In Para swimming, the athlete has to go through a classification process after which they are assigned to one of 14 classes, so they have an equal chance of winning the race against their competitors.
Carl explains: “It should not be the level of impairment that determines the outcome of a race. Your impairment should not advantage or disadvantage you. There’s been considerable disquiet and controversy around sport classification, there’s a big push by the IPC to conduct research and revise all the classification systems. That’s where my work comes in – to provide the evidence to develop something more objective, fairer and less controversial.
“The sport has changed so much - the professionalism, funding and performances. These athletes train four hours a day in the pool, an hour a day in the gym, some of them are swimming 50,000 to 60,000 metres (up to 60km) a week. They are serious athletes. Worldwide, the sport has become professionalised. In some respects, the classification system hasn’t kept pace.”
Improving the system
In 2016, the IPC approached Manchester Met and the University of the Sunshine Coast in Australia to improve the World Para Swimming classification system that defines race categories of physically impaired swimmers.
The project has collected data from more than 150 Para and non-disabled swimmers in the UK and overseas – the largest ever study cohort of its kind.
“We look at a swimmer’s condition – be that cerebral palsy or a spinal cord injury - and we only test or measure the factors associated with that condition,’’ says Carl.
“For example, for a swimmer with a limb deficiency such as an arm amputation, we wouldn’t test their strength, we wouldn’t test their coordination, because actually having a limb amputation shouldn’t affect those things. Whereas someone with a motor impairment such as hypertonia may have coordination, strength and range of motion affected. The classification should address those three areas to determine the extent to which the swimmer’s impairment is preventing them from doing the things required to swim fast. We are moving towards much more quantitative, measurement-driven ways of classifying swimmers.”
Subjective assessments can discriminate against elite athletes whose superior training puts them in a higher class than some competitors with the same level of impairment, but who train less.
The WPC and the IPC can now develop a classification system based on objective measurements rather than on expert, but subjective, opinion.
The new system will be mandatory and adopted for all competitions from local and national meets to World Championships and the Paralympics.