Egypt at The 2000 Summer Olympics - Swimming

Swimming

Men's 50m Freestyle

  • Tamer Hamed
    1. Preliminary Heat - 23.77 (did not advance)

Men's 100m Freestyle

  • Tamer Hamed
    1. Preliminary Heat - 52.14 (did not advance)

Men's 200m Freestyle

  • Mahmoud Elwany
    1. Preliminary Heat - 1:55.19 (did not advance)

Men's 400m Freestyle

  • Hani Elteir
    1. Preliminary Heat - 04:04.23 (did not advance)

Men's 100m Butterfly

  • Haitham Hassan
    1. Preliminary Heat - 56.42 (did not advance)

Men's 100m Backstroke

  • Haitham Hassan
    1. Preliminary Heat - 58.67 (did not advance)

Men's 200m Backstroke

  • Ahmed Hussein
    1. Preliminary Heat - 02:06.10 (did not advance)

Men's 200m Individual Medley

  • Haitham Hassan
    1. Preliminary Heat - 02:09.92 (did not advance)

Women's 50m Freestyle

  • Rania Elwani
    1. Preliminary Heat - 25.87
    2. Semi-final - 25.95 (did not advance)

Women's 100m Freestyle

  • Rania Elwani
    1. Preliminary Heat - 56.31
    2. Semi-final - 55.85 (did not advance)

Women's 200m Freestyle

  • Rania Elwani
    1. Preliminary Heat - 02:01.93 (did not advance)

Read more about this topic:  Egypt At The 2000 Summer Olympics

Famous quotes containing the word swimming:

    Mead had studied for the ministry, but had lost his faith and took great delight in blasphemy. Capt. Charles H. Frady, pioneer missionary, held a meeting here and brought Mead back into the fold. He then became so devout that, one Sunday, when he happened upon a swimming party, he shot at the people in the river, and threatened to kill anyone he again caught desecrating the Sabbath.
    —For the State of Nebraska, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    Awareness of having better things to do with their lives is the secret to immunizing our children against false values—whether presented on television or in “real life.” The child who finds fulfillment in music or reading or cooking or swimming or writing or drawing is not as easily convinced that he needs recognition or power or some “high” to feel worthwhile.
    Polly Berrien Berends (20th century)

    The swimming hole is still in use. It has the same mudbank. It is still impossible to dress without carrying mud home in one’s inner garments. As an engineer I could devise improvements for that swimming hole. But I doubt if the decrease in mother’s grief at the homecoming of muddy boys would compensate the inherent joys of getting muddy.
    Herbert Hoover (1874–1964)