Monday, August 18, 2008
Rajasthan Examination Results » University of Rajasthan Results
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Government College, Ajmer (Rajasthan)
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Government College, Ajmer (Rajasthan)
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Government College, Ajmer (Rajasthan)
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Rajasthan University Results
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Government College, Ajmer (Rajasthan)
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BSTC / NTT / BSTC (Sanskrit) EXAMINATION 2008
Government College, Ajmer (Rajasthan)
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Michael Phelps Biography (Michael Fred Phelps)
Michael Phelps Biography (Michael Fred Phelps)
Michael Fred Phelps
In The News: American swimmer Michael Phelps set the all-time single Olympics gold-medal record Sunday (August 17, 2008) by passing Mark Spitz's 36-year-old record of seven.
Phelps won his eighth gold medal at the Beijing Games, swimming the third leg for the Americans in the winning four-by-100-meter medley relay. It was also his 14th career gold medal, another record.
Phelps also won gold at Beijing in the 4-by-100 individual medley, 4-by-100 individual relay, 200 freestyle, 200 butterfly, 4-by-200 freestyle relay, 200 individual medley and 100 butterfly.
Biography: Michael Fred Phelps was born June 30, 1985, in Baltimore, Maryland, to Fred and Debbie Phelps and grew up in the Baltimore neighborhood of Rodgers Forge. Fred, an all around athlete, was a state trooper and Debbie was a middle-school principal.
Phelps began swimming when his two older sisters, Whitney (born 1978) and Hilary (born 1980), joined a local swim team. Whitney tried out for the U.S. Olympic team in 1996 at the age of 15, but injuries derailed her career.
At age seven, Phelps was still “a little scared” to put his head underwater, so his instructors allowed him to float around on his back. Not surprisingly, the first stroke he mastered was the backstroke.
When Michael’s parents divorced in 1994, the kids went to live with Debbie and Michael grew very close to his mother.
After he saw swimmers Tom Malchow and Tom Dolan compete at the 1996 Summer Games in Atlanta, Michael started to dream of becoming a champion himself. He launched his swimming career at Towson’s Loyola High School pool.
Phelps then met his coach, Bob Bowman, when he started training at the North Baltimore Aquatic Club at the Meadowbrook Aquatic and Fitness Center. The coach immediately recognized Michael’s talents and fierce sense of competition and began an intense training regime together. By 1999, Phelps had made the U.S. National B Team.
At the age of 15, Phelps became the youngest American male swimmer at an Olympic Games in 68 years. While he didn’t win a medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, he would soon become a major force in competitive swimming.
During the spring of 2001, Phelps set the world record in the 200-meter butterfly, becoming the youngest male swimmer in history (at 15 years and 9 months) to ever set a swimming world record. He then broke his own record during the 2001 World Championships in Fukuoka, Japan, with a time of 1:54:58, earning his first international medal.
Phelps continued to set new marks at the 2002 U.S. Summer Nationals in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, establishing a new world record for the 400-meter individual medley and U.S. records in the 100-meter butterfly and the 200-meter individual medley. The following year at the same event, he broke his own world record in the 400-meter individual medley with a time of 4:09.09.
Shortly after graduating from Towson High School in 2003, the 17-year-old Phelps set five world records, including the 200-meter individual medley at the World Championships in Barcelona, Spain, with a time of 1:56:04. Then during the U.S. trials for the 2004 Summer Olympics, he broke his own world again in the 400 meter individual medley when he was clocked at 4:08:41.
Phelps became a superstar at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece, winning eight medals (including six gold), which tied with Soviet gymnast Aleksandr Dityatin (1980) for the most medals in a single Olympic Games. Phelps scored the first of six gold medals on August 14 when he broke his own world record in the 400-meter individual medley, shaving 0.15 seconds of his previous mark.
He also won gold in the 100-meter butterfly, 200-meter butterfly, 200-meter individual medley, 4x200-meter freestyle relay and 4x100-meter medley relay). The two events in Athens in which Phelps took bronze medals were 200-meter freestyle and the 4x100-meter freestyle relay.
Just weeks following his triumph in Athens, Phelps was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol in Salisbury, Maryland, after cruising through a stop sign.
He plead guilty to driving while impaired, and was sentenced to 18 months probation, fined $250 and had to speak against drinking and driving to high school students and attend a Mothers Against Drunk Driving meeting. Michael called it an “isolated incident,” but admitted letting himself and his family down.
Phelps soon followed coaach Bowman to the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, studying sports marketing and management. Bowman coached the Wolverines’ swim team and guided Club Wolverine, the club Phelps swims for.
Phelps continued to establish world records at the 2006 Pan Pacific Championships in Victoria, British Columbia, and the 2007 World Championships in Melbourne, Australia.
After the Beijing Games are completed, Phelps and Bowman plan to return to Baltimore as Bowman will take over as CEO of North Baltimore Aquatic Club.
Source: biography.com
Michael Fred Phelps
In The News: American swimmer Michael Phelps set the all-time single Olympics gold-medal record Sunday (August 17, 2008) by passing Mark Spitz's 36-year-old record of seven.
Phelps won his eighth gold medal at the Beijing Games, swimming the third leg for the Americans in the winning four-by-100-meter medley relay. It was also his 14th career gold medal, another record.
Phelps also won gold at Beijing in the 4-by-100 individual medley, 4-by-100 individual relay, 200 freestyle, 200 butterfly, 4-by-200 freestyle relay, 200 individual medley and 100 butterfly.
Biography: Michael Fred Phelps was born June 30, 1985, in Baltimore, Maryland, to Fred and Debbie Phelps and grew up in the Baltimore neighborhood of Rodgers Forge. Fred, an all around athlete, was a state trooper and Debbie was a middle-school principal.
Phelps began swimming when his two older sisters, Whitney (born 1978) and Hilary (born 1980), joined a local swim team. Whitney tried out for the U.S. Olympic team in 1996 at the age of 15, but injuries derailed her career.
At age seven, Phelps was still “a little scared” to put his head underwater, so his instructors allowed him to float around on his back. Not surprisingly, the first stroke he mastered was the backstroke.
When Michael’s parents divorced in 1994, the kids went to live with Debbie and Michael grew very close to his mother.
After he saw swimmers Tom Malchow and Tom Dolan compete at the 1996 Summer Games in Atlanta, Michael started to dream of becoming a champion himself. He launched his swimming career at Towson’s Loyola High School pool.
Phelps then met his coach, Bob Bowman, when he started training at the North Baltimore Aquatic Club at the Meadowbrook Aquatic and Fitness Center. The coach immediately recognized Michael’s talents and fierce sense of competition and began an intense training regime together. By 1999, Phelps had made the U.S. National B Team.
At the age of 15, Phelps became the youngest American male swimmer at an Olympic Games in 68 years. While he didn’t win a medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, he would soon become a major force in competitive swimming.
During the spring of 2001, Phelps set the world record in the 200-meter butterfly, becoming the youngest male swimmer in history (at 15 years and 9 months) to ever set a swimming world record. He then broke his own record during the 2001 World Championships in Fukuoka, Japan, with a time of 1:54:58, earning his first international medal.
Phelps continued to set new marks at the 2002 U.S. Summer Nationals in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, establishing a new world record for the 400-meter individual medley and U.S. records in the 100-meter butterfly and the 200-meter individual medley. The following year at the same event, he broke his own world record in the 400-meter individual medley with a time of 4:09.09.
Shortly after graduating from Towson High School in 2003, the 17-year-old Phelps set five world records, including the 200-meter individual medley at the World Championships in Barcelona, Spain, with a time of 1:56:04. Then during the U.S. trials for the 2004 Summer Olympics, he broke his own world again in the 400 meter individual medley when he was clocked at 4:08:41.
Phelps became a superstar at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece, winning eight medals (including six gold), which tied with Soviet gymnast Aleksandr Dityatin (1980) for the most medals in a single Olympic Games. Phelps scored the first of six gold medals on August 14 when he broke his own world record in the 400-meter individual medley, shaving 0.15 seconds of his previous mark.
He also won gold in the 100-meter butterfly, 200-meter butterfly, 200-meter individual medley, 4x200-meter freestyle relay and 4x100-meter medley relay). The two events in Athens in which Phelps took bronze medals were 200-meter freestyle and the 4x100-meter freestyle relay.
Just weeks following his triumph in Athens, Phelps was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol in Salisbury, Maryland, after cruising through a stop sign.
He plead guilty to driving while impaired, and was sentenced to 18 months probation, fined $250 and had to speak against drinking and driving to high school students and attend a Mothers Against Drunk Driving meeting. Michael called it an “isolated incident,” but admitted letting himself and his family down.
Phelps soon followed coaach Bowman to the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, studying sports marketing and management. Bowman coached the Wolverines’ swim team and guided Club Wolverine, the club Phelps swims for.
Phelps continued to establish world records at the 2006 Pan Pacific Championships in Victoria, British Columbia, and the 2007 World Championships in Melbourne, Australia.
After the Beijing Games are completed, Phelps and Bowman plan to return to Baltimore as Bowman will take over as CEO of North Baltimore Aquatic Club.
Source: biography.com
Debbie Phelps Biography
Debbie Phelps Bio
Debbie Phelps was a middle-school principal.
Debbie Phelps raised Michael phelps and his two sisters on a teacher’s salary after her divorce from Phelps’s father, Fred.
Debbie Phelps (mother): In the mixed zone after winning his eighth medal, Phelps said: “There’s so much emotions going through my head, so much excitement. I guess I just want to see my mom.” She raised Phelps and his two sisters on a teacher’s salary after her divorce from Phelps’s father, Fred.
Tags: debbie phelps biography,debbie phelps bio,debbie phelps photo,debbie phelps
Source: nytimes.com
Debbie Phelps was a middle-school principal.
Debbie Phelps raised Michael phelps and his two sisters on a teacher’s salary after her divorce from Phelps’s father, Fred.
Debbie Phelps (mother): In the mixed zone after winning his eighth medal, Phelps said: “There’s so much emotions going through my head, so much excitement. I guess I just want to see my mom.” She raised Phelps and his two sisters on a teacher’s salary after her divorce from Phelps’s father, Fred.
Tags: debbie phelps biography,debbie phelps bio,debbie phelps photo,debbie phelps
Source: nytimes.com
What’s Michael Phelps listening to?
What's on Michael Phelps' iPod?
Young Jeezy (rapper): An artist who Phelps has listed as one of his current favorites. Phelps listened to his songs — “Go
Getta” is favorite — before his Olympic races. Phelps and his American rival Ryan Lochte, who is also a fan of Jeezy, greet
each other by saying “Juh,” in homage to the rapper, a k a Jay Jenkins.
Source: nytimes.com
Young Jeezy (rapper): An artist who Phelps has listed as one of his current favorites. Phelps listened to his songs — “Go
Getta” is favorite — before his Olympic races. Phelps and his American rival Ryan Lochte, who is also a fan of Jeezy, greet
each other by saying “Juh,” in homage to the rapper, a k a Jay Jenkins.
Source: nytimes.com
Gwen Stefani Wiki
Gwen Stefani Wiki
Gwen Stefani Wikipedia
Gwen Renée Stefani (born October 3, 1969) is an American singer, songwriter, fashion designer, and occasional actress. Stefani fronts the rock/ska punk band No Doubt, whose 1995 album Tragic Kingdom propelled them to stardom, selling 16 million copies worldwide. It spawned the singles "Just a Girl", "Spiderwebs", and "Don't Speak". The band's popularity went into decline with its fourth album, Return of Saturn (2000), but Rock Steady (2001) introduced reggae production into its music, and generally received positive reviews.
Stefani recorded her first solo album Love. Angel. Music. Baby. in 2004. The album was primarily inspired by music of the 1980s, taking Stefani's work further into more pop and dance music, and enjoyed international success with sales of over seven million.[3] The album's third single "Hollaback Girl" became the first U.S. digital download to sell one million copies Stefani's second solo album The Sweet Escape (2006) yielded "Wind It Up", a moderate worldwide success, and "The Sweet Escape". Including her work with No Doubt, Stefani has sold more than 30 million albums worldwide. She won the World's Best-Selling New Female Artist at the World Music Awards 2005.
Stefani is known as a fashion trendsetter. In 2003, she debuted her clothing line L.A.M.B. and expanded her collection with the 2005 Harajuku Lovers line, drawing inspiration from Japanese culture and fashion. Stefani performs and makes public appearances with four back-up dancers known as the Harajuku Girls. She married British grunge musician Gavin Rossdale in 2002; they have a son, Kingston James McGregor, who was born in 2006 and are expecting their second child in August 2008.
Gwen Stefani Background information
Birth name Gwen Renée Stefani
Born October 3, 1969 (1969-10-03) (age 38)
Fullerton, California, United States
Origin Anaheim, California, United States
Genre(s) Pop, New Wave, dance, rock, ska punk, alternative, synthpop
Occupation(s) Singer, songwriter, fashion designer, actress
Instrument(s) Keyboards, vocals, synthesizer, sampler, drum machine, guitar
Voice type(s) Mezzo-soprano
Years active 1986–present
Label(s) Interscope
Associated acts No Doubt
Website www.GwenStefani.com
Source: wikipedia.org
Tags: Gwen Stefani Wiki,Gwen Stefani Wikipedia,Gwen Stefani photo,Gwen Stefani Bio,Gwen Stefani Biography
Gwen Stefani Wikipedia
Gwen Renée Stefani (born October 3, 1969) is an American singer, songwriter, fashion designer, and occasional actress. Stefani fronts the rock/ska punk band No Doubt, whose 1995 album Tragic Kingdom propelled them to stardom, selling 16 million copies worldwide. It spawned the singles "Just a Girl", "Spiderwebs", and "Don't Speak". The band's popularity went into decline with its fourth album, Return of Saturn (2000), but Rock Steady (2001) introduced reggae production into its music, and generally received positive reviews.
Stefani recorded her first solo album Love. Angel. Music. Baby. in 2004. The album was primarily inspired by music of the 1980s, taking Stefani's work further into more pop and dance music, and enjoyed international success with sales of over seven million.[3] The album's third single "Hollaback Girl" became the first U.S. digital download to sell one million copies Stefani's second solo album The Sweet Escape (2006) yielded "Wind It Up", a moderate worldwide success, and "The Sweet Escape". Including her work with No Doubt, Stefani has sold more than 30 million albums worldwide. She won the World's Best-Selling New Female Artist at the World Music Awards 2005.
Stefani is known as a fashion trendsetter. In 2003, she debuted her clothing line L.A.M.B. and expanded her collection with the 2005 Harajuku Lovers line, drawing inspiration from Japanese culture and fashion. Stefani performs and makes public appearances with four back-up dancers known as the Harajuku Girls. She married British grunge musician Gavin Rossdale in 2002; they have a son, Kingston James McGregor, who was born in 2006 and are expecting their second child in August 2008.
Gwen Stefani Background information
Birth name Gwen Renée Stefani
Born October 3, 1969 (1969-10-03) (age 38)
Fullerton, California, United States
Origin Anaheim, California, United States
Genre(s) Pop, New Wave, dance, rock, ska punk, alternative, synthpop
Occupation(s) Singer, songwriter, fashion designer, actress
Instrument(s) Keyboards, vocals, synthesizer, sampler, drum machine, guitar
Voice type(s) Mezzo-soprano
Years active 1986–present
Label(s) Interscope
Associated acts No Doubt
Website www.GwenStefani.com
Source: wikipedia.org
Tags: Gwen Stefani Wiki,Gwen Stefani Wikipedia,Gwen Stefani photo,Gwen Stefani Bio,Gwen Stefani Biography
Gwen Stefani Ready to Give Birth
After the long wait, Gwen Stefani is ready to welcome another baby into the world any day now. She was spotted arriving at a hospital in Los Angeles, California last August 7. The all-time favorite No Doubt front woman is pregnant with her second child to rocker husband Gavin Rossdale. Just one short year ago, Stefani proclaimed her wish for a brother or sister for her son Kingston, telling how much she enjoys the whole pregnancy process. Have a safe labor Gwen!!!
Source: davesdaily.com
Photo Credit: http://4.bp.blogspot.com
Source: davesdaily.com
Photo Credit: http://4.bp.blogspot.com
Gwen Stefani Biography
Gwen Stefani Biography
Name : Gwen Stefani
Birth Name : Gwendolyn Renee Stefani
Birth Date : October 3, 1969
Birth Place : Anaheim, California, USA
Height : 5' 6
Nationality : American
Profession : Actor, musician
Claim to fame : Lead singer of the band No Doubt
Gwen Stefani Trivia
Plans to design for the rest of her life. (2004)
Has recently found out from her husband, 36-year-old Gavin Rossdale, that he's the father of Pearl Lowe's daughter Daisy, a 15-year-old London model named Daisy Lowe. (2004)
Said her solo album is heading in a dance direction. (March 12, 2004)
Is getting acting tips from Leonardo DiCaprio for her cameo in THE AVIATOR. (March 10, 2004)
No Doubt and Blink 182 will team up for a coheadlining U.S. amphitheater tour beginning June 1 in Indianapolis and wrapping June 26 in San Bernardino, California. (February 5, 2004)
Her new line of clothes, L.A.M.B., has all the hallmarks of her singing style, which includes bikini tops, Rasta-inspired colors, low-slung pants, even bum flaps. (October 31, 2003)
No Doubt recently shot a video for their new single It's My Life at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles -- It was directed by David LaChapelle, who's best known for his racy and provocative photographs of today's hottest stars. (October 21, 2003)
While No Doubt enjoys a break after intense touring activity in support of its 2001 Interscope album, Rock Steady, Stefani is busying herself with a variety of endeavors � She�s been collaborating on some tracks on her own with different people; Stefani has previously lent her vocals to hit songs by Moby (South Side) and Eve (Let Me Blow Ya Mind). (April 22, 2003)
No Doubt received the keys to Anaheim Friday at Disneyland, which the band mocked in its 1995 hit album Tragic Kingdom -- lead singer Gwen Stefani even confessed she wanted to work at Disneyland and sing songs at the Disneyland Hotel, and admitted she used to come dancing there. (November 25, 2002)
Gwen used to date bass player in the band Tony Kanal. When they broke up she wrote the hit single Don't Speak in memory of their relationship.
Sometimes Credited As: Gwendolyn Renee Stefani
Nickname: Sunshine, G-loc
Trade mark: Red Lipstick
Was on her High School swim team.
Met fiance Gavin Rossdale (Bush) in 1996 at a concert she was playing at with her band No Doubt
Inspired by such musicals as The Sound Of Music, and Annie.
Eric, her brother, was the keyboardist for No Doubt
Has a small dog named Megan
Favorite food: spagetti
Is Catholic
Favorite movie: THE SOUND OF MUSIC
Her prom dress was a remake of the movie BEHIND THE REAR WINDOW
Gwen and bandmate Adrian used to have a crush on each other.
No Doubt opened up for the Ziggy Marley (Bob Marleys son) concert in 1990. During the tour Gwen would come out on stage in different costumes, such as a wedding dress! She built her fans from then.
Gwen wrote Simple Kind Of Life the night before they recorded it.
Is the only original member who's still in the band.
Auditioned for GIRL INTERRUPTED and FIGHT CLUB.
Her grandfather is the guy at the register in the Sunday Morning video.
On the Just a Girl video, Gwen's shirt that she's wearing is made from boys underwear.
Played the Piccolo in her high school marching band.
No Doubt is in the Guiness Book for longest singel at #1, Don't Speak for 16 weeks.
During high school, Gwen thought she was chubby, so she joined the swim team.
Gwen's red vinyl dress from the cover of Tragic Kingdom is enshirned in a Hard Rock Cafe in Newport Beach, CA.
Gavin, Gwen's boyfriend of Bush doesn't like her style of clothing much.
Every year makes an annual trip to Knott's Berry Farm.
Once while jogging in Paris, Gwen got lost and forgot what hotel they were staying at, so she had to call her father who was back in the USA to get the name and number of the hotel she was at.
Has been known to check into hotels under the name Daria Blue.
In the Sunday Morning video, the guy laying in the driveway at the beginning is Eric Stefani, the guy on the porch is Donnie, at concerts he use to warm up the crowd before the band would preform, the man at the grocery store is Gwen's Grandfather and the house is Gwen's grandparent's.
Performed water ballet in high school.
Started wearing the Bindi after attending a party with Tony and his mother, where all the women were wearing them.
Tony got his nose pierced after loosing a bet to Gwen, but he forced her to watch him get peireced, and she fainted.
Gwen Stefani Detailed Biography
Gwen Renee Stefani born October 3, 1969 is an American singer and the frontwoman of the band No Doubt. Stefani was born in Fullerton, California. Her brother Eric founded No Doubt in 1986 with John Spence, but eventually left the band to pursue a career on "The Simpsons". Gwen became the group's lead singer after original frontman John Spence committed suicide in December of 1987. Following the success of the band's 1995 album Tragic Kingdom, Stefani became highly popular and recognizable; the tension this produced with the other members of the band was touched on by their video for the song "Don't Speak". Many of the album's songs, including "Don't Speak", were inspired by her relationship and breakup with fellow band member Tony Kanal. On September 17, 2002, Stefani married Bush guitarist Gavin Rossdale. Thus far, her solo career has been most recognized for a pair of popular 2001 duets, the "Southside" remix with techno artist Moby and "Let Me Blow Ya Mind" with rapper Eve. In fact, Stefani became the first artist in history to win both Best Male Video and Best Female Video awards at the MTV VMA's, for "Southside" (credited as "Moby featuring Gwen Stefani") and "Let Me Blow Ya Mind" (credited as "Eve featuring Gwen Stefani") respectively, both in 2001. Stefani is currently working on a solo record titled Love Angel Music Baby, scheduled for release on November 22nd/23rd in 2004. Gwen created a sucessful fashion line, named L.A.M.B, which showcases clothing which Gwen would wear herself. The line also includes handbags and purses. Girls and young women who imitate Stefani's distinctive and trendsetting style of dress are sometimes referred to as "Gwenabees."
Source: netglimse.com
Photo Credit: jeanettes-celebrity-corner.com
Name : Gwen Stefani
Birth Name : Gwendolyn Renee Stefani
Birth Date : October 3, 1969
Birth Place : Anaheim, California, USA
Height : 5' 6
Nationality : American
Profession : Actor, musician
Claim to fame : Lead singer of the band No Doubt
Gwen Stefani Trivia
Plans to design for the rest of her life. (2004)
Has recently found out from her husband, 36-year-old Gavin Rossdale, that he's the father of Pearl Lowe's daughter Daisy, a 15-year-old London model named Daisy Lowe. (2004)
Said her solo album is heading in a dance direction. (March 12, 2004)
Is getting acting tips from Leonardo DiCaprio for her cameo in THE AVIATOR. (March 10, 2004)
No Doubt and Blink 182 will team up for a coheadlining U.S. amphitheater tour beginning June 1 in Indianapolis and wrapping June 26 in San Bernardino, California. (February 5, 2004)
Her new line of clothes, L.A.M.B., has all the hallmarks of her singing style, which includes bikini tops, Rasta-inspired colors, low-slung pants, even bum flaps. (October 31, 2003)
No Doubt recently shot a video for their new single It's My Life at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles -- It was directed by David LaChapelle, who's best known for his racy and provocative photographs of today's hottest stars. (October 21, 2003)
While No Doubt enjoys a break after intense touring activity in support of its 2001 Interscope album, Rock Steady, Stefani is busying herself with a variety of endeavors � She�s been collaborating on some tracks on her own with different people; Stefani has previously lent her vocals to hit songs by Moby (South Side) and Eve (Let Me Blow Ya Mind). (April 22, 2003)
No Doubt received the keys to Anaheim Friday at Disneyland, which the band mocked in its 1995 hit album Tragic Kingdom -- lead singer Gwen Stefani even confessed she wanted to work at Disneyland and sing songs at the Disneyland Hotel, and admitted she used to come dancing there. (November 25, 2002)
Gwen used to date bass player in the band Tony Kanal. When they broke up she wrote the hit single Don't Speak in memory of their relationship.
Sometimes Credited As: Gwendolyn Renee Stefani
Nickname: Sunshine, G-loc
Trade mark: Red Lipstick
Was on her High School swim team.
Met fiance Gavin Rossdale (Bush) in 1996 at a concert she was playing at with her band No Doubt
Inspired by such musicals as The Sound Of Music, and Annie.
Eric, her brother, was the keyboardist for No Doubt
Has a small dog named Megan
Favorite food: spagetti
Is Catholic
Favorite movie: THE SOUND OF MUSIC
Her prom dress was a remake of the movie BEHIND THE REAR WINDOW
Gwen and bandmate Adrian used to have a crush on each other.
No Doubt opened up for the Ziggy Marley (Bob Marleys son) concert in 1990. During the tour Gwen would come out on stage in different costumes, such as a wedding dress! She built her fans from then.
Gwen wrote Simple Kind Of Life the night before they recorded it.
Is the only original member who's still in the band.
Auditioned for GIRL INTERRUPTED and FIGHT CLUB.
Her grandfather is the guy at the register in the Sunday Morning video.
On the Just a Girl video, Gwen's shirt that she's wearing is made from boys underwear.
Played the Piccolo in her high school marching band.
No Doubt is in the Guiness Book for longest singel at #1, Don't Speak for 16 weeks.
During high school, Gwen thought she was chubby, so she joined the swim team.
Gwen's red vinyl dress from the cover of Tragic Kingdom is enshirned in a Hard Rock Cafe in Newport Beach, CA.
Gavin, Gwen's boyfriend of Bush doesn't like her style of clothing much.
Every year makes an annual trip to Knott's Berry Farm.
Once while jogging in Paris, Gwen got lost and forgot what hotel they were staying at, so she had to call her father who was back in the USA to get the name and number of the hotel she was at.
Has been known to check into hotels under the name Daria Blue.
In the Sunday Morning video, the guy laying in the driveway at the beginning is Eric Stefani, the guy on the porch is Donnie, at concerts he use to warm up the crowd before the band would preform, the man at the grocery store is Gwen's Grandfather and the house is Gwen's grandparent's.
Performed water ballet in high school.
Started wearing the Bindi after attending a party with Tony and his mother, where all the women were wearing them.
Tony got his nose pierced after loosing a bet to Gwen, but he forced her to watch him get peireced, and she fainted.
Gwen Stefani Detailed Biography
Gwen Renee Stefani born October 3, 1969 is an American singer and the frontwoman of the band No Doubt. Stefani was born in Fullerton, California. Her brother Eric founded No Doubt in 1986 with John Spence, but eventually left the band to pursue a career on "The Simpsons". Gwen became the group's lead singer after original frontman John Spence committed suicide in December of 1987. Following the success of the band's 1995 album Tragic Kingdom, Stefani became highly popular and recognizable; the tension this produced with the other members of the band was touched on by their video for the song "Don't Speak". Many of the album's songs, including "Don't Speak", were inspired by her relationship and breakup with fellow band member Tony Kanal. On September 17, 2002, Stefani married Bush guitarist Gavin Rossdale. Thus far, her solo career has been most recognized for a pair of popular 2001 duets, the "Southside" remix with techno artist Moby and "Let Me Blow Ya Mind" with rapper Eve. In fact, Stefani became the first artist in history to win both Best Male Video and Best Female Video awards at the MTV VMA's, for "Southside" (credited as "Moby featuring Gwen Stefani") and "Let Me Blow Ya Mind" (credited as "Eve featuring Gwen Stefani") respectively, both in 2001. Stefani is currently working on a solo record titled Love Angel Music Baby, scheduled for release on November 22nd/23rd in 2004. Gwen created a sucessful fashion line, named L.A.M.B, which showcases clothing which Gwen would wear herself. The line also includes handbags and purses. Girls and young women who imitate Stefani's distinctive and trendsetting style of dress are sometimes referred to as "Gwenabees."
Source: netglimse.com
Photo Credit: jeanettes-celebrity-corner.com
Young Jeezy Wiki
Young Jeezy Wiki
Background information
Birth name Jay Jenkins
Born October 12, 1977 (1977-10-12) (age 30)
Origin Atlanta, Georgia United States
Genre(s) Southern rap
Gangsta rap
Crunk
Pop rap
Occupation(s) Rapper, actor
Years active 2001–present
Label(s) Corporate Thugz Entertainment, Def Jam
Associated acts T.I., U.S.D.A., Akon, Young Buck, B.G., Bun B, Mannie Fresh, Trick Daddy, Kanye West, Lil Wayne, Young Dro, Ludacris, Rick Ross, Yung Joc, Usher, Ice Cube
Life and career
Early life
Jay Jenkins was born in Columbia, South Carolina. As an infant, Jenkins and his family relocated to Duncan Block, a neighborhood in Macon, Georgia (75 miles / 120 km south of Atlanta). At a young age, his parents separated. As a result, he was constantly sent to stay with his aunts and grandmothers when he was not being sent between his father and mother. During these years, he built a strong relationship with his older cousins, who were also drug dealers. They often shared their earnings with him, which attracted him to the drug dealer lifestyle. When Jenkins was 12 years old, he started selling drugs in his neighborhood. By 1994, he was arrested and charged with possession of crack cocaine, and served nine months in a boot camp in Savannah, Georgia. He eventually moved to West Atlanta’s 4th Ward between late 1999 and early 2000. Jeezy has described his childhood as “empty”.
Personal life
He was arrested after an alleged shootout involving some of his friends in Miami Beach, Florida on Sunday, March 12, 2006. He was charged with two counts of carrying a concealed firearm without a permit, however, he was acquitted over lack of evidence. Though many people believed he is related to fellow rapper Yung Joc, he cleared the rumor up by telling the media that he is not related to the fellow Atlanta rapper, though they are friends. Both rappers are known for their slow, southern flow. After Hurricane Katrina, Young Jeezy opened his house to the victims in an effort to help them have a place to stay.
In the early hours of September 29, 2007, Young Jeezy totaled his Lamborghini when it was hit by a taxi crossing Peachtree Street, outside of Justin’s, Sean Combs’ restaurant in Atlanta. The Atlanta Journal Constitution reported his claim that this gave him “a new appreciation for life. Jeezy also has a 13 year old son that he often speaks about.”
During the early morning hours of June 18, 2008, the Atlanta rapper was arrested in Atlanta and charged with DUI, speeding, reckless driving, no tags, driving with an open container and no proof of insurance. He made bail and was released, but later that day, a source close to the camp said that Jeezy had just driven it off the lot, and the temporary tags had fallen off, which is why he was pulled over. As for the open container, Jeezy said that was the passenger’s fault.
Music
Young Jeezy released his first independent album, Thuggin' Under the Influence (T.U.I.), in 2001 under the name Lil J. It featured artists such as Kinky B, Fidank, and Lil Jon, who also produced some of the tracks. In 2003, Jeezy released (also independently) Come Shop Wit' Me, a two CD set featuring completely new tracks along with some songs from T.U.I. Come Shop Wit' Me sold 50,000 copies world wide.[9] In 2004, he signed with Bad Boy Records and joined the Boyz n da Hood group. Boyz n da Hood’s self-titled album was released on June 21, 2005 and peaked at #5 on the Billboard 200 albums chart. Young Jeezy also released a solo album around this time, which was his major label debut, with Def Jam Records. Let's Get It: Thug Motivation 101 was released on July 26, 2005 and debuted at #2, selling 172,000 copies in its first week. Guest appearances include Young Buck, T.I., Trick Daddy, Akon, Mannie Fresh, Lil Scrappy, Bun B, Lloyd, Slick Pulla, & Lil Will.[10] In interviews and on several records, Young Jeezy has affirmed his resistance to commercialism in his music. Maintaining his street credibility, according to Jeezy, is of the utmost concern to him as an artist.[12] In 2005, Young Jeezy was featured in several popular hip hop songs including Gucci Mane’s “Icy” and Boyz n da Hood’s “Dem Niggaz”.
In 2006, he was featured in Christina Milian’s single “Say I”. Jeezy’s second major label album is The Inspiration, which features Project Pat, T.I., Keyshia Cole, Three 6 Mafia, R. Kelly, Bloodraw and Slick Pulla (the latter two of which are members of Jeezy’s rap group USDA). The album’s first single “I Luv It” has peaked at #14 on the Billboard Hot 100, making it Jeezy’s second highest single to date. The second single is “Bury Me a G”. The 3rd single is the club banger “Go Getta” which features R. Kelly. Young Jeezy’s “I am the Street Dream” tour started in March 2007. He also appeared as himself in the hip-hop fighting themed game Def Jam: Icon that can be added to the player’s record label. Young Jeezy appeared on BET’s Access Granted for his song “Dreamin’ ” with Keyshia Cole on May 2, 2007. In 2007, Young Jeezy released Cold Summer, an album by rap group USDA which consists of Young Jeezy, Slick Pulla, and Blood Raw. Recently, he is featured on Usher's song "Love In This Club".
Toyz n da Hood
Young Jeezy presented a week-long toy drive and charity event series with his Corporate Thugz Entertainment (CTE) family with the first annual Toyz n da Hood toy drive. The series presented 1,000 toys for 1,000 kids at various locations in Macon and Atlanta, which began on December 17, 2007, with the CTE Christmas Kickoff from 10PM to 5AM at Club Miami. The toy giveaway took place in the Unionville neighborhood of Macon and at the Old Fourth Ward Community in Atlanta.
Awards
BET Awards
2008, Best Collaboration ("I'm So Hood [Remix]") with DJ Khaled, Ludacris, Busta Rhymes, Big Boi, Lil Wayne, Fat Joe, Birdman, & Rick Ross [Nominated]
BET Hip-Hop Awards
2006, Hip-Hop CD of the Year ("Let's Get It: Thug Motivation 101") [Nominated]
Ozone Awards
2008, Best Rap Artist [Nominated]
2008, Best Rap/R&B Collaboration ("Love in this Club") with Usher (Won)
2007, Best Rap Album ("The Inspiration") (Won)
2007, Best Rap/R&B Collaboration ("Go Getta") with R. Kelly [Nominated]
2007, Best Video ("Grew Up a Screw Up") with Ludacris [Nominated]
2007, Best Group with Slick Pulla & Blood Raw as USDA [Nominated]
Source: wikipedia.org
Tags: Young Jeezy Wiki,Young Jeezy Wikipedia,Young Jeezy photo,Young Jeezy Bio,Young Jeezy Biography
Background information
Birth name Jay Jenkins
Born October 12, 1977 (1977-10-12) (age 30)
Origin Atlanta, Georgia United States
Genre(s) Southern rap
Gangsta rap
Crunk
Pop rap
Occupation(s) Rapper, actor
Years active 2001–present
Label(s) Corporate Thugz Entertainment, Def Jam
Associated acts T.I., U.S.D.A., Akon, Young Buck, B.G., Bun B, Mannie Fresh, Trick Daddy, Kanye West, Lil Wayne, Young Dro, Ludacris, Rick Ross, Yung Joc, Usher, Ice Cube
Life and career
Early life
Jay Jenkins was born in Columbia, South Carolina. As an infant, Jenkins and his family relocated to Duncan Block, a neighborhood in Macon, Georgia (75 miles / 120 km south of Atlanta). At a young age, his parents separated. As a result, he was constantly sent to stay with his aunts and grandmothers when he was not being sent between his father and mother. During these years, he built a strong relationship with his older cousins, who were also drug dealers. They often shared their earnings with him, which attracted him to the drug dealer lifestyle. When Jenkins was 12 years old, he started selling drugs in his neighborhood. By 1994, he was arrested and charged with possession of crack cocaine, and served nine months in a boot camp in Savannah, Georgia. He eventually moved to West Atlanta’s 4th Ward between late 1999 and early 2000. Jeezy has described his childhood as “empty”.
Personal life
He was arrested after an alleged shootout involving some of his friends in Miami Beach, Florida on Sunday, March 12, 2006. He was charged with two counts of carrying a concealed firearm without a permit, however, he was acquitted over lack of evidence. Though many people believed he is related to fellow rapper Yung Joc, he cleared the rumor up by telling the media that he is not related to the fellow Atlanta rapper, though they are friends. Both rappers are known for their slow, southern flow. After Hurricane Katrina, Young Jeezy opened his house to the victims in an effort to help them have a place to stay.
In the early hours of September 29, 2007, Young Jeezy totaled his Lamborghini when it was hit by a taxi crossing Peachtree Street, outside of Justin’s, Sean Combs’ restaurant in Atlanta. The Atlanta Journal Constitution reported his claim that this gave him “a new appreciation for life. Jeezy also has a 13 year old son that he often speaks about.”
During the early morning hours of June 18, 2008, the Atlanta rapper was arrested in Atlanta and charged with DUI, speeding, reckless driving, no tags, driving with an open container and no proof of insurance. He made bail and was released, but later that day, a source close to the camp said that Jeezy had just driven it off the lot, and the temporary tags had fallen off, which is why he was pulled over. As for the open container, Jeezy said that was the passenger’s fault.
Music
Young Jeezy released his first independent album, Thuggin' Under the Influence (T.U.I.), in 2001 under the name Lil J. It featured artists such as Kinky B, Fidank, and Lil Jon, who also produced some of the tracks. In 2003, Jeezy released (also independently) Come Shop Wit' Me, a two CD set featuring completely new tracks along with some songs from T.U.I. Come Shop Wit' Me sold 50,000 copies world wide.[9] In 2004, he signed with Bad Boy Records and joined the Boyz n da Hood group. Boyz n da Hood’s self-titled album was released on June 21, 2005 and peaked at #5 on the Billboard 200 albums chart. Young Jeezy also released a solo album around this time, which was his major label debut, with Def Jam Records. Let's Get It: Thug Motivation 101 was released on July 26, 2005 and debuted at #2, selling 172,000 copies in its first week. Guest appearances include Young Buck, T.I., Trick Daddy, Akon, Mannie Fresh, Lil Scrappy, Bun B, Lloyd, Slick Pulla, & Lil Will.[10] In interviews and on several records, Young Jeezy has affirmed his resistance to commercialism in his music. Maintaining his street credibility, according to Jeezy, is of the utmost concern to him as an artist.[12] In 2005, Young Jeezy was featured in several popular hip hop songs including Gucci Mane’s “Icy” and Boyz n da Hood’s “Dem Niggaz”.
In 2006, he was featured in Christina Milian’s single “Say I”. Jeezy’s second major label album is The Inspiration, which features Project Pat, T.I., Keyshia Cole, Three 6 Mafia, R. Kelly, Bloodraw and Slick Pulla (the latter two of which are members of Jeezy’s rap group USDA). The album’s first single “I Luv It” has peaked at #14 on the Billboard Hot 100, making it Jeezy’s second highest single to date. The second single is “Bury Me a G”. The 3rd single is the club banger “Go Getta” which features R. Kelly. Young Jeezy’s “I am the Street Dream” tour started in March 2007. He also appeared as himself in the hip-hop fighting themed game Def Jam: Icon that can be added to the player’s record label. Young Jeezy appeared on BET’s Access Granted for his song “Dreamin’ ” with Keyshia Cole on May 2, 2007. In 2007, Young Jeezy released Cold Summer, an album by rap group USDA which consists of Young Jeezy, Slick Pulla, and Blood Raw. Recently, he is featured on Usher's song "Love In This Club".
Toyz n da Hood
Young Jeezy presented a week-long toy drive and charity event series with his Corporate Thugz Entertainment (CTE) family with the first annual Toyz n da Hood toy drive. The series presented 1,000 toys for 1,000 kids at various locations in Macon and Atlanta, which began on December 17, 2007, with the CTE Christmas Kickoff from 10PM to 5AM at Club Miami. The toy giveaway took place in the Unionville neighborhood of Macon and at the Old Fourth Ward Community in Atlanta.
Awards
BET Awards
2008, Best Collaboration ("I'm So Hood [Remix]") with DJ Khaled, Ludacris, Busta Rhymes, Big Boi, Lil Wayne, Fat Joe, Birdman, & Rick Ross [Nominated]
BET Hip-Hop Awards
2006, Hip-Hop CD of the Year ("Let's Get It: Thug Motivation 101") [Nominated]
Ozone Awards
2008, Best Rap Artist [Nominated]
2008, Best Rap/R&B Collaboration ("Love in this Club") with Usher (Won)
2007, Best Rap Album ("The Inspiration") (Won)
2007, Best Rap/R&B Collaboration ("Go Getta") with R. Kelly [Nominated]
2007, Best Video ("Grew Up a Screw Up") with Ludacris [Nominated]
2007, Best Group with Slick Pulla & Blood Raw as USDA [Nominated]
Source: wikipedia.org
Tags: Young Jeezy Wiki,Young Jeezy Wikipedia,Young Jeezy photo,Young Jeezy Bio,Young Jeezy Biography
Young Jeezy f/ R.Kelly - Go Getta Lyrics
Chorus:]
you kno we trap all day play all night dis is da life of a go
getta (ey) go getta (ey) go getta (yea)
u in da club u c a bad bitch point her out (oh) yea u damn right ima (ey)
you damn right ima go getta (ey) go getta (ey)
go getta (yea)
[Verse 1: jeezy]
in the immediate state they callin me will smith
gotta thing on ma side u can call dat jada
the boys talkin down yea we call em hatas im ballin
right now so well get back to dat lata
be the first to admit am alcoholic only blow dat good
shit yea dat whatchamacallit
catch me posted on da block in sumthin exotic '07
yea da same color hypnotiq on the outside lookin
and I want in my homie did the same thang and he got 10
jus took a loss still tryin 2 win nd u tryin 2 get back so wut u tryin to spend
[Chorus:]
you kno we trap all day play all night dis is da
life of a go getta (ey) go getta (ey) go getta (yea)
u in da club u c a bad bitch point her out (oh)
yea u damn right ima (ey)
you damn right ima go getta (ey) go getta (ey)
go getta (yea)
[Verse 2: jeezy]
we live life on da edge like theres no tomorrow
they grind hard like theres no today
they do the same shit like its yesterday
the game never stop so whos next to play?
Against all odds u can place ur bets yea
im jus gettin started so I aint done yet (naw)
risk it all you can lose ur life wut else can
I say dats a hell of a price (dayumm)
I dont under cuz I overstand no time for mistakes so im overplayin
im in da club like wut? 4 5 Wit me and ima stay thuggin till da feds come get me
[Chorus:]
you kno we trap all day play all night dis is
da life of a go getta (ey) go getta (ey) go getta (yea)
u in da club u c a bad bitch point her out (oh)
yea u damn right ima (ey)
you damn right ima go getta (ey) go getta (ey) go getta (yea)
[Verse: r.kelly]
hey hey this is how we play when we roll up to da club high sittin on 20 treys
hop out like we fabolous top models grabbin
us they luv dem go gettas only in america
put d on chicks like wallace turn em
?
Thinkin they can have all dis cant deny it
when u c da wheels spinnin
boy kells out da coupe in miami white linen
chips big spendin walk out da club witha shitloada women
soon as I c one I like ima go get (oo) ima get it cuz ima go getta
[Chorus:]
you kno we trap all day play all night dis is da life
of a go getta (ey) go getta (ey) go getta (yea)
u in da club u c a bad bitch point her out (oh)
yea u damn right ima (ey)
you damn right ima go getta (ey) go getta (ey) go getta (yea)
199b
Source: www.smartlyrics.com
you kno we trap all day play all night dis is da life of a go
getta (ey) go getta (ey) go getta (yea)
u in da club u c a bad bitch point her out (oh) yea u damn right ima (ey)
you damn right ima go getta (ey) go getta (ey)
go getta (yea)
[Verse 1: jeezy]
in the immediate state they callin me will smith
gotta thing on ma side u can call dat jada
the boys talkin down yea we call em hatas im ballin
right now so well get back to dat lata
be the first to admit am alcoholic only blow dat good
shit yea dat whatchamacallit
catch me posted on da block in sumthin exotic '07
yea da same color hypnotiq on the outside lookin
and I want in my homie did the same thang and he got 10
jus took a loss still tryin 2 win nd u tryin 2 get back so wut u tryin to spend
[Chorus:]
you kno we trap all day play all night dis is da
life of a go getta (ey) go getta (ey) go getta (yea)
u in da club u c a bad bitch point her out (oh)
yea u damn right ima (ey)
you damn right ima go getta (ey) go getta (ey)
go getta (yea)
[Verse 2: jeezy]
we live life on da edge like theres no tomorrow
they grind hard like theres no today
they do the same shit like its yesterday
the game never stop so whos next to play?
Against all odds u can place ur bets yea
im jus gettin started so I aint done yet (naw)
risk it all you can lose ur life wut else can
I say dats a hell of a price (dayumm)
I dont under cuz I overstand no time for mistakes so im overplayin
im in da club like wut? 4 5 Wit me and ima stay thuggin till da feds come get me
[Chorus:]
you kno we trap all day play all night dis is
da life of a go getta (ey) go getta (ey) go getta (yea)
u in da club u c a bad bitch point her out (oh)
yea u damn right ima (ey)
you damn right ima go getta (ey) go getta (ey) go getta (yea)
[Verse: r.kelly]
hey hey this is how we play when we roll up to da club high sittin on 20 treys
hop out like we fabolous top models grabbin
us they luv dem go gettas only in america
put d on chicks like wallace turn em
?
Thinkin they can have all dis cant deny it
when u c da wheels spinnin
boy kells out da coupe in miami white linen
chips big spendin walk out da club witha shitloada women
soon as I c one I like ima go get (oo) ima get it cuz ima go getta
[Chorus:]
you kno we trap all day play all night dis is da life
of a go getta (ey) go getta (ey) go getta (yea)
u in da club u c a bad bitch point her out (oh)
yea u damn right ima (ey)
you damn right ima go getta (ey) go getta (ey) go getta (yea)
199b
Source: www.smartlyrics.com
Michael Phelps Nickname
Michael Phelps nickname is "MP"
Michael Phelps has two older sisters, Whitney and Hilary. Both of them were swimmers as well, with Whitney coming close to making the U.S. national team for the 1996 Summer Olympics before injuries derailed her career.
Tags: Michael Phelps,Michael Phelps nickname,Michael Phelps sisters,Michael Phelps sister
Michael Phelps has two older sisters, Whitney and Hilary. Both of them were swimmers as well, with Whitney coming close to making the U.S. national team for the 1996 Summer Olympics before injuries derailed her career.
Tags: Michael Phelps,Michael Phelps nickname,Michael Phelps sisters,Michael Phelps sister
Debbie Phelps Wiki
Debbie Phelps
Debbie Davisson Phelps, is a middle school principal. The two divorced in 1994.
Phelps was born and raised in Baltimore, Maryland, and grew up in the Rodgers Forge neighborhood. He graduated from Towson High School in 2003. His father, Fred Phelps, worked for the Maryland State Police and his mother, Debbie Davisson Phelps, is a middle school principal. The two divorced in 1994. Michael, whose nickname is "MP", has two older sisters, Whitney and Hilary. Both of them were swimmers as well, with Whitney coming close to making the U.S. national team for the 1996 Summer Olympics before injuries derailed her career.
Source: wikipedia.org
Tags:debbie phelps wiki,debbie phelps wikipedia,michael phelps mother debbie phelps
Debbie Davisson Phelps, is a middle school principal. The two divorced in 1994.
Phelps was born and raised in Baltimore, Maryland, and grew up in the Rodgers Forge neighborhood. He graduated from Towson High School in 2003. His father, Fred Phelps, worked for the Maryland State Police and his mother, Debbie Davisson Phelps, is a middle school principal. The two divorced in 1994. Michael, whose nickname is "MP", has two older sisters, Whitney and Hilary. Both of them were swimmers as well, with Whitney coming close to making the U.S. national team for the 1996 Summer Olympics before injuries derailed her career.
Source: wikipedia.org
Tags:debbie phelps wiki,debbie phelps wikipedia,michael phelps mother debbie phelps
Mark Spitz Wiki
Mark Spitz Wikipedia
Mark Andrew Spitz (born February 10, 1950) is a retired American swimmer, best known for winning seven gold medals at the 1972 Munich Olympic Games, an achievement not surpassed until Michael Phelps won his eighth gold medal of the 2008 Olympics. Between 1968 and 1972, Spitz won nine Olympic gold medals, one silver, and one bronze; five Pan American golds; 31 National U.S. Amateur Athletic Union titles; and eight U.S. National Collegiate Athletic Association Championships. During those years, he set 33 world records. He was named World Swimmer of the Year in 1969, 1971 and 1972.
Mark Spitz Personal information
Full name: Mark Andrew Spitz
Nickname(s): Mark The Shark
Nationality: United States
Stroke(s): freestyle, butterfly
College team: Indiana Hoosiers (1968-1972)
Date of birth: February 10, 1950 (1950-02-10) (age 58)
Height: 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Swimming career
Spitz was born in Modesto, California, the first of three children of Arnold and Lenore Spitz, a Jewish family. When he was two years old, Spitz's family moved to Hawaii. Spitz swam at Waikiki Beach every day. "You should have seen that little boy dash into the ocean. He'd run like he was trying to commit suicide." Lenore Spitz told a reporter for TIME (April 12, 1968). At age six his family returned to Sacramento, California, and he began to compete at his local swim club. At age nine, he was training at Arden Hills Swim Club in Sacramento with Sherm Chavoor, the swimming coach who mentored Spitz and six other Olympic medal winners.
Spitz continued to show his tremendous talents by the early age of 10, holding 17 national age-group and one world record. At 14, his family moved to Santa Clara so Spitz could train with George F. Haines of the Santa Clara Swim Club. From 1964 to 1968 Mark trained with Haines at SCSC and Santa Clara High School. During his four years there, Mark held national high school records in every stroke and in every distance [needs citation?]. It was a remarkable and unprecedented achievement. In 1966, at 16, he won the 100 meter butterfly at the National AAU Championships, the first of his 24 AAU titles. The following year, 1967 Mark set his first world record at a small California meet, in the 400 meter freestyle, with a time of 4:10.60, and emerged on the world swimming stage.
Maccabiah Games
The 1965 Maccabiah Games was his first international competition. At the age of 15, in Tel Aviv, Spitz won four gold medals and was named the most outstanding athlete.
He returned to Israel in 1969, following the Mexico Olympics, to again compete in the Maccabiah. This time he won six gold medals. He was again named outstanding athlete of the Games.
In 1985, Spitz lit a torch to open the games.
In 2005, he was a member of the U.S. delegation at the 17th Maccabiah Games.
In 2005, he spoke at the Maccabi Games Opening Ceremonies, which was held in Richmond, Virginia. The Weinstein JCC in Richmond was one of the Host JCC's for the 2005 games with over 1,000 teenagers participating in various sports, including swimming.
Pan American Games
In 1967, he established a record, winning five gold medals at the V Pan American Games in Winnipeg. Forty years later his record was surpassed by Brazilian swimmer Thiago Pereira at the XV Pan American Games held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, when he won six gold medals.
1968 Olympics
Holder of 10 world records already[citation needed], Spitz predicted brashly he would win six golds at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City. However, he won only two team golds: the 4 x 100 meter freestyle in 3:31:70, and the 4 x 200 meter freestyle relay in 7:52:33. In addition, Spitz finished 2nd in the 100 m butterfly in 00:56:40. In this event he was beaten by fellow American Doug Russell by 1/2 a second despite holding the world record and having beaten Russell in the previous 10 times they had swum against each other in that year.[8] Russell did briefly match Spitz's world record in late August of 1967, holding the world record equally with Spitz for five days before Spitz regained it solely on October 2 1967. As a result of being beaten by Russell, Spitz did not get to swim in the 4 x 100 m Medley Relay which gave Russell his second Gold medal and the USA team another World Record swim.
College training
Disappointed in his 1968 Olympic performance, Spitz entered Indiana University to train with legendary coach Doc Counsilman, who was also his coach in Mexico City. While at IU, Spitz won 8 individual NCAA titles. In 1971, he won the James E. Sullivan Award as the top amateur athlete in the United States. Spitz also set a number of world records during the U.S. Olympic Swim Trials held in Chicago's Portage Park in 1972.
He was nicknamed "Mark the Shark" by his teammates.
1972 Olympics
At the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich (West Germany), Spitz was back to maintain his bid for the six gold medals. He did even more, winning seven Olympic gold medals. Further, Spitz set a new world record in each of the seven events (the 100 m freestyle [00:51:22], 200 m freestyle [01:52:78], 100 m butterfly [00:54:27], 200 m butterfly [02:00:70], 4 x 100 m freestyle relay [03:26:42], 4 x 200 m freestyle relay [07:35:78] and the 4 x 100 m medley relay [03:48:16]). Originally Spitz was reluctant to swim the 100m freestyle fearing a less than gold medal finish. Minutes before the race he confessed on the pool deck to ABC's Donna de Varona, "I know I say I don't want to swim before every event but this time I'm serious. If I swim six and win six, I'll be a hero. If I swim seven and win six, I'll be a failure." Spitz won by half a stroke in a world-record 51.22.
His participation in the 1972 Munich Olympic games gained him a bit of notoriety as he swam with a mustache, whereas most competitors opt to shave their entire bodies.
Spitz is one of five Olympians to win nine or more career gold medals: Larissa Latynina, Paavo Nurmi and Carl Lewis also have nine; only swimmer Michael Phelps has won more with 14. Spitz's record of seven gold medals in a single Olympics was not surpassed until 2008 by Michael Phelps at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
Spitz was evacuated from Munich when 11 athletes and officials from Israel's Olympic team were kidnapped and later killed by Palestinian terrorists. Officials were worried that Spitz might be targeted because of his Jewish heritage. He had already finished his competition.
Retirement
Following the Munich Olympics, even though he was still only 22, Spitz retired from competition.
In 1999, Spitz ranked #33 on ESPN SportsCentury 50 Greatest Athletes, the only aquatic athlete to make the list.
Hall of Fame
International Swimming Hall of Fame, Inducted 1977.
International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame, Inducted 1979.
United States Olympic Hall of Fame, Inducted 1983.[14]
San Jose Sports Hall of Fame, inducted Wednesday, November 14, 2007.
National Jewish Museum Sports Hall of Fame, Inducted 2007.
Long Beach City College Hall of Fame, Inducted 2007
Indiana University Athletics Hall of Fame
Film and television career
After his retirement at age 22, his management tried to get him into show business while his name was still hot. In 1973–74, Spitz appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson and TV series such as The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour and Emergency! as paramedic Pete Barlow. Spitz went to work for ABC Sports in 1976 and worked on many sports presentations, including coverage of the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal and the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles.[20] In 1985 he appeared as a TV announcer in Challenge of a Lifetime. In 1998 he appeared in a TV commercial for Sony PlayStation—however, Spitz was clearly uncomfortable on camera, and he mostly had occasional bit spots in shows and commercials. His lackluster acting performances soon led to a cessation of movie and TV offers. He continued as a broadcaster for some time, but within a few years, he had all but vanished as a public figure.
In 2006 he received critical praise for his narration of Freedom's Fury, a Hungarian documentary about the Olympic water polo team's famous Blood in the Water match against Russia during the Revolution of 1956—considered the most famous match in water polo history. The film was executive produced by Quentin Tarantino and Lucy Liu, and made its debut at the Tribeca Film Festival.
In November 2007, Spitz made a cameo appearance on Amanda Beard's first television commercial (for GoDaddy) featuring her own seven Olympic medals (won between 1996–2004).
In a live, in-studio interview with KCRA host Mike TeSelle on June 14, 2008, Spitz commented that he no longer maintains his iconic mustache because it had become "too gray."
Personal life
Family life
When Spitz returned from the Olympics, he began dating the daughter of one of his father's business acquaintances after seeing her picture.[23] Suzy was a tougher sell. "She was disinterested," Spitz says. Less than a year after Munich, Spitz and Suzy Weiner, a UCLA theater student and part-time model, were married on May 6, 1973.[25] They have two sons: Matthew (b. October, 1981) and Justin (b. September, 1991).
Schooling
From 1964 to 1968 Mark attended the Santa Clara High School. After graduating he went on to Indiana University.
At Indiana University from 1968-72, he was a pre-dental student and member of Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity. Time Magazine asked him if he wanted to return to dental school after the Olympics. "I always wanted to be a dentist from the time I was in high school, and I was accepted to dental school in the spring of 1972. I was planning to go, but after the Olympics there were other opportunities. I did some television and speaking engagements, and things just went from there."
According to the Indiana University School of Dentistry, Mark Spitz was planning on attending in the fall of 1972, but instead he moved to California. He was quoted in the Chicago Tribune in June, 2004 saying, “I’m probably the most famous dentist who never became a dentist in the world.”
Job and career
Soon after his return to the U.S., Spitz landed several lucrative corporate endorsement contracts. He earned about $7 million in a two-year period.[28] He bought a Ferrari and says he made more than $1 million when he started a very successful real-estate company in Beverly Hills.[22] "A million dollars in 1972 would be equivalent to more than $10 million today," Spitz said. "I did very well, thank you very much."[29] "I would say I was a pioneer. There wasn't anyone who'd gone to the Olympics before me who capitalized the same way on opportunity. It depends on timing, it depends on hype, it depends on the economy, and most importantly, it depends on looks. I mean, I've never seen a magazine of uglies. That's our society. I'm not saying it's right. That's just the facts."
Per his official Web site, Spitz is currently self-employed as a corporate spokesperson and motivational speaker. However, Sports Yahoo! lists his occupation as a stock broker and motivational speaker.[31] According to a recent interview "Spitz became a stockbroker in 2002 and has since moved into private equity. He is now also dabbling in the "water business," as he calls it, and is in negotiations to build a water-bottling facility on aquifer-rich land that he and a business partner own.
He has pursued various entrepreneurial projects with former NBA player Rick Barry. He travels the world delivering about 25 lectures a year, and has just written a memoir, The Extraordinary Life of An Olympic Champion.
Hobbies
His hobbies include sailing, skiing and collecting art.[34] He has been involved in blue water ocean racing (sailing) and in the summer of 1981 competed in his third Trans-Pac Yacht Race from Los Angeles to Hawaii, finishing third.
People always asked Spitz, "Do you still swim?" Remarkably, the answer most of the time was "no."
Iconic mustache during Olympics
In an era when other swimmers, male and female were shaving body hair, he swam with a mustache. When asked why he initially grew one he stated "I grew the mustache because a coach in college said I couldn't grow one." Spitz said he originally grew the mustache as a form of rebellion against the clean-cut look imposed on him in college. “It took a long time to grow,” he said.It took four months to grow, but Spitz was proud of it, he decided the mustache was a "good-luck piece."
Mark Spitz is quoted as saying, "When I went to the Olympics, I had every intention of shaving the mustache off, but I realized I was getting so many comments about it--and everybody was talking about it--that I decided to keep it. I had some fun with a Russian coach who asked me if my mustache slowed me down. I said, "No, as a matter of fact, it deflects water away from my mouth, allows my rear end to rise and make me bullet-shaped in the water, and that's what had allowed me to swim so great. He's translating as fast as he can for the other coaches, and the following year every Russian male swimmer had a mustache."
According to a Sports Illustrated article, on Valentine's Day in 1988, after talking about shaving off his mustache for a year, he finally did. "He looked great with it, don't get me wrong," explained Suzy, "but he looks so handsome without it."
When he was asked why he shaved it off he responded "well, one - I'm not swimming anymore, two - it started to turn gray, and three - my wife had never seen me, nor my family, without the mustache... I'm happy [without it]."
Source: wikipedia.org
Tags: mark spitz wikipedia,mark spitz wiki,mark spitz bio,mark spitz biography,mark spitz photo
Mark Andrew Spitz (born February 10, 1950) is a retired American swimmer, best known for winning seven gold medals at the 1972 Munich Olympic Games, an achievement not surpassed until Michael Phelps won his eighth gold medal of the 2008 Olympics. Between 1968 and 1972, Spitz won nine Olympic gold medals, one silver, and one bronze; five Pan American golds; 31 National U.S. Amateur Athletic Union titles; and eight U.S. National Collegiate Athletic Association Championships. During those years, he set 33 world records. He was named World Swimmer of the Year in 1969, 1971 and 1972.
Mark Spitz Personal information
Full name: Mark Andrew Spitz
Nickname(s): Mark The Shark
Nationality: United States
Stroke(s): freestyle, butterfly
College team: Indiana Hoosiers (1968-1972)
Date of birth: February 10, 1950 (1950-02-10) (age 58)
Height: 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Swimming career
Spitz was born in Modesto, California, the first of three children of Arnold and Lenore Spitz, a Jewish family. When he was two years old, Spitz's family moved to Hawaii. Spitz swam at Waikiki Beach every day. "You should have seen that little boy dash into the ocean. He'd run like he was trying to commit suicide." Lenore Spitz told a reporter for TIME (April 12, 1968). At age six his family returned to Sacramento, California, and he began to compete at his local swim club. At age nine, he was training at Arden Hills Swim Club in Sacramento with Sherm Chavoor, the swimming coach who mentored Spitz and six other Olympic medal winners.
Spitz continued to show his tremendous talents by the early age of 10, holding 17 national age-group and one world record. At 14, his family moved to Santa Clara so Spitz could train with George F. Haines of the Santa Clara Swim Club. From 1964 to 1968 Mark trained with Haines at SCSC and Santa Clara High School. During his four years there, Mark held national high school records in every stroke and in every distance [needs citation?]. It was a remarkable and unprecedented achievement. In 1966, at 16, he won the 100 meter butterfly at the National AAU Championships, the first of his 24 AAU titles. The following year, 1967 Mark set his first world record at a small California meet, in the 400 meter freestyle, with a time of 4:10.60, and emerged on the world swimming stage.
Maccabiah Games
The 1965 Maccabiah Games was his first international competition. At the age of 15, in Tel Aviv, Spitz won four gold medals and was named the most outstanding athlete.
He returned to Israel in 1969, following the Mexico Olympics, to again compete in the Maccabiah. This time he won six gold medals. He was again named outstanding athlete of the Games.
In 1985, Spitz lit a torch to open the games.
In 2005, he was a member of the U.S. delegation at the 17th Maccabiah Games.
In 2005, he spoke at the Maccabi Games Opening Ceremonies, which was held in Richmond, Virginia. The Weinstein JCC in Richmond was one of the Host JCC's for the 2005 games with over 1,000 teenagers participating in various sports, including swimming.
Pan American Games
In 1967, he established a record, winning five gold medals at the V Pan American Games in Winnipeg. Forty years later his record was surpassed by Brazilian swimmer Thiago Pereira at the XV Pan American Games held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, when he won six gold medals.
1968 Olympics
Holder of 10 world records already[citation needed], Spitz predicted brashly he would win six golds at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City. However, he won only two team golds: the 4 x 100 meter freestyle in 3:31:70, and the 4 x 200 meter freestyle relay in 7:52:33. In addition, Spitz finished 2nd in the 100 m butterfly in 00:56:40. In this event he was beaten by fellow American Doug Russell by 1/2 a second despite holding the world record and having beaten Russell in the previous 10 times they had swum against each other in that year.[8] Russell did briefly match Spitz's world record in late August of 1967, holding the world record equally with Spitz for five days before Spitz regained it solely on October 2 1967. As a result of being beaten by Russell, Spitz did not get to swim in the 4 x 100 m Medley Relay which gave Russell his second Gold medal and the USA team another World Record swim.
College training
Disappointed in his 1968 Olympic performance, Spitz entered Indiana University to train with legendary coach Doc Counsilman, who was also his coach in Mexico City. While at IU, Spitz won 8 individual NCAA titles. In 1971, he won the James E. Sullivan Award as the top amateur athlete in the United States. Spitz also set a number of world records during the U.S. Olympic Swim Trials held in Chicago's Portage Park in 1972.
He was nicknamed "Mark the Shark" by his teammates.
1972 Olympics
At the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich (West Germany), Spitz was back to maintain his bid for the six gold medals. He did even more, winning seven Olympic gold medals. Further, Spitz set a new world record in each of the seven events (the 100 m freestyle [00:51:22], 200 m freestyle [01:52:78], 100 m butterfly [00:54:27], 200 m butterfly [02:00:70], 4 x 100 m freestyle relay [03:26:42], 4 x 200 m freestyle relay [07:35:78] and the 4 x 100 m medley relay [03:48:16]). Originally Spitz was reluctant to swim the 100m freestyle fearing a less than gold medal finish. Minutes before the race he confessed on the pool deck to ABC's Donna de Varona, "I know I say I don't want to swim before every event but this time I'm serious. If I swim six and win six, I'll be a hero. If I swim seven and win six, I'll be a failure." Spitz won by half a stroke in a world-record 51.22.
His participation in the 1972 Munich Olympic games gained him a bit of notoriety as he swam with a mustache, whereas most competitors opt to shave their entire bodies.
Spitz is one of five Olympians to win nine or more career gold medals: Larissa Latynina, Paavo Nurmi and Carl Lewis also have nine; only swimmer Michael Phelps has won more with 14. Spitz's record of seven gold medals in a single Olympics was not surpassed until 2008 by Michael Phelps at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
Spitz was evacuated from Munich when 11 athletes and officials from Israel's Olympic team were kidnapped and later killed by Palestinian terrorists. Officials were worried that Spitz might be targeted because of his Jewish heritage. He had already finished his competition.
Retirement
Following the Munich Olympics, even though he was still only 22, Spitz retired from competition.
In 1999, Spitz ranked #33 on ESPN SportsCentury 50 Greatest Athletes, the only aquatic athlete to make the list.
Hall of Fame
International Swimming Hall of Fame, Inducted 1977.
International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame, Inducted 1979.
United States Olympic Hall of Fame, Inducted 1983.[14]
San Jose Sports Hall of Fame, inducted Wednesday, November 14, 2007.
National Jewish Museum Sports Hall of Fame, Inducted 2007.
Long Beach City College Hall of Fame, Inducted 2007
Indiana University Athletics Hall of Fame
Film and television career
After his retirement at age 22, his management tried to get him into show business while his name was still hot. In 1973–74, Spitz appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson and TV series such as The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour and Emergency! as paramedic Pete Barlow. Spitz went to work for ABC Sports in 1976 and worked on many sports presentations, including coverage of the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal and the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles.[20] In 1985 he appeared as a TV announcer in Challenge of a Lifetime. In 1998 he appeared in a TV commercial for Sony PlayStation—however, Spitz was clearly uncomfortable on camera, and he mostly had occasional bit spots in shows and commercials. His lackluster acting performances soon led to a cessation of movie and TV offers. He continued as a broadcaster for some time, but within a few years, he had all but vanished as a public figure.
In 2006 he received critical praise for his narration of Freedom's Fury, a Hungarian documentary about the Olympic water polo team's famous Blood in the Water match against Russia during the Revolution of 1956—considered the most famous match in water polo history. The film was executive produced by Quentin Tarantino and Lucy Liu, and made its debut at the Tribeca Film Festival.
In November 2007, Spitz made a cameo appearance on Amanda Beard's first television commercial (for GoDaddy) featuring her own seven Olympic medals (won between 1996–2004).
In a live, in-studio interview with KCRA host Mike TeSelle on June 14, 2008, Spitz commented that he no longer maintains his iconic mustache because it had become "too gray."
Personal life
Family life
When Spitz returned from the Olympics, he began dating the daughter of one of his father's business acquaintances after seeing her picture.[23] Suzy was a tougher sell. "She was disinterested," Spitz says. Less than a year after Munich, Spitz and Suzy Weiner, a UCLA theater student and part-time model, were married on May 6, 1973.[25] They have two sons: Matthew (b. October, 1981) and Justin (b. September, 1991).
Schooling
From 1964 to 1968 Mark attended the Santa Clara High School. After graduating he went on to Indiana University.
At Indiana University from 1968-72, he was a pre-dental student and member of Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity. Time Magazine asked him if he wanted to return to dental school after the Olympics. "I always wanted to be a dentist from the time I was in high school, and I was accepted to dental school in the spring of 1972. I was planning to go, but after the Olympics there were other opportunities. I did some television and speaking engagements, and things just went from there."
According to the Indiana University School of Dentistry, Mark Spitz was planning on attending in the fall of 1972, but instead he moved to California. He was quoted in the Chicago Tribune in June, 2004 saying, “I’m probably the most famous dentist who never became a dentist in the world.”
Job and career
Soon after his return to the U.S., Spitz landed several lucrative corporate endorsement contracts. He earned about $7 million in a two-year period.[28] He bought a Ferrari and says he made more than $1 million when he started a very successful real-estate company in Beverly Hills.[22] "A million dollars in 1972 would be equivalent to more than $10 million today," Spitz said. "I did very well, thank you very much."[29] "I would say I was a pioneer. There wasn't anyone who'd gone to the Olympics before me who capitalized the same way on opportunity. It depends on timing, it depends on hype, it depends on the economy, and most importantly, it depends on looks. I mean, I've never seen a magazine of uglies. That's our society. I'm not saying it's right. That's just the facts."
Per his official Web site, Spitz is currently self-employed as a corporate spokesperson and motivational speaker. However, Sports Yahoo! lists his occupation as a stock broker and motivational speaker.[31] According to a recent interview "Spitz became a stockbroker in 2002 and has since moved into private equity. He is now also dabbling in the "water business," as he calls it, and is in negotiations to build a water-bottling facility on aquifer-rich land that he and a business partner own.
He has pursued various entrepreneurial projects with former NBA player Rick Barry. He travels the world delivering about 25 lectures a year, and has just written a memoir, The Extraordinary Life of An Olympic Champion.
Hobbies
His hobbies include sailing, skiing and collecting art.[34] He has been involved in blue water ocean racing (sailing) and in the summer of 1981 competed in his third Trans-Pac Yacht Race from Los Angeles to Hawaii, finishing third.
People always asked Spitz, "Do you still swim?" Remarkably, the answer most of the time was "no."
Iconic mustache during Olympics
In an era when other swimmers, male and female were shaving body hair, he swam with a mustache. When asked why he initially grew one he stated "I grew the mustache because a coach in college said I couldn't grow one." Spitz said he originally grew the mustache as a form of rebellion against the clean-cut look imposed on him in college. “It took a long time to grow,” he said.It took four months to grow, but Spitz was proud of it, he decided the mustache was a "good-luck piece."
Mark Spitz is quoted as saying, "When I went to the Olympics, I had every intention of shaving the mustache off, but I realized I was getting so many comments about it--and everybody was talking about it--that I decided to keep it. I had some fun with a Russian coach who asked me if my mustache slowed me down. I said, "No, as a matter of fact, it deflects water away from my mouth, allows my rear end to rise and make me bullet-shaped in the water, and that's what had allowed me to swim so great. He's translating as fast as he can for the other coaches, and the following year every Russian male swimmer had a mustache."
According to a Sports Illustrated article, on Valentine's Day in 1988, after talking about shaving off his mustache for a year, he finally did. "He looked great with it, don't get me wrong," explained Suzy, "but he looks so handsome without it."
When he was asked why he shaved it off he responded "well, one - I'm not swimming anymore, two - it started to turn gray, and three - my wife had never seen me, nor my family, without the mustache... I'm happy [without it]."
Source: wikipedia.org
Tags: mark spitz wikipedia,mark spitz wiki,mark spitz bio,mark spitz biography,mark spitz photo
Mark Spitz Wikipedia
Mark Spitz Wiki
Mark Andrew Spitz (born February 10, 1950) is a retired American swimmer, best known for winning seven gold medals at the 1972 Munich Olympic Games, an achievement not surpassed until Michael Phelps won his eighth gold medal of the 2008 Olympics. Between 1968 and 1972, Spitz won nine Olympic gold medals, one silver, and one bronze; five Pan American golds; 31 National U.S. Amateur Athletic Union titles; and eight U.S. National Collegiate Athletic Association Championships. During those years, he set 33 world records. He was named World Swimmer of the Year in 1969, 1971 and 1972.
Mark Spitz Personal information
Full name: Mark Andrew Spitz
Nickname(s): Mark The Shark
Nationality: United States
Stroke(s): freestyle, butterfly
College team: Indiana Hoosiers (1968-1972)
Date of birth: February 10, 1950 (1950-02-10) (age 58)
Height: 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Swimming career
Spitz was born in Modesto, California, the first of three children of Arnold and Lenore Spitz, a Jewish family. When he was two years old, Spitz's family moved to Hawaii. Spitz swam at Waikiki Beach every day. "You should have seen that little boy dash into the ocean. He'd run like he was trying to commit suicide." Lenore Spitz told a reporter for TIME (April 12, 1968). At age six his family returned to Sacramento, California, and he began to compete at his local swim club. At age nine, he was training at Arden Hills Swim Club in Sacramento with Sherm Chavoor, the swimming coach who mentored Spitz and six other Olympic medal winners.
Spitz continued to show his tremendous talents by the early age of 10, holding 17 national age-group and one world record. At 14, his family moved to Santa Clara so Spitz could train with George F. Haines of the Santa Clara Swim Club. From 1964 to 1968 Mark trained with Haines at SCSC and Santa Clara High School. During his four years there, Mark held national high school records in every stroke and in every distance [needs citation?]. It was a remarkable and unprecedented achievement. In 1966, at 16, he won the 100 meter butterfly at the National AAU Championships, the first of his 24 AAU titles. The following year, 1967 Mark set his first world record at a small California meet, in the 400 meter freestyle, with a time of 4:10.60, and emerged on the world swimming stage.
Maccabiah Games
The 1965 Maccabiah Games was his first international competition. At the age of 15, in Tel Aviv, Spitz won four gold medals and was named the most outstanding athlete.
He returned to Israel in 1969, following the Mexico Olympics, to again compete in the Maccabiah. This time he won six gold medals. He was again named outstanding athlete of the Games.
In 1985, Spitz lit a torch to open the games.
In 2005, he was a member of the U.S. delegation at the 17th Maccabiah Games.
In 2005, he spoke at the Maccabi Games Opening Ceremonies, which was held in Richmond, Virginia. The Weinstein JCC in Richmond was one of the Host JCC's for the 2005 games with over 1,000 teenagers participating in various sports, including swimming.
Pan American Games
In 1967, he established a record, winning five gold medals at the V Pan American Games in Winnipeg. Forty years later his record was surpassed by Brazilian swimmer Thiago Pereira at the XV Pan American Games held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, when he won six gold medals.
1968 Olympics
Holder of 10 world records already[citation needed], Spitz predicted brashly he would win six golds at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City. However, he won only two team golds: the 4 x 100 meter freestyle in 3:31:70, and the 4 x 200 meter freestyle relay in 7:52:33. In addition, Spitz finished 2nd in the 100 m butterfly in 00:56:40. In this event he was beaten by fellow American Doug Russell by 1/2 a second despite holding the world record and having beaten Russell in the previous 10 times they had swum against each other in that year.[8] Russell did briefly match Spitz's world record in late August of 1967, holding the world record equally with Spitz for five days before Spitz regained it solely on October 2 1967. As a result of being beaten by Russell, Spitz did not get to swim in the 4 x 100 m Medley Relay which gave Russell his second Gold medal and the USA team another World Record swim.
College training
Disappointed in his 1968 Olympic performance, Spitz entered Indiana University to train with legendary coach Doc Counsilman, who was also his coach in Mexico City. While at IU, Spitz won 8 individual NCAA titles. In 1971, he won the James E. Sullivan Award as the top amateur athlete in the United States. Spitz also set a number of world records during the U.S. Olympic Swim Trials held in Chicago's Portage Park in 1972.
He was nicknamed "Mark the Shark" by his teammates.
1972 Olympics
At the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich (West Germany), Spitz was back to maintain his bid for the six gold medals. He did even more, winning seven Olympic gold medals. Further, Spitz set a new world record in each of the seven events (the 100 m freestyle [00:51:22], 200 m freestyle [01:52:78], 100 m butterfly [00:54:27], 200 m butterfly [02:00:70], 4 x 100 m freestyle relay [03:26:42], 4 x 200 m freestyle relay [07:35:78] and the 4 x 100 m medley relay [03:48:16]). Originally Spitz was reluctant to swim the 100m freestyle fearing a less than gold medal finish. Minutes before the race he confessed on the pool deck to ABC's Donna de Varona, "I know I say I don't want to swim before every event but this time I'm serious. If I swim six and win six, I'll be a hero. If I swim seven and win six, I'll be a failure." Spitz won by half a stroke in a world-record 51.22.
His participation in the 1972 Munich Olympic games gained him a bit of notoriety as he swam with a mustache, whereas most competitors opt to shave their entire bodies.
Spitz is one of five Olympians to win nine or more career gold medals: Larissa Latynina, Paavo Nurmi and Carl Lewis also have nine; only swimmer Michael Phelps has won more with 14. Spitz's record of seven gold medals in a single Olympics was not surpassed until 2008 by Michael Phelps at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
Spitz was evacuated from Munich when 11 athletes and officials from Israel's Olympic team were kidnapped and later killed by Palestinian terrorists. Officials were worried that Spitz might be targeted because of his Jewish heritage. He had already finished his competition.
Retirement
Following the Munich Olympics, even though he was still only 22, Spitz retired from competition.
In 1999, Spitz ranked #33 on ESPN SportsCentury 50 Greatest Athletes, the only aquatic athlete to make the list.
Hall of Fame
International Swimming Hall of Fame, Inducted 1977.
International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame, Inducted 1979.
United States Olympic Hall of Fame, Inducted 1983.[14]
San Jose Sports Hall of Fame, inducted Wednesday, November 14, 2007.
National Jewish Museum Sports Hall of Fame, Inducted 2007.
Long Beach City College Hall of Fame, Inducted 2007
Indiana University Athletics Hall of Fame
Film and television career
After his retirement at age 22, his management tried to get him into show business while his name was still hot. In 1973–74, Spitz appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson and TV series such as The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour and Emergency! as paramedic Pete Barlow. Spitz went to work for ABC Sports in 1976 and worked on many sports presentations, including coverage of the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal and the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles.[20] In 1985 he appeared as a TV announcer in Challenge of a Lifetime. In 1998 he appeared in a TV commercial for Sony PlayStation—however, Spitz was clearly uncomfortable on camera, and he mostly had occasional bit spots in shows and commercials. His lackluster acting performances soon led to a cessation of movie and TV offers. He continued as a broadcaster for some time, but within a few years, he had all but vanished as a public figure.
In 2006 he received critical praise for his narration of Freedom's Fury, a Hungarian documentary about the Olympic water polo team's famous Blood in the Water match against Russia during the Revolution of 1956—considered the most famous match in water polo history. The film was executive produced by Quentin Tarantino and Lucy Liu, and made its debut at the Tribeca Film Festival.
In November 2007, Spitz made a cameo appearance on Amanda Beard's first television commercial (for GoDaddy) featuring her own seven Olympic medals (won between 1996–2004).
In a live, in-studio interview with KCRA host Mike TeSelle on June 14, 2008, Spitz commented that he no longer maintains his iconic mustache because it had become "too gray."
Personal life
Family life
When Spitz returned from the Olympics, he began dating the daughter of one of his father's business acquaintances after seeing her picture.[23] Suzy was a tougher sell. "She was disinterested," Spitz says. Less than a year after Munich, Spitz and Suzy Weiner, a UCLA theater student and part-time model, were married on May 6, 1973.[25] They have two sons: Matthew (b. October, 1981) and Justin (b. September, 1991).
Schooling
From 1964 to 1968 Mark attended the Santa Clara High School. After graduating he went on to Indiana University.
At Indiana University from 1968-72, he was a pre-dental student and member of Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity. Time Magazine asked him if he wanted to return to dental school after the Olympics. "I always wanted to be a dentist from the time I was in high school, and I was accepted to dental school in the spring of 1972. I was planning to go, but after the Olympics there were other opportunities. I did some television and speaking engagements, and things just went from there."
According to the Indiana University School of Dentistry, Mark Spitz was planning on attending in the fall of 1972, but instead he moved to California. He was quoted in the Chicago Tribune in June, 2004 saying, “I’m probably the most famous dentist who never became a dentist in the world.”
Job and career
Soon after his return to the U.S., Spitz landed several lucrative corporate endorsement contracts. He earned about $7 million in a two-year period.[28] He bought a Ferrari and says he made more than $1 million when he started a very successful real-estate company in Beverly Hills.[22] "A million dollars in 1972 would be equivalent to more than $10 million today," Spitz said. "I did very well, thank you very much."[29] "I would say I was a pioneer. There wasn't anyone who'd gone to the Olympics before me who capitalized the same way on opportunity. It depends on timing, it depends on hype, it depends on the economy, and most importantly, it depends on looks. I mean, I've never seen a magazine of uglies. That's our society. I'm not saying it's right. That's just the facts."
Per his official Web site, Spitz is currently self-employed as a corporate spokesperson and motivational speaker. However, Sports Yahoo! lists his occupation as a stock broker and motivational speaker.[31] According to a recent interview "Spitz became a stockbroker in 2002 and has since moved into private equity. He is now also dabbling in the "water business," as he calls it, and is in negotiations to build a water-bottling facility on aquifer-rich land that he and a business partner own.
He has pursued various entrepreneurial projects with former NBA player Rick Barry. He travels the world delivering about 25 lectures a year, and has just written a memoir, The Extraordinary Life of An Olympic Champion.
Hobbies
His hobbies include sailing, skiing and collecting art.[34] He has been involved in blue water ocean racing (sailing) and in the summer of 1981 competed in his third Trans-Pac Yacht Race from Los Angeles to Hawaii, finishing third.
People always asked Spitz, "Do you still swim?" Remarkably, the answer most of the time was "no."
Iconic mustache during Olympics
In an era when other swimmers, male and female were shaving body hair, he swam with a mustache. When asked why he initially grew one he stated "I grew the mustache because a coach in college said I couldn't grow one." Spitz said he originally grew the mustache as a form of rebellion against the clean-cut look imposed on him in college. “It took a long time to grow,” he said.It took four months to grow, but Spitz was proud of it, he decided the mustache was a "good-luck piece."
Mark Spitz is quoted as saying, "When I went to the Olympics, I had every intention of shaving the mustache off, but I realized I was getting so many comments about it--and everybody was talking about it--that I decided to keep it. I had some fun with a Russian coach who asked me if my mustache slowed me down. I said, "No, as a matter of fact, it deflects water away from my mouth, allows my rear end to rise and make me bullet-shaped in the water, and that's what had allowed me to swim so great. He's translating as fast as he can for the other coaches, and the following year every Russian male swimmer had a mustache."
According to a Sports Illustrated article, on Valentine's Day in 1988, after talking about shaving off his mustache for a year, he finally did. "He looked great with it, don't get me wrong," explained Suzy, "but he looks so handsome without it."
When he was asked why he shaved it off he responded "well, one - I'm not swimming anymore, two - it started to turn gray, and three - my wife had never seen me, nor my family, without the mustache... I'm happy [without it]."
Source: wikipedia.org
Tags: mark spitz wikipedia,mark spitz wiki,mark spitz bio,mark spitz biography,mark spitz photo
Mark Andrew Spitz (born February 10, 1950) is a retired American swimmer, best known for winning seven gold medals at the 1972 Munich Olympic Games, an achievement not surpassed until Michael Phelps won his eighth gold medal of the 2008 Olympics. Between 1968 and 1972, Spitz won nine Olympic gold medals, one silver, and one bronze; five Pan American golds; 31 National U.S. Amateur Athletic Union titles; and eight U.S. National Collegiate Athletic Association Championships. During those years, he set 33 world records. He was named World Swimmer of the Year in 1969, 1971 and 1972.
Mark Spitz Personal information
Full name: Mark Andrew Spitz
Nickname(s): Mark The Shark
Nationality: United States
Stroke(s): freestyle, butterfly
College team: Indiana Hoosiers (1968-1972)
Date of birth: February 10, 1950 (1950-02-10) (age 58)
Height: 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Swimming career
Spitz was born in Modesto, California, the first of three children of Arnold and Lenore Spitz, a Jewish family. When he was two years old, Spitz's family moved to Hawaii. Spitz swam at Waikiki Beach every day. "You should have seen that little boy dash into the ocean. He'd run like he was trying to commit suicide." Lenore Spitz told a reporter for TIME (April 12, 1968). At age six his family returned to Sacramento, California, and he began to compete at his local swim club. At age nine, he was training at Arden Hills Swim Club in Sacramento with Sherm Chavoor, the swimming coach who mentored Spitz and six other Olympic medal winners.
Spitz continued to show his tremendous talents by the early age of 10, holding 17 national age-group and one world record. At 14, his family moved to Santa Clara so Spitz could train with George F. Haines of the Santa Clara Swim Club. From 1964 to 1968 Mark trained with Haines at SCSC and Santa Clara High School. During his four years there, Mark held national high school records in every stroke and in every distance [needs citation?]. It was a remarkable and unprecedented achievement. In 1966, at 16, he won the 100 meter butterfly at the National AAU Championships, the first of his 24 AAU titles. The following year, 1967 Mark set his first world record at a small California meet, in the 400 meter freestyle, with a time of 4:10.60, and emerged on the world swimming stage.
Maccabiah Games
The 1965 Maccabiah Games was his first international competition. At the age of 15, in Tel Aviv, Spitz won four gold medals and was named the most outstanding athlete.
He returned to Israel in 1969, following the Mexico Olympics, to again compete in the Maccabiah. This time he won six gold medals. He was again named outstanding athlete of the Games.
In 1985, Spitz lit a torch to open the games.
In 2005, he was a member of the U.S. delegation at the 17th Maccabiah Games.
In 2005, he spoke at the Maccabi Games Opening Ceremonies, which was held in Richmond, Virginia. The Weinstein JCC in Richmond was one of the Host JCC's for the 2005 games with over 1,000 teenagers participating in various sports, including swimming.
Pan American Games
In 1967, he established a record, winning five gold medals at the V Pan American Games in Winnipeg. Forty years later his record was surpassed by Brazilian swimmer Thiago Pereira at the XV Pan American Games held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, when he won six gold medals.
1968 Olympics
Holder of 10 world records already[citation needed], Spitz predicted brashly he would win six golds at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City. However, he won only two team golds: the 4 x 100 meter freestyle in 3:31:70, and the 4 x 200 meter freestyle relay in 7:52:33. In addition, Spitz finished 2nd in the 100 m butterfly in 00:56:40. In this event he was beaten by fellow American Doug Russell by 1/2 a second despite holding the world record and having beaten Russell in the previous 10 times they had swum against each other in that year.[8] Russell did briefly match Spitz's world record in late August of 1967, holding the world record equally with Spitz for five days before Spitz regained it solely on October 2 1967. As a result of being beaten by Russell, Spitz did not get to swim in the 4 x 100 m Medley Relay which gave Russell his second Gold medal and the USA team another World Record swim.
College training
Disappointed in his 1968 Olympic performance, Spitz entered Indiana University to train with legendary coach Doc Counsilman, who was also his coach in Mexico City. While at IU, Spitz won 8 individual NCAA titles. In 1971, he won the James E. Sullivan Award as the top amateur athlete in the United States. Spitz also set a number of world records during the U.S. Olympic Swim Trials held in Chicago's Portage Park in 1972.
He was nicknamed "Mark the Shark" by his teammates.
1972 Olympics
At the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich (West Germany), Spitz was back to maintain his bid for the six gold medals. He did even more, winning seven Olympic gold medals. Further, Spitz set a new world record in each of the seven events (the 100 m freestyle [00:51:22], 200 m freestyle [01:52:78], 100 m butterfly [00:54:27], 200 m butterfly [02:00:70], 4 x 100 m freestyle relay [03:26:42], 4 x 200 m freestyle relay [07:35:78] and the 4 x 100 m medley relay [03:48:16]). Originally Spitz was reluctant to swim the 100m freestyle fearing a less than gold medal finish. Minutes before the race he confessed on the pool deck to ABC's Donna de Varona, "I know I say I don't want to swim before every event but this time I'm serious. If I swim six and win six, I'll be a hero. If I swim seven and win six, I'll be a failure." Spitz won by half a stroke in a world-record 51.22.
His participation in the 1972 Munich Olympic games gained him a bit of notoriety as he swam with a mustache, whereas most competitors opt to shave their entire bodies.
Spitz is one of five Olympians to win nine or more career gold medals: Larissa Latynina, Paavo Nurmi and Carl Lewis also have nine; only swimmer Michael Phelps has won more with 14. Spitz's record of seven gold medals in a single Olympics was not surpassed until 2008 by Michael Phelps at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
Spitz was evacuated from Munich when 11 athletes and officials from Israel's Olympic team were kidnapped and later killed by Palestinian terrorists. Officials were worried that Spitz might be targeted because of his Jewish heritage. He had already finished his competition.
Retirement
Following the Munich Olympics, even though he was still only 22, Spitz retired from competition.
In 1999, Spitz ranked #33 on ESPN SportsCentury 50 Greatest Athletes, the only aquatic athlete to make the list.
Hall of Fame
International Swimming Hall of Fame, Inducted 1977.
International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame, Inducted 1979.
United States Olympic Hall of Fame, Inducted 1983.[14]
San Jose Sports Hall of Fame, inducted Wednesday, November 14, 2007.
National Jewish Museum Sports Hall of Fame, Inducted 2007.
Long Beach City College Hall of Fame, Inducted 2007
Indiana University Athletics Hall of Fame
Film and television career
After his retirement at age 22, his management tried to get him into show business while his name was still hot. In 1973–74, Spitz appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson and TV series such as The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour and Emergency! as paramedic Pete Barlow. Spitz went to work for ABC Sports in 1976 and worked on many sports presentations, including coverage of the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal and the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles.[20] In 1985 he appeared as a TV announcer in Challenge of a Lifetime. In 1998 he appeared in a TV commercial for Sony PlayStation—however, Spitz was clearly uncomfortable on camera, and he mostly had occasional bit spots in shows and commercials. His lackluster acting performances soon led to a cessation of movie and TV offers. He continued as a broadcaster for some time, but within a few years, he had all but vanished as a public figure.
In 2006 he received critical praise for his narration of Freedom's Fury, a Hungarian documentary about the Olympic water polo team's famous Blood in the Water match against Russia during the Revolution of 1956—considered the most famous match in water polo history. The film was executive produced by Quentin Tarantino and Lucy Liu, and made its debut at the Tribeca Film Festival.
In November 2007, Spitz made a cameo appearance on Amanda Beard's first television commercial (for GoDaddy) featuring her own seven Olympic medals (won between 1996–2004).
In a live, in-studio interview with KCRA host Mike TeSelle on June 14, 2008, Spitz commented that he no longer maintains his iconic mustache because it had become "too gray."
Personal life
Family life
When Spitz returned from the Olympics, he began dating the daughter of one of his father's business acquaintances after seeing her picture.[23] Suzy was a tougher sell. "She was disinterested," Spitz says. Less than a year after Munich, Spitz and Suzy Weiner, a UCLA theater student and part-time model, were married on May 6, 1973.[25] They have two sons: Matthew (b. October, 1981) and Justin (b. September, 1991).
Schooling
From 1964 to 1968 Mark attended the Santa Clara High School. After graduating he went on to Indiana University.
At Indiana University from 1968-72, he was a pre-dental student and member of Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity. Time Magazine asked him if he wanted to return to dental school after the Olympics. "I always wanted to be a dentist from the time I was in high school, and I was accepted to dental school in the spring of 1972. I was planning to go, but after the Olympics there were other opportunities. I did some television and speaking engagements, and things just went from there."
According to the Indiana University School of Dentistry, Mark Spitz was planning on attending in the fall of 1972, but instead he moved to California. He was quoted in the Chicago Tribune in June, 2004 saying, “I’m probably the most famous dentist who never became a dentist in the world.”
Job and career
Soon after his return to the U.S., Spitz landed several lucrative corporate endorsement contracts. He earned about $7 million in a two-year period.[28] He bought a Ferrari and says he made more than $1 million when he started a very successful real-estate company in Beverly Hills.[22] "A million dollars in 1972 would be equivalent to more than $10 million today," Spitz said. "I did very well, thank you very much."[29] "I would say I was a pioneer. There wasn't anyone who'd gone to the Olympics before me who capitalized the same way on opportunity. It depends on timing, it depends on hype, it depends on the economy, and most importantly, it depends on looks. I mean, I've never seen a magazine of uglies. That's our society. I'm not saying it's right. That's just the facts."
Per his official Web site, Spitz is currently self-employed as a corporate spokesperson and motivational speaker. However, Sports Yahoo! lists his occupation as a stock broker and motivational speaker.[31] According to a recent interview "Spitz became a stockbroker in 2002 and has since moved into private equity. He is now also dabbling in the "water business," as he calls it, and is in negotiations to build a water-bottling facility on aquifer-rich land that he and a business partner own.
He has pursued various entrepreneurial projects with former NBA player Rick Barry. He travels the world delivering about 25 lectures a year, and has just written a memoir, The Extraordinary Life of An Olympic Champion.
Hobbies
His hobbies include sailing, skiing and collecting art.[34] He has been involved in blue water ocean racing (sailing) and in the summer of 1981 competed in his third Trans-Pac Yacht Race from Los Angeles to Hawaii, finishing third.
People always asked Spitz, "Do you still swim?" Remarkably, the answer most of the time was "no."
Iconic mustache during Olympics
In an era when other swimmers, male and female were shaving body hair, he swam with a mustache. When asked why he initially grew one he stated "I grew the mustache because a coach in college said I couldn't grow one." Spitz said he originally grew the mustache as a form of rebellion against the clean-cut look imposed on him in college. “It took a long time to grow,” he said.It took four months to grow, but Spitz was proud of it, he decided the mustache was a "good-luck piece."
Mark Spitz is quoted as saying, "When I went to the Olympics, I had every intention of shaving the mustache off, but I realized I was getting so many comments about it--and everybody was talking about it--that I decided to keep it. I had some fun with a Russian coach who asked me if my mustache slowed me down. I said, "No, as a matter of fact, it deflects water away from my mouth, allows my rear end to rise and make me bullet-shaped in the water, and that's what had allowed me to swim so great. He's translating as fast as he can for the other coaches, and the following year every Russian male swimmer had a mustache."
According to a Sports Illustrated article, on Valentine's Day in 1988, after talking about shaving off his mustache for a year, he finally did. "He looked great with it, don't get me wrong," explained Suzy, "but he looks so handsome without it."
When he was asked why he shaved it off he responded "well, one - I'm not swimming anymore, two - it started to turn gray, and three - my wife had never seen me, nor my family, without the mustache... I'm happy [without it]."
Source: wikipedia.org
Tags: mark spitz wikipedia,mark spitz wiki,mark spitz bio,mark spitz biography,mark spitz photo
Mark Spitz Biography
Name : Mark Spitz
Birth Name : Mark Andrew Spitz
Date of Birth : 10 February 1950
Place of Birth : Modesto, California, USA
Height : 6' 1''
Nationality : American
Profession : Sportsman (Swimmer)
Mark Spitz Trivia
Winner of an unprecedented 7 gold medals in swimming at the 1972 Munich Olympics. Winner of 2 gold medals in the 1968 Mexico City olympics.
Sons: Matthew (b. 1981) and Justin (b. 1991)
Considered the swiftest swimmer of all time, made his big splash during the 1972 Olympics, becoming the first athlete to win seven gold medals in an Olympiad. His performances were even more remarkable considering world records were set in all seven events.
Still only aged 22, he retired from swimming after the Munich Olympics.
After he won the 200m free-style in the 1972 (Munich) Olympics, he celebrated by swinging his sneakers in front of the cameras. He had to explain to the organizing comitee that he was just euphoric, not doing publicity.
In the 1967 Pan-American Games (Winnipeg), he won 5 gold medals.
Inducted into the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame, 1983 (charter member).
American swimming sensation 19-year old Michael Phelps aspired to break Spitz's record of 7 gold medals, at the Athens Olympics. Phelps, however, had to settle for 8 medals, 6 gold, and 2 bronze, respectively.
Idol of Australian freestyle swimmer and 9-time Olympic champion, Ian Thorpe.
Mark Spitz Detailed Biography
American swimmer Mark Spitz achieved an Olympic record in 1972 that may never be equalled: seven gold medals. Perhaps no one athlete put more pressure on himself than American swimmer Mark Spitz. The athlete's bold predictions and cocky disposition made it almost impossible for him to live up to the standards he was setting for himself. Mark Spitz began swimming at the age of two and as far back as he could remember, he ruled the pool. Mark Spitz held 17 national records (for his age group) at the age of ten and was named "the world's best 10-and-under swimmer." At age 16, he won his first AAU National Championship. And the following year he won five gold medals at the 1967 Pan American Games and laid claim to ten world records. He couldn't help but think he was the best. So before the 1968 games in Mexico City, Spitz predicted he would accomplish what no one else had to win six gold medals. Mark Spitz ended up with two team golds, plus an individual silver and bronze. It's tough for someone to be disappointed with four Olympic medals, but Spitz was.
Mark Spitz spent the next four years at Indiana University, winning almost every conceivable award, setting almost every world record in existence, and preparing himself for the 1972 Olympics in Munich. At Munich, not only did Spitz win the six golds he predicted four years before he won seven! And not only did he win all seven, but world records were set in each event. He won four individual golds in the 200m butterfly, the 200m freestyle, the 100m butterfly and the 100m freestyle. Mark Spitz also added three team golds as the United States won the 4x100m freestyle relay, the 4x200m relay, and the 4x100 medley relay. It was the greatest performance by an Olympic athlete in history. Tragedy then struck the 1972 games as Palestinian terrorists killed two Israelis and taking nine others hostage. Spitz, who is Jewish, left Germany for London before the closing ceremonies. The nine hostages were later killed.
Mark Spitz's performance coupled with his good looks made Spitz an instant celebrity back in the states. A host of endorsements and a short-lived television career followed but he eventually settled in to a profitable real estate career. Seventeen years later, at the age of 39, Mark Spitz began training again with the hopes of earning a spot on the 1992 Olympic team. The familiar mustache was gone but the fire remained. Alas Mark Spitz fell short in qualifying and had to settle for a whopping career total of 11 Olympic medals. Olympic champion Mark Spitz is available for personal appearances at your next event - contact us today to arrange an appearance.
Source: http://www.netglimse.com
Tags: mark spitz biography,mark spitz gold medals,mark spitz olympics,mark spitz photo,mark spitz bio,mark spitz 1972
Birth Name : Mark Andrew Spitz
Date of Birth : 10 February 1950
Place of Birth : Modesto, California, USA
Height : 6' 1''
Nationality : American
Profession : Sportsman (Swimmer)
Mark Spitz Trivia
Winner of an unprecedented 7 gold medals in swimming at the 1972 Munich Olympics. Winner of 2 gold medals in the 1968 Mexico City olympics.
Sons: Matthew (b. 1981) and Justin (b. 1991)
Considered the swiftest swimmer of all time, made his big splash during the 1972 Olympics, becoming the first athlete to win seven gold medals in an Olympiad. His performances were even more remarkable considering world records were set in all seven events.
Still only aged 22, he retired from swimming after the Munich Olympics.
After he won the 200m free-style in the 1972 (Munich) Olympics, he celebrated by swinging his sneakers in front of the cameras. He had to explain to the organizing comitee that he was just euphoric, not doing publicity.
In the 1967 Pan-American Games (Winnipeg), he won 5 gold medals.
Inducted into the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame, 1983 (charter member).
American swimming sensation 19-year old Michael Phelps aspired to break Spitz's record of 7 gold medals, at the Athens Olympics. Phelps, however, had to settle for 8 medals, 6 gold, and 2 bronze, respectively.
Idol of Australian freestyle swimmer and 9-time Olympic champion, Ian Thorpe.
Mark Spitz Detailed Biography
American swimmer Mark Spitz achieved an Olympic record in 1972 that may never be equalled: seven gold medals. Perhaps no one athlete put more pressure on himself than American swimmer Mark Spitz. The athlete's bold predictions and cocky disposition made it almost impossible for him to live up to the standards he was setting for himself. Mark Spitz began swimming at the age of two and as far back as he could remember, he ruled the pool. Mark Spitz held 17 national records (for his age group) at the age of ten and was named "the world's best 10-and-under swimmer." At age 16, he won his first AAU National Championship. And the following year he won five gold medals at the 1967 Pan American Games and laid claim to ten world records. He couldn't help but think he was the best. So before the 1968 games in Mexico City, Spitz predicted he would accomplish what no one else had to win six gold medals. Mark Spitz ended up with two team golds, plus an individual silver and bronze. It's tough for someone to be disappointed with four Olympic medals, but Spitz was.
Mark Spitz spent the next four years at Indiana University, winning almost every conceivable award, setting almost every world record in existence, and preparing himself for the 1972 Olympics in Munich. At Munich, not only did Spitz win the six golds he predicted four years before he won seven! And not only did he win all seven, but world records were set in each event. He won four individual golds in the 200m butterfly, the 200m freestyle, the 100m butterfly and the 100m freestyle. Mark Spitz also added three team golds as the United States won the 4x100m freestyle relay, the 4x200m relay, and the 4x100 medley relay. It was the greatest performance by an Olympic athlete in history. Tragedy then struck the 1972 games as Palestinian terrorists killed two Israelis and taking nine others hostage. Spitz, who is Jewish, left Germany for London before the closing ceremonies. The nine hostages were later killed.
Mark Spitz's performance coupled with his good looks made Spitz an instant celebrity back in the states. A host of endorsements and a short-lived television career followed but he eventually settled in to a profitable real estate career. Seventeen years later, at the age of 39, Mark Spitz began training again with the hopes of earning a spot on the 1992 Olympic team. The familiar mustache was gone but the fire remained. Alas Mark Spitz fell short in qualifying and had to settle for a whopping career total of 11 Olympic medals. Olympic champion Mark Spitz is available for personal appearances at your next event - contact us today to arrange an appearance.
Source: http://www.netglimse.com
Tags: mark spitz biography,mark spitz gold medals,mark spitz olympics,mark spitz photo,mark spitz bio,mark spitz 1972
Michael Phelps Mother
Michael Phelps Mother : Debbie Phelps
Michael Phelps Parents: Fred and Debbie Phelps (divorced)
Michael Phelps Profile:
Date of Birth : 30 June 1985, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
Birth Name : Michael Fred Phelps
Nickname : Flying Fish
Height : 6' 4" (1.93 m)
Michael Phelps Mini Biography
Michael Phelps is the newest phenomenon to take the swimming world by storm. Before the Olympics started, rumor had it that a 19 year-old from Baltimore was thinking of trying to match or even surpass Mark Spitz's legendary seven gold medals. By his fourth race with one gold and two bronze it was obvious he couldn't tie it but instead he could match Russian gymanst's Alexander Dityatin's record of eight medals in one Olympics. Every race after the two bronze he came away with gold. After his seventh race he did a truly noble thing by handing over his butterfly leg on the 4 x 200m Freestyle relay to Ian Crocker a rival and now a friend. To everyone this was deemed the most selfless act of the games but to Michael it was just giving his team mate another chance. Throughout the entire week of competition he barely managed to sleep so when he finally got to rest he went to check out how the dominant women's teams were doing and enjoying the culture and atmosphere in Athens. The success in Athens was amazing and now he will begin training for the 2008 Olympics in Bejing.
IMDb Mini Biography By: Annie Bansmer
Trade Mark
His black Cadillac Escalade
The Condor Flap: to loosen up for a swimming competition, he bends over and flaps his long arms up and down like a large bird.
Trivia
Siblings: 2 sisters, Whitney (born 1978) and Hilary (born 1980)
Parents: Fred and Debbie Phelps (divorced)
He won 6 gold and 2 bronze medals at the 2004 Olympics in Athens, Greece.
Sponsors: Speedo, Omega, AT&T, Powerbar, Visa, Argent Mortgage
He was the youngest male Olympian since 1932 (he was only 15 when he made it in the 2000 Olympics).
Has a street named after him in his hometown Baltimore,Maryland.
First person under one minute and 55 seconds in 200m fly with world record swim.
His sister, Whitney, was a member of the 1995 World Championship team.
Became the youngest male swimmer ever to set a world record at the age of 15 years and nine months, breaking the record in the 200m butterfly.
Attending the University of Michigan (2004)
"Phelps Flys", winning 8 medals at the 2004 Olympics, was ranked #17 in TV Guide's list of the "25 Most Awesome Sports Moments (of the last 15 years)". [17 July 2005 issue]
Winner of the "Sports - Choice Athlete (male)" category at the 2005 Teen Choice Awards.
His feet have been referred to as "fins" by the media, because he wears a size 14 shoe. His wing span measures in at 6 foot 7 inches.
Graduated from Towson High School (2003).
World Swimmer of the Year in 2003, 2004 and 2006.
Has won 17 titles at World Championships between 2001 and 2007.
Currently holds six long course world records.
Grew up in the Rodgers Forge section of Baltimore County just south of Towson.
Michael PhelpsPersonal Quotes:
"Winning the gold in Greece was a dream come true but going on this tour with Ian and Lenny and meeting the young swimming stars of tomorrow has been simply incredible."
"I have my family and friends, so really I'm just another high school kid."
"I listen to Eminem on my headphones. I don't know the name of it but I think that just listening to that fires me up. It's working so far I just hope it keeps up." - Michael Phelps
Where Are They Now
(October 2004) Resting up a sore back at home and getting ready to start training at University of Michigan.
Source: http://www.imdb.com
Photo Credit: timesonline.co.uk
Michael Phelps Parents: Fred and Debbie Phelps (divorced)
Michael Phelps Profile:
Date of Birth : 30 June 1985, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
Birth Name : Michael Fred Phelps
Nickname : Flying Fish
Height : 6' 4" (1.93 m)
Michael Phelps Mini Biography
Michael Phelps is the newest phenomenon to take the swimming world by storm. Before the Olympics started, rumor had it that a 19 year-old from Baltimore was thinking of trying to match or even surpass Mark Spitz's legendary seven gold medals. By his fourth race with one gold and two bronze it was obvious he couldn't tie it but instead he could match Russian gymanst's Alexander Dityatin's record of eight medals in one Olympics. Every race after the two bronze he came away with gold. After his seventh race he did a truly noble thing by handing over his butterfly leg on the 4 x 200m Freestyle relay to Ian Crocker a rival and now a friend. To everyone this was deemed the most selfless act of the games but to Michael it was just giving his team mate another chance. Throughout the entire week of competition he barely managed to sleep so when he finally got to rest he went to check out how the dominant women's teams were doing and enjoying the culture and atmosphere in Athens. The success in Athens was amazing and now he will begin training for the 2008 Olympics in Bejing.
IMDb Mini Biography By: Annie Bansmer
Trade Mark
His black Cadillac Escalade
The Condor Flap: to loosen up for a swimming competition, he bends over and flaps his long arms up and down like a large bird.
Trivia
Siblings: 2 sisters, Whitney (born 1978) and Hilary (born 1980)
Parents: Fred and Debbie Phelps (divorced)
He won 6 gold and 2 bronze medals at the 2004 Olympics in Athens, Greece.
Sponsors: Speedo, Omega, AT&T, Powerbar, Visa, Argent Mortgage
He was the youngest male Olympian since 1932 (he was only 15 when he made it in the 2000 Olympics).
Has a street named after him in his hometown Baltimore,Maryland.
First person under one minute and 55 seconds in 200m fly with world record swim.
His sister, Whitney, was a member of the 1995 World Championship team.
Became the youngest male swimmer ever to set a world record at the age of 15 years and nine months, breaking the record in the 200m butterfly.
Attending the University of Michigan (2004)
"Phelps Flys", winning 8 medals at the 2004 Olympics, was ranked #17 in TV Guide's list of the "25 Most Awesome Sports Moments (of the last 15 years)". [17 July 2005 issue]
Winner of the "Sports - Choice Athlete (male)" category at the 2005 Teen Choice Awards.
His feet have been referred to as "fins" by the media, because he wears a size 14 shoe. His wing span measures in at 6 foot 7 inches.
Graduated from Towson High School (2003).
World Swimmer of the Year in 2003, 2004 and 2006.
Has won 17 titles at World Championships between 2001 and 2007.
Currently holds six long course world records.
Grew up in the Rodgers Forge section of Baltimore County just south of Towson.
Michael PhelpsPersonal Quotes:
"Winning the gold in Greece was a dream come true but going on this tour with Ian and Lenny and meeting the young swimming stars of tomorrow has been simply incredible."
"I have my family and friends, so really I'm just another high school kid."
"I listen to Eminem on my headphones. I don't know the name of it but I think that just listening to that fires me up. It's working so far I just hope it keeps up." - Michael Phelps
Where Are They Now
(October 2004) Resting up a sore back at home and getting ready to start training at University of Michigan.
Source: http://www.imdb.com
Photo Credit: timesonline.co.uk
Debbie Phelps puts her hand on the USA's Olympic hero and her son Michael Phelps
Debbie Phelps has a hand in sharing son's Olympic glory
Debbie Phelps puts her hand on the USA's Olympic hero and her son Michael Phelps after he completed his goal of winning eight gold medals at the Beijing Games.
BEIJING — Over the last nine days, Debbie Phelps has met President Bush and the First Lady. She's had Kobe Bryant and LeBron James blowing her kisses from across a packed arena.
Friends told her the Baltimore Ravens showed her son swimming on the Jumbotron during a preseason game, that Bruce Springsteen dedicated the song Born in the USA to him during a concert.
And she's watched her son, 23-year-old Michael Phelps, win a record eight Olympic gold medals, the single greatest Olympic performance ever. He also has the most career golds of any Olympian, with 14.
"It's just like, 'Wow.' It's so much to embrace, to put your arms around," she says.
She could do little more over those nine days than give her son a hug and a rub on the head every day as he stopped to say hello while walking around the pool deck with another gold medal hanging around his neck. Each time he gave her the flowers he got on the medals podium — her hotel room now looks like a florist shop.
She's having the flowers preserved, she says. Her son is saving every swim cap, every suit, every pair of goggles and every article of clothing he wore.
"I have the memories, I have pictures, I'll have the medals forever," Phelps says.
He's likely to have the eight-golds record for a very long time. It had been 36 years since Mark Spitz won seven golds at the 1972 Olympics.
"The Olympic Games live on heroes," International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge said as he left the Water Cube after watching Phelps' final race, in the 4x100-meter medley relay, on Sunday. "How do you compare him to (legendary Finnish runner) Paavo Nurmi? To Jesse Owens? Michael is very high up there, in a very elite league."
It had been eight years since Phelps first put Spitz's mark in his sights. At the 2004 Olympics, Phelps finished just short of it, with six gold and eight bronze medals.
"What he did still is an amazing feat," Phelps says of Spitz, "and will always be an amazing accomplishment in the swimming world and also the Olympics. Being able to have something like that to shoot for, I think, it made those days when you were tired and didn't want to be there and you just wanted to go home and sleep (instead of) work out — it made those days easier."
Phelps made some of his eight victories in Beijing look easy. He lowered his own world record in his first event, the 400-meter individual medley, by more than a second. He won the 200-meter freestyle by nearly two seconds.
Others were nail-biting dramatic. The U.S. men's victory in the 4x100-meter freestyle relay Monday took a superhuman anchor leg by Jason Lezak to pass France. Phelps' victory in the 100-meter butterfly Saturday took a miraculous finish by Phelps, who imperceptibly touched out silver medalist Milorad Cavic of Serbia for a winning margin of one one-hundredth of a second.
"The term 'Spitzean feat' might be kind of outdated now. It might be a 'Phelpsean feat,'" U.S. teammate Aaron Peirsol says..
The 100 fly was the only event in which Phelps did not set a world record. He was more disappointed, though, in his finishing time in the 200-meter butterfly. In that race, his goggles started filling with water as he dove in off the starting blocks. By the time he headed for his last turn, he couldn't see at all. He had to count strokes to know when to turn.
He ripped off his goggles in frustration when it was over. He had won and set a world record, but his time wasn't as fast as he set out to do.
No one watching was disappointed.
"Our whole country can be proud of him," says Peter Ueberroth, U.S. Olympic committee chairman. "Maybe in this era, nobody makes us prouder."
Bush told Phelps in a congratulatory call Sunday from his Texas ranch that "if you can handle eight gold medals, you can handle anything."
Through it all, even as Bush came to watch his first race and the NBA stars playing on the U.S. Olympic basketball team came to others, Phelps stayed even keel. While they were eating at the athletes' village, his U.S. swimming teammates would ask him if he realized what he was doing.
"He was like, 'Man, pizza's good today,'" Brendan Hansen says.
They could see what he was doing, and as the meet wore on, his teammates were asked many questions about it.
"I think years and years down the road we'll realize more and more how amazing he is and how special he really is," says Natalie Coughlin, who won six medals in Beijing.
Hansen tried to put it in context for non-swimming fans.
"He just made the pressure putt in the U.S. Open to win it, just won the Tour de France and he just knocked out Muhammad Ali in the last round. He just did all three of those things in a week," Hansen says.
The record-breaker came Sunday in the 4x100-meter medley relay, in which Peirsol swam the opening backstroke leg, Hansen the breaststroke leg, Phelps the butterfly leg and Lezak the anchor freestyle leg.
After Lezak climbed out of the water, the four U.S. swimmers huddled like a football team on the pool deck. In the huddle, Phelps' teammates congratulated him.
"We're all very proud — and I'll speak for myself especially — to be part of something as special as this and to end this wonderful meet on such a high note," Peirsol says.
When the huddle broke, Phelps acknowledged the crowd's cheers by raising both arms and pumping his fists in the air. Moments later, he stepped on the medal podium for an eighth and final time, his eyes welling up as they had been all week as he watched the U.S. flag raised and listened to the national anthem.
"I don't want to forget anything that happened," Phelps says. "With getting emotional like I was on the awards stands, those are moments and experiences that will live with me forever."
They'll live with his mom as well, who let the tears flow every time she saw her son on the podium.
"There's not one single word that can express how I feel," she says. "I can say proud, I can say honored, I can say it's a performance you want to see your child achieve."
Source: http://www.usatoday.com
Debbie Phelps puts her hand on the USA's Olympic hero and her son Michael Phelps after he completed his goal of winning eight gold medals at the Beijing Games.
BEIJING — Over the last nine days, Debbie Phelps has met President Bush and the First Lady. She's had Kobe Bryant and LeBron James blowing her kisses from across a packed arena.
Friends told her the Baltimore Ravens showed her son swimming on the Jumbotron during a preseason game, that Bruce Springsteen dedicated the song Born in the USA to him during a concert.
And she's watched her son, 23-year-old Michael Phelps, win a record eight Olympic gold medals, the single greatest Olympic performance ever. He also has the most career golds of any Olympian, with 14.
"It's just like, 'Wow.' It's so much to embrace, to put your arms around," she says.
She could do little more over those nine days than give her son a hug and a rub on the head every day as he stopped to say hello while walking around the pool deck with another gold medal hanging around his neck. Each time he gave her the flowers he got on the medals podium — her hotel room now looks like a florist shop.
She's having the flowers preserved, she says. Her son is saving every swim cap, every suit, every pair of goggles and every article of clothing he wore.
"I have the memories, I have pictures, I'll have the medals forever," Phelps says.
He's likely to have the eight-golds record for a very long time. It had been 36 years since Mark Spitz won seven golds at the 1972 Olympics.
"The Olympic Games live on heroes," International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge said as he left the Water Cube after watching Phelps' final race, in the 4x100-meter medley relay, on Sunday. "How do you compare him to (legendary Finnish runner) Paavo Nurmi? To Jesse Owens? Michael is very high up there, in a very elite league."
It had been eight years since Phelps first put Spitz's mark in his sights. At the 2004 Olympics, Phelps finished just short of it, with six gold and eight bronze medals.
"What he did still is an amazing feat," Phelps says of Spitz, "and will always be an amazing accomplishment in the swimming world and also the Olympics. Being able to have something like that to shoot for, I think, it made those days when you were tired and didn't want to be there and you just wanted to go home and sleep (instead of) work out — it made those days easier."
Phelps made some of his eight victories in Beijing look easy. He lowered his own world record in his first event, the 400-meter individual medley, by more than a second. He won the 200-meter freestyle by nearly two seconds.
Others were nail-biting dramatic. The U.S. men's victory in the 4x100-meter freestyle relay Monday took a superhuman anchor leg by Jason Lezak to pass France. Phelps' victory in the 100-meter butterfly Saturday took a miraculous finish by Phelps, who imperceptibly touched out silver medalist Milorad Cavic of Serbia for a winning margin of one one-hundredth of a second.
"The term 'Spitzean feat' might be kind of outdated now. It might be a 'Phelpsean feat,'" U.S. teammate Aaron Peirsol says..
The 100 fly was the only event in which Phelps did not set a world record. He was more disappointed, though, in his finishing time in the 200-meter butterfly. In that race, his goggles started filling with water as he dove in off the starting blocks. By the time he headed for his last turn, he couldn't see at all. He had to count strokes to know when to turn.
He ripped off his goggles in frustration when it was over. He had won and set a world record, but his time wasn't as fast as he set out to do.
No one watching was disappointed.
"Our whole country can be proud of him," says Peter Ueberroth, U.S. Olympic committee chairman. "Maybe in this era, nobody makes us prouder."
Bush told Phelps in a congratulatory call Sunday from his Texas ranch that "if you can handle eight gold medals, you can handle anything."
Through it all, even as Bush came to watch his first race and the NBA stars playing on the U.S. Olympic basketball team came to others, Phelps stayed even keel. While they were eating at the athletes' village, his U.S. swimming teammates would ask him if he realized what he was doing.
"He was like, 'Man, pizza's good today,'" Brendan Hansen says.
They could see what he was doing, and as the meet wore on, his teammates were asked many questions about it.
"I think years and years down the road we'll realize more and more how amazing he is and how special he really is," says Natalie Coughlin, who won six medals in Beijing.
Hansen tried to put it in context for non-swimming fans.
"He just made the pressure putt in the U.S. Open to win it, just won the Tour de France and he just knocked out Muhammad Ali in the last round. He just did all three of those things in a week," Hansen says.
The record-breaker came Sunday in the 4x100-meter medley relay, in which Peirsol swam the opening backstroke leg, Hansen the breaststroke leg, Phelps the butterfly leg and Lezak the anchor freestyle leg.
After Lezak climbed out of the water, the four U.S. swimmers huddled like a football team on the pool deck. In the huddle, Phelps' teammates congratulated him.
"We're all very proud — and I'll speak for myself especially — to be part of something as special as this and to end this wonderful meet on such a high note," Peirsol says.
When the huddle broke, Phelps acknowledged the crowd's cheers by raising both arms and pumping his fists in the air. Moments later, he stepped on the medal podium for an eighth and final time, his eyes welling up as they had been all week as he watched the U.S. flag raised and listened to the national anthem.
"I don't want to forget anything that happened," Phelps says. "With getting emotional like I was on the awards stands, those are moments and experiences that will live with me forever."
They'll live with his mom as well, who let the tears flow every time she saw her son on the podium.
"There's not one single word that can express how I feel," she says. "I can say proud, I can say honored, I can say it's a performance you want to see your child achieve."
Source: http://www.usatoday.com
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