Laurie Lawrence Takes A Jab At Jacco: Aussie Olympic Tough Cuts Would Have Left Armstrong & Sieben At Home


by 

July 2020 

Laurie Lawrence has never been shy about letting the world of swimming know how he’s feeling, as we came to learn from watching him slap a reporter across the chops several times in the heat of the moment after his Australia charge Duncan Armstrong caused upset with gold in the 200m freestyle at the Seoul Olympic Games in 1988.
Now 78, Coach Lawrence is not mellowing with age, it seems: he’s just labelled Swimming Australia’s departing head coach Jacco Verhaeren “a w****r” for implementing what’s been described as a “ruthless” selection policy for the Tokyo 2020ne Olympic Games, delayed by a year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The language is what it is. The point is this: the first two swimmers home inside qualifying time get to represent Australia at the Olympic Games. Usually.
For next year, when the trials will be held late and in the same week as the United States Olympic Trials, there’s a new twist: the top two inside the time cut must also swim inside what could be a sharper target: the time it took to make finals at the 2019 World Championships.
Lawrence tells Julian Linden at the Aussie Telegraph:

“This policy is absolutely ridiculous, it makes me want to spew. It should be first and second and away you go. It’s cutthroat enough to finish first or second at the trials but plenty of swimmers are pure racers that will improve when they get to the Olympics.”

Laurie Lawrence, whose successes include two of the greatest upsets in Olympic racing, Armstrong’s effort couple by Jon Sieben‘s 200m butterfly victory over Micheal “The Albatross” Gross after entering the Games as No25 in the world. Says Lawrence:

“If we have the same policy then, neither Sieben or Armstrong would have even gone to the Olympics so neither would have won gold medals for Australia. The Olympics is about racing, it’s not about what time they swim because times change depending on the situation. You want racers so the trials should be about finding out who are the best two racers, then let them race again at the Olympics.”

Linden notes that, under the higher criteria, 2016 Olympic champion Mack Horton would not have been in the 400m freestyle at the 2019 World Championships had it not been for a let-out clause allowing him access to solo events if he made a relay.

Jacco Verhaeren – Photo Courtesy: SwimmingWorld.TV

Verhaeren, of course, also has significant Olympic success under his belt, as does Alex Baumann, the 1984 double Olympic medley champion for Canada and now Swimming Australia high performance boss. Baumann takes a different view to Laurie Lawrence at least for 2021, telling Linden:

“Our philosophy is to win when it matters to inspire a nation. That’s our vision and whether we like it or not, it is about medals. That’s what high performance is all about, you‘ve got to perform when it matters and you have to perform to make the team. Obviously that puts pressure on athletes during the trials but when you get to the Olympics, it’s a pressure cooker and you have to be able to deal with a lot of distractions and perform under those conditions.”

Whether through hearing the concerns off Laurie Lawrence and others or for other reasons, Baumann discussed the possibility of changing the policy with Verhaeren and the man who will take up the head coach reigns, Rohan Taylor.  All agreed the higher bar would stay in place for 2021 Olympic Trials, set for Adelaide from June 12-17, pandemic allowing.

Helene Madison – 90th Anniversary Of The Advent Of The ‘Queen Of Waves’

Helen Madison with her Coach Ray Daughters, Photo Courtesy: ISHOF

by 

06 July 2020, 12:10am

This year marks the 90th anniversary of the advent of Helene Madison as a dominant force in freestyle swimming. By the time the American was done racing, she had gone down in history as an Olympic and World-record pioneer who set 16 World records on freestyle in just 16 months. This day in 193o she claimed the global 880y (800m) standard
Helene Madison (USA) was dubbed “The Queen of Waves“. Her pioneering achievements in the early 1930s live eternal: she was the first swimmer ever to hold every world freestyle record – from 100yd through to the mile – at the same time, a feat that has been matched only once since, by Shane Gould (AUS, 1971-1972).
Gould remains, technically, the first to ever be accepted as having held the official 100-1500m records simultaneously: Madison set the 880 yards world mark once in her career, in 1930, but the 800m distance was not an official world record until after the American’s swim, while the distance was not swum in Olympic waters until 1968.
Remove FINA bureaucracy from the education and Madison, who set her first world mark in March 1930 and her last in August 1932, was the first queen of waves over 100-1500-mile speed. She clocked 11.41.2 over 880 yards on July 6, 1930 in Long Beach. On August 23, 1931, Yvonne Goddard of France clocked 12.18.8 over 800m and that was, technically, the first official FINA world record over the specific distance of 800m.
Madison, who passed away in 1970, would never know but in 1973, FINA revisited its world-record history lists, removed Goddard and a swim by American Lenore Kight, from 1933, and accepted Madison’s mark as an official world 800m record. Not long before its decision on Madison, FINA had stopped accepting the 880 yards distance for world-record ratification over 800m, leaving Debbie Meyer, the pioneering 1968 triple Olympic gold medallist for the USA, as the last (and therefore, technically, reigning, world record holder over 880 yards, at 9.44.1 from a swim in 1967.
The official FINA lists suggest Madison established seven World freestyle records between 1930 and 1932 but the actual count was 16 in a period of just 16 months. The records including yards standards and distances official in those days but no longer counted: the 300y distance dropped in 1938, the 500m and 500y dropped in 1940 and 1942 respectively, the 1000y in 1938 and the 1000m in 1941; while the 1760y, mile, record passed into history in 1955.

Helene Madison and Johnny Weissmuller in 1932 – Photo Courtesy: ISHOF

The Madison Pantheon Of Pioneering Pace

100 yards: 60.8, 60.0sec
100m: 68.0; 66.6
220y: 2:35.0; 2:34.8
200m: 2;34.6
300y: 3:41.6; 3:39.0
300m: 3:59.5
440y: 5:39.4; 5:31.0
400m : 5:31.0 – Olympic Gold, Los Angeles, 1932
500y: 6:16.4
500m: 7:12.0
880y: 11:41.2
1000y: 13:23.6
1000m: 14:44.8
1500m: 23.17.2
1760y: 24.34.6

On March 6th, 10930, Madison broke the first of the seven World freestyle records she would break between 1930 and 32 that remain on the books of official FINA World standards.  Four years earlier, fellow American Martha Norelius had left the 200m freestyle standards at 2:40.6. Madison stopped the clock at 2:34.6 in St Augustine that March day.
A week later at Miami Beach, she crushed the 100m freestyle World record set at 1:09.4 by American Olympic champion of 1928, Albina Osipowich, with a 1:08.0. On April 20, 1931, in Boston, Madison’s pioneering took the pace down to 1:06.6.
Over 400m, she stormed inside Norelius’ mark of 5:39.2 from 1928 with a 5:31.0 effort in home, Green Lake, Seattle on February 3, 1931.  Local crowds flocked to see her that day. Later that year, she downed Norelius’ 1500m free mark of 23:44.6 with a 23:27.2 global standard in New York.
The following year, on August 13, 1932, she set the last of her World record with a 5:28.5 for Olympic 400m gold in Los Angeles.
Madison, who hailed from what was once written up as “the tiny town” of Green Lake – a district of Seattle, with the lake at its heart – competed for the Washington Athletic Club in Seattle her entire career, the protégée of coach Ray Daughters.

Helene Madison, Queen Of Waves At Los Angeles 1932
At the 1932 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, Madison claimed three gold medals in the pool, over 100 and 400m freestyle and as a member of the 4x100m freestyle with USA teammates.
Her victory over 400m freestyle was the last of the three and produced a World record. She celebrated the moment by dancing with Clark Gable at The Coconut Grove, a haunt of the rich and famous of American society.
Here’s how Madison’s campaign panned out:

100m Freestyle – August 8, 1932
In 1929, Albina Osipowich, the 1928 Olympic champion, had set a world record of 1:09.4. A year later, Helene Madison, 17, moved the event on in a big way, with a 1:08.0, before lowering her own world record again in 1:06.6 at a 25-yard pool in Boston in 1931. In Honolulu the same year, she had also set a world-best time of 1:08.2 in a 50m pool. No-one else had come close. 
In the second Olympic heat in Los Angeles, 1928 bronze medallist Joyce Cooper lowered the Olympic record in 1:09.0, before Madison, 19, shaved 0.1sec off that in the third heat. In the next heat, Eleanor Saville (nee Garratti), second in 1928, improved the standard to 1:08.5.
In the semis, a shooting star called Wilhelmina den Ouden (NED), 14 years old, roared down the pool and set a world best time in a 50m pool of 1:07.6. Madison, 19, responded with a spectacular sprint down the first length of the second semi-final, in 29.2 that suggested a 1:04 was possible well before its time.
Madison faded to a 1:09.9 on the way home, scraping through in fifth place for the six-lane final. But having given warning of her potential for pioneering speed and having heaped pressure on the shoulders of 14-year-old Den Ouden, Madison delivered on promise in the final: in and Olympic record of 1:06.8, Madison claimed her first Olympic crown a second ahead of Den Ouden.

4x100m freestyle – August 12, 1932
Helene Madison was joined by Josephine McKim (who had swum in the heats in 1928), Helen Johns and Eleanor Saville (nee Garratti) Lenore Kight, for a world record relay victory of 4:38.0, almost 10 sec inside the 1928 world best time of the 1928 champion team from the US, which included Garratti. FINA recognised relays for official world-record status from 1932 onwards.

400m freestyle – August 13, 1932

Helene Madison, right, and Lenore Kight, 400m pioneers of 1932 – Photo Courtesy: ISHOF

In 1931, Helene Madison had clocked a world record of 5:31.0 in the 400m, 8.2sec inside the standard that had been set by 1924 and 1928 Olympic champion Martha Norelius (USA). Madison’s best in a 50m pool before the 1932 Games was 5:39.4, set at Long Beach in 1930 and a league ahead of the world at the time. In the third heat at the Games, Lenore Kight (USA) set an Olympic record of 5:40.9.
At a time when third place in heats often meant that a swimmer would not progress to the semi-finals regardless of whether their time (as opposed to place) merited it, Marie Phillipsen (nee Braun, NED), 1928 100m backstroke champion and silver medallist in the 400m freestyle, lost out in 5:50.5. 
In the final, Madison and Knight raced stroke-for-stroke. At 200m, they split in 2:38.0, not far from the 2:34.5 at which Madison held the world record over 200m. Thin air could hardly split the two for the rest of the rest and at the wall, it was Madison who had the longer reach, taking the gold in 5:28.5, 0.1sec ahead of Kight and 4sec under her own world mark.

When The Racing Was Done
Helene Madison’s homecoming to Seattle was something modern celebrations for Olympians can barely compete with. Greeted by the largest ticker-tape parade in Seattle history, she was idolised and lionised, feted and banqueted. With no challenges left in swimming, Madison turned “pro”, endorsing cereals and – gasp! – Camel cigarettes.
She moved into films but was not a success. She applied for a job at Green Lake beach as a swim instructor but she came up against city rules that barred women from teaching swimming.
During the 1936 Games in Berlin, Madison could be found at Green Lake, serving at the hotdog stand. She was unlucky in love too: she married three times. Madison later became a Licensed Practical Nurse. Sadly, she contracted diabetes and throat cancer in her fifties. At 57, she passed away in the basement apartment she shared with her parakeet and a Siamese cat, across the street from her beloved Green Lake.

Coach Ray Daughters
In a 48-year career as a swimming coach (1916-64), Colorado-born and then lifelong Washington state resident Ray Daughters taught nearly 50,000 people how to swim. A swimmer himself, he earned the undying admiration of the aquatic world in the Pacific Northwest as well as the national stage, writes Michael J. Stott.
Daughters mentored five Olympic swimmers, who trained out of his home base, the Washington Athletic Club (WAC) in Seattle. Four were freestylers who competed during the 1930s:
• Helene Madison (1932, three gold, 17 world records)• Jack Medica (1936, one gold and two silver, 11 world records)• Olive McKean (1936, one bronze and a sixth-place finish)• Mary Lou Petty (1936, one fourth-place finish)
His fifth Olympian, Nancy Ramey, also was a world record holder (butterfly) and won a silver medal in 1956, bringing his swimmers’ Olympic medal total to eight.
Once described by Seattle Times sports editor Georg N. Myers as “a Svengali in a bow tie,” Daughters was a “big man who was brusque and burdened by an unceremonious and indestructible sense of humor.” He also had an eye for talent, preferring it over just native speed. Before he retired to become WAC athletic director exclusively, Daughters worked closely with each swimmer, setting their practice hours and competitions. He emphasized conditioning, timing and rhythm, working meticulously during long practices to refine swimmers’ strokes. He also advised on dietary habits and insisted on 10 hours sleep a night, knowing his athletes were going to bed exhausted.
His methods produced results, earning swimmers at least 30 world and 301 American records as well as 74 national championships. Daughters liked to win, and he was not above scheduling swim meets to have his swimmers break national records. For instance, on Nov. 7, 1931, he conducted a meet specifically so that Madison could go for American records at 600, 700, 800 and 880 yards, while Medica aimed at the Northwest 220-yard standard.

 

JASON LEZAK is One in A Thousand !!!

Jason Lezak, ISHOF Honoree and called the man who
made the greatest relay swim of all time, is special.  He is One in a Thousand!

When asked why he wanted to join the
International Swimming Hall of Fame’s One in A Thousand Club, Lezak said, “I
made my first trip to the Hall of Fame when I was 18.  Although I already had Olympic dreams, this
added inspiration to want to achieve like so many of the greats from our past.  No matter what sport I did, I was always
appreciated the history that created the opportunities for me to succeed. 
It was an honor to be inducted last year and
to now have a display for all the visitors to see.  It’s very humbling to be a small part of
swimming history.”
Join the One in a Thousand Club by helping ISHOF on a monthly or
one-time basis.

·        
$10 Monthly Commitment
·        
$25 Monthly Commitment
·        
$50 Monthly Commitment
·        
Make a One-Time
Commitment

More about……JASON LEZAK
From the beginning, Jason Lezak
showed great promise in the pool, but he constantly butted heads with
his coach, Dave Salo, over his commitment to training. Recruited to swim at UC
Santa Barbara, Jason’s problems with authority continued until coach Gregg
Wilson finally dismissed him from the team. This was the wake-up call he
needed. He loved to swim and compete, and after promising to improve his
training habits, Jason rejoined the team. In his Senior year, Lezak was named
Big West Conference Swimmer of the Year.
At
the 2000 Olympic Trials, Jason finished fourth in the 100m freestyle. While he
failed to qualify individually, his result was good enough to make the 4x100m
freestyle relay team, an event Team USA had never lost in the Olympic Games.  In Sydney, the Australians pulled off
the unexpected upset in their home pool and the USA settled for the silver.
Over
the next four years, Jason was the top sprinter in the world, and at the 2004
U.S. OlympicTrials
in Long Beach, he qualified for the Olympic Games in both the 50m and 100m
freestyle.
In
Athens, the US freestyle relay team was trying to win back the title it had
lost in Sydney four years earlier. Instead, they finished third behind South Africa
and the Netherlands.The next day Jason did not swim as well
as expected and failed to reach the semi-finals. Individually Jason finished
fifth in the 50 meter freestyle. Success came when he swam the freestyle leg
behind Aaron Peirsol, Brendan Hansen, and Ian Crocker to win the medley relay
gold medal, in world record time.
In
2006, Dave Salo left Irvine to take the coaching job at USC, leaving Jason
without a coach. Hebegan coaching himself and proved by
qualifying for his third Olympic Games that he had the discipline to train
daily without a team or trainer at his side.
When
he finished second in the 100m freestyle at the Olympic Trials in Omaha, he was
32 years old,the
oldest male swimmer to make the team and was selected by his teammates as a
captain.
At the 2008 Games in Beijing, his first
event was the 4x100m freestyle relay. The USA hadn’t won this
race since 1996 and this time the USA was not the favorite. That distinction
belonged to theteam
from France, with 100m world record holder, Alain Bernard as its anchorman.
Swimming last,and
starting nearly a fully body length behind, Jason chased down Bernard in the
final 20 yards towin the gold medal by
eight-one-hundredths of a second. Jason’s split time of 46.06, is still the fastest 100m split in history.

The next day, Jason won bronze in the
100m freestyle for the first individual Olympic medal of hiscareer.
On the final day of competition, he anchored the USA’s world record setting
medley relaythat
gave Michael Phelps his historic eighth gold medal.
Continuing to swim on his own after
Beijing, Jason passed up the opportunity to compete in theWorld
Championships to participate in the Maccabiah Games in Israel, where he won
four goldmedals
and celebrated his heritage as a Jewish athlete.
In 2012, at the age of 36, Jason
qualified for his fourth Olympic team by finishing sixth at theOlympic
Trials in the 100 free. In London, he swam in the preliminaries and helped earn
a spot in thefinal
for the silver medal winning U.S. team. In doing so, he became the first male
swimmer inOlympic
history to win four medals in the same event, in the 4×100m freestyle relay, in
fourconsecutive Olympic Games.
Jason ended his Olympic career with a total of eight medals,
four gold, two silver and two bronze. 
Today Jason is a proud husband and father of three and a popular
motivational speaker who is balancing his family life with business
opportunities.

The
International Swimming Hall of Fame nts to know if you are One in a Thousand? 
We think you are!  Show how special you are and become a member of the
International Swimming Hall of Fame’s “One In
A Thousand”
 Club. 
Help keep the International Swimming Hall of Fame moving forward toward a new
vision and museum by joining now!

During
these unprecedented times, the ISHOF Board is calling on every member in the
aquatic community to make a small monthly commitment of support to show how
special you are and how special the International Swimming Hall of Fame is to
everyone. 
“Our
goal is simple. If we get 1,000 people to simply commit $10, $25 or $50 per
month, we will generate enough revenue to go beyond this Covid-19 Pandemic
Crisis.” – Bill Kent – Chairman of the ISHOF Board

“Those
that believe in our vision, mission, and goals can join us in taking ISHOF into
the future and be a part of aquatic history.”  – Brent
Rutemiller – CEO and President of ISHOF

Since
1965, ISHOF has been the global focal point for recording and sharing the
history of aquatics, promoting swimming as an essential life-skill, and
developing educational programs and events related to water sports. ISHOF’s
vision for the future is to build a new museum and expand its reach by offering
its museum artifacts digitally through a redesigned website.
The
ISHOF Board of Directors is calling on all members of the aquatics community to
make a small monthly commitment to show their dedication to aquatics and how
special the International Swimming Hall of Fame is to everyone.
About ISHOF   Take a Virtual Tour
The
International Swimming Hall of Fame (ISHOF) museum opened its doors to the
public in December of 1968 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. That same year, the
Fédération Internationale de Natation (FINA) – the governing body for Olympic
aquatic sports – designated the ISHOF museum as the “Official Repository for
Aquatic History”.   In 2018, Sports Publications Inc, publisher
of Swimming World Magazine and its multi-media platforms,
merged with ISHOF to expand the museum’s reach and impact.  Today, ISHOF’s
vision is to be the global focal point for recording and sharing the history of
aquatics, promoting swimming as an essential life-skill, and developing
educational programs and events related to water sports.  Show your support
for the sport of swimming by becoming a member of ISHOF.
ISHOF Vision Statement
To be the global focal point for recording and sharing the history of aquatics,
promoting swimming as an essential life-skill, and developing educational
programs and events related to water sports.
ISHOF Mission Statement
To collaborate with aquatic organizations worldwide to preserve, educate and
celebrate history, showcase events, share cultures, and increase participation
in aquatic sports.
The
International Swimming Hall of Fame, Inc. is registered as a 501(c)(3)
nonprofit organization, incorporated in the State of Florida. Contributions to
ISHOF are tax deductible to the fullest extent of the law. ISHOF’s tax
identification number is 59-1087179. A COPY OF THE OFFICIAL REGISTRATION AND
FINANCIAL INFORMATION MAY BE OBTAINED FROM THE DIVISION OF CONSUMER SERVICES BY
CALLING TOLL-FREE (800-435-7352) WITHIN THE STATE OR FROM THE WEBSITE, www.800helpfla.com. REGISTRATION DOES NOT IMPLY ENDORSEMENT, APPROVAL, OR
RECOMMENDATION BY THE STATE. You can find out more about us on guidestar.org under International Swimming Hall of Fame, Inc.

KLAUS DIBIASI is One in A Thousand !!!


Klaus DiBiasi, ISHOF Honoree and triple Olympic
medalist is special.  He is One in a Thousand!

When asked why he wanted to join the
International Swimming Hall of Fame’s One in A Thousand Club, DiBiasi said, “ What I remember most about the
Hall of Fame is the first time I came to compete in the early 1970’s and the
important people who really showed a big friendship to all of us.   I feel
a huge gratitude to all of them who really stepped in for our sport, and
organized the International Hall of Fame Diving Meet so we could come to Fort
Lauderdale all those years.
I remember my induction in 1981 and then again in
2006 for the induction of my father, Carlo “Papà” DiBiasi.  The museum is a wonderful historical contribution to the sport of swimming and diving worldwide.  With the induction ceremonies of the famous divers and swimmers every year, the Hall of Fame is the most famous water
sport historical collection in the world.
All this is why I am proud to be One in a Thousand, and
give back to help keep this fantastic project alive.   I am anxious
to return when the new pool construction will permit competition again in this
historical environment.”
Join Klaus in the One in a Thousand Club by helping ISHOF on a monthly or
one-time basis.

·        
$10 Monthly Commitment
·        
$25 Monthly Commitment
·        
$50 Monthly Commitment
·        
Make a One-Time
Commitment

Klaus DiBiasi. No other
man or woman has won an Olympic diving title in three consecutive Olympic
Games.  He very nearly won four, missing
the first of what would have been four consecutive 10-meter platform titles by
1.04 points to Bob Webster (USA) at the 1964 Tokyo Olympic Games.  This Austro-Italian from Bolzano, Italy was
king of the tower from 1964 through his retirement in 1976.  He was coached by his father, Carlo, fondly
known as “Papa”, and Olympian himself, 1936 Olympics.  Klaus succeeded his father as National Coach when
he retired after his third gold medal in Montreal. 

  At the
first two FINA World Aquatic Championships, in 1973 and 1975 he won four medals,
two gold on the platform and two silver on the springboard.  Klaus was a three-time European Champion,
twice on the platform and once on the springboard. Nationally DiBiasi won 11
platform and seven springboard titles.  DiBiasi
was named Platform Diver of the Year nine times.
DiBiasi and the Italian
team were staples at ISHOF’s International/Can-Am-Max Meet in Fort
Lauderdale.  They came every year in the
1970’s until Klaus retired.  DiBiasi returned
to Fort Lauderdale in 1981, when he was inducted into the International
Swimming Hall of Fame as an Honor Diver.
 Klaus DiBiasi is “One in
a Thousand.  

The International
Swimming Hall of Fame wants to know if you are One in a Thousand?  We think
you are!  Show how special you are and become a member of the
International Swimming Hall of Fame’s “One In
A Thousand”
 Club. 
Help keep the International Swimming Hall of Fame moving forward toward a new
vision and museum by joining now!

During
these unprecedented times, the ISHOF Board is calling on every member in the
aquatic community to make a small monthly commitment of support to show how
special you are and how special the International Swimming Hall of Fame is to
everyone.
“Our
goal is simple. If we get 1,000 people to simply commit $10, $25 or $50 per
month, we will generate enough revenue to go beyond this Covid-19 Pandemic
Crisis.” – Bill Kent – Chairman of the ISHOF Board

“Those
that believe in our vision, mission, and goals can join us in taking ISHOF into
the future and be a part of aquatic history.”  – Brent
Rutemiller – CEO and President of ISHOF

Since
1965, ISHOF has been the global focal point for recording and sharing the
history of aquatics, promoting swimming as an essential life-skill, and
developing educational programs and events related to water sports. ISHOF’s
vision for the future is to build a new museum and expand its reach by offering
its museum artifacts digitally through a redesigned website.
The
ISHOF Board of Directors is calling on all members of the aquatics community to
make a small monthly commitment to show their dedication to aquatics and how
special the International Swimming Hall of Fame is to everyone.

About ISHOF   Take a Virtual Tour
The
International Swimming Hall of Fame (ISHOF) museum opened its doors to the
public in December of 1968 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. That same year, the
Fédération Internationale de Natation (FINA) – the governing body for Olympic
aquatic sports – designated the ISHOF museum as the “Official Repository for
Aquatic History”.   In 2018, Sports Publications Inc, publisher
of Swimming World Magazine and its multi-media platforms,
merged with ISHOF to expand the museum’s reach and impact.  Today, ISHOF’s
vision is to be the global focal point for recording and sharing the history of
aquatics, promoting swimming as an essential life-skill, and developing
educational programs and events related to water sports.  Show your
support for the sport of swimming by becoming a member of ISHOF.
ISHOF Vision Statement
To be the global focal point for recording and sharing the history of aquatics,
promoting swimming as an essential life-skill, and developing educational
programs and events related to water sports.

ISHOF Mission Statement
To collaborate with aquatic organizations worldwide to preserve, educate and
celebrate history, showcase events, share cultures, and increase participation
in aquatic sports.

The
International Swimming Hall of Fame, Inc. is registered as a 501(c)(3)
nonprofit organization, incorporated in the State of Florida. Contributions to
ISHOF are tax deductible to the fullest extent of the law. ISHOF’s tax
identification number is 59-1087179. A COPY OF THE OFFICIAL REGISTRATION AND
FINANCIAL INFORMATION MAY BE OBTAINED FROM THE DIVISION OF CONSUMER SERVICES BY
CALLING TOLL-FREE (800-435-7352) WITHIN THE STATE OR FROM THE WEBSITE, www.800helpfla.com. REGISTRATION DOES NOT IMPLY ENDORSEMENT, APPROVAL, OR
RECOMMENDATION BY THE STATE. 

You can find out more about us on guidestar.org under International Swimming Hall of Fame, Inc.

Happy Birthday STEPHANIE RICE !!!


Stephanie Rice (AUS)
2019 Honor Swimmer
FOR THE RECORD: 2008 OLYMPIC GAMES: gold (200m I.M, 400m I.M, 4x200m freestyle; 2007 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS (LC): bronze (200m I.M, 400m I.M.); 2009 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS (LC): silver (200m I.M, 4x100m medley); bronze (400m I.M.); 2011 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS (LC): bronze (400m I.M., 4x100m medley); 2006 PAN PACIFIC CHAMPIONSHIPS: bronze (200m I.M., 400m I.M); 2006 COMMONWEALTH GAMES: gold (200m I.M, 400m I.M)
She first showed promise of being a great swimmer at 16, when she qualified for the 2005 Junior Pan-Pacific Championships. It was there that Stephanie Rice won two gold medals for Team Australia.
Rice burst onto the international senior scene in 2006 under coach Michael Bohl, winning two gold medals in both IMs at the Commonwealth Games in her home country. The next year at the World Championships also in front of a home crowd, Rice won two bronze medals in both IMs, lowering the Australian record in the 200.
In March 2008 at the Australian Olympic Trials in Sydney, Rice unexpectedly broke the world record in the 400m IM by a full second. Three days later, she broke the 200m IM world record that had stood for 11 years and qualified for her first Olympic team.
At the Olympic Games in Beijing, Rice became just the sixth Australian athlete to win three gold medals at a single Olympics when she won both IMs and led off Australia’s 4x200m freestyle relay team.
Stephanie became the first woman to break 4:30 in the 400m IM and lowered her own world record in the 200m IM later in the meet. To finish off her meet, she broke the Australian record in the 200m freestyle en route to Australia breaking the world record in the 4x200m freestyle relay. Rice was honored as the World Swimmer of the Year by Swimming World Magazine and in January 2009 was awarded the prestigious Order of Australia Medal.
After the Olympics, Rice started dealing with nagging shoulder pain while she swam. At the 2009 World Championships, she won silver in the 200m IM and bronze in the 400m IM, not quite as good as her Olympics performances.
In 2010, her shoulder pain had gotten so bad, she underwent surgery, causing her to drop out of international competition.
Her surgery was successful but nine months before the 2012 Olympic Games in London, she tore a tendon in her shoulder. She was going to need surgery with a six-month recovery, but with the Olympic Trials only ten weeks away, full surgery was not an option. She elected for a smaller surgery that would hopefully keep her healthy for the Olympics. Despite these injuries, Rice qualified for the London Olympics in both the 200m and 400m IM, posting times near the top of the world rankings at the Olympic Trials.
In the weeks leading up to the Olympics, the pain in her shoulder continued to get worse. She was cutting her work load in the pool to ease the pain, but it was still a struggle. With all the injuries behind her, Rice was proud of her 4th place 200m IM and 6th place 400m IM performances in London and announced her retirement in 2014 at the age of 24.
She co-authored the book, The Art of Wellness, and is an ambassador for numerous well-known Australian health brands. Rice’s passion in life is to share her wealth of knowledge and her insights to positively impact others’ lives and inspire them to be the best they can be.
She is now giving back to the sport of swimming with her coach Michael Bohl. They are planning to build Learn-to- Swim programs all throughout India. In addition, they plan to develop the “Stephanie Rice Elite Academy,” with the goal of producing India’s very first Olympic swimming medalist in the next decade.

Happy Birthday STEVE CLARK !!!

STEVE CLARK (USA)
1966 Honor Swimmer
FOR THE RECORD: OLYMPIC GAMES: 1960 (participant); 1964 gold (4x100m, 4x200m freestyle relay; 4x100m medley relay); WORLD RECORDS: 50yd, 100yd, 100m, 200yd, 200m freestyle.
Steve Clark was inducted in ISHOF’s second class of Honorees, which shows you how great he was.  This was his bio back then, in 1966.
Steve Clark swam the 1960 Olympics out of Los Altos High School and the 1964 Olympics out of Yale and Santa Clara.  He won five NCAA individual championships at Yale and six AAU titles for Santa Clara Swim Club.  He won three gold medals at the Tokyo Olympics in 1964, setting a world record of 52.9 for the 100 meter freestyle.
Clark is the first man in the world to have swum faster than 21 seconds for 50 yards, 46 seconds for 100 yards, 53 seconds for 100 meters, 1:50 for 200 yards and two minutes for 200 meters.
Clark’s nine world records would have been at least 29 in an earlier time when FINA was accepting short course times for 50, 100, 200 and 220 yard, 100 meter and 200 meter freestyle.  Steve Clark was Santa Clara’s first great male swimmer at the time Hall of Famer Chris Von Saltza was Santa Clara’s premier woman swimmer.  Whereas Chris’ father characterized Chris by saying, “The longer the distance, the better the Von Saltza”, he might have added, “and the shorter the distance, the better the Clark.”  
Steve Clark was unquestionably the World’s fastest freestyle sprint swimmer for five years retiring to Harvard Law School with his records unchallenged.
In speculating on what might have been, swim buffs will always wonder on the fate that might have kept Steve from being the first man to win four gold medals in an Olympiad.  Steve had tendonitis in his shoulder during the USA’s sudden-death Olympic Trials.  His fourth place made the team, but only as a relay swimmer.  By Tokyo, the tendonitis was gone, but U.S. rules limited Steve to three relays and three gold medals.  He started off the 400 freestyle relay in the fastest gun start 100 of the Olympics.  It was a new world record, but Steve didn’t get to do it when it would count for that fourth gold medal.
Clark’s book, Competitive Swimming As I See It , was a swimming best seller.

DARA TORRES: She’s One In A Thousand! Join her!


Dara Torres, ISHOF Honoree and five-time Olympic team member is special.  She is One in a Thousand!
When asked why she wanted to join the International Swimming Hall of Fame’s One in A Thousand Club, Torres said, “I first discovered the Hall of Fame Museum as a 12-year old California kid going to my first YMCA Nationals in Fort Lauderdale.    I didn’t know a place like this even existed.  I didn’t know anything about Olympians of the past or the history of our sport and I was fascinated by it.  The first thing I did when I was in Fort Lauderdale, was visit the Hall of Fame.  It was filled with history, artifacts, stories, and treasures. I remember walking through the museum with my mom and coach, and it was amazing.” 
 “So, I want to give back. Swimming has been such a huge part of my life.   It touches my heart to give back to the sport that has done so much for me. If I can help even a little bit to preserve the history that I was so inspired by as a 12-year old, I absolutely will.”  
Join the One in a Thousand Club by helping ISHOF on a monthly or one-time basis.

·         $10 Monthly Commitment
·         $25 Monthly Commitment
·         $50 Monthly Commitment
·         Make a One-Time Commitment
For larger corporate sponsorships and estate-planning donations, please contact us at customerservice@ishof.org
Dara Grace Torres grew up in Beverly Hills, California, where she learned to swim in her family’s backyard pool.  At the age of seven, she followed her brothers to swim practice at the local YMCA.  During her junior year of high school, Torres moved to Mission Viejo, CA to train with Hall of Fame Coach Mark Schubert, and in 1983 she broke the world record in the 50-meter freestyle.  The next year, while not yet a senior in high school, she won her first Olympic gold medal as a member of the USA’s 4 x 100 freestyle relay team at the Los Angeles Olympic Games.
While swimming for Randy Reese at the University of Florida, Torres earned 28 NCAA All-American swimming awards and at the 1988 Olympic Games, she won two silver medals swimming on relays.  She finished her collegiate athletic career playing volleyball and took two years off before returning to win her second Olympic relay gold medal in Barcelona, Spain during the summer of 1992.
After 1992, Torres lived what appeared to be a glamorous life.  She moved to New York City, worked in television, and as a Wilhelmina model.  She became the first model athlete in the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue. Then, in the spring of 1999, despite not having trained in a pool for seven years, she decided to give the Olympics one more try.

Dara trained with Coach Richard Quick in Palo Alto and Santa Clara, and made the Olympic team for the fourth time, at the age of 33.  She returned home with five medals, more than any other member of the team, including three in individual events and retired.


In 2005, while pregnant with her first child, Dara began swimming three or four times a week at the Coral Spring Aquatic Complex, to keep fit.  After giving birth to Tessa Grace, in April 2006, she entered two Masters meets and posted times that emboldened her to try another comeback.  She asked Coral Springs coach Michael Lohberg, if he would coach her, and a little over a year later, she won the 100-meter freestyle at the U.S. Nationals in Indianapolis.  Three days later, she broke the American record in the 50-meter freestyle for the 10th time-an amazing 24 years after setting it for the very first time. In 2008, Dara qualified for her fifth Olympic team.   At the Beijing Games, she became the oldest swimmer ever to compete in the Olympic Games.  Dara returned home with three silver medals, including the heartbreaking 50-meter freestyle race where she missed gold by 1/100th of a second.

In 2009, Dara won the ESPY award for “Best Comeback” and was named one of the “Top Female Athletes of the Decade” by Sports Illustrated and became a best-selling author with the release of her inspirational memoir, “Age is Just A Number”.

Dara continued swimming after recovering from reconstructive knee surgery.  With the encouragement of Coach Lohberg, she set her sights on making a record sixth Olympic team.  When she barely missed making the London Olympic team by nine-hundredths of a second at the 2012 US Swimming Olympic Trials, Dara announced her retirement with a smile on her face and her six-year old daughter Tessa in her arms.


Olympian, television personality, fitness guru, queen of the comeback, best-selling author, ISHOF supporter and Honoree, and a mother.  Dara Torres is many things to many people, but above all, she is an inspiration, and now, she is “One in A Thousand.”  Won’t you join her?


The International Swimming Hall of Fame wants to know if you are one in a thousand?  We think you are!  Show how special you are and become a member of the International Swimming Hall of Fame’s “One In A Thousand” Club.  Help keep the International Swimming Hall of Fame moving forward toward a new vision and museum by joining now!

During these unprecedented times, the ISHOF Board is calling on every member in the aquatic community to make a small monthly commitment of support to show how special you are and how special the International Swimming Hall of Fame is to everyone.
“Our goal is simple. If we get 1,000 people to simply commit $10, $25 or $50 per month, we will generate enough revenue to go beyond this Covid-19 Pandemic Crisis.” – Bill Kent – Chairman of the ISHOF Board

“Those that believe in our vision, mission, and goals can join us in taking ISHOF into the future and be a part of aquatic history.”  – Brent Rutemiller – CEO and President of ISHOF

Since 1965, ISHOF has been the global focal point for recording and sharing the history of aquatics, promoting swimming as an essential life-skill, and developing educational programs and events related to water sports. ISHOF’s vision for the future is to build a new museum and expand its reach by offering its museum artifacts digitally through a redesigned website.

The ISHOF Board of Directors is calling on all members of the aquatics community to make a small monthly commitment to show their dedication to aquatics and how special the International Swimming Hall of Fame is to everyone.

About ISHOF   Take a Virtual Tour
The International Swimming Hall of Fame (ISHOF) museum opened its doors to the public in December of 1968 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. That same year, the Fédération Internationale de Natation (FINA) – the governing body for Olympic aquatic sports – designated the ISHOF museum as the “Official Repository for Aquatic History”.   In 2018, Sports Publications Inc, publisher of Swimming World Magazine and its multi-media platforms, merged with ISHOF to expand the museum’s reach and impact.  

Today, ISHOF’s vision is to be the global focal point for recording and sharing the history of aquatics, promoting swimming as an essential life-skill, and developing educational programs and events related to water sports.  Show your support for the sport of swimming by becoming a member of ISHOF.
ISHOF Vision Statement
To be the global focal point for recording and sharing the history of aquatics, promoting swimming as an essential life-skill, and developing educational programs and events related to water sports.

ISHOF Mission Statement
To collaborate with aquatic organizations worldwide to preserve, educate and celebrate history, showcase events, share cultures, and increase participation in aquatic sports.


The International Swimming Hall of Fame, Inc. is registered as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, incorporated in the State of Florida. Contributions to ISHOF are tax deductible to the fullest extent of the law. ISHOF’s tax identification number is 59-1087179. A COPY OF THE OFFICIAL REGISTRATION AND FINANCIAL INFORMATION MAY BE OBTAINED FROM THE DIVISION OF CONSUMER SERVICES BY CALLING TOLL-FREE (800-435-7352) WITHIN THE STATE OR FROM THE WEBSITE, www.800helpfla.com. REGISTRATION DOES NOT IMPLY ENDORSEMENT, APPROVAL, OR RECOMMENDATION BY THE STATE. You can find out more about us on guidestar.org under International Swimming Hall of Fame, Inc.

ISHOF Aquatic Complex Update June 12, 2020


For those of you keeping track….The Beat goes on…..
Thank you Hensel Phelps and Laura Voet for the photos and for keeping us up to date!
The dive well waterproof subfloor was poured on Wednesday.
The floor for the main competition pool will in next week Wednesday, June 17,
2020.

ISHOF Fans, Have you become “One in A Thousand ” Yet?

To Join, 
Click here:  

Dick McDonough bestows gifts on ISHOF


The Dick McDonough Collection

Dick McDonough, swimming great from Philadelphia and Villanova University recently meet with ISHOF historian Bruce Wigo and donated a treasure trove of programs, books, antique swimwear and films from ABC’s Wide World Sports from the late 1950’s and early 1960 that had been collected mostly by his father.  

After leaving swimming behind, McDonough worked as a successful attorney and became such an avid golfer that he acquired one of the great collections of golf memorabilia and even wrote a book, “Great Golf Collections of the World.” 

An All-American swimmer for Villanova, he was an NCAA champion and record holder in both the 100 and 200-yd butterfly and an AAU National Champion in the 100-meter freestyle. 

As a member of the U.S. Team that competed in a USA-Japan Duel Meet in Osaka, in 1963, McDonough broke the American record in the 100-meter freestyle and was a member of the 4×100 freestyle relay that set a new world record. 

McDonough still has a love for swimming, and with his wife, he is owner of the Dorset Quarry in Vermont, which has been touted as one of the top swimming holes in the country, which he leaves open to the public. He currently resides Georgia. 

A big thank you to Dick McDonough for this amazing collection!