- Donna de Varona
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Donna de Varona Personal information Full name Donna Elizabeth DeVarona Nickname(s) Liz Nationality United States
Born April 26, 1947
San Diego, California, U.S.Height 1.68 m (5 ft 6 in) Sport Sport Swimming Stroke(s) Freestyle and Medley Club Santa Clara Swim Club College team UCLA Medal recordWomen's swimming Competitor for the United States
Olympic Games Gold 1964 Tokyo 400 m individual medley Gold 1964 Tokyo 4x100 m freestyle Pan American Games Gold 1963 São Paulo 4x100 m freestyle Gold 1963 São Paulo 4x100 m medley Donna Elizabeth de Varona (born April 26, 1947, San Diego, California) is a former American swimmer of Mexican and Irish descent.
Contents
Biography
Swimming career
De Varona was the youngest swimmer to compete at the 1960 Summer Olympics. In the following Olympics, she won gold medals in the 400-meter individual medley and as a member of the 400-meter freestyle relay. In her career, she set 18 swimming records after retiring shortly after the 1964 Olympics. Despite her Olympic medals, she was unable to obtain a swimming scholarship to attend college as they did not exist for women at that time.[citation needed] She trained under George Haines at the Santa Clara Swim Club.
ABC Sports career
In 1965, aged 18, she signed a contract with ABC, which made her one of the first female sportscasters in television history. She served as Late night host of both the 1984 Winter Olympics and the 1984 Summer Olympics. She anchored the Los Angeles Olympics with Jim Lampley and served as both a play-by-play announcer for Synchronized Swimming and as a color analyst for Swimming in the women's category.
She also served as a correspondent for the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary. In addition, she was a political activist in favor of the Title IX entitlement program. She helped to establish the Women's Sports Foundation, where she served as their first president from 1976-84.
Personal life
De Varona graduated in 1986 graduate from UCLA.
Her younger sister is actress/director Joanna Kerns, who played Maggie Seaver on the ABC sitcom Growing Pains.
External links
Records Preceded by
Sylvia Ruuska
Women's 200 metre individual medley
world record holder (long course)
May 13, 1961 – July 22, 1966Succeeded by
Lynn Vidali
Preceded by
Sylvia Ruuska
Women's 400 metre individual medley
world record holder (long course)
July 15, 1960 – July 26, 1962Succeeded by
Sharon Finneran
Preceded by
Sharon Finneran
Women's 400 metre individual medley
world record holder (long course)
July 26, 1962Succeeded by
Sharon Finneran
Preceded by
Sharon Finneran
Women's 400 metre individual medley
world record holder (long course)
March 10, 1964 – July 9, 1967Succeeded by
Claudia Kolb
Awards Preceded by
Eunice Kennedy ShriverTheodore Roosevelt Award (NCAA)
2003Succeeded by
Alan PagePreceded by
Mary Lou RettonFlo Hyman Memorial Award
1996Succeeded by
Billie Jean KingOlympic Champions in Women's 400 m Individual Medley 1964: Donna de Varona • 1968: Claudia Kolb • 1972: Gail Neall • 1976: Ulrike Tauber • 1980: Petra Schneider • 1984: Tracy Caulkins • 1988: Janet Evans • 1992: Krisztina Egerszegi • 1996: Michelle Smith • 2000: Yana Klochkova • 2004: Yana Klochkova • 2008: Stephanie Rice
Pan American Champions in Women's 4×100 m Freestyle Relay 1951: United States (Green, Geary, LaVine, Mullen) · 1955: United States (Werner, Green, Kluter, Roberts) · 1959: United States (Botkin, Spillane, Stobs, Von Saltza) · 1963: United States (De Varona, Stouder, McCleary, Norton) · 1967: United States (Fordyce, Carpinelli, Gustavson, Kruse) · 1971: United States (Neilson, Fordyce, McKitrick, Skrifvars) · 1975: United States (Heddy, Brown, Sterkel, Peyton) · 1979: United States (Elkins, Caulkins, Sterkel, Woodhead) · 1983: United States (Sterkel, Torres, Wayte, Steinseifer) · 1987: United States (Coffin, Thompson, Linke, Steinseifer) · 1991: United States (Oesting, Buckovich, Jacob, Tappin) · 1995: United States (Martino, Van Dyken, Farella, Teuscher) · 1999: Canada (Deglau, Limpert, Evanetz, Nicholls) · 2003: United States (Weir, Swindle, Lanne, Shealy) · 2007: United States (Smit, Woodward, Kukors, Correia) · 2011: United States (Kennedy, Pelton, Kendall, Erndl)
Pan American Champions in Women's 4×100 m Medley Relay 1951: United States (Geary, Pence, O'Brien) · 1955: United States (O'Connor, Sears, Mullen, Werner) · 1959: United States (Cone, Brancroft, Collins, Von Saltza) · 1963: United States (Duenkel, Goyette, Stouder, De Varona) · 1967: United States (Moore, Ball, Daniel, Fordyce) · 1971: Canada · 1975: United States (Bonne, Morey, Wright, Peyton) · 1979: United States (Jezek, Caulkins, Sterkel, Woodhead) · 1983: United States (Walsh, Rhodenbaugh, Lehner, Steinseifer) · 1987: United States (Green, Heisick, Jorgensen, Linke) · 1991: United States (Wilson, Tierney, Wester-Krieg, Tappin) · 1995: United States (Bedford, King Bednar, Van Dyken, Martino) · 1999: United States (Knapp, Stitts, Campbell, Spatz) · 2003: United States (MacManus, Stitts, Vollmer, Weir) · 2007: United States (Smit, McKeehan, Hersey, Correia) · 2011: United States (Bootsma, Chandler, Donahue, Kendall)
Categories:- 1947 births
- Living people
- Olympic swimmers of the United States
- Olympic gold medalists for the United States
- People from San Diego, California
- American television sports announcers
- American swimmers
- Swimmers at the 1960 Summer Olympics
- Swimmers at the 1964 Summer Olympics
- American people of Irish descent
- American sportspeople of Mexican descent
- Women sports announcers
- Former world record holders in swimming
- Olympic medalists in swimming
- Female freestyle swimmers
- Female medley swimmers
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