Malcolm Champion

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Olympic medal record
Men’s swimming
Gold 1912 Stockholm 4x200 m freestyle relay

Malcolm Eadie Champion (12 November 1883July 27, 1939) was New Zealand's first Olympic gold medallist, and the first swimmer to represent New Zealand at an Olympic Games.[1] He won a gold medal in the 4x200m freestyle relay at the 1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm, Sweden as part of a combined team with Australia, competing as Australasia.

Champion was born in 1883 on Norfolk Island (now an Australian territory but then a British colony), the descendant of a Bounty mutineer, later moving to New Zealand. Between 1901 and 1914, Champion won thirty-two New Zealand national titles, at one point holding the titles for every distance between 220 yards and one mile.[2] In 1911 was the long-distance champion of England and the 880yd champion of the Thames. He had also represented Australasia at the 1911 Festival of Empire at The Crystal Palace, an early forerunner to the Commonwealth Games, where he finished third in the mile race.

Due to the financial difficulties faced by the New Zealand Olympic Committee, his swimming club had to fundraise for him and organize loans so that he could travel to the 1912 Stockholm Olympics. At the Olympics, Champion carried the flag for the Australasian delegation. Champion was originally slated to compete in the 400m and 1500m freestyle events. He finished second in his 400m heat behind Harold Hardwick and before finishing fourth in his semi-final to be eliminated. In the 1500m event, he placed second in both his heat and semifinal, before abandoning in the final after 600m.

A sudden ear infection to Bill Longworth resulted in Champion being promoted to the 4x200m freestyle relay team. In the final on 15 July, Champion swam the second leg, and started equal with the American swimmer after Cecil Healy's first leg before building up a 10m lead in his leg. Les Boardman extended the lead to 15m before Harold Hardwick held off Duke Kahanamoku to claim the gold medal in the world record time of 10:11.6. The final was the third time that a world record had been set in that event at the Stockholm games, the first two times occurring on 12 July with the United States team swimming 10:26.4, only to be bettered later that day by the Australasian team who swam 10:14.0 (the United States team won the silver medal in the final).[3]

Champion was New Zealand's only Olympic gold medallist in swimming until 1996, when Danyon Loader won in the 200m and 400m freestyle events at the Atlanta Olympics.[4] In 1990 Champion became an inaugural inductee into the New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame. In 2005 the winning relay team was inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame, making Champion the only non-Australian inductee.[5]

[edit] References

  1. ^ History. Swimming New Zealand. Retrieved on 2006-07-17.
  2. ^ Our Inductees - Malcolm Champion. NZ Hall of Fame. Retrieved on 2006-07-17.
  3. ^ World Record Progression, Men, 4x200m Freestyle Relay (PDF). The Official Website of the Olympic Movement. Retrieved on 2006-07-17.
  4. ^ Hall of Fame. Swimming New Zealand. Retrieved on 2006-07-17.
  5. ^ Men's 4 x 200m Freestyle Relay Team - Swimming. Sport Australia Hall of Fame. Retrieved on 2006-07-17.
  • Andrews, Malcolm (2000). Australia at the Olympic Games. 
  • Howell, Max (1986). Aussie Gold. 


Olympic champions in men's 4x200 m freestyle relay

1908 Great Britain - John Henry Derbyshire, Paul Radmilovic, William Foster, Henry Taylor
1912 Australasia - Cecil Healy, Malcolm Champion, Leslie Boardman, Harold Hardwick
1920 United States - Perry McGilivray, Pua Kela Kealoha, Norman Ross, Duke Kahanamoku
1924 United States - Walter O'Connor, Harry Glancy, Ralph Breyer, Johnny Weissmuller
1928 United States - Austin Clapp, Walter Laufer, George Kojac, Johnny Weissmuller
1932 Japan - Yasuji Miyazaki, Masonori Yusa, Takashi Yomoyama, Hisakichi Toyoda
1936 Japan - Masanori Yusa, Shigeo Suguira, Masaharu Taguchi, Shigeo Arai
1948 United States - Walter Ris, James McLane, Wallace Wolf, William Smith
1952 United States - Wayne Moore, William Woolsey, Ford Konno, James McLane
1956 Australia - Kevin O'Halloran, John Devitt, Murray Rose, Jon Henricks
1960 United States - George Harrison, Richard Blick, Michael Troy, Jeffrey Farrell
1964 United States - Stephen Clark, Roy Saari, Gary Ilman, Don Schollander
1968 United States - John Nelson, Stephen Rerych, Mark Spitz, Don Schollander
1972 United States - John Kinsella, Fred Tyler, Steve Genter, Mark Spitz
1976 United States - Mike Bruner, Bruce Furniss, John Naber, Jim Montgomery
1980 Soviet Union - Sergei Kopliakov, Vladimir Salnikov, Ivar Stukolkin, Andrei Krylov
1984 United States - Michael Heath, David Larson, Jeffrey Float, Bruce Hayes
1988 United States - Troy Dalbey, Matthew Cetlinski, Doug Gjertsen, Matt Biondi
1992 Unified Team - Dmitri Lepikov, Vladimir Pychnenko, Veniamin Taianovich, Yevgeny Sadovyi
1996 United States - Josh Davis, Joe Hudepohl, Bradley Schumacher, Ryan Berube
2000 Australia - Ian Thorpe, Michael Klim, Todd Pearson, Bill Kirby
2004 United States - Michael Phelps, Ryan Lochte, Peter Vanderkaay, Klete Keller

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