Dakar-Gorée Swim Explained

The Dakar-Gorée Swim (French: Traversée Dakar-Gorée) is an annual open water swimming event between the beach of Dakar and Gorée island.[1] The competition is split into a 4500 m race for amateurs and a 5200 m course.[2] The 2020 edition was cancelled due to the COVID-19 epidemic.[3]

History

The Dakar-Gorée crossing was launched in 1985 as a homage to the victims of slavery who displayed resilience by attempting to swim, often in chains, towards freedom. The first edition of the swim took place on October 15, 1985, during the International Youth Year. Around thirty participants set off from the harbor of the Autonomous Port of Dakar for this inaugural edition, covering a distance of 3500 m.[4]

Since 2001, the Senegalese Swimming and Lifesaving Federation decided to adhere to the standards of the International Swimming Federation (FINA), increasing the distance of the Dakar-Gorée crossing to 5000 m, starting from the Voile d'Or beach in Dakar.

In 2004, the competition saw over 600 participants, both men and women, Senegalese and foreigners.

It was in 2008 that the Senegalese Swimming and Lifesaving Federation decided to organize two starts: race A (7800 m), starting from Thiaroye, and race B (4500 m) with the starting point at the Voile d'Or beach. The 2008 innovation has been maintained since then, but both races now start from the same location (Voile d'Or), with a change in distance for race A, which now covers 5200 km.

In 2012, the 4500 m race for amateurs saw the participation of 410 individuals, while the race for experienced swimmers, licensed club members, covering 7800 m, was contested by 66 individuals, according to the organizers.[5]

It has been a recurring event throughout its history, except in 2020 and 2021 when it was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Description

As of 2023, two race categories are held during the event: Race A, which spans 5,200 meters and is attended by professional swimmers starting from Voile d'Or; and Race B, designed for amateurs, which in 2023 saw participation from around 400 swimmers.[6]

Winners

Women's competition

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Haque. Nicolas. Hundreds swim to former Senegal slave island in annual race. 2020-11-05. www.aljazeera.com. en.
  2. Web site: 26 September 2019. La traversée Dakar-Gorée : 600 nageurs pour la 32è édition. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20200828202345/https://www.africatopsports.com/2019/09/26/la-traversee-dakar-goree-600-nageurs-pour-la-32e-edition/ . 2020-08-28 . 2020-11-05. Africa Top Sports. fr-FR.
  3. Web site: 2020-10-24. Officiel - La Traversée Dakar-Gorée annulée ! - Natation. 2020-11-05. wiwsport. fr-FR.
  4. Web site: September 28, 2014 . Meredith Staken et Malick Fall remportent la traversée Dakar- Gorée . Seneweb.
  5. Web site: September 30, 2012 . Traversée à la nage entre Dakar et l’île de Gorée: une 25e édition populaire . Jeune Afrique.
  6. Web site: Fisayo-Bambi . Jerry . September 25, 2023 . Senegal: Hundreds compete in Dakar to Gorée Island swimming race . Africa News.
  7. Web site: October 4, 2021 . Swimming: the 33rd edition of Dakar - Gorée postponed to 2022 . October 12, 2021 . sportnewsafrica.com.
  8. Web site: 2022-10-13 . Dakar-Gorée 2022 : Les lauréats honorés, ce samedi ! . 2024-05-17 . fr-FR.
  9. Web site: 2023-09-25 . Traversée Dakar-Gorée (34ème édition) : Ousseynou Diop et Aïssatou Ndiaye sacrés . 2024-05-17 . STADES . fr-FR.