Michael Groß
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Olympic medal record | |||
Men’s Swimming | |||
---|---|---|---|
Gold | 1984 Los Angeles | 200m Freestyle | |
Gold | 1984 Los Angeles | 100m Butterfly | |
Gold | 1988 Seoul | 200m Butterfly | |
Silver | 1984 Los Angeles | 200m Butterfly | |
Silver | 1984 Los Angeles | 4x200m Freestyle Relay | |
Bronze | 1988 Seoul | 4x200m Freestyle Relay |
- The title of this article contains the character ß. Where it is unavailable or not desired, the name may be represented as Michael Gross.
Michael Groß (born June 17, 1964 in Frankfurt) is a former swimmer from Germany. A 202 cm (6 ft 7 in) athlete, he received nickname "The Albatross", due to his super long arms which gave him a total span of 2.27 m. Gross, competing for West Germany, won three Olympic gold medals in 1984 and 1988 in the freestyle and butterfly events, in addition to two World Championship titles in 1982, two in 1986 and one in 1991.
[edit] Career
Groß was probably the finest swimmer in the world in the 200 m butterfly race from 1981 to 1988. In this period he set four world records, won two world titles, four european titles and one Olympic gold medal.
The sole exception occurred in the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, when Groß was one of the great athletes of the games. Gross easily won gold in the 200m freestyle, dominating the field. In the 100m butterfly, Groß pulled off a bit of an upset, winning over the favorite in the event, American Pablo Morales. However, in the 200m butterfly, Groß himself was upset by a relative unknown, Australian Jon Sieben. The men's 4x200m freestyle relay race became one of the marquee events of the games, with Gross leading the German relay against the underdog American squad. Despite the fact that Gross swam the fastest relay leg in the event's history, the American team pulled off the upset, earning the title of the Grossbusters.
Groß won a total of thirteen medals at the World Championships (including five gold), fifteen gold medals at the European Championships and was elected German "Athlete of the Year" four times (1982, 1983, 1984 and 1988). He retired from professional swimming in 1991.
He is featured in Bud Greenspan's 16 Days of Glory, the documentary film of the 1984 Summer Olympics.
1976 gold medal winning swimmer John Naber remarked to Sports Illustrated in 1984 that if Michael Gross were an American, he would have won six or seven medals, and that Gross was better than Mark Spitz.
He was named Male World Swimmer of the Year in 1985 by Swimming World magazine.
[edit] See also
Olympic champions in men's 200 m freestyle |
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1900: Frederick Lane | 1968: Michael Wenden | 1972: Mark Spitz | 1976: Bruce Furniss | 1980: Sergey Kopliakov | 1984: Michael Groß | 1988: Duncan Armstrong | 1992: Yevgeny Sadovyi | 1996: Danyon Loader | 2000: Pieter van den Hoogenband | 2004: Ian Thorpe |
1968: Doug Russell | 1972: Mark Spitz | 1976: Matt Vogel | 1980: Pär Arvidsson | 1984: Michael Groß | 1988: Anthony Nesty | 1992: Pablo Morales | 1996: Denis Pankratov | 2000: Lars Frölander | 2004: Michael Phelps
1956: William Yorzyk | 1960: Michael Troy | 1964: Kevin Berry | 1968: Carl Robie | 1972: Mark Spitz | 1976: Mike Bruner | 1980: Sergey Fesenko | 1984: Jon Sieben | 1988: Michael Groß | 1992: Melvin Stewart | 1996: Denis Pankratov | 2000: Tom Malchow | 2004: Michael Phelps
Preceded by Alex Baumann |
World Swimmer of the Year 1985 |
Succeeded by Matt Biondi |
Categories: 1964 births | Living people | People from Frankfurt | German swimmers | Swimmers at the 1984 Summer Olympics | Swimmers at the 1988 Summer Olympics | Swimming World World Swimmers of the Year | Olympic competitors for West Germany | Olympic gold medalists for West Germany | Olympic silver medalists for West Germany | Olympic bronze medalists for West Germany