Burning
hundreds of calories and working virtually every muscle in the body,
swimming is one of the most physically-demanding disciplines at Rio
2016.
It
was one of the original nine sports at the very first modern Games in
1896 and athletes now compete across four strokes - freestyle,
breaststroke, butterfly and backstroke.
As
water is 12 times denser than air, the sport requires physical strength
as well as stamina, meaning athletes must be at the very peak of their
fitness to compete in the Olympics.
Synchronised
swimmers must also be able to hold their breath for between two and
three minutes, and are not allowed to touch the bottom of the pool
during their routine.
Swimming
makes intensive use of the body's energy supplies, with a normal-sized
person moving at a fast pace burning around 800 calories an hour.
Team USA's Michael Phelps claims to consume 12,000 calories a day, the equivalent of eight whole chickens.
The
18 times gold medal-winner starts the day with a hearty breakfast
consisting of three fried-egg sandwiches, three chocolate chip pancakes
and a five-egg omelette.
And that is in addition to three sugar-coated slices of French toast and a bowl of maize porridge
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