William: I missed Paris Olympics because of Covid fears for Kate
The Prince of Wales was speaking to medal-winning swimmers at a revived community swimming pool in Gateshead.
Your support helps us to tell the story
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.The Prince of Wales has told some of Britainās top medal-winning swimmers how Covid fears for his wife stopped him going to the Paris Olympics, but his family was glued to the action.
William met 2024 Olympians Adam Peaty and Tom Dean, and Paralympians Maisie Summers-Newton and Louise Fiddes, as he visited at Birtley Community Pool in Gateshead on Thursday.
Apparently referring to Peatyās positive Covid test during the Olympics, he said: āI was so keen to come but, I have to say, after reading someoneās interview about Covid I decided, because my wife was obviously having chemo, that I didnāt want to risk bringing Covid home.
āSo Adam very kindly reminded me that was still a thing. But we watched the whole thing. We were glued to it every day.ā
William was at the centre ā which reopened in September after the community came together following its closure last year ā to promote swimming.
He told the four athletes that he and the Princess of Wales āadoredā swimming and that his son George had taken up scuba diving.
He said: āCatherine and I both adore swimming.
āGeorge loves scuba diving. Heās 10 years old. We took him under thinking he would freak out. He absolutely loves it.
āItās just introducing him to the world of water.ā
Referring to the pool, he said: āWe want to replicate this across the country because swimming is such an important part of life.
āWeāre an island nation, we should all have access to learn how to swim.ā
Dean attended the event after his recent exit from the BBCās Strictly Come Dancing, and he said William and Kate thought him being voted off was ārobberyā.
After the visit, the swimmer said: āHe (William) doesnāt watch it but his wifeās a big fan.
āRobbery was the word he used. Very, very kind of him but it does give me a lot more free time to do stuff like this.ā
Aston Villa fan William was congratulated on his teamās Champions League victory over Bayern Munich as he went for a walkabout in the sunshine as he arrived at the event.
As he posed for dozens of selfies, he told well-wishers he and his sons shouted themselves hoarse at the match, and he had lost his voice.
William toured the centre, watching swimming lesson and lifeguard training, and was told how one in three children in the UK leaves primary education unable to swim.
The pool opened in 1974 but was closed by Gateshead Council in July 2023 due to costs.
The prince was told that the community came together to support efforts to reopen the pool through a crowdfunding campaign and that businesses and tradespeople gave their time to refurbish the facilities.
On Thursday, the Royal Foundation of the Prince and Princess of Wales announced a new partnership with Birtley Community Pool to provide swimming lessons and lifeguard training.
The foundation said it has been working closely with the centre to connect it with new partners to support their efforts to get back up and running.
The organisation said its Community Impact Programme has partly funded the refurbishment, helped young people to make use of the facilities with a bursary, and established another bursary for teenagers to train as lifeguards.
In a speech at the event, William said: āThe next generation needs to know that swimming is important.
āIt can save your life, itās a great skill, itās fun, it gives you health, there are social reasons, it is good for people who are isolated.
āAll these things are really important and why we need community swimming pools to remain, and come back to life again.ā
He praised Yvonne Probert, the chair of Birtley Community Pool, saying people like her were the āglue in the communityā
He said: āItās people like you, Yvonne, that get things done.
āWithout your leadership, without your partnership, your bringing together, your drive, none of this would have happened at all ā you and your team.
āWhat I see up and down the country is that without a local leader in a community, nothing gets done.ā
Ms Probert said: āWeāre grateful for the support the Royal Foundation is providing as we open.
āTheir funding and their work behind the scenes to connect us with the national swimming sector and those keen to support initiatives like ours has meant we are able to invest in swimming lessons, lifeguard training and initiatives that ensure our newly opened pool is truly inclusive for thousands of children and young people locally.ā