Shirley Babashoff

Shirley Babashoff
Babashoff on the podium at 1972 Olympics
Personal information
Full nameShirley Frances Babashoff
National teamUnited States
Born (1957-01-31) January 31, 1957 (age 67)
Whittier, California, U.S.
Height5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
Weight148 lb (67 kg)
Sport
SportSwimming
StrokesFreestyle
ClubMission Viejo Nadadores
CoachMark Schubert
Nadadores
Medal record
Women's swimming
Representing the United States
Event 1st 2nd 3rd
Olympic Games 3 6 0
World Championships 2 7 1
Total 5 13 1
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place 1972 Munich 4×100 m medley
Gold medal – first place 1972 Munich 4×100 m freestyle
Gold medal – first place 1976 Montreal 4×100 m freestyle
Silver medal – second place 1972 Munich 100 m freestyle
Silver medal – second place 1972 Munich 200 m freestyle
Silver medal – second place 1976 Montreal 200 m freestyle
Silver medal – second place 1976 Montreal 400 m freestyle
Silver medal – second place 1976 Montreal 800 m freestyle
Silver medal – second place 1976 Montreal 4×100 m medley
World Championships
Gold medal – first place 1975 Cali 200 m freestyle
Gold medal – first place 1975 Cali 400 m freestyle
Silver medal – second place 1973 Belgrade 100 m freestyle
Silver medal – second place 1973 Belgrade 200 m freestyle
Silver medal – second place 1973 Belgrade 4×100 m freestyle
Silver medal – second place 1973 Belgrade 4×100 m medley
Silver medal – second place 1975 Cali 4×100 m freestyle
Silver medal – second place 1975 Cali 4×100 m medley
Silver medal – second place 1975 Cali 100 m freestyle
Bronze medal – third place 1975 Cali 800 m freestyle

Shirley Frances Babashoff (born January 31, 1957) is an American former competition swimmer, Olympic champion, and former world record-holder in multiple events. Babashoff set six world records and earned a total of nine Olympic medals in her career.[1] She won a gold medal in the 400-meter freestyle relay in both the 1972 and 1976 Olympics, and she won the 1975 world championship in both the 200-meter and 400-meter freestyle. During her career, she set 37 national records (17 individual and 20 relay) and for some time held all national freestyle records from the 100-meter to 800-meter event.[2]

Early swimming career

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After trying private lessons, Shirley began taking swimming lessons around the age of eight at Cerritos College pool, a Junior College in Los Angeles County's Norwalk, California, as did her brother Jack Babashoff, who would also become an Olympic swimmer in 1976. At nine, Shirley swam for the Buena Park Splashers with her brother Jack, later swimming for a club in El Monte, California coached by Don La Mont, a talented coach.[3]

Beginning around the age of 13 in 1970, Shirley swam at Golden West College in Huntington Beach for a company-sponsored team, Phillips 66, under coach Ralph "Flip" Darr through her junior year in High School. Darr coached swimmers who swam in four separate Olympics. Shirley attended meets from an early age, and under Darr, she began to set age group records.

Swimming with the Nadadores

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When Flip Darr resigned from coaching when Shirley was around sixteen in her Junior year in High School, she began swimming for the Mission Viejo Nadadores, one of America's top swimming programs coached by Hall of Fame Coach Mark Schubert. Shirley excelled under Schubert's long and challenging workouts, which included a focus on improving her fly, back, and breaststroke skills, and included managed weight training. By the 1972 Olympics, Shirley was one of the top women freestylers in the country. She continued to work with the Nadadores and Schubert as her primary source of training until the 1976 Olympics, and led the team to win the AAU Short Course Championships in April, 1975.[4][5][3][6]

1972 Summer Olympics

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At the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, she won golds in the 4x100 meter freestyle and medley relay and silver medals in the 100 meter and 200 meter individual freestyle events. In the 400 meter freestyle, finishing fourth behind the German competitor Guden Wegner, Shirley missed taking a bronze medal by only .48 seconds.[6][7]

In September 1974, Shirley led the American Women's team to a win over the East German women in a Dual Meet in Concord, California. She tied her own world record in the 200 Meter freestyle at 2:02.94, won the 400 meter freestyle, and anchored a 4x100 freestyle relay that set a world record. The American women's team was coached by Shirley's former coach, Ralph Darr.[8]

1976 Summer Olympics

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At the 1976 U.S. Olympic Trials, she won all the freestyle events, as well as the 400-meter individual medley, setting one world and six national records in the process. Her performance was considered one of the greatest achievements by any woman at an Olympic trial.[2]

At the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, Quebec, she won four silver medals and a gold medal in the 4×100-meter freestyle relay in world record time, despite the competition being dominated by the East German swimmers. The four silver medals came in the 200-meter, 400-meter and 800-meter freestyle, and the 4×100-meter medley relay. Although Babashoff never won an individual gold medal in Olympic competition, she is still regarded as one of the top swimmers in history, and is most vividly remembered for having swum the anchor leg on the gold-medal winning 4×100-meter freestyle relay team, in its victory over the doped up, steroid-plagued 1976 East German women, in what is widely acknowledged as having been one of the single most memorable races in the entire history of women's swimming.[7]

The East German team of Kornelia Ender, Petra Thumer, Andrea Pollack and Claudia Hempel was heavily favored to win the race. Prior to the relay, American sportscaster Donna de Varona picked East Germany to win the event, but Kim Peyton, Wendy Boglioli and Jill Sterkel teamed with Babashoff to upset the East Germans breaking the world record by 4 seconds. After the event, de Varona said, "I have never been happier to eat my words in the prediction I made right before this event." Shirley Babashoff's time in winning the silver medal in the 400-meter freestyle at the 1976 Olympics would have defeated men's gold medalist Don Schollander twelve years earlier at the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo.[7][9]

Personal life

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Babashoff in 2016

Babashoff was one of four children of Jack Babashoff, a machinist, and Vera Slivkoff, a housewife. Her father had been a swimming instructor in Hawaii and always wanted his own children to become Olympians. Both of her parents are second-generation Russian American.[10][11]

Shirley's doping accusations confirmed

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After the 1976 Olympics, Babashoff was occasionally referred to as "Surly Shirley" and described as a "sore loser" by the media because of her public accusations of drug cheating by the East German swimmers. She was later proven correct: most East German athletes were using performance-enhancing drugs, substantiated by investigators in the PBS documentary, "Secrets of the Dead: Doping for Gold."[2][12] By 1991, after the fall of communism and German reunification, several media reports vindicated Shirley's accusations of doping, including the widely circulated New York Times, that featured the headlines, "Coaches Confirm That Steroids Fueled East Germany's Success in Swimming". Most of the East German women's team were listed in the article. It is estimated that Babashoff was denied three gold medals as a result of cheating by East Germany.[2]

In the mid to late-90's, when German news agencies released more detailed information confirming that the former East Germany had a state-run doping program for their 1976 women's swimming team and other athletes, the American Olympic committee considered giving "upgrade medals" to Americans who had lost to East German athletes confirmed of taking banned substances. However, Jacques Rogge, an IOC committee member from Belgium and future IOC president, disapproved of the idea as he felt too much time had passed to make the change. The 1976 American Olympic 4x100 meter Women's medley relay team, in which Shirley had participated in Montreal and taken a silver, were given "appropriate medal recognition", however. No medal reallocations took place, and East German athletes are still listed as winners.[2][12][3]

Life after swimming

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After the Montreal Olympics, and the end of her competitive swimming career, in the Autumn of 1976 she enrolled at UCLA, majoring in business. She left the school after a few years, did not swim with the team, and retired from swimming in January 1977. She had an endorsement contract with Arena, the swimsuit company from 1977 through around 1980, which required her to work as a representative 56 days a year. She did a few television appearances.[3] Babashoff then worked coaching swimming primarily around Los Angeles, and for a period in Korea, coaching the Korean Women's National Swim Team in Pyongyang for the 1988 Olympics.[12][5][3]

In 1978, Babashoff married, but the marriage ended in divorce in 1978, and she did not remarry.[5]

In 1982, she was inducted in the International Swimming Hall of Fame as an "Honor Swimmer,"[10] and in 1987, became a member of the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame in 1987.[5] She had a son in 1986 whom she raised alone, and became a letter carrier for the United States Postal Service in Orange County, California in the Huntington Beach Area.[12][5]

On April 30, 2005, Babashoff received the Olympic Order, the highest award of the Olympic Movement, during the Inaugural Olympic Assembly luncheon. International Olympic Committee members Bob Ctvrtlik, Anita DeFrantz, and Jim Easton presented the award. The IOC established the Olympic Order in 1974 to honor individuals who have illustrated the Olympic Ideals through their actions, have achieved remarkable merit in the sporting world, or have rendered outstanding services to the Olympic cause, either through their own personal achievements or their contributions to the development of sport.[12]

Her brother Jack Babashoff won the silver medal behind teammate Jim Montgomery in the 100-meter freestyle at the 1976 Montreal Olympics. Her other brother Bill and sister Debbie were also swimmers who competed internationally.[12]

Shirley attended Fountain Valley High School in Fountain Valley, California where she graduated in 1974. In 1973 she led the school to their first-ever California Interscholastic Federation Championship in girls' swimming.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Olympic.org: Shirley Babashoff
  2. ^ a b c d e Sports-Reference.com, Olympic Sports, Athletes, Shirley Babashoff Retrieved September 11, 2012.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Babashoff, Shirley, Making Waves, Santa Monica Press, Solana Beach California, (2016), pg. 22- Cerritos, Nadadores -80-83, Don Lamont - iii, v, 30, Golden West College-34, Ralph "Flip" Dar - 34, 36, 43-48, Buena Park Splashers- v, 23, 107, Arena-179-183, UCLA-178
  4. ^ AAU Championships in Gusktey, Earl, "National Swim Spotlight Falls on Mission Viejo", Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles, California, pg. 19, 17 April 1975
  5. ^ a b c d e f "Shirley Babashoff". encyclopedia.com. Retrieved January 28, 2023.
  6. ^ a b "Shirley Babashoff". Socalswimhistory. October 5, 2017. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
  7. ^ a b c "Shirley Babashoff". Olympedia. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
  8. ^ Moody, Darrell, "Naber: Not Satisfied", Concord Transcript, Concord, California, pg. 9, 3 September 1974
  9. ^ "Don Schollander". Olympedia. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
  10. ^ a b "Shirley Babashoff (USA)". ISHOF.org. International Swimming Hall of Fame. Retrieved October 20, 2012.[dead link]
  11. ^ Babashoff, Shirley. Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives, Thematic Series: Sports Figures (January 1, 2002).
  12. ^ a b c d e f Paula Edelson (January 1, 2002). A to Z of American Women in Sports. Infobase Publishing. pp. 13–. ISBN 978-1-4381-0789-9. Retrieved November 10, 2012.

Bibliography

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Further reading

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Olympic Games
Preceded by
Most career Olympic medals
won by an American woman

– 2000
Succeeded by