Tracy Caulkins
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Medal record | |||
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Tracy Caulkins |
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Women's Swimming | |||
Competitor for the United States | |||
Olympic Games | |||
Gold | 1984 LA | 200m Medley | |
Gold | 1984 LA | 400m Medley | |
Gold | 1984 LA | 4x100m Medley | |
World Championsips (LC) | |||
Gold | 1978 Berlin | 200m Butterfly | |
Gold | 1978 Berlin | 200m Medley | |
Gold | 1978 Berlin | 400m Medley | |
Gold | 1978 Berlin | 4x100m Freestyle | |
Gold | 1978 Berlin | 4x100m Medley | |
Silver | 1978 Berlin | 100m Breaststroke | |
Bronze | 1982 Guayaquil | 200m Medley | |
Bronze | 1982 Guayaquil | 400m Medley | |
Pan American Games | |||
Gold | 1979 San Juan | 200m Medley | |
Gold | 1979 San Juan | 400m Medley | |
Gold | 1979 San Juan | 4x100m Freestyle | |
Gold | 1979 San Juan | 4x100m Medley | |
Gold | 1983 Caracas | 200m Medley | |
Gold | 1983 Caracas | 400m Medley | |
Silver | 1979 San Juan | 400m Freestyle | |
Silver | 1979 San Juan | 100m Breaststroke | |
Silver | 1983 Caracas | 200m Butterfly |
Tracy Ann Caulkins (born January 11, 1963) is a former three time gold medal winning swimmer from the United States.
Caulkins is perhaps best remembered for her adeptness at all four major competitive swimming strokes; the butterfly, breaststroke, backstroke, and freestyle. Caulkins won national championships and set American records in all four strokes over a range of distances as well as in the individual medley events, which combine all four strokes over the course of a single race. This versatility brought Caulkins many titles and awards, and as a result she is considered one of the greatest swimmers of all-time. By the time she retired from swimming, Caulkins had set five world records and an incredible 63 American records (more than any other American swimmer, male or female).
Born in Winona, Minnesota on the same day as Petra Schneider, the East German who would break the last of Caulkins' world records, Caulkins swam for the Nashville Aquatic Club (NAC), where she was coached by Paul Bergen.[1] Caulkins is considered one the greatest athletes to ever be from or live in Tennessee. She attended the all-girls Harpeth Hall School in Nashville and would go on to compete at the collegiate level for the University of Florida. Another notable NAC teammate, Joan Pennington, became a great swimmer at University of Texas,[2] and like Caulkins was won gold in Berlin in 1978 but was denied a chance to compete in the 1980 Olympic Games by the U.S. boycott.[3][4]
In 1978, Caulkins won the prestigious James E. Sullivan Award given by the Amateur Athletic Union, and was the youngest ever winner of the award at the age of 15. In perhaps her most impressive performance, Tracy won five gold medals and a silver medal in Berlin, Germany at the world championships. Like many other American athletes, she was expected to put in a great performance at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, Russia (which was then the communist controlled Soviet Union). However, following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, President Jimmy Carter announced that the United States would not be sending an Olympic team to Moscow in protest to the invasion (see 1980 Olympic boycott). Caulkins was consequently not able to compete at the 1980 Olympics.
Fortunately, Caulkins was able to maintain her competitive level through the next four years. At the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California, Caulkins won individual golds in the 200m individual medley and the 400m individual medley. She also won a relay gold by swimming the breaststroke on the women's 400m medley relay. Caulkins retired from the sport after the games and was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame in 1990.
Caulkins married Mark Stockwell, a swimmer from Australia. At last report, Caulkins lived in the Brisbane area with her husband and children. Caulkins is involved with a series of physiotherapy clinics in Tennessee that bear her name.
Caulkins' ultimate legacy may be that of the best all-around swimmer in American history. While her career did not have the longevity of Jenny Thompson or the Olympic medal talleys of Mark Spitz and Michael Phelps, Caulkins stands high in the pantheon of American swimming greats.
The gold medals won by Caulkins are carved onto the walk of Tennessee history at the Bicentennial Mall State Park in Nashville.
[edit] External links
Records | ||
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Preceded by Ulrike Tauber |
Women's 200 metre individual medley world record holder (long course) August 2, 1978 – May 24, 1980 |
Succeeded by Petra Schneider |
Preceded by Ulrike Tauber |
Women's 400 metre individual medley world record holder (long course) August 23, 1978 – March 30, 1980 |
Succeeded by Petra Schneider |
Awards | ||
Preceded by Rosemarie Ackermann |
United Press International Athlete of the Year 1978 |
Succeeded by Marita Koch |
Preceded by Incumbent |
World American Swimmer of the Year 1980 – 1982 |
Succeeded by Tiffany Cohen |
Preceded by Tiffany Cohen |
World American Swimmer of the Year 1984 |
Succeeded by Mary T Meagher |
Preceded by John E. Frank Beth Heiden Terrell L. Hoage Stefan G. Humphries Steve Young |
NCAA Top Five Award Class of 1985 Gregg Carr Tracy Caulkins Doug Flutie Mark J. Traynowicz Susan E. Walsh |
Succeeded by Todays Top VI Award James A. Dombrowski Edward D. Eyestone Timothy J. Green Susan K. Harbour Kathryn L. Hayes Lauri A. Young |
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