- Nobutaka Taguchi
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Nobutaka Taguchi Personal information Born 1951 Medal recordMen’s swimming Competitor for Japan Olympic Games Gold 1972 Munich 100 m breaststroke Bronze 1972 Munich 200 m breaststroke World Championships (LC) Silver 1975 Cali 100 m breaststroke Bronze 1973 Belgrad 100 m breaststroke Bronze 1973 Belgrad 200 m breaststroke Nobutaka Taguchi (田口信教 Taguchi Nobutaka , born June 18, 1951 in Saijō, Ehime, Japan) is an Olympic gold medalist for Japan in swimming.
In 1972, he won Japan's first Olympic swimming gold medal since 1956. Japan dominated the 1932 and 1936 Olympics and won the breaststroke crown in 1928, 1932, 1936 and 1956 Olympic Games despite three radical rule changes that completely changed the stroke each time.
Taguchi did it single-handedly in 1972, beating three Americans in his Olympic victory. He was the only Nippon winner, as Americans dominated the 1971 Japanese Nationals the year before the Olympics, and he followed his Olympic triumph by again beating John Hencken, nicknamed "The Rocket", in the Santa Clara Invitational in 1973. His accomplishments are notable because he won during a five year era dominated by Hencken and David Wilkie, record breaking breaststrokers. He also earned the bronze medal behind "the Rocket" and the "Flying Scott" in the 200 metre breaststroke at Munich and in both breaststrokes in the 1975 World Championships at Cali. He ended his career at the Olympics in Montreal.
In 1987 he was inducted in the International Swimming Hall of Fame.
External links
Olympic Champions in Men's 100 m Breaststroke 1968: Don McKenzie • 1972: Nobutaka Taguchi • 1976: John Hencken • 1980: Duncan Goodhew • 1984: Steve Lundquist • 1988: Adrian Moorhouse • 1992: Nelson Diebel • 1996: Frédérik Deburghgraeve • 2000: Domenico Fioravanti • 2004: Kosuke Kitajima • 2008: Kosuke Kitajima
Categories:- 1951 births
- Living people
- Japanese swimmers
- Olympic gold medalists for Japan
- Olympic bronze medalists for Japan
- Olympic swimmers of Japan
- Swimmers at the 1972 Summer Olympics
- Swimmers at the 1976 Summer Olympics
- People from Ehime Prefecture
- Former world record holders in swimming
- Olympic medalists in swimming
- World Aquatics Championships medalists in swimming
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