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Molly Hannis (left) and Maddy Banic of the International Swimming League look ahead to the olympics
(Photo: Peter Fisher)
Molly Hannis (left) and Maddy Banic of the International Swimming League look ahead to the olympics
Molly Hannis (left) and Maddy Banic of the International Swimming League (Photo: Peter Fisher)

The Plot to Kill the Olympics


Published:  Updated: 

When Konstantin Grigorishin鈥斆糱er-wealthy Ukrainian businessman, aspiring philosopher, former pal of Russian oligarchs鈥攊ntroduced the upstart International Swimming League in 2019, he made the first move in an ambitious plan that could blow up Olympic sports and usher in a new era of athlete fairness. He also commenced a game of chicken with some of the world鈥檚 most powerful and dangerous men, including Vladimir Putin. And he just might win.


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Last fall Caeleb Dressel, the world鈥檚 fastest swimmer, sat in a hotel coffee shop on an island in the Danube in Budapest, sipping water from a bottle and trying not to think about a world without the Olympics. This was not easy. The 24-year-old from Florida was in Hungary鈥檚 fairy-tale capital of castles and grand hotels, along with 300 other Olympians, for the second season of a new competition, the (ISL), whose regard for the Games and their domination over watersports was summed up by its slogan: 鈥淭his. Is. The. Revolution.鈥

Dressel was doing much to stoke the rebellion. A year earlier he鈥檇 won six golds and two silvers at the World Championships in Kwangju, South Korea, to match Michael Phelps鈥檚 all-time record of eight golds at a single Olympics. When the pandemic forced the postponement of the 2020 Tokyo Games, Dressel came to Budapest, where during six weeks of racing he broke four world records in seven days. That, plus five more world records set by other swimmers in Hungary, suddenly made the league, not the Games, the place where sports history was being made. That in turn made Dressel and his left-arm sleeve tattoo the icons of an Olympic sport fast evolving beyond the Olympics.

Dressel wasn鈥檛 sure how he felt about that. He had built his entire existence around the Games. 鈥淢y whole life,鈥 he said, 鈥測ou hear swimming, you hear track, you hear gymnastics, you think Olympics.鈥 But in the league, he said, he had discovered 鈥渨hat swimming should be.鈥

Dressel鈥檚 dilemma had its roots in an old paradox. In public, the mythology of the Games鈥攖he Olympic ideal鈥攎akes them the world鈥檚 most prestigious tournament. Backstage, however, athletes despise the old men who run them, for their long and dismal history of corruption, and for allowing and even profiting from the financial, sexual, and pharmacological abuse of Olympians. The establishment鈥檚 latest ignominy concerned the coronavirus. Last March, epidemiologists said they couldn鈥檛 imagine a better superspreader event than gathering together several million people from every country on earth, then dispersing them back across the planet two weeks later. The International Olympic Committee鈥檚 response鈥攖hat it couldn鈥檛 imagine the Games any other way鈥攎ade clear that it valued schedules and bottom lines above global health. After weeks of refusing to back down, it agreed to a only and Australia and Britain threatened to do the same.

But for once, the IOC鈥檚 arrogance had cost it. Just as the pandemic inspired political and social change the world over, so, during the course of 2020, did many of the bigger Olympic sports experience a quiet remaking. By arranging COVID-safe bubbles or going virtual, most major competitions in track and field, basketball, soccer, cycling, tennis, and marathon running went ahead, prompting a string of editorials wondering if the Games were even necessary. 鈥淐ancel. The. Olympics,鈥 .

Leading the charge was the ISL. It鈥檚 not often that someone sets up a new Champions League. But over nine months in 2019, Ukrainian multimillionaire Konstantin Grigorishin did just that. At 55, Grigorishin has a trim physique and a shaved head that suggest a muscular efficiency; in another life as a Soviet cosmologist, he spent his days imagining new galaxies. Grigorishin鈥檚 vision of a better world for swimming involved a professional league of city-based teams made up of elite athletes. He argued that waiting four years for a big race didn鈥檛 celebrate the sport so much as stifle it, and pointed up another Olympic conundrum: why the world鈥檚 most popular participatory sports鈥攔unning and swimming鈥攚ere among its more obscure spectator ones. His competition would be in which swimmers faced off in weekly meets. To ensure that it was free of doping, any violation would mean a lifetime ban. Unlike the Olympics, the league would pay its athletes: Grigorishin pledged a 50 percent share of revenues. His big promise to swimmers was that by combining continuous competition with arena-rock production, he would make them stars. The ISL鈥檚 first season, in 2019鈥攕even meets between eight teams from the U.S. and Europe, which drew stadium crowds and an online audience of millions鈥攑roved that he was onto something. The second season鈥攅xpanded to ten teams, and staged in a bubble thrown around 300 swimmers, 1,000 support staff, and three adjacent hotels and a natatorium on the river in Budapest鈥攔eplaced the Olympics as the biggest sporting event of 2020.

Dressel shifted uneasily in his seat. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really hard for me to say, 鈥榊eah, Budapest is how it鈥檚 going to be,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if it鈥檚 up to me. I don鈥檛 know what even I wish it to be.鈥 Something in Dressel鈥檚 tone suggested that he was less spooked by the idea of Olympic decline than by talking about it out loud. We spoke about other subjects for a while: growing up in a family of swimmers, how he might have been a wide receiver, the beauty and spirituality of water. Then Dressel said: 鈥淎t the end of the day, there鈥檚 a lot of baggage that comes with any sport. You鈥檝e got to have people run the meets. And, you know, there might be some things that maybe I don鈥檛 want to know about.鈥

Which people? What things?

Caeleb Dressel
Caeleb Dressel (Peter Fisher)
Dressel midrace in Las Vegas
Dressel midrace in Las Vegas (Peter Fisher)

Vladimir Putin鈥檚 biographers cite his love of judo as evidence of a calculating mind. His publicists hand out pictures of him hunting, horseback-riding, or fishing bare-chested as evidence of great pecs. But in truth, the Russian president鈥檚 sport is swimming. His morning routine, at any of his dozen palaces, is comparable to that of an Olympian in training, an exhausting regimen of two hours of vigorous freestyle and butterfly.

For Putin, the benefits are mental as much as physical. 鈥淭his is where the political assistants suggest he gets much of Russia鈥檚 thinking done,鈥 . Putin is also setting an example for a nation known for heavy drinking and smoking, and one of his presidency鈥檚 great achievements is that it appears to be working. Under him, Russian . Two million Russians have even taken up the presidential hobby of ice swimming.

Putin鈥檚 enthusiasm for sports reflects his past in the KGB. Behind the Iron Curtain, sports, especially Olympic sports, were controlled by the security services. The Soviet Union in 1952, the year Putin was born, and during the Cold War the Olympics became one of the few arenas in which East and West did open battle. Tasked with producing West-beating Olympians, the Soviets overachieved. In the 1970s and 鈥80s, the USSR dominated medal counts, while Soviet satellites like East Germany and Romania ruled swimming and gymnastics. To communist leaders, the Olympics were proof, like Sputnik, Cuba, and Vietnam, that the righteous underdog could win. Behind the scenes, the Soviets used the Olympics to spread influence and ideology. Their success can be measured by how the KGB that it had an asset in Juan Antonio Samaranch, , and how Soviet sports bureaucrats the Olympics鈥 founding creed of elitism, imperialism, and individualism into a more socialist one of egalitarianism, internationalism, and mass participation.

Putin came to power from the humiliation of Soviet collapse. Somewhat confusingly, he has pursued that goal using many of the techniques of Soviet rule. His inner circle, the , is almost exclusively ex-KGB. Like the USSR, his state tries to in one hierarchy, which in modern Russia means government, business, the security services, and organized crime.

Putin has also revived the state鈥檚 connection with sports. In the past decade, Russia has become the , welcoming the World Athletics Championships, Formula One, the World Swimming Championships, the soccer World Cup, and the Winter Olympics. As in times past, the regime once again recruits from the sporting world. 鈥淭he situation is no different from the Cold War,鈥 says Yuri Ganus, former head of the Russian Anti-Doping Agency (Rusada), after speaking out about drugs. 鈥淥ur leading athletes are politicized, controlled. Look how many of them have seats in parliament.鈥 A measure of how personal these sporting ties are to Putin, 68, can be gauged from his romance, since his divorce in 2014, with gymnastics gold medalist Alina Kabaeva, 37.

Today, Russian sports once again mirror the character of the Russian state. To the extent that Moscow has been able to revive its influence with Olympic officials鈥攂y, say, supplying the Norwegian head of biathlon鈥檚 governing body with bags of cash, hunting trips, and prostitutes, 鈥擮lympic sports also often seem to reflect the same values. That was on full display at the 2014 Sochi Winter Games. The Russian team鈥檚 dominance was . The outlandish sums spent on the Games鈥攖otaling $51 billion, making them the most expensive Olympics in history鈥攚ere explained by state directives to certain oligarchs to lavish money on the event; by construction contracts worth billions handed out to others; and, , by a festival of embezzlement and money laundering amounting to $30 billion. Sochi illustrated the Olympics鈥 other uses, too. It provided patriotic cover for the 蝉颈濒辞惫颈办颈鈥s venality. Among the wider public, it inspired the kind of patriotism normally reserved for war. In the years since, the Games鈥 importance to Russia has been further underlined by death threats directed at athletes who testify about doping, and the . None of which has prompted IOC president Thomas Bach to revisit his closing-ceremony remarks that Sochi was 鈥渁mazing鈥 and Russia鈥檚 performance there 鈥渞emarkable.鈥

A member of the ISL team Energy Standard diving in
A member of the ISL team Energy Standard diving in (Peter Fisher)

To make Russian sports great again, the Kremlin set up a range of supervisory bodies staffed by leading regime figures. The 105 medals available in swimming鈥檚 35 Olympic events mark it out for special attention. At the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro, the 17-member board of the Russian swimming federation included seven oligarchs. Among them: Oleg Deripaska, once Russia鈥檚 richest man, now by the U.S. for wiretapping, extortion, racketeering, and threatening to kill rivals. Overseeing them as board chairman was , U.S.-sanctioned former Kremlin chief of staff, keen amateur swimmer, and, since late 2016, director of the Foreign Intelligence Service, Russia鈥檚 CIA.

Exploring the bond between Putin and the pool one snowy February day in Moscow, I visited Alexey Vlasenko in the gray concrete block on the banks of the Moskva River which houses Russia鈥檚 Olympic administrators. Vlasenko, 55, is Putinism personified. He graduated from Moscow鈥檚 university for sports, once the engine of the Soviet Olympic effort. Today he鈥檚 head of (water polo, diving, and artistic swimming) and a member of Russia鈥檚 Olympic committee. In politics, he鈥檚 a member of the Eurasian Peoples鈥 Assembly, an international forum set up by Putin to counter the Western bias he perceives in global institutions. In business, before it was in 2015, he was chairman of Russia鈥檚 MAST-Bank. (Vlasenko was not among MAST-Bank managers prosecuted for stealing $90 million.)

Vlasenko turned out to be a jovial, portly man who fed me giant slices of chocolate cake and presented me with a pair of skintight purple water-polo trunks. On the walls of his office were two photographs of Naryshkin, one of which showed him conferring with Putin. When I asked how Russia鈥檚 top spy assisted the nation鈥檚 Olympic ambitions, Vlasenko was candid. 鈥淚 go to Naryshkin and I say, 鈥楾his is important for the country.鈥 One phone call, tick, it鈥檚 decided鈥攖he money is immediately found. I have three sports. I feel support on every level, at every step. Any question, whatever I need, it鈥檚 decided immediately.鈥

Part of Vlasenko鈥檚 job is to promote Russian interests and influence overseas. This he does through positions in the Olympics鈥 two big swimming subordinates, the International Swimming Federation (FINA) and the European Swimming Federation. Vlasenko has been especially successful with FINA, forging a close relationship with its 85-year-old president, Julio Maglione of Uruguay, and its 79-year-old chief executive, Cornel Marculescu, a Romanian former water-polo player who assumed the job in 1986, near the end of the Cold War. In 2014, before MAST-Bank went bust, Vlasenko struck a deal for the bank to sponsor FINA鈥檚 World Cup. He has also facilitated a friendship between Putin and Maglione. In 2014, Maglione presented Putin with his organization鈥檚 highest honor, , declaring Russia 鈥渙ne of the most important and major powers in world sport.鈥 Maglione has since become a regular companion of Putin鈥檚, sharing the stage with him at FINA鈥檚 2015 World Championships in Kazan, in central Russia, accompanying him at international sports conferences, and attending his third presidential inauguration, in 2018, at his invitation. When I asked Vlasenko about the warmth between the two men, he beamed. 鈥淥ur president adores him,鈥 he said of Maglione. 鈥淗e loves him.鈥

The regime鈥檚 affection for FINA is matched by its fondness for swimming. Under the guidance of a president who was 鈥渟o sporty and always in great shape,鈥 Vlasenko said swimming had become the 蝉颈濒辞惫颈办颈鈥s preferred pastime. 鈥淗alf of our government swims!鈥 he said. He described an annual gala at Moscow鈥檚 Olimpiyskiy pool, attended by Naryshkin, his daughter, Veronika, and other ministers and officials, pictures of which have been distributed to the Russian press. Vlasenko presented this vogue for the pool as good for the leadership鈥檚 health. But he was also describing a curiosity of the regime: that to say ministers, spies, billionaires, and gangsters swim in the same waters in Putin鈥檚 Russia is not a mere metaphor, but a literal account of how power works.

Think of it as the Kremlin Swim Club.

Konstantin Grigorishin
Konstantin Grigorishin (Shamil Sakhavatov)

ISL founder Konstantin Ivanovich Grigorishin was born in 1965 in Zaporozhye, an industrial city on the Dnieper River in the rolling, black-earth flatlands of southern Ukraine. Russia has never accepted Ukrainian independence鈥1,000 years ago, Kyiv was the capital of the original Mother Russia, the Rus empire鈥攁nd Grigorishin鈥檚 parents were children in the early 1930s, when Stalin tried to eradicate even the idea of Ukraine, starving up to 12 million people to death in the . Today the city still remembers the in May 1933 when party bosses in the Intourist Hotel drank champagne and watched women dance naked on the tables as, outside, tens of thousands ate the flesh of horses and even one another.

Stalin decreed that from this cleansing catastrophe a new city would arise, embodying the enlightened modernism of the Soviet Union. Within a few years, Zaporozhye was transformed from provincial backwater into workers鈥 paradise, a city of square housing blocks, giant industrial plants, and generous public parks, arranged on the longest central avenue in Europe, powered by its biggest hydroelectric dam. Grigorishin鈥檚 parents designed jet engines for Antonovs and Yakovlevs. The arrival of a son allowed them to move from a communal apartment into their own two-bedroom, opposite a state sports academy to which Grigorishin was sent at the age of six. Today Grigorishin recalls the school as the origin of his love of Olympic sports. Yet his lawyer, Ekaterina Slivko, says that his attendance indicated his gifts not as an athlete but as a rebel. 鈥淭he sports school was a bit stricter, for kids whose parents couldn鈥檛 handle them,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou can still see that mischievous boy who upset the entire world.鈥

Grigorishin鈥檚 contrariness sprang from an unyielding intellect. At 12, he was transferred to a school for children who excelled in math and science. By age 19, his ability to 鈥渢hink around corners,鈥 as a friend put it, had taken him to the Nobel Prize鈥搘inning Landau Institute of Theoretical Physics in Moscow. When Communism collapsed, Grigorishin watched hundreds of colleagues depart for research positions overseas before deciding to apply the scientific method to the new world of capitalism at home. He would pick a sector, research it, propose a new hypothesis to explain it, then start a company to apply his theories. On enough occasions, his ideas turned industries on their heads and made him outrageously rich. By 2014, his business group, Energy Standard, had holdings in power distribution, manufacturing, ports, and oil and gas logistics worth nearly $6 billion. 鈥淏ig money is made by playing against the rules,鈥 he said in a 2008 interview.

With his family鈥攚ife Natacha, daughter Jane, and sons Ivan and George鈥擥rigorishin enjoyed his wealth. There was a 200-year-old mansion in central Moscow, a cellar of Bordeaux and Burgundy to match any in the world, an art collection that included a Munch, a Bacon, a Lichtenstein, and a Mir贸, and three interconnected chalets in Courchevel, in the French Alps. But in other ways, Grigorishin didn鈥檛 act the billionaire. He took the train. He dressed in sneakers, gym shorts, and old Pink Floyd T-shirts. For Grigorishin, the joy of money was the freedom it gave him to pursue a life of the mind. Delegating oversight of his empire to managers, he spent months reading postmodern philosophers who argued that after progressing from medievalism to modernity, humanity was on the cusp of a new era of multiple, subjective truths, some beyond rational understanding. Grigorishin described this evolution as 鈥渞eligion, science, magic.鈥

Once, in a pre-air-travel era, limiting Olympic competition to one climactic tournament every four years made sense. Today that restriction merely illustrates the Olympic establishment鈥檚 success at crushing potential rivals.

Inevitably, Grigorishin鈥檚 pursuit of metaphysical truth colored his earthly behavior. He tolerated the kind of corruption needed to operate a business in the post-Soviet world鈥攑aying bribes to bureaucrats, making alliances with gangster-politicians. But he saw no point in making billions only to remain in hock to some 鈥渃orruptioner,鈥 and would publicly call out the kind of kleptomania that ate whole countries. 鈥淔reedom is very important to me,鈥 he told me. 鈥淚f somebody tries to restrict my freedom, immediately they are my enemy. I want to do what I want, say that Putin is stupid.鈥 It was an attitude that stood out in the creeping authoritarianism of his environment. When he met Grigorishin in 2003, his general counsel, Maxim Markov, said that he had no intention of leaving a career in international finance to work for some Ukrainian billionaire. 鈥淭hen, in one meeting, I really fell in love with him,鈥 Markov said. 鈥淗e never lies. That鈥檚 his principle. Even if it is so bad for us as a company.鈥

It wasn鈥檛 great for Grigorishin鈥檚 personal safety, either. In 2002, after he fell out with the pro-Moscow government in Kyiv, the Ukrainian police bundled him into a car outside a restaurant, planted a pistol and a bag of cocaine on him, and held him in jail with three convicted murderers for ten days, threatening to drive him out to the woods and bury him alive. Grigorishin鈥檚 response upon his release was to move his family to Moscow, detail his treatment in a in The New York Times, then, from 2004 to 2005, spend $35 million bankrolling the pro-democracy, pro-Europe Orange Revolution, which overthrew the Ukrainian government. Within a few years, however, Grigorishin was complaining that the new leaders were as bad as the old ones. That earned him the disapproval of several Western ambassadors in Kyiv who backed the new regime. An equal-opportunity provocateur, he angered Moscow by opposing its 2014 invasion of Ukraine.

Grigorishin found respite from the turmoil of his professional life in the Olympic ideals of his youth. 鈥淲hy do I love sport?鈥 he asked. Because in its highest expression it was like fine art. 鈥淭he beauty of the body, the beauty of motion, the chance that you will see something extraordinary.鈥 His interest narrowed to swimming when his son Ivan showed early promise as a butterflyer. In a few years, Grigorishin progressed from funding training camps to founding a swim club, also called Energy Standard, based in Moscow and Kyiv.

But just as Grigorishin couldn鈥檛 help sounding off at oligarchs and politicians, he was soon berating the Olympic coaches and officials they employed. They were pushing the kids too hard, he said. Russia often triumphed at the junior world championships but hadn鈥檛 won gold in the Olympic pool since 1996. Why? Because by the time its swimmers were old enough to compete, Grigorishin said, they were burned out. Russia鈥檚 Stakhanovite sports culture made doping all but logical, he added, something confirmed when, in the run-up to the 2012 London Games, Rusada turned itself into a , and swapping out dirty samples for clean ones. Oligarch cash provided . Former national head coach Andrei Vorontsov, now at Bath University in southern England, says that in London, the reward for 鈥渁 gold medal was 4.5 million rubles [then $140,000], plus scholarships, salaries, the keys to a new car鈥攎aybe Mercedes, maybe Audi鈥攈ouses or flats, bonuses from local governments, and an increase in your pension.鈥 To Grigorishin, the pressure to win amounted to state-sponsored child abuse. 鈥淜ids are very fragile,鈥 he said. 鈥淭heir bodies are not ready. Their brains are not ready. So many talents have been destroyed because of that.鈥

After London, Grigorishin decreed that Energy Standard would be everything Russia鈥檚 Olympic sports world was not. No doping, no medal targets, no gifts of cars or luxury watches. Grigorishin鈥檚 instinct was that relaxed swimmers were better swimmers, their minds not objects to be suppressed but assets to be harnessed. Gratifyingly, results came quickly. By 2016, Energy Standard had several Olympic prospects, and its enlightened methods were attracting world champions like Sara Sj枚str枚m of Sweden and Chad le Clos of South Africa. Within a few years, almost by accident, Grigorishin found himself owner of the best, most progressive swim club in the world.

Florent Manaudou
Florent Manaudou (Peter Fisher)
Lilly King
Lilly King (Peter Fisher)

Part II

The first time Grigorishin was extorted was in 2013. The phenomenon of using the state to intimidate or steal businesses had become so common in Russia that it was given a name: , after the English phrase 鈥渃orporate raider.鈥 Grigorishin had always resisted. But this time he was persuaded to pay by the stature of his adversaries: an oligarch with close ties to Putin, a lieutenant general in the state security services, and Russia鈥檚 two most notorious warlord-gangsters, Chechen president Ramzan Kadyrov and his right-hand man, Adam Delimkhanov. Kadyrov in particular was a caricature of a playboy-tyrant who, when he wasn鈥檛 wrestling his pet tiger or shooting a gold-plated pistol or hosting Elizabeth Hurley, G茅rard Depardieu, or Mike Tyson at his palace in Grozny, liked to electrocute his enemies or beat them to death with a shovel. Putin used the Chechens for like assassinations or the invasion of Ukraine, and with them, Grigorishin knew, violence was not a threat but a promise. Still, even as he transferred $100 million鈥攖o a security-agency slush fund, the oligarch鈥檚 soccer club, and a fund to build a mosque in Chechnya鈥攈e understood that he was inviting the cabal to return one day.

In December 2015, while Grigorishin was in Kyiv on business, a dozen plainclothes officers carrying machine guns and wearing balaclavas kicked open the front door of his Moscow home and detained Natacha, Ivan, then 17, and George, 5, threatening to hold them hostage until Grigorishin signed over his entire empire. With the raiders camped out on their doorstep, the family made two unsuccessful attempts to escape in the days that followed. Finally, they snuck out of an unguarded back door one night and raced to the airport, where, taking advantage of a public holiday when most officials with the authority to stop aircraft would be unavailable, Grigorishin had arranged for a private plane to fly them to Europe. The price for their freedom? The house ($60 million), the art in it ($300 million), a dacha near Putin鈥檚 residence in Rublyovka ($5 million), and two apartments, plus cars, furniture, jewelry, and a property empire in Crimea worth $400 million鈥攁 total of around three-quarters of a billion dollars in assets, most of which was seized by the state the next day.

Grigorishin still had Energy Standard, the business group, mostly based in Ukraine. But after settling his family into a life of exile in London, he decided that he needed a new plan. He was tired of all the threats and corruption, and ashamed that his business had endangered his wife and children. Watching the Rio Olympics on television that summer, Grigorishin saw one of the great swim performances of all time. American Anthony Ervin had first won gold at 19, in the 50-meter freestyle in Sydney in 2000. Then he dropped out of the sport, auctioned his medal for charity, joined a rock band, and fell into drinking, drugs, depression, and homelessness, before returning to swimming as a children鈥檚 coach and then a competitor. For his finale in Rio, at the age of 35鈥攎aking him the oldest male swimmer to compete in the Games since 1904鈥 by beating French world champion Florent Manaudou by one hundredth of a second and surpassing his own time in Sydney, 16 years earlier, by more than half a second. This was not sports as a metaphor for life. This was life itself, at its most miraculous鈥攐r, as Grigorishin saw it, magic. 鈥淪uch a great story,鈥 he said.

A month later, when Energy Standard鈥檚 Italian head coach, Andrea di Nino, announced that he was quitting swimming because he was bored with such a 鈥済ray sport鈥攏o heart, no crazy fans,鈥 Grigorishin held up his hand. 鈥淪tay with me one year,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檒l test some new ideas.鈥

Adam Peaty
Adam Peaty (Peter Fisher)
Sara Sj枚str枚m
Sara Sj枚str枚m (Peter Fisher)

It was symptomatic of what the Olympics had become that Ervin鈥檚 win wasn鈥檛 the big story at Rio. Attracting far more attention were stories from outside the competition, such as how Brazilian organizers to secure the Games, , for reselling millions of dollars鈥 worth of tickets, and the in sports history.

Two investigations by the conducted in the lead-up to Rio confirmed media reports that Rusada had the Russian team. WADA banning the entire squad. Rather than act decisively, however, the IOC punted, asking individual sports federations to rule on each athlete鈥檚 admission .

In years past, that might have been all the reassurance Moscow needed. A linchpin of its doping program until mid-2015 was Lamine Diack, Senegalese president of the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), who took bribes to cover up Russian cheating. (In 2020, Diack, 87, was for two years for accepting $3.8 million for his services.) But the athletics body had a new president, British former Olympian Sebastian Coe. Days before Rio, Coe disqualified 67 of Russia鈥檚 68 track-and-fielders.

By contrast, FINA responded as a loyal Kremlin Swim Club ally. Maglione rushed to Russia鈥檚 defense, complaining to the Russian news agency that the anti-dopers had 鈥渆xceeded their powers.鈥 And while FINA did seven Russian swimmers named as dopers, Vlasenko protested, after which FINA allowed them all to compete, on the grounds that they had appealed.

That was too much for many in Rio. Three of FINA鈥檚 eight anti-doping officials . The crowd booed Russia鈥檚 pool star Yulia Efimova, one of the named dopers, as she approached the blocks. After 19-year-old U.S. breaststroker Lilly King beat Efimova in the 100-meter final, King declared her gold medal a 鈥渧ictory for clean sport鈥 as Efimova looked on. John Leonard, head of the American Swimming Coaches Association, one of the few independent bodies in swimming, FINA鈥檚 behavior to The Guardian. 鈥淭hey are getting paid by the Russians,鈥 he said, adding that FINA didn鈥檛 鈥済ive a crap鈥 about doping. 鈥淎s cynical as you can possibly be about this,鈥 said Leonard, 鈥渢hat鈥檚 correct and accurate, I believe.鈥 (Neither FINA, nor its chief executive Marculescu, nor the IOC responded to multiple requests to be interviewed for this story; an IOC spokesperson stressed by email that the organization was 鈥渇ully committed to protecting the integrity of sport.鈥)

A relay start
A relay start (Peter Fisher)

FINA鈥檚 conduct shocked the world. But, in many ways, it was behaving as it always had. When files on the East German Stasi were opened in the 1990s, they confirmed that the GDR鈥檚 dominance of world swimming in the 鈥70s and 鈥80s 聽so large that several athletes died or suffered organ failure鈥攐r, if they were female, experienced changes in sex characteristics. The organization did nothing then, even allowing the program鈥檚 sadistic lead scientist to keep his silver FINA pin. Today, with Marculescu still at the helm, things have not improved. FINA has been sluggish on athlete abuse, staying silent about several instances of sexual assault involving coaches, And while there are few studies on the prevalence of doping in swimming, the athletes themselves acknowledge that it鈥檚 common, and a 2017 survey found that a quarter of elite swimmers who were polled were either willing to dope or considering it.

Such readiness to cheat is facilitated by FINA鈥檚 tolerance of it. At the 2019 World Championships in South Korea, FINA allowed China鈥檚 most famous Olympian, Sun Yang, to compete, despite and an incident in 2018 when testing officials came to Sun鈥檚 home to take a blood sample and he smashed the vial with a hammer. (After WADA appealed to the Court for Arbitration in Sport, Sun was banned for eight years. In late 2020, a Swiss court set aside that ruling, clearing the way for Sun鈥檚 return to competition.)

But if it鈥檚 soft on cheats and sex predators, FINA is hard on money. In that it follows the IOC. Though Olympic officials admitted professional tennis, basketball, and soccer players in the 1980s and 鈥90s, they oversee a regime of low pay or outright amateurism in the sports they control, such as track and swimming. Since they run all the major competitions in both of those sports (in swimming the list includes the Olympics, the World Championships, the World Cup, and the World Swim Series), they enforce this creed by threatening to ban from the Olympic circuit any athlete who takes part in better-paid, nonsanctioned competition. This intimidation explains the peculiarity of the Olympics鈥 uniquely vulnerable quadrennial calendar. Once, in a pre-air-travel era, limiting Olympic competition to one climactic tournament every four years made sense. Today that restriction merely illustrates the Olympic establishment鈥檚 success at crushing potential rivals.

The IOC defends this practice as a noble . But as the Games have become big business with the growth of television rights and sponsorship, it looks more and more like greed. In the 2013鈥16 Olympic cycle, the IOC鈥檚 income was $5.7 billion. Of that, it paid not a cent to the athletes whose sweat it was profiting from. Instead, , it reserved 10 percent for itself, contributed $2.4 billion to the cost of the Sochi and Rio Games, and sent $1.7 billion to other Olympic sports bureaucracies, leaving it with a bank balance of $2.1 billion.

So it is with FINA. In 2013鈥16, it earned $200 million and paid none of it to Olympic swimmers. It did pay out prize money in its other tournaments鈥攁 total of $25.8 million, including $20,000 for a gold, $15,000 for a silver, and $10,000 for a bronze at its . During that same period, however, FINA spent $22 million on salaries for its few dozen staff, $20 million on travel and per diems, $18 million on travel for other swimming bureaucrats, and $19 million for the purchase and expansion of a ch芒teau in Lausanne, on Lake Geneva in Switzerland, to serve as its headquarters, with living quarters for Marculescu. The trickle-down of Olympic income distribution鈥攆rom the IOC to FINA to national sports bodies, and finally to competitors鈥攎eans that pen pushers make several times more than star athletes. In 2017, British Swimming paid its 69-year-old chief executive of 23 years, David Sparkes, $258,155 in salary and pension. That same year Briton Adam Peaty, the world鈥檚 fastest breaststroker, received a stipend of $39,527, revocable if he earned $91,759 or more from sponsors (which Peaty did).

At the 2016 Games in Rio de janeiro, the 17-member board of the Russian swimming federation included seven oligarchs. Among them: Oleg Deripaska, once Russia鈥檚 richest man, now sanctioned by the U.S. for wiretapping, extortion, racketeering, and threatening to kill rivals.

The difference between officials and swimmers is never starker than at a meet. The bureaucrats fly in all-expenses-paid, VIP style and stay at the best hotels. Swimmers, some of whom work a second job or sell their medals to pay their way, get cattle class and sleep two to a room in the athletes鈥 village. 鈥淲e鈥檙e always prepared for the worst when we get to a meet,鈥 says Lilly King. 鈥淣o air-conditioning in our rooms, a hard bed, no pillow, having to walk eight miles a day in the village to get food.鈥 At the 2019 World Championships, swimmers arriving at the dining hall in Kwangju were greeted with a sign that warned of a . No alternatives were suggested: 鈥淛ust 鈥楬eads up! You might be throwing up after this meal!鈥欌 King says.

Hungarian Katinka Hosszu, 31, one of the greatest swimmers of all time, with 26 Olympic, World, and European golds in a 17-year career, and the only swimmer ever to earn $1 million from racing, recalls a conversation with Marculescu a few years ago in which he asked her how to go about popularizing the World Cup. Perhaps if he treated swimmers better, she suggested, more would come. 鈥淎nd he said, 鈥楲ook, swimmers are swimmers, Katinka. Swimmers come and go. Swimmers don鈥檛 matter. The fans come out for FINA.鈥欌 Hosszu realized that Marculescu was letting slip a truth. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 care about swimmers,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 like swimming. Swimming is just a tool to make money.鈥 Grigorishin agrees with that assessment. He cites the fate of the American open-water swimmer , who died of heat exhaustion 500 meters from the finish in the United Arab Emirates in 2010. FINA had ordered the race to go ahead despite concerns that the water temperature was too high. 鈥淭hey are using these athletes, poor kids, like slaves,鈥 Grigorishin says.

Away from the pool, the snapshots of FINA that have emerged in media stories and court cases raise questions over not just what kind of sports authority it is, but what kind of organization. What to make of the 2016 for the theft of Olympic gear or the 2017 arrest of Brazilian FINA member Coaracy Nunes ? What to think of an organization that Husain al-Musallam of Kuwait as its first vice president in 2017 and now backs him to succeed Maglione, despite a U.S. indictment for paying bribes to fix elections to FIFA, the world soccer authority, and a 2017 video in which he鈥檚 seen telling a Chinese sponsor to pay him 10 percent of any FINA deal?

And really, what does it say about FINA that it kept Hungarian Tamas Gyarfas, 71, on its executive board after police charged him with on a business rival who was shot 19 times in his car in Budapest in 1998? (Gyarfas, who denies any involvement in the murder, is currently on trial.) Gyarfas was president of the Hungarian swimming federation for 23 years, until Hosszu forced his resignation in late 2015, accusing him of stealing funds. Her courage in standing up to a man of Gyarfas鈥檚 reputation caused a sensation in Hungary. 鈥淓veryone was really scared,鈥 says Hosszu. 鈥淭hey knew who he was. They knew what kind of things he does.鈥 So what conclusion are swimmers to draw from the fact that, as Hosszu says, Gyarfas and Marculescu are 鈥渉uge friends鈥? King has no doubts. 鈥淔INA鈥檚 corrupt,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 have said it before. I鈥檒l say it again.鈥

Russian State Duma Speaker Sergei Naryshkin in Italy
Sergey Naryshkin (Mikhail Svetlov/Getty)
ANOC General Assembly - Day 2
Alexey Vlasenko (Matt Roberts/Getty)

The case for remaking swimming was undeniable. By the middle of 2017, Grigorishin was convinced that it was urgent, too. As was his habit, he had buried himself in research, digging into FINA鈥檚 and the IOC鈥檚 accounts and talking to managers of professional sports. He emerged proclaiming that there was no time to lose. If doping and gangsterism weren鈥檛 enough to sink the Olympics, the Games鈥 astronomical costs meant they were . Meanwhile, a of the American TV audience, from 45.5 in 2000 to 52.4 in 2016, something Grigorishin ascribed to a tired format, suggested that they would one day also run out of spectators. He predicted that, without reform, the Games might carry on for a decade or two as a prestigious sideshow, as they had become for tennis, soccer, and basketball. But it was also possible that 鈥渢he Olympic Games has no future,鈥 he said.

Grigorishin鈥檚 central contention was that the term Olympic sports was a misnomer. Swimming and running, even beach volleyball and BMX, were some of the world鈥檚 most universal sports, practiced by billions, accessible to anyone, owned by no one. His plan to save swimming centered on his assertion that, with the right competition, swimmers could be as big as other professional sports stars. Accordingly, out would go the endless prelims and the tedium of racing against the clock. In would come meets between teams that would build fan bases in New York, Washington, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Toronto, London, Paris, Rome, Budapest, and Tokyo. As in other professional leagues, during the preseason those clubs would be free to recruit and trade the world鈥檚 300 best swimmers. Meets would pit four teams against one another, with two swimmers from each team spread across a total of eight lanes. Points awarded for finishes would go toward a cumulative score. The action would peak at the end of the first day of racing with relays, and at the end of the second with a skins competition鈥攁n edge-of-your-seat knockout contest in which eight swimmers race, then the fastest four, then the final two. Points for meet results would go toward a season total to determine which teams progress to the semis and the final. Without prelims, every race would be like an Olympic final. Stoking the competition further, the would be $6 million, an average of $19,000 per season per swimmer, though a Dressel or a King could expect to win $300,000. Finally, Grigorishin was determined that his contest should be a show. Each meet would feature a poolside DJ, neon-lit dugouts, hundreds of stage lights, and a space-age jumbotron. The broadcast would be heavy with underwater cameras, on-screen animation, and the kind of shots that make the most of swimming鈥檚 particular visual appeal. As Grigorishin said: 鈥淚t鈥檚 very rare in sport that athletes show up almost naked.鈥

Natalie Hinds
Natalie Hinds (Peter Fisher)
Marie Wattel
Marie Wattel (Peter Fisher)

But however spectacular Grigorishin鈥檚 innovations, in 2017 no swimmer would risk a ban from the Olympics in order to take part in a new league. To fill his teams, Grigorishin needed a deal with FINA. The prospect of negotiating one neither thrilled nor daunted him. 鈥淚n my imagination it was a voluntary organization, maybe some corruption,鈥 he said of FINA. 鈥淎 very small mafia. Not too serious.鈥 Reaching out to a fellow Russian, Grigorishin asked Alexey Vlasenko to set up a meeting. A few weeks later, word came back that Marculescu was ready to see Grigorishin in Lausanne in September 2017.

Discussions went nowhere. Marculescu habitually digressed into details, such as the name of the ISL, which he proposed changing to the World League Swimming Clubs Association. He sulked about Grigorishin鈥檚 friendships with swimmers. At one point, the two sides produced a memorandum of understanding proposing that FINA and the ISL 鈥渆nter into a cooperation which will be mutually beneficial for swimming.鈥 But in early 2018, Marculescu became increasingly unavailable, and Grigorishin concluded that FINA wasn鈥檛 interested in an agreement.

By then, Grigorishin had other reasons for feeling disquieted. He says that Olympic officials he met often assumed that since he was Ukrainian and rich, he was 鈥渓ike them, fully corrupted.鈥 They would hint at how much they were making from money laundering or embezzlement, then 鈥渋mmediately start to negotiate about some kickbacks.鈥 Meanwhile, in Ukraine, Grigorishin heard that Maglione had come visiting, looking for kompromat: dirt. between Marculescu and FINA鈥檚 American vice president, Dale Neuberger, reveal that they saw the ISL鈥檚 challenge to FINA as existential. 鈥淲e must win, we will win,鈥 wrote Neuberger. Marculescu wanted to punish swimmers who swam for Grigorishin. Neuberger preferred to go after national officials. 鈥淗urt them badly,鈥 he wrote of one country federation, adding of its chief: 鈥淲e must kill him … suspend him for years.鈥 At one point, Grigorishin received an anonymous text that read: 鈥淜onstantin can have everything for $150 million.鈥 When Grigorishin鈥檚 new managing director, Ali Khan, asked officials in Europe and the U.S. for help in talking to FINA, he found them terrified. 鈥淚n some instances, it got down to one individual saying, 鈥業 don鈥檛 want this to cost me my job,鈥欌 Khan said.

Khan, a London investment banker, was amazed by what he was discovering. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 realize how much sport stinks,鈥 he said. He was struggling even to characterize the organization in front of him. FINA was not a 鈥減rofessional governing body that鈥檚 going to bring swimming into the 21st century.鈥 Though the IOC claimed to be a nonprofit committed to 鈥渨orld peace, bringing the world together, and the good of mankind,鈥 in reality 鈥渢here鈥檚 billions of dollars changing hands.鈥 Fear, threats, an obsession with loyalty to the swimming 鈥渇amily,鈥 and 鈥渁 black box of billions of dollars,鈥 Khan mused. There was only one way to describe that type of organization. Grigorishin concurred. He had recently dispatched Dmytro Kachurovsky, former Olympic coach for Ukraine, to Florida to set up the ISL鈥檚 U.S. office. Kachurovsky reported back that, on a tour of Miami with another investment banker, the man began pointing out new apartment blocks, saying, 鈥淭hat was Sochi, that was Rio.鈥 Grigorishin said: 鈥淚 recognized that it鈥檚 not a small corrupt organization, but a big corrupt organization.鈥 And if FINA was following the standard mafia M.O., then Grigorishin knew what to expect. First FINA would create a crisis. Then it would offer a solution鈥攆or a price.

Manaudou
Manaudou (Peter Fisher)
Dressel signing autographs
Dressel signing autographs (Peter Fisher)

The crisis came on June 5, 2018, when Marculescu tried to shut down the ISL. In a letter to all 209 swimming federations, he forbade them from taking part in the 鈥渟o-called international competition 鈥業nternational Swimming League,鈥 which FINA does not recognise.鈥 Any swimmer or federation that participated, he implied, would be excluding themselves from the Olympics.

Next came the solution. It began with an anonymous e-mail forwarded to Maxim Markov, Grigorishin鈥檚 general counsel, claiming that Vlasenko had been shortchanged by the lack of any deal between FINA and Grigorishin. (In Russian business, sensitive negotiations are routinely conducted via messages passed on by an intermediary, disguising their author and preserving deniability.) 鈥淎ctually, [Grigorishin] should have established a company, and 14% of this company was meant to be owned by Alexey Vlasenko,鈥 read the message. The logic eluded Grigorishin, and he was inclined to ignore it. Then he says Vlasenko contacted him directly. 鈥淚 can help you solve this problem with the [security services] and the Chechens,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ecause I know them. But you have to give something.鈥

This was astonishing. Even if, as Grigorishin believed, Vlasenko was offering a genuine mediation (for a fee), his suggestion that he broker a deal with Grigorishin鈥檚 extortionists was unusual. What was extraordinary was what Vlasenko seemed to be revealing: that he, an Olympic swimming official, had links with some of the biggest gangsters in Russia. Grigorishin needed to know more, and one evening in October 2018, following several more weeks of indirect negotiation, he dispatched Markov to an apartment in Baden-Baden, Germany. There, Markov had been told, he would meet a gentleman who, to protect Markov from reprisal, we will call Yevgeny. Yevgeny turned out to be 鈥渁n enormously fat man with a little Porsche, living with his mother in this nice apartment,鈥 Markov said. Yevgeny introduced himself as a close friend of Maglione鈥檚, and then he launched into a tirade. 鈥淲hat is Konstantin doing in this world?鈥 he shouted at Markov. 鈥淗e does not know what he is doing! He is destroying the whole thing!鈥

After working himself up, Yevgeny needed a drink. He yelled to his mother to bring brandy. 鈥淣ot that Armagnac,鈥 he shouted when she returned. 鈥淭he other Armagnac!鈥

An exasperated Yevgeny then turned back to Markov. 鈥淕rigorishin promised something in 2013 and he did not deliver it,鈥 he said.

Here it comes, Markov thought.

Yevgeny now claimed that Grigorishin鈥檚 $100 million payout had not reached the right recipients. All he was asking, Yevgeny said, was that Grigorishin pay again. 鈥淲e just need him to pay something,鈥 he said. 鈥淢aybe $20 million.鈥

Hungarian Katinka Hosszu, 31, one of the greatest swimmers of all time, realized that FINA鈥檚 director was letting slip a truth. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 care about swimmers,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 like swimming. Swimming is just a tool to make money.鈥

When Markov recounted the meeting, Grigorishin鈥檚 first reaction was to laugh. Of all the shakedowns he had faced, this was possibly the most amateur. But when he considered the situation, Grigorishin became unsettled. Vlasenko held positions in FINA and with the Russian Olympic authorities. Yevgeny said he was close to Maglione, and records showed that he had also worked with Igor Putin, a cousin of the Russian president, at another bank shut down for money laundering. A third man who had set up the Baden-Baden meeting was a lawyer for Adam Delimkhanov, one of Grigorishin鈥檚 nemeses in Chechnya. This was the nexus of power, crime, and sports that defined Putin鈥檚 Russia. This was the Kremlin Swim Club. Nor did Yevgeny鈥檚 clumsiness make him any less dangerous. As Markov said, even inept gangsters have one undeniable power: 鈥淭hey can kill you.鈥

Still, Grigorishin refused to pay. The threats began within days. 鈥淵ou do not know what is going to happen now, [but] you will be responsible,鈥 read a new, anonymous text. Another announced: 鈥淒ue to inadequate behaviour, a concerted tough scenario was conceived on all fronts. Start: next week. Once it starts, it will be useless to appeal. Because so many active units are involved, the process will be impossible to stop.鈥

Exactly what that meant became apparent on November 1, 2018, when against 322 figures from Ukraine. Number 66 on the list: Konstantin Ivanovich Grigorishin.

When Markov phoned with the news, Grigorishin sighed. 鈥淚 am in a fight with Putin,鈥 he said.

The ISL 2019 Las Vegas Finale
The ISL 2019 Las Vegas Finale (Peter Fisher)

Part III

Grigorishin had tried to escape his old life. He wanted to protect his family. He hoped to be measured by something more than accumulation. Now, in swimming, he was confronting the exact same enemies, and the exact same dangers. He realized with a start how unsafe he was in London. 颅Russia had murdered 14 people in and around the British capital since 2003, by BuzzFeed News. There was also a British precedent for the danger Gri颅gor颅ishin was in. Seb Coe, head of the IAAF (now renamed World Athletics), had re颅ceived death threats from Moscow for his stand against doping. 鈥淭aking on the Russians,鈥 said a colleague of Coe鈥檚, 鈥渓et me tell you, it鈥檚 fucking scary.鈥

Holed up in his central London apartment, Grigorishin鈥檚 confidence began to ebb. One careless action, one loose word, and he would 鈥減ass the point of no return鈥 and be classed as 鈥渟traight-out attacking the Kremlin.鈥 That would be 鈥渧ery dangerous,鈥 he said. Kachurovsky, the ISL鈥檚 manager in the U.S., said that his boss was confronting his 鈥渂iggest risk鈥濃攊t all depended on him. The ISL didn鈥檛 exist without 鈥渉is energy, his vision, his finances, and his bravery.鈥

Meanwhile, the Olympics were pressing their advantage. A week after Russia imposed its sanctions, IOC president Bach to fellow officials in which he warned that the work of 鈥渕illions of volunteers鈥 was under attack from a new wave of commercial tournaments that 鈥渏ust want to harvest the fruits of the trees you have planted,鈥 a clear allusion to the ISL.

FINA seemed determined to squash the league before it could launch. Grigorishin had planned a trial meet to familiarize swimmers with the new format, but FINA鈥檚 threats persuaded USA Swimming to pull out of hosting, then British Swimming, then the Italian equivalent. Other national federations warned their athletes not to take part. At a FINA World Cup meet in Beijing, on the pool deck as she warmed up, saying that FINA would exclude its three-time Swimmer of the Year if she swam for Grigorishin.

By late November 2018, before a single swimmer had left the blocks, the league seemed dead in the water.

2018 FIFA World Cup Football Park opens in Kazan, Russia
Julio Maglione (Yegor Aleyev/TASS/Getty)
FINA Olympic Games Synchronised Swimming Qualification - LOCOG Test Event for London 2012: Media Day
Cornel Marculescu (Tom Dulat/Getty)

There was another way to look at Grigorishin鈥檚 predicament, however. On reflection, he realized that he now had a chance to hit back at the people who had held his family at gunpoint, taken his home, and condemned him to a life in exile. Revenge wasn鈥檛 something to base a business on. But in the Kremlin Swim Club, Grigorishin had a chance to take on the people who had perverted everything he once loved about the Olympics, and even the Soviet Union. That had a magnitude Grigorishin found irresistible. 鈥淚 like the big-scale projects,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd this is something inside myself. This is my own justice.鈥 Besides, his enemies had overlooked something. By already taking everything he had in Russia, they鈥檇 made sure he had nothing left to lose. 鈥淭hese people don鈥檛 recognize that I am free,鈥 he said.

Reasoning that FINA could ban a few swimmers but not all of them, since that would kill their own competition, Grigorishin set about . In December 2018, he invited the competitors from his canceled trial to a two-day meeting at Chelsea Football Club in London. He issued more invitations to other swimmers, coaches, trainers, athletes, and journalists. His message: if you have something to say about the future of swimming, be there.

Thirty of the biggest names in swimming descended. Among them were Adam Peaty, Chad le Clos, Sara Sj枚str枚m, and Katinka Hosszu. The mood was mutinous. When Grigorishin said he had calculated that the IOC had earned $6.6 million in broadcasting rights and sponsorship from Sj枚str枚m鈥檚 gold, silver, and bronze in Rio, she shouted out that she hadn鈥檛 made a tenth of that all year. When Hosszu talked about Tamas Gyarfas, there was an uproar. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 even know our own sport,鈥 exclaimed one voice. Peaty to reporters. 鈥淭he International Swimming League [is] exactly what the sport needs. The whole sport needs to change.鈥 Swimmers needed to take a stand, he added. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 care, . I鈥檓 not bothered, because at the end of the day they know they can鈥檛.鈥 Watching from the sidelines was Jon Ridgeon, Coe鈥檚 number two, making plain that he understood the implications for all Olympic sports. 鈥淭he whole world is talking about this,鈥 Ridgeon said.

Within weeks, the revolt had grown to 200 of the world鈥檚 best, including鈥攖o Grigorishin鈥檚 delight鈥攕everal independent-minded Russian athletes. To show that he wasn鈥檛 trying to be the new power in swimming, but was transferring power to the swimmers themselves, Grigorishin proposed an independent union led by U.S. Olympic legend Matt Biondi, 55. Biondi鈥檚 story was a cautionary tale about the dangers of challenging swimming鈥檚 status quo. After winning five golds, a silver, and a bronze at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, he tried to turn pro, only to have USA Swimming鈥攊n its role as amateur-athletics enforcer鈥攕hut him out of the team and force him to train alone, on his own dime. Following a disappointing 1992 Games, Biondi quit, spent a few years giving speeches on the rubber-chicken circuit, and ended up coaching high school swimming in Hawaii for $12,000 a year. When Grigorishin called him to ask if he might return to the sport to campaign for swimmers鈥 pay and conditions, Biondi just about bit his hand off. 鈥淚 am ready to fight,鈥 Biondi said.

A third element in Grigorishin鈥檚 strategy was legal. For some time, he had been talking to Neil Goteiner, a San Francisco class-action litigator. Goteiner said that, according to his reading of U.S. antitrust law, FINA was an illegal monopoly. In Europe, the legal precedent had already been established. In 2017, the European Commission ruled that the International Skating Union by threatening to ban two Dutch skaters who wanted to take part in non-Olympic events. Goteiner said that FINA had behaved exactly the same way with the league.

On December 7, 2018, Goteiner filed in the U.S. District Court in San Francisco鈥攐ne for the ISL, and one a class action on behalf of all swimmers. In his complaint, Goteiner wrote that FINA鈥檚 threats were evidence of a monopoly doing 鈥渨hatever it takes to protect its stranglehold.鈥 This 鈥渃omplete control, by unlawful means, over the promotion and organization of international swimming,鈥 he added, constituted unlawful exploitation and restraint of swimmers 鈥渙n whose bodies FINA鈥檚 income and power depend鈥 so as to 鈥渒eep for itself the lion鈥檚 share of profits.鈥

Predictably, FINA fluffed its response. In late December, Maglione claiming that his concern had never been money, and that 鈥渟upporting swimmers has been my life鈥檚 work.鈥 This spurred a dozen more outraged athletes to join the ISL. A few days later, Maglione announced the FINA Champions Swim Series, an obvious ISL rip-off that Peaty called 鈥渆mbarrassing and offensive.鈥 Then, on January 15, FINA blinked. A fresh statement from Maglione insisted that while FINA鈥檚 鈥減rincipal concern鈥 remained the sport and the 鈥渨ell-being of our athletes,鈥 he was happy to clarify that 鈥淔INA acknowledges that swimmers are free to participate in competitions or events staged by independent organisers.鈥

The Olympic swimming monopoly was broken.

In October 2019 in Indianapolis, Energy Standard, by then based in Paris, of the ISL鈥檚 debut season. Then, days before it won the final, which was held in December in a glass-sided pool in Las Vegas, San Francisco District Court magistrate Jacqueline Scott Corley ruled that Grigorishin and the swimmers had established a prima facie case that FINA was operating 鈥渁 global anti-trust conspiracy.鈥 The judgment established the principle that any Olympic body operating in the same manner was breaking U.S. law. Since that was all of them, the court had effectively ruled that the Olympics were an illegal monopoly, and potentially liable for tens of millions of dollars in compensation for lost earnings to athletes.

Since wrapping up the ISL鈥檚 second season last November (won by Dressel and King鈥檚 team, the Cali Condors of San Francisco), Grigorishin has been working on a third installment to start just weeks after Tokyo. He has other plans, too: the installation of hundreds of pools in the developing world, a new cryptocurrency called Sportcoin, and a multisport competition combining swimming with track or cycling.

Perhaps Grigorishin鈥檚 biggest achievement has been to prove his central thesis: that some of the world鈥檚 greatest sports stars have been held back by swimming. There may be no more awesomely consistent competitor in all of sports than King, 24, who won 30 league races in a row. There can be few harder-working ones than Katinka Hosszu, 31, or Sara Sj枚str枚m, 27, who habitually swim half the women鈥檚 races at a meet. There are few finer-looking figures in sport, or even humanity, than Dressel鈥檚 great rival Florent Manaudou, 30, whose six-foot-six, 220-pound frame makes a bow wave that could sink a ship. Nor are there many more-moving comebacks than the one made by former Olympian Tom Shields, 29, a U.S. all-arounder with the voice of Hercules and a gift for profanity who tried to hang himself in 2018 and won MVP honors in Budapest two years later. And it鈥檚 hard to think of a more graceful moment in any sport than when Dressel fishtails off a wall and blasts away into the endless blue.

Still, challenges remain. The ISL is shown on CBS, the BBC, ESPN, and Eurosport, but broadcasters and sponsors have yet to start paying, leaving the league鈥檚 annual to Grigorishin, a situation even his fortune cannot support indefinitely. The threat from Russia has also increased. In 2019, because of the country鈥檚 continued doping violations, WADA persuaded the Court for Arbitration in Sport to from international competition for four years. (In December 2020, to global outcry, the instead.) Moscow鈥檚 response to its pariah status has been to to attack the 2018 Winter Olympics in South Korea, causing system failures and power outages, and to order a second assault on Tokyo, according to U.S. and British intelligence. Meanwhile, Grigorishin鈥檚 enemies are still pursuing him. Last November, he was 鈥 hard labor in a tax case that seemed designed to legitimize the seizure of his assets. Should the league become big business, Grigorishin has little doubt that his extortionists will appear again, at which point, he says, 鈥渧iolence is an option.鈥

When he considered the situation, Grigorishin became unsettled. The clumsiness of the shakedown didn鈥檛 make it any less dangerous. As Markov said, even inept gangsters have one undeniable power: 鈥淭hey can kill you.鈥

The intimidation of swimmers continues, too. The latest country to warn its athletes off the ISL is Australia, whose federation advised Olympians to stay away from Budapest. After King publicly called out doping and corruption in swimming, FINA鈥檚 officials issued her a for an illegal turn in Kwangju, costing her a gold medal (which went to Efimova)鈥攁 punishment no one in swimming, and certainly not King, thinks was a coincidence. In Budapest, one multiple-gold-medal winner told me that King鈥檚 treatment warned him off attacking the Olympic establishment ahead of Tokyo, because then 鈥渢hey won鈥檛 let me train. I won鈥檛 be allowed to swim at the Olympics.鈥 The same fear was behind Dressel鈥檚 reluctance to discuss the people who controlled swimming鈥攅ven with the position he holds in the sport, even though 鈥淚鈥檓 in agreement with Lilly,鈥 he said. 鈥淪he鈥檚 stronger than I think I could be.鈥

FINA鈥檚 threats would lose their power if the Games lost their shine. For some veterans, that has already happened. Emily Seebohm, 28, a three-time Australian Olympian who defied her federation to swim in Budapest, said that when she was a young swimmer, 鈥渢he Olympics was such a big deal. I used to dream of stuff like this.鈥 But today, because of 鈥渢he way we鈥檙e treated, I actually wouldn鈥檛 tell anyone to do it.鈥 Grigorishin and Biondi predict that such sentiments will spread after Tokyo. But Grigorishin adds that the experience of setting up the ISL has shown him that the biggest obstacle to good Olympic competition is the public myth of Olympic greatness. Despite decades of scandal, the IOC still manages to present the Games as an arena for ancient values like fair play, athletic excellence, and world peace, and itself as sports鈥 eternal guardian 鈥渃ontributing to building a better world,鈥 as it congratulated itself in its . And every four years, at the first shot from a starting gun, 3.2 billion of us tune in to what we obediently accept as the greatest sporting contest on earth. It is, Grigorishin says, the most successful exercise in 鈥渂rainwashing鈥 of all time.

Nothing would diminish the Olympic legend more than the Games鈥 first cancellation since 1944. Now that Tokyo is approaching for a second time, there鈥檚 a strong sense of d茅j脿 vu. Once again, the IOC is adamant that the Games will proceed. Once again, the decision may be out of its hands. The virus surged over Japan鈥檚 winter. In February, the Games鈥 83-year-old chief organizer, Yoshiro Mori, resigned after remarking that women had an to talk too much in meetings. of Japanese now oppose staging the tournament. Moreover, as 2020 proved, there can be no Games if the athletes refuse to go. The world鈥檚 most famous swimmer is among the doubters. 鈥淭he fact that you鈥檙e going to put together 10,000-plus athletes, plus all the volunteers, plus all the coaches鈥攊t doesn鈥檛 make sense to me,鈥 Michael Phelps in December. 鈥淚 just don鈥檛 see how it can happen.鈥

The next few weeks may determine the future of the Olympics. If the IOC tries to go ahead despite the pandemic and global opposition, that would present the plainest proof yet of its excessive power. But if Tokyo is called off and a generation of athletes face losing eight of their peak years instead of just four, a revolution of non-Olympic, alternative competition is all but inevitable.

Spend much time around swimmers and you鈥檒l hear a lot of talk about how water is another world, a place of infinite possibility connected to something timeless and essential鈥攖he womb, perhaps, or even a primordial sea. Dressel is fluent in waterspeak. In Budapest, he insisted, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 have the sport figured out. I watch nature videos鈥攄olphins, sharks. It鈥檚 just art, a giant puzzle that I鈥檒l never win. Every time I dive in, it鈥檚 a completely new element, just you in the water and your relationship with it.鈥

There are lessons here for those who have corrupted the Olympic ideal. When the world鈥檚 best swimmer describes the essence of the Olympic endeavor, he talks about humility, and beauty, and freedom.