It doesnât happen at every Olympics but when a homegrown athlete galvanizes the host nation with a couple of golds to get the crowds firing, thereâs really nothing like it. Ian Thorpe did it at Sydney 2000. Mo Farah at London 2012. And no doubt about it, Paris 2024 belongs to Léon Marchand.
Known as âLa Baguetteââfor reasons I believe are as basic as âbecause heâs Frenchââthe 22-year-old bagged four individual swimming gold medals this week. That more than vindicates the pre-games comparisons with the one and only Michael Phelps, who has 23 Olympic medals hanging up in a room somewhere.
Zoom in on Léon Marchand atop a Paris 2024 podium, though, and it appears he has more in common with Phelps than a greedy obsession with gold medals. He likes watches, tooâspecifically Omega watches. Indeed, the duo actually teamed up for Omegaâs Paris 2024 campaign. Entitled âLegends Inspire Legends,â it really could have jinxed things had Marchand not delivered, but who am I kiddingâOmega is known for ensuring precision at the Olympics (it’s been doing so since 1932), so once the Swiss watchmakers called it, Marchand reaching legend status was never in doubt.
While Phelps has been known for wearing versions of the Omega Seamaster over the years, Marchand seems to fancy himself as a master of something else: speed. On all four medal ceremonies inside Parisâs electric swimming arena, the Frenchman has rocked an Omega Speedmaster Chronoscope.
âPerhaps you would expect a swimmer of his calibre [watch pun alert] to wear a Seamaster 300M, or Planet Ocean, but instead he chose the Speedmaster Chronoscope,â says Fratelloâs Robert-Jan Broer, a man who knows a lot about Omega watches.
Omegaâs official watches of the Paris 2024 are a pair of 43mm Speedmaster Chronoscopes in steel and gold. Dating back to the 1880s would you believe, the modelâs concentric triple-chronograph scales on the dial have always grabbed the headlines but the newbies boast hand-wound movements. Marchand isnât wearing one of these though â perhaps too obvious a choice, or maybe it was a superstitious thing? Instead, heâs wearing a nearly identical steel version worth $9,500âthe main difference being the red markings on the subdials, bezel and seconds hand, and a transparent caseback so you get to peek at the inner workings of the movement instead of a solid Paris 2024 one.