Alvarez received urgent medical attention after the rescue.
After the accident, Fuentes accused the rescuers on the scene of not acting fast enough in the face of danger.
“It was very scary,” Fuentes told Spain’s Marca newspaper. “I had to jump because the rescuers didn’t.”
Alvarez was competing in the women’s singles freestyle final when she stopped breathing, sparking widespread concern among her teammates, spectators at the venue and on social media.
In an Instagram update on Wednesday, USA Swimming’s tech account shared a statement from Fuentes saying that Alvarez had been thoroughly examined by doctors and that he was recovering. She thanked people for their good wishes and said the athlete was “feeling happy now”.
“All is well,” she wrote, before highlighting the risks that swimmers, like other athletes, face while performing.
“We’ve all seen pictures where some athletes don’t reach the finish line and others help them get there. Our sport is no different, just in the pool,” she said. “We push across the border and sometimes we find it.”
Alvarez, of Tonawanda, New York, started artistic swimming, widely known as synchronized swimming until 2017, at the age of five. USA teamHe competed in the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games and in the Tokyo 2020 Games, which have been rescheduled to 2021 amid the pandemic.
Wednesday was the second time Alvarez, 25, had fainted while swimming. It’s also the second time Fuentes has jumped to save her.
And in Barcelona last year, a swimmer fainted during an Olympic qualifier, prompting her coach to dive and pull her out of the water. The cause of Alvarez’s collapse remains unclear, but the sport often requires swimmers to hold their breath.
“When out for air only occasionally, technical swimmers need clean air when they have the opportunity to breathe,” he reads about the team. Official Website.
During the coronavirus pandemic, athletes around the world have been forced to find alternative training methods, including the US technical swimming team forced to train alone, sometimes standing on their heads in their bedrooms – to perfect their leg movements – even when swimming pools all over the country. Closed.
Fuentes Tell The Washington Post noted that the team has switched to virtual group exercises, sometimes joined by other international swimmers. She said Alvarez taught the group the Tik Tok dance.
It remains unclear if Alvarez will take part in Friday’s team event. She is scheduled to be examined by doctors Thursday.
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