have suffered no ill-effects and downplay any risks, suggesting that the water concerns are overshadowing some of the most exciting and challenging sailing of their lives.

However, Van Bladel is not convinced, saying that the impact of Van Acker's illness showed on Wednesday when Laser Radial sailors left the light-wind courses of Guanabara Bay for the large waves and heavy winds of the Copacabana ocean course outside the Bay.

'Can't make claim'

“The courses yesterday were physically difficult, and her weakened condition showed,” he said, although he added it is impossible to tell for sure if the water caused Van Acker's illness. “I can't make that claim," he said. “But the organisers chose this place when they had cleaner venues. Now we just have to deal with it.”

Laser sailors interviewed after Wednesday's races, which lasted about an hour each, said they were “gruelling.” After two second-place finishes in the first four races, Van Acker was fifth overall on Tuesday. She only finished 16th and 15th on Wednesday, dropping to 10th.

The top 10 in each class after 10 preliminary races qualify for a medal race. Sailors receive points equal to their finish with the lowest score winning. In the medal round points are doubled.

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment