Lauren van Oosten

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Lauren van Oosten (right) and roommate, Liz Warden at a staging camp for the Olympics in Kos
Lauren van Oosten (right) and roommate, Liz Warden at a staging camp for the Olympics in Kos

Lauren van Oosten (born November 17, 1978 in Nanaimo, British Columbia) is a Canadian swimmer and a member of the Olympic swimming team for Canada.

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[edit] Biography

She is originally from Nanaimo, British Columbia and is of Dutch heritage. She grew up and learned to swim in Nanaimo, B.C. before moving to the national training centre at the University of Calgary in Calgary, Alberta.

Lauren has been an integral part of the National Swim Team since 1997. Since then she has won a total of 9 international medals (bronze, silver and gold) and has set two Canadian records, one (200m breaststroke) that still stands and one (100m breaststroke) that lasted for six years (1998-2004). She attributes much of her success to her coach, Jan Bidrman.

Her first international meet was the Pan Pacific Swimming Championships in Fukuoka, Japan in August of 1997. There she came from sixth place to third in the final 50 metres of the 200m breaststroke race to win a bronze medal. This incredible preformance qualified her for the 1998 World Aquatics Championships in Perth, Western Australia, Australia. At this World Championships Lauren swam a best time, set a Canadian record and won a bronze medal in the 100m breaststroke with a time of 1:08:66.

From there she went to the 1998 Commonwealth Games that summer. This meet awarded her a silver medal (4*100m medley relay) and 2 bronze medals (100m breaststroke, 200m breaststroke).

The 1999 Pan American Games were held in Winnipeg, Manitoba, from 23 July to 8 August 1999. Lauren medaled in all the events she entered which included 100m breaststroke (Gold), 200m breaststroke (Bronze), and 4*100m medley relay (Silver).

Lauren had a major disappointment when she didn’t make the Olympic team in 2000. Up until this point she had been ranked first in Canada, but was only able to manage a 5th place finish at Olympic trials.

She also didn’t make the World Championships team in 2001 or the Commonwealth Games team in 2002. She was in a nasty slump and fading out of the Canadian swimming picture. However the 2003 season proved to be a come back year for van Oosten.

She qualified and race at the 2003 World Aquatics Championships in Barcelona, Spain where she swam 100m and 200m breaststroke.

Then in November of 2003, at Canadian Open in Quebec City, Quebec, Lauren van Oosten broke a 10-year-old national record in the women’s 200m breaststroke to highlight the third day of competition, with a time of 2:25.47.

Following that she broke her Canadian record, only two months later, at the World Cup swimming competitions in East Meadow, New York. She won a bronze medal in the 200m and set a new time of 2:24.92.

In August of 2004, Lauren was disappointed with her races at the Olympics, compared to her performance at Olympic trials. At the 2004 Olympic Games, she competed in the 100m breaststroke (11th place), 200m breaststroke (13th place) and the 4*100m medley relay (11th place). Although she had thought she would retire after the Olympics, she felt that she had more in her and wasn’t ready to retire just yet.

Early in 2005, she was hospitalized for pneumonia and was thought to be severely over trained. This proved to be quite a setback as it took her till the end of August to even be able to start training again. She had two and a half months to go from not training at all to being ready to win at Commonwealth Games trials. She did just that with a gold medal win in the 100m breaststroke, qualifying her for the 2006 Commonwealth Games in Melbourne, Australia. There Lauren won a bronze medal in the 4*100m medley relay.

[edit] 2004 Summer Olympics

Lauren van Oosten's 2004 Summer Olympics Events
Date Event Final Time Place
August 15 100m Breaststroke 1:09.45 11th
August 18 200m Breaststroke 2:30.39 13th
August 21 4x100m Medley Relay 4:09.84 11th


[edit] External links

  • Lauren van Oosten.com A website Lauren's sister, Elaine, made for her upon making the 2004 Olympic team.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

http://www.swimming.ca/swimming/index_e.aspx?DetailId=2374 http://www.swimming.ca/swimming/index_e.aspx?DetailId=839#Calgary_swimmer_Lauren_Van_Oosten_breaks_national_record_at_Canadian_Open_and_short_course_nationals http://www.swimming.ca/swimming/index_e.aspx?ArticleID=1014&ev=1#Jan31

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