Happy Birthday Petar Stoychev!!

Petar Stoychev (BUL)

Honor Open Water Swimmer (2019)

FOR THE RECORD: FOUR TIME OLYMPIAN, MORE THAN 100 PODIUM FINISHES IN PROFESSIONAL CAREER, WINNER FOR 11 YEARS: FINA OPEN WATER SWIMMING GRAND PRIX CIRCUIT, TRAVERSÉE INTERNATIONALE DU LAC ST-JEAN AND (34km/21 miles), OHRID (30km/19 miles) AND TRAVERSÉE INTERNATIONALE DU LAC MEMPHRÉMAGOG (32 km/20 miles); 2011 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: gold (25km); 2010 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: bronze (25km); 2006 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: bronze (25km); 2005 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: bronze (10km, 25km); 2003 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: bronze (25km); 2000 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: silver (10km); 2012 EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP: gold (25km); 2011 EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP: silver (25km); 2004 EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP: bronze (25km)

Petar Stoychev is unique among all the world’s open water swimmers. Stoychev’s versatility in open water swimming is unprecedented. A superman in the water, he has been able to cross great channels and swim in extreme conditions with water temperatures ranging from 35 to 90 degrees. He was the first swimmer to cross the English Channel in under seven hours.

Born on October 24, 1976 in Momchilgrad, Bulgaria, Petar Stoychev started to practice swimming at the age of six in the town of Smolyan, under the guidance of his first coaches Evelina Georgieva and Ognyan Georgiev. This little boy from the Rhodope Mountains could hardly have dreamed then that he would compete in four Olympic Games and become one of the greatest open water swimmers in history.

Petar Stoychev made his first international success in 1992, when the 16-year old swimmer placed fourth in the 400m freestyle at the European Junior Championships. After that, in the same year, he made his open water debut at the annual Ohrid Swimming Marathon in Macedonia, where he placed second. This was when Stoychev realized that his strength was in longer distances and challenging conditions in the open water. At the 1995 European Open Water Championships in Austria, Stoychev managed to place sixth at the 5km swimming race and 12th in the 25km. He slowly gave up swimming in the warm and luxurious pools and started to swim in the open water marathons organized by the International Swimming Federation (FINA).

Stoychev enters the ISHOF with more than 60 international marathon victories to his credit. He won the FINA World Cup/World Series titles 11 consecutive years, from 2001-2011. He also won the Traversée Internationale du Lac Memphrémagog in Magog, Canada (34km), Lac Saint-Jean in Roberval, Canada (32km) and the Ohrid Lake, Macedonia Swimming Marathon (30km) each 11 consecutive times. In 2007, he became the first to swim the English Channel in under seven hours, with a time of 6:57.5.

In addition to his numerous achievements in marathon swimming, Petar participated in four Olympic Games; twice as a pool swimmer (2000 & 2004) before the open water event joined the Olympic program and in 2008 & 2012, where he finished 6th and 9th respectively in the 10k Olympic races which were shorter than his preferred 25k and longer distances. In Beijing, Stoychev was Bulgaria’s flag bearer at the opening ceremony.

Petar Stoychev is not only considered one of the greatest marathon swimmers of all time, but in addition, he takes an active role in popularizing swimming in Bulgaria and around the world. He frequently meets with children and supports the UNICEF initiatives and the campaign against child obesity. He has also served in Bulgaria’s Ministry of Sport and on the FINA Athlete’s Commission.

Flashback Friday: The Launch of a Legend as Mark Spitz Wins Five Gold Medals at 1967 Pan American Games

by DAVID RIEDER – SENIOR WRITER

19 October 2023, 02:35am

Throwback Thursday: Mark Spitz Wins Five Gold Medals at 1967 Pan American Games

With the Pan American Games scheduled to start this weekend, it seemed like an appropriate time to feature the launch of a legend. At the 1967 edition of the Pan Am Games, Mark Spitz made his name known to the world.

During the era when Mark Spitz established himself as the standard-bearer for swimming, swimmers did not race in goggles, and the World Championships did not exist. The first edition of the global showcase held by FINA (now World Aquatics) was not held until 1973 in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, one year after Spitz retired following his record-setting seven-gold-medal performance at the Munich Olympics. International racing opportunities were sparse in the 1960s and 1970s, a far cry from the plentiful options for competition in this era.

Thus, Spitz only competed at two international competitions outside of his two Olympics (1968 and 1972): the Maccabiah Games, limited to Jewish athletes, and the Pan American Games, where any athletes from North and South American could compete. At the fifth edition of the Pan Am Games in 1967, Spitz supplied his first signature performance, with Winnipeg, Canada, the site of his first world records and a medal tally that would last for decades.

On June 26, 1967, Spitz set the first world record of his career, swimming a time of 2:06.4 in the 200 butterfly. Five days later, Spitz clocked 56.2 in the 100 fly, seven tenths under the previous global mark. Add in three relay gold medals, and Spitz had won five in total, becoming the first swimmer to win that many golds at Pan Ams.

Spitz would not hold these records continuously for years. On the contrary, only one month after Winnipeg, fellow American Doug Russell tied Spitz’s 100 fly world record while a third U.S. swimmer, John Farris, took away the mark in the 200 fly, only for Spitz to reclaim both standards in October at a meet in West Berlin, foreshadowing the historic performance he would notch in the same country five years later.

Spitz would hold both records before, during and after his ill-fated performance at the 1968 Olympics, where he placed second in the 100 fly and a shocking eighth in the 200 fly. But after those Games, he quickly recaptured his form, and between the butterfly events and the 100 and 200 freestyle, Spitz finished his career having set 20 individual world records.

But that run of greatness started at the Pan American Games, no longer considered one of the major meets on swimming’s calendar but still a meaningful one for swimmers from Canada to Argentina and everywhere in between. The most prolific swimmer in the history of the Pan Am Games is Brazil’s Thiago Pereira, who broke Spitz’s record of five gold medals with six of his own in 2007 before winning six again in 2011 and a further three in 2015.

More recently, plenty of standouts have used Pan Ams as a pre-Olympic year launching point for success, a list that includes Cesar Cielo, Allison Schmitt, Katie Meili, Kelsi Dahlia and most recently, Alex Walsh, Annie Lazor, Fernando Scheffer and Drew Kibler. This year’s edition of Pan Ams gets underway Saturday in Santiago, Chile, and the meet could again help vault a swimmer toward Olympic success, though anyone would be hard-pressed to take his or her Pan Ams momentum quite as far as Spitz did 56 years ago.

IOC Re-Elects 2023 Honoree Kirsty Coventry to Executive Board

by DAN D’ADDONA — SWIMMING WORLD MANAGING EDITOR

16 October 2023, 02:16pm

IOC Re-Elects Kirsty Coventry to Executive Board

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) re-elected 2023 International Swimming Hall of Fame (ISHOF) inductee Kirsty Coventry to its executive board on Monday.

Coventry, from Zimbabwe, was re-elected with Prince Feisal al Hussein of Jordan to the executive board.

The election gave Coventry a four-year term. She served on the Executive Board from 2018-2021 and chaired the IOC Athletes’ Commission.

Prince Feisal is head of the Working Group on Safeguarding and deputy chair of the Gender Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Commission.

According to an Olympics report, seven IOC Members coming to the end of their eight-year term, following their election or re-election in 2015, were re-elected for another eight years, with the age limit being taken into consideration for the end of their terms (80 years for those elected before December 1999 and 70 years for those elected after that date). They were Nawal El Moutawakel (Morocco, Independent Individual, year of birth: 1962, elected in 1998), Prince Albert II (Monaco, Independent Individual, year of birth: 1958, elected in 1985), and the Grand Duke of Luxembourg (Luxembourg, Independent Individual, year of birth: 1955, elected in 1998). All were elected for another eight-year term.

Also elected with age-consideration term limits by the IOC were: Valeriy Borzov (Ukraine, Independent Individual, year of birth: 1949, elected in 1994) was re-elected to serve until the end of 2029; Gunilla Lindberg (Sweden, Independent Individual, year of birth: 1947, elected in 1996) was re-elected to serve until the end of 2027; Syed Shahid Ali (Pakistan, Independent Individual, year of birth: 1946, elected in 1996) was re-elected to serve until the end of 2026; and Nenad Lalović (Serbia, membership linked to his function as President of United World Wrestling (UWW), year of birth: 1958, elected in 2015) was elected to serve until the end of 2028.

Australia’s Swimming Community Mourns The Passing of National Treasure, Coaching Pioneer, and ISHOF Honoree Ursula Carlile

by IAN HANSON – OCEANIA CORRESPONDENT

16 October 2023, 04:25am

Australia’s Swimming Community Mourns The Passing of National Treasure And Coaching Pioneer Ursula Carlile

The Australian swimming community is today mourning the loss of a legend and a National swimming treasure with the peaceful passing of coaching pioneer Ursula Carlile in Ryde today. She was 86.

Ursula’s passing comes nine years after her famous husband and swimming coaching and teaching icon, Forbes Carlile, passed away during the 2016 Rio Olympics – marking the end of an era – celebrating one of the most famous names in Australian swimming – a name that will forever remain a major part of the country’s sporting landscape.

The Carlile name is synonymous with teaching and coaching excellence – from their humble beginnings from Carlile’s Cross Street backyard teaching pool to the world stages and the golden celebrations of Olympic, World Championship and Commonwealth Games glory.

INSIDE THE LAB: Ursula and Forbes Carlile monitoring world record holder Terry Gathercole. Photo Courtesy: Carlile Foundation.

Tributes to Ursula have poured in through the Carlile organisation who prepared an extraordinary insight into the life and times of Ursula Carlile –  a tribute to the one and only Lady Mayoress of the pool deck, who guided the great Shane Gould to Olympic glory in Munich in 1972 – later telling the story of where she was on the day of the Israeli massacre and the time she was banned for three years for coaching in China.

 A pioneer of sports science who forged a career that broke down barriers for women across the globe, remaining the only woman to be the head coach of the Australian Swimming team, after leading them at both the 1974 Commonwealth Games in Christchurch and the 1975 World Championships in Cali, Columbia.

Carlile Foundation director, Australian champion and Commonwealth Games swimmer, Richard Cahalan said of Ursula.

“What a remarkable woman. With her late husband Forbes, she pioneered some of the most important innovations in world swimming,” said Cahalan.

Carlile Foundation director and Commonwealth Games silver medallist, Tim Ford saying: “Ursula was a pioneer and a leader in her own right. At a time when our sport was dominated by highly conservative thinking and practices, overt officialdom, and very limited opportunities for female coaches.

“Ursula blazed a trail to be the first female coach of an Australian Olympic swimming team. An amazing achievement, despite the obstacles.”

IN a lifetime dedicated to swimming, Ursula Carlile:

Worked with husband Forbes in the first specialist sports science laboratory.

Establishing a backyard business that now provides more 1.3 million swimming lessons a year.

The first woman to coach Australia’s swimmers at the Olympics.

The first woman to be head coach of the Australian Swimming Team.

A Member of the International Swimming Hall of Fame, Life Member of Swimming Australia, Life Member of the Australian Swimming Teachers and Coaches Association, Member of the Australian Swim Schools Association Hall of Fame, Member of the United States Swim Schools Hall of Fame.

Steering Shane Gould to Three Olympic Gold

While Ursula helped shape the careers of numerous world record holders, the highlight was the bond forged with the incomparable Shane Gould.

In preparation for the 1972 Olympics, the pair spent countless hours at Ryde pool and travelling together to country swimming meets.

THE TIME IS RIGHT: Ursula Carlile and Shane Gould on the eve of the 1972 Munich Olympics. Photo Courtesy: Carlile Foundation

“We really did get to know each other quite well, she was just so gifted,” Ursula said in an interview last year.

Shane was just 15 at the Munich Games, and what an Olympics they were. One where terrorists broke into the Olympic Village, killing two Israeli team members and holding nine others hostage. Ursula would help get Shane out of Munich and away from the mayhem that followed.

But Ursula was lucky to be there to help.

On the day of the attack, at 4.30am Ursula, always an early riser, had left her room for a run.  Her routine was to leave the village and run around the fence. The Israeli rooms were just opposite the Australians and Ursula missed the terrorists by seconds, saying: “I was really very lucky.’’

Before the Games were marred by the massacre, Ursula guided Shane to perhaps the greatest Olympic performance of any Australian athlete. Shane won five individual medals, three of them gold and all in World Record time.

An individual medal tally that Ian Thorpe, Mark Spitz or Emma McKeon have not matched at a single Olympic Games. In 1972, Ursula also coached Gail Neall to a gold medal and World Record in the 400IM.

“That really was an incredible time. Shane was just so good, but I did feel Forbes deserved more of the credit,” Ursula said.

FULL MEDAL STACK:  Shane Gould with her five Munich Medals from 1972. Photo: Russell McPhedran (Courtesy Hanson Media Collection).

“I was working with her, but as much as anything, I was giving her the programs that Forbes had developed.”

Banned For Three Years

Ursula’s career also included stints with the Dutch Olympic team in 1964 and coaching in China, a step that put her on a collision course with swimming’s officials.

This was an era when most of the western world hadn’t recognised the Chinese government.

“We’d been invited to coach the Chinese. This is way back when China was excommunicated,” Ursula said. Australian officials were livid, threatening to ban Forbes.

“I said that I was the coach and Forbes was only there as my assistant, so if they disqualified anybody, they’d have to disqualify me. And they did.”

Ursula was banned from Australian swimming for three years.

“It was a genuine act of selflessness. Ursula took the blame and the suspension, so Forbes could continue to coach,” said Cahalan.

It was just another battle for a woman of principle, “I wasn’t even able to go on the pool deck at local meets, because I was a bad person who’d been to China.”

Ursula lived by the motto “no one cares about how much you know, until they know how much you care” and she cared deeply about her two great loves, Forbes and swimming.

Making it all the harder to believe, she was once an adult who couldn’t swim.

Forbes and Ursula Love At First Sight

YIOUNG GUNS IN FAMOUS HANDS: World beating freestylers Sally Lockyer and Jenny Turrall with suer coaches Ursula and Forbes Carlile.Circa 1974.  Photo Courtesy:

Needing to complete a swim as the final part of her university degree in Physical Education, Ursula’s parents contacted the man who was regarded as the best coach in the country. Of course, that was Forbes Carlile.

Was it love at first sight? “I guess it was from Forbes’ point of view. I thought about it a little bit more. I think my parents thought about it a lot more. They were thinking, you can’t, he can’t afford to support you. I said, “Oh, it doesn’t matter. We’re going to be off overseas, we won’t need to support ourselves,” Ursula recalled in an interview last year.

Off overseas, indeed. Their passion for swimming even hijacked their wedding. A Saturday morning ceremony at the registry office in Sydney was followed by a quick cup of tea and then a dash to the airport.

The honeymoon started in Townsville, as the two scientists helped prepare the Australian team for the 1958 Commonwealth Games in Cardiff.

“What a honeymoon. The Australian team did very well there and then we went on a swimming trip through Europe. The boys team went one way and the women another. We visited with swimming people all over. They were some of our happiest times,” Ursula recalled years later.

The two turned Carlile into a dominant force in world swimming and the most successful club team in Australian swimming history. They also built the first indoor learn to swim centre in NSW in their backyard at Cross Street.

Although it wasn’t their backyard at the time. They were renting the house but went ahead and knocked down the garage and built the pool where they would begin baby teaching.

“We were always planning to buy the house, so we just went ahead and put the pool in,” Ursula said. The two would stay in that home and operate that “backyard business” for the rest of their lives.

It was the start of a business that now has ten pools and provides more than one million swimming lessons a year. In what was a unique and remarkable coaching partnership, it’s fair to say Ursula had the business brains.

OLYMPIC TICKETS: Coach Ursula Carlile and 1971 Team Manager Roger Pegram. Photo Courtesy: Carlile Foundation.

“Forbes never really cared about money. We had an amazing life travelling the world coaching. He always felt that somehow, the money would be there and inevitably it was,” Ursula said.

“Yes, it was really Ursula who understood how important learn to swim teaching could be in terms of a business. A business which would support elite swimming as it still does to this day,” Mr Cahalan said.

A Swimming Foundation That Lives On

The success of the business enabled Forbes and Ursula to establish a foundation to support competitive swimming and that legacy lives on.

Tim Ford was also coached by Ursula. Years later, he worked with her as the CEO of Carlile Swimming and today, he is on the board of the Carlile Foundation.

 “Ursula had a wonderful and unique set of characteristics – unwavering loyalty to Forbes, passion for her beloved Ryde Swimming Club, diligence, and commitment to coaching and deep care for her swimmers. This made it truly special to be coached by Ursula and a tremendous privilege to work with her.”

“Ursula was the epitome of the quiet achiever. Given Forbes’ larger than life personality, and with her natural reserve and humility, Ursula’s profile was often secondary to Forbes’. However, it was a big mistake to underestimate the impact that Ursula had on the Carlile organisation.  She was fiercely determined, highly intelligent and technically excellent.  Her swimmers were always very well trained with precise technique and pacing.”

Tim was there to accept Ursula’s induction into the International Swimming Hall of Fame and Ursula was justifiably delighted. “It makes me extremely proud, because along with Forbes, we have been in swimming all our lives. I feel very honoured.”

The induction came almost 50 years after husband Forbes was inducted, making them the only husband and wife coaching team in the Hall of Fame.

“It’s exciting. It’s the first time and I feel really honoured and I know Forbes would too, if he was here,” Ursula said at the time.

When asked what she would like people to remember when her name is mentioned, Ursula was typically modest. “Well, it will never be mentioned on its own. It always will be Forbes and Ursula, which suits me very well. He was the scientist; he was the innovator the one who bought scientific concepts not just to swimming, but to sports. Between us, we did have something special going on.”

Special is an understatement. RIP Ursula Carlile.

With thanks to Carlile CEO Jon Harker

URSULA WITH GEN NEXT: Ursula Carlile has left her legacy with these Gen Next girls. Photo Courtesy: Carlile Foundation

Ursula Carlile with Carol Gathercole (left) and Lynn Elliott. Photo Courtesy: Swimming Coaches And Teachers Association.

Ursula Carlile with Carol Gathercole (left) and Dawn Fraser. Photo Courtesy: Swimming Coaches And Teachers Association.

 

Happy Birthday Summer Sanders!!

Summer Sanders (USA)

Honor Swimmer (2002)

FOR THE RECORD: 1992 OLYMPIC GAMES: gold (200m butterfly), gold (4x100m

medley relay – preliminary heat), silver (200m IM), bronze (400m IM), 6th (100m butterfly). 1991 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: gold (200m butterfly), silver (200m IM), bronze (400m IM); 8 U.S. NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS: 2-100y butterfly, 2-200y butterfly, 1-200y IM, 2-400y IM, 1-200m IM; 9 NCAA NATIONAL  CHAMPIONSHIPS: 2-200y butterfly, 2-200y IM, 2-400y IM, 1-4x50y medley relay, 1-4x100y medley relay, 1-4x100y freestyle relay; 1989 PAN PACIFIC CHAMPIONSHIPS: silver (200m IM); 1991 PAN PACIFIC CHAMPIONSHIPS: gold (200m IM, 400m IM, 200m butterfly).

Summer Sanders, a name synonymous with success in swimming. Born October 13, 1972,

by age three Sanders could swim a lap of the pool. She wanted to be just like her older brother

Trevor. So in 1976 she joined the Sugar Bears, an age group swimming program in Roseville, California, coached by Mike Barsotti, Scott Winter and Scott O’Conner. From there she jumped to the Sierra Aquatic Club with coach Ralph Thomas and finally to COA where coach Mike Hastings became her greatest influence as a coach. “She knew how to find the holes in the

water,” Hastings recalled. “You know how Summer psyches herself up?” brother Trevor had said, “She does it by smiling.” But who could have predicted that she would make swimming history years later at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, winning two gold, one silver and one bronze medal.

In 1989 at age 17, she made her way to a silver medal in the 200m I.M. behind Lin Li of China at the Pan Pacific Championships, her first international meet. Two years later, she came back to win the event, as well as the 400m I.M. (beating Lin Li) and the 200m butterfly.

In 1991, her first year swimming for Hall of Fame coach Richard Quick at Stanford University, Sanders won the 200y butterfly, 200y I.M. and 400y I.M and the 4x100y medley relay. And she repeated her championship swims in 1992, the only other year she swam at Stanford and helped her team win the NCAA National Championships. All totaled, she won eight NCAA National Championship titles during her two years of competition.

At Perth, Australia for the 1991 World Championships, Summer won a silver medal in the 200m I.M. and a bronze medal in the 400m I.M. behind Lin Li of China. It was her prelude to winning the gold medal in the 200m butterfly in the Olympic record time of 2:08.67 the next year at the Barcelona Olympics.

Sanders also won silver and bronze medals in the 200m and 400m individual medleys and a second gold medal on the 4x100m medley relay – preliminary heat. In qualifying for the Olympic Games, Summer was the first U.S. woman since Hall of Famer Shirley Babashoff in 1976 to qualify for four individual events at one Olympiad.

Summer swam for another year, then officially retired in 1994, but came back a year later to try unsuccessfully for the 1996 Olympic Team. During her career she won eight U.S. National Championships.

Sanders turned her enthusiasm, focus, and glowing smile to television reporting and event hosting. She has been co-host of NBA Inside Stuff, contributor for the Today Show, host of  “U.S. Olympic Gold,” co-host on Nickelodeon, contributing editor of Self Magazine, and special feature correspondent for NBC Sports at the 2002 Olympics. She has been a reporter for the NBA, USA tennis and various other events and a special representative of Sport for the U.S. Committee for UNICEF.

Happy Birthday Ian Thorpe!!

Ian Thorpe (AUS)

Honor Swimmer (2011)

FOR THE RECORD: 2000 OLYMPIC GAMES: gold (400m freestyle, 4x100m freestyle, 4x200m freestyle), silver (200m freestyle, 4×100 m medley); 2004 OLYMPIC GAMES: gold (200m freestyle, 400m freestyle), silver (4x200m freestyle), bronze (100m freestyle): 1998 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: gold (400m freestyle, 4X200 m freestyle); 2001 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: gold (200m freestyle, 400m freestyle, 800m freestyle, 4x100m freestyle, 4x200m freestyle, 4x100m medley); 2003 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: gold (200m freestyle, 400m freestyle, 4x200m freestyle), silver (200m Individual Medley) bronze (100m freestyle); 17 WORLD RECORDS: 6 (200m freestyle), 5 (400m freestyle), 2 (800 m freestyle), 1 (4x100m freestyle), 3 (4x200m freestyle); 6 WORLD RECORDS (25m): 3 (200m freestyle), 1 (400m freestyle), 2 (4x100m freestyle, 4x200m freestyle); 1999 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP CHAMPIONSHIPS (25m): gold (200m freestyle, 4x100m freestyle), silver (400m freestyle); 1998 COMMONWEALTH GAMES: gold (200m freestyle, 400m freestyle; 4x100m freestyle, 4x200m freestyle); 2002 COMMONWEALTH GAMES: gold (100m freestyle, 200m freestyle, 400m freestyle, 4x100m freestyle, 4x200m freestyle, 4x100m medley), silver (100m backstroke); 1999 PAN PACIFIC CHAMPIONSHIPS: gold (200m freestyle, 400m freestyle, 4x100m freestyle, 4x200m freestyle); 2002 PAN PACIFIC CHAMPIONSHIPS: gold (100m freestyle, 200m freestyle, 400m freestyle, 4x100m freestyle, 4x200m freestyle), silver (4x100m medley); WORLD SWIMMER OF THE YEAR: 1998-1999, 2001-2002: WORLD PACIFIC RIM SWIMMER OF THE YEAR: 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2004.

As a child, Ian Thorpe grew tired of seeing his older sister swim in competitions, so he also took up swimming. He was a natural swimmer with a natural stroke, who after outgrowing a chlorine allergy, swam his way into the history books to become Australia’s most decorated swimmer ever. Nicknamed “Torpedo”, Thorpe became a celebrated hero throughout the world. At age 14 he became the youngest-ever male World Champion when he won the 400m freestyle at the 1998 Perth World Championship, dominating this event for the next six years.

A giant in swimming, he stood 6 feet 5 inches tall, weighing 230 pounds with a shoe size 17 and an arm span of 6 feet 5 inches. He was built for speed and most everything he swam resulted in winning gold medals. He won four gold medals at the 1998 Kuala Lampur Commonwealth Games; four gold medals at the 1999 Pan Pacific Games; six gold medals at the 2001 Fukuoka World Championships; five gold medals at the 2002 Yokohama Pan Pacific Games; three gold medals at the 2003 Barcelona World Championships, and six gold medals at the 2002 Manchester Commonwealth Games. At the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games, Thorpe won the 400 meter freestyle in world record time and another two gold medals on the freestyle relay teams. He also won silver medals in the 200m freestyle and 4×100 meter medley relay team. At the 2004 Athens Olympic Games, he became the only Olympian in history to win medals in the 100 meter, 200 meter and 400 meter freestyle at the same Olympic Games by winning gold medals in the 200 meter and 400 meter freestyle and a bronze medal in the 100 meter freestyle. All totaled, Thorpe used his powerful trademark six-beat kick to set 18 world records. Today, Ian has his own jewelry and underwear line, is an ambassador for Armani clothes and has a swimming pool named in his honor. He co-founded the Ian Thorpe Foundation for Youth Trust, a charity that benefits the treatment of children with life threatening diseases.

Happy Birthday Laure Manaudou!!

Laure Manaudou (FRA)

Honor Swimmer (2017)

FOR THE RECORD: WORLD RECORD HOLDER 200 and 400m freestyle; 2004 OLYMPIC GAMES: gold (400m freestyle silver (800m freestyle), bronze (100m backstroke); 2008 OLYMPIC GAMES: participant; 2012 OLYMPIC GAMES: participant; 2005 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS (LC): gold (400m freestyle); 2007 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: gold (200m & 400m freestyle), silver (800m freestyle, 100m backstroke), bronze (4×200m freestyle); 2004 EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIPS (LC): gold (400m freestyle, 100m backstroke, 4×100m medley); 2006 EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIPS (LC): gold (400m freestyle, 800 m freestyle, 100m backstroke, 200m medley), bronze (200m freestyle, 4x200m freestyle, 4x100m medley); 2008 EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIPS (LC): gold (200m backstroke, 4×200 m freestyle), silver (100m backstroke); 2005 EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIPS (SC): gold (400m freestyle, 800m freestyle, 100m backstroke); 2006 EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIPS (SC): gold (400 m freestyle, 800m freestyle, 100m backstroke); 2007 EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIPS (SC): gold (400m freestyle, 100m backstroke), silver (200m freestyle), bronze (4×50m medley); 2008 EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIPS (SC): Rijeka: bronze (100m backstroke); 2012 EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIPS (SC): gold (50m backstroke), silver (100m backstroke), bronze (4×50m medley); 2005 MEDITERRANEAN GAMES: gold (400m freestyle, 50m backstroke)

Laure Manaudou was born on October 9, 1986 in Villeurbanne, France. She swam for the club of Ambérieu-en-Bugey, in Ain, from the age of 6 to 14 years old. In 2000, coach Philippe Lucas spotted her and convinced her parents that he would make her a champion. She then left the family nest to join her new coach in Melun, and a year later she won two silver medals at the European Junior Championships in Malta. Everyone started talking about her enormous potential.

In 2003, at the age of 16, Manaudou won her first French national title in the 50m backstroke. The following year she took gold in the five individual events (400m, 800m, 1500m freestyle, 50m and 100m backstroke) at the French Nationals and qualified for her first Olympic team. In Athens, a few months later, she won the gold medal in the 400m freestyle. It was France’s first gold medal ever in women’s swimming and the first swimming gold medal won by a French athlete since Jean Boiteux’s victory in the 400m men’s freestyle event at Helsinki in 1952. Manaudou also won the silver medal in the women’s 800m freestyle and the bronze medal in the women’s 100m backstroke, thus becoming only the second French woman to win three medals in a single Olympic Games, Summer or Winter.

In 2005, she defended her world title in the 400m freestyle at the FINA World Championships. At the French Championships in 2006, she did what many thought was impossible. For eighteen years, women swimmers had been chasing the seemingly untouchable record set by America’s Janet Evans in the 400m freestyle at the 1988 Seoul Olympic Games. There was reason to believe it would last for eternity, but Laure Manaudou finally broke it and she lowered Evans’ standard again at the European Championship three months later.

She confirmed her status as a favorite to repeat as Olympic champion in Beijing, by winning five medals including two gold, two silver and one bronze at the 2007 World Swimming Championships in Melbourne, Australia. Shortly thereafter, she signed a sponsorship contract for five years for a sum of money that would be close to one million euros a year. The same year, on May 6, 2007, she decided to part with coach Philippe Lucas to train in Italy.

Manaudou was the star of French swimming and a real hope of multiple medals at Beijing 2008, but by her own admission 2007 was a crazy year as personal issues interfered with her training. After a season where she had four coaches and a loss of motivation, Laure finished a disappointing eighth in the 400m freestyle final and seventh in the 100m backstroke.

She announced her retirement in early 2009, but living in the United States two years later, started training again. Although she qualified for the London Olympic Games in the 100m and 200m backstroke, she failed to advance beyond the preliminaries. She once again announced her retirement and left the international aquatic stage as she started it, after winning the 50m backstroke at the European (SC) Championships in November of 2013.

In 2014, Laure released her autobiography, Entre Les Lignes (Between The Lines). It is a candid, honest account of her life in competitive swimming, with its sacrifices, its ups and downs, her relationships with her brothers, coaches, love life and the challenges she faced dealing with fame at an early age.

Triple Olympic medalist, three-time world champion, 18-time European champion and 58 time champion of France, Laure Manaudou enters the ISHOF as the best female swimmer in French history.

Happy Birthday Terry Schroeder!!

Terry Schroeder (USA)

Honor Water Polo (2002)

FOR THE RECORD: 1979-1992 UNITED STATES NATIONAL WATER POLO TEAM: member; 1980 OLYMPIC GAMES: boycott; 1984 OLYMPIC GAMES: silver; 1988 OLYMPIC GAMES: silver; 1992 OLYMPIC GAMES: 4th; PAN AMERICAN GAMES: gold (1979, 1983, 1987), silver (1991); 1978, 1981, 1985, 1987, 1991 FINA WORLD CUP: gold (1991), silver (1985); WORLD PLAYER OF THE YEAR: 1981, 1985.

Very rarely will you find an Olympic athlete in one of the roughest Olympic sports who has  the easy demeanor and control of emotions as does this captain of three Olympic water polo teams. At 6 feet 3 inches, 210 pounds, he became one of the best players in Olympic history to play the two-meter position, the quarterback of the offense. For over 15 years and 4 Olympic Games, Terry Schroeder was the USA team leader and one of the most revered players in international competition during his career.

He never lost his temper in play. There was not time for that. As the “hole man,” he had to wrestle the heavyweights, take blows and keep focused on the game. That was his strength – to take a beating and hold his own. He was fouled up to 75 times in a game. He had a total of 100 stitches in his face. But he never relented, leading his team to great international achievements.

He started swimming at the Santa Barbara YMCA for coach Ian McPherson. As an age grouper, Terry was nationally ranked in the backstroke, but he liked the dynamics of a team. Swimming didn’t have that. Water polo did. He played water polo in high school at San Marcos High, Santa Barbara, California, where he was a high school All-American. He chose water polo over football, and it seemed to combine skills from all the sports he had played (swimming, passing, throwing, catching, eye-hand coordination), and it was a great team sport. His high school coach Mike Irwin was an inspiration in shaping Terry’s athleticism. At Pepperdine University in California he graduated Magna Cum Laude, Sports Medicine in 1981. He played for veteran coach Rick Rowland and became a three-time All-American. During his sophomore year of 1978, he was asked to join the National Team. National Team coaches Ken Lindgren and Hall of Famer Monte Nitzkowski were inspirational to Terry. He became Team USA’s only four-time Olympian. His 1980 team was dismissed due to the Olympic boycott. He refocused and became the captain of the 1984 team and 1988 team where Team USA won silver medals at both Los Angeles and Seoul. He retired in 1988 but made a comeback in 1990 where he was elected team captain for a third time placing fourth in Barcelona, 1992.

During his career, Schroeder led the National Team to five FINA World Cups winning gold and silver medals, and four Pan American Games winning three golds and a silver medal. On the club level, he played for Industry Hills, Malibu, New York Athletic Club and Harvard, competing seven times on National Championship teams. He was voted National MVP six times and was an All-American fourteen times. He was twice named International Player of the Year and carried the U.S. flag at the 1988 Olympic Closing Ceremony. In 1984, he modeled for sculptor, Robert Graham as the bronze male torso sculpted for the Olympic Gateway at the entrance to the Los Angeles Coliseum at the Olympic Games. This headless figure represents all Olympic athletes.

In 1992 he took second place at the Superstars competition in Cancun, Mexico. In 1986, he graduated Cum Laude from Palmer University as a Doctor of Chiropractic, a third generation family tradition. Terry’s grandfather, father, seven cousins, brother, sister, brother-in-law, wife and other relatives totaling 59 family members are all chiropractors. Since 1986, he has been Pepperdine’s head water polo coach, winning the school’s first NCAA National Championship in 1997.

Terry is a guest lecturer and instructor at chiropractic seminars. He has written chapters in The Spine in Sports by Robert Watkins and Awaken the Olympian Within by John Naber. He has been a television color analyst for water polo on TBS Sports, Prime Network, USA Cable and Bud Sports.

Terry Schroeder, an honor student, honor coach and honor athlete.

Happy Birthday Klaus Dibiasi!!

Klaus Dibiasi (ITA) 1981 Honor Diver

FOR THE RECORD:  OLYMPIC GAMES: 1964 silver (platform); 1968 gold (platform), silver (springboard); 1972 gold (platform); 1976 gold (platform). First diver to win 5 Olympic medals; First and only diver to win the same Olympic title at 3 successive Olympic Games; WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: 1973 gold (platform), 1973 silver (springboard); 1975 gold (platform), silver (springboard); EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIPS: 1966 gold (platform); 1970 silver (springboard, platform); 1974 gold (springboard, platform); EUROPEAN DIVING CUPS: 1967 gold (platform); 1968 gold (springboard); 1971 gold (springboard, platform); 1973 gold (springboard); 1975 gold (platform); Platform Diver of the Year 9 times.

No other man or woman has won an Olympic diving title in 3 Olympic Games.  Klaus Dibiasi very nearly won 4, missing the first of what would have been 4 consecutive 10-meter platform titles by 1.04 points to Bob Webster at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics.  Tall, soft spoken and handsome this Austro-Italian from Bolzano, Italy was king of the tower from 1964 through retirement in 1976.  Coached by his father, a former Italian Olympian and National Champion, Klaus succeeded him as National Coach after his third Olympic Gold medal at Montreal in 1976.

Bob Bowman On the Innate Skill Shared by Michael Phelps, Michael Jordan and LeBron James

by JOHN LOHN – EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

03 October 2023, 05:02am

The Innate Skill Shared by Michael Phelps, Michael Jordan and LeBron James

Ahead of his induction into the International Swimming Hall of Fame, coach Bob Bowman took a few minutes to sit down with Swimming World and discuss a variety of topics. Among the points covered was the ability of Michael Phelps, a 28-time Olympic medalist, to vividly remember specific races and aspects of his career.

Since heading into retirement following the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Phelps has done some commentary for NBC. While on air, his insights have provided a glimpse into his vast knowledge of the sport, and ability to dissect critical aspects of races. This skill was on display when Frenchman Leon Marchand broke Phelps’ world record in the 400-meter individual medley at last summer’s World Championships in Fukuoka.

During the COVID days, Bowman and Phelps had the opportunity to rewatch some of Phelps’ most-iconic Olympic races. Bowman joked that some of the races were more enjoyable to watch than others, such as the final of the 200 butterfly at the 2012 Olympics in London, where South African Chad Le Clos edged Phelps at the finish. Overall, Bowman and Phelps had the chance to take a walk down memory lane.

In the interview with Bowman in Fort Lauderdale, Swimming World publisher Jack Hallahan asked the legendary coach if Phelps’ race recall was similar to how LeBron James can remember the details of basketball games from years ago. Bowman gave a terrific response to the question.

“I think he is definitely a savant,” Bowman said of Phelps. “He is a lot like Michael (Jordan) was, in that he is able to remember specific details, key moments that made a difference. We were watching the 200 individual medley from Rio and Michael says to me, ‘In three strokes, I’m going to breathe and look to see where (Thiago) Pereira is. And that’s what happened.”

In that final of the 200 individual medley, Phelps captured gold in the event for the fourth consecutive Games. The title made him the first athlete in the sport to four-peat.