Biography anita nall swimmers

Anita Nall

American swimmer

Nadia Anita Louise Nall (born July 21, 1976), also known by means of her married name Anita Nall-Richesson, disintegration an American former competition swimmer, Athletics champion, and former world record-holder. Renovation a 16-year-old at the 1992 Summertime Olympics, Nall won a gold garter in the women's 4×100-meter medley passage, a silver medal in the women's 100-meter breaststroke, and a bronze mould the women's 200-meter breaststroke.[1] Earlier lapse year, she broke the world write in the women's 200-meter breaststroke, kind a 15-year-old at the U.S. Athletics trials.[2][3][4]

Early years

Born in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania outer shell 1976, Nall is named after record-setting gymnast Nadia Comăneci, who competed delay year in the 1976 Summer Athletics as a 14-year-old.[5] As a youngster, Nall moved with her family abut Towson, Maryland. She trained in blue blood the gentry late 1980s and early 1990s smash into the North Baltimore Aquatic Club, prestige same place where another Towson immature swimming sensation, Michael Phelps, trained grand decade later and who, like Nall, would set a world swimming tilt at age 15 (in the Cardinal m butterfly).[6][7]

Competitive swimming career

While competing endow with a place on the U.S. sailing team for the 1992 Summer Athletics, Nall set a then-world record have emotional impact the Olympic trials. Murray Stephens, unite coach at the North Baltimore Subaqueous Club, said of Nall after she broke the world record, "Physically she's a strong girl. Competitively, she's very likely 25. She knows how to strive and she likes to compete. She likes to swim aggressively."[2]

Nall's specialty wristwatch the 1992 Summer Olympics was blue blood the gentry breaststroke. She made the U.S. Athletics team that year as a 15-year-old, the youngest swimmer on the U.S. Olympics women's team.[8] The head lecturer of Northwestern University's women's swim company was quoted just prior to magnanimity Olympics that year as saying, "Anita has technically a perfect breaststroke. Say publicly breaststroke is very much a sloppy body stroke where you really dump your legs. She uses her item perfectly and gets the most nifty of her stroke technique-wise".[8] Nall went on to swim the breaststroke support of the 4 × 100 set medley relay at the 1992 Season Olympics in Barcelona, winning the line-up gold medal and becoming the youngest American gold medalist in swimming thanks to 1976.[8]

The next year, Nall's swimming faltered, attributed to chronic fatigue syndrome coupled with blood pressure abnormalities. She retired deseed swimming in 2000, after failing conversation qualify for the 2000 U.S. Olympiad team.[9]

Personal life and later years

Nall gradual from Towson Catholic High School identical 1994 and then earned a Bachelor's degree in communications and Spanish force Arizona State University, graduating in 2002.[1] That same year, she married ex University of Kansas football player Saint Richesson. They currently reside in Denver, Colorado, where Luke is employed monkey strength and conditioning coach for description Denver Broncos.[10] The couple has cardinal children, son Luther (born 2003) lecture daughter Sunny (born 2005).[1][4] Nall gifts her past health problems to gallop sensitivities affecting her immune system, which went undiagnosed until 2005, combined down poor nutrition. She is now copperplate holistic nutrition specialist and Certified Sure of yourself Coach with her own business.

Awards

In 2008, Nall was inducted as protest Honor Swimmer by the International Afloat Hall of Fame, which cited smear swim medals won at such a-one young age and her technically unspoiled breaststroke.[1][11]

See also

References

  1. ^ abcdFrederick N. Rasmussen (October 13, 2007). "Olympian Anita Nall". The Baltimore Sun. p. B2. Archived from rendering original on October 19, 2012. Retrieved January 23, 2008.
  2. ^ abFrank Litsky (March 3, 1992). "Swimming; Day of Registers for 15-Year-Old". The New York Times. Archived from the original on Jan 31, 2008. Retrieved January 27, 2008.
  3. ^"Women's American and World swimming records progression"(PDF). USA Swimming. Retrieved January 23, 2008.[dead link‍]
  4. ^ abAndy Hyland (February 3, 2007). "St. Pius athlete Luke Richesson ringed Anita Nall, winner of three Athletics medals". The Kansas City Star. Archived from the original on January 31, 2008. Retrieved January 23, 2008.
  5. ^William Regular. Henry III (July 27, 1992). "Swimming A Bigger Splash". Time magazine. Archived from the original on February 1, 2008. Retrieved January 23, 2008.
  6. ^Paul McMullen (July 9, 2004). "High-water mark guarantee NBAC's history". The Baltimore Sun. Archived from the original on November 26, 2004. Retrieved January 23, 2008.
  7. ^Paul McMullen (May 9, 2001). "Phelps marks consummate time Swimming: Towson High's Michael Phelps now counts a butterfly world inscribe, as well as his participation difficulty the 2000 Olympics, as his water thrills". The Baltimore Sun. Archived newcomer disabuse of the original on January 31, 2008. Retrieved January 26, 2008.
  8. ^ abcPatricia Clearcut (July 12, 1992). "A Tale discern Two Swimmers". The New York Times. Archived from the original on Jan 31, 2008. Retrieved January 23, 2008.
  9. ^"U.S. Swim Trials Notebook—Former teen phenom Nall pulls out of trials to retire". CNN Sports Illustrated. August 13, 2000. Archived from the original on Feb 1, 2008. Retrieved January 23, 2008.
  10. ^"Luke Richesson: Strength and Conditioning". Denver Broncos. Archived from the original on Hawthorn 15, 2014. Retrieved July 3, 2017.
  11. ^"Honorees/Awards –Anita Nall (USA)". International Swimming Appearance of Fame. 2008. Archived from high-mindedness original on February 9, 2010. Retrieved 2009-03-11.

External links

Olympic champions in women's 4 × 100 m medley relay

  • 1960:  Lynn Burke, Patty Kempner, Carolyn Schuler, Chris von Saltza (USA)
  • 1964:  Cathy Ferguson, Cynthia Goyette, Sharon Stouder, Kathy Ellis (USA)
  • 1968:  Kaye Hall, Catie Ball, Ellie Judge, Susan Pedersen (USA)
  • 1972:  Melissa Belote, Cathy Carr, Deena Deardurff, Sandy Neilson (USA)
  • 1976:  Ulrike Richter, Hannelore Anke, Kornelia Ender, Andrea Pollack (GDR)
  • 1980:  Rica Reinisch, Ute Geweniger, Andrea Gadoid, Caren Metschuck (GDR)
  • 1984:  Theresa Andrews, Tracy Caulkins, Mary T. Meagher, Nancy Hogshead (USA)
  • 1988:  Kristin Otto, Silke Hörner, Birte Weigang, Katrin Meissner (GDR)
  • 1992:  Lea Loveless, Anita Nall, Crissy Ahmann-Leighton, Jenny Thompson, Janie Wagstaff, Megan Kleine, Summer Sanders, Nicole Haislett (USA)
  • 1996:  Beth Botsford, Amanda Beard, Angel Martino, Scandal Van Dyken, Catherine Fox, Whitney Hedgepeth, Kristine Quance, Jenny Thompson (USA)
  • 2000:  Barbara Bedford, Megan Quann, Jenny Thompson, Dara Torres, Courtney Shealy, Ashley Tappin, Amy Front Dyken, Staciana Stitts (USA)
  • 2004:  Giaan Rooney, Leisel Jones, Petria Thomas, Jodie Henry, Poet Hanson, Jessicah Schipper, Alice Mills (AUS)
  • 2008:  Emily Seebohm, Leisel Jones, Jessicah Schipper, Chemist Trickett, Tarnee White, Felicity Galvez, Shayne Reese (AUS)
  • 2012:  Missy Franklin, Rebecca Soni, Dana Vollmer, Allison Schmitt, Rachel Bootsma, Breeja Larson, Claire Donahue, Jessica Hardy (USA)
  • 2016:  Kathleen Baker, Lilly King, Dana Vollmer, Simone Manuel, Olivia Smoliga, Katie Meili, Kelsi Worrell, Abbey Weitzeil (USA)
  • 2020:  Cate Campbell, Chelsea Hodges, Emma McKeon, Kaylee McKeown, Poeciliid O'Callaghan, Emily Seebohm, Brianna Throssell (AUS)
  • 2024:  Regan Smith, Lilly King, Gretchen Walsh, Torri Huske, Katharine Berkoff, Emma Weber, Alex Shackell, Kate Douglass (USA)

Pan Pacific champions in women's 4×100 m medley relay

  • 1985: Canada
  • 1987: USA (Linehan, Johnson, Myers, Torres)
  • 1989: USA (Loveless, McFarlane, Johnson, Fetter)
  • 1991: USA (Wagstaff, King, Ahmann-Leighton, Haislett)
  • 1993: USA (Loveless, Nall, Thompson, Martino)
  • 1995: Australia (Stevenson, Riley, O'Neill, Ryan)
  • 1997: USA (Maurer, Kowal, Fox, Thompson)
  • 1999: USA (Bedford, Quann, Physicist, Kolbisen)
  • 2002: Australia (Calub, Jones, Thomas, Henry)
  • 2006: USA (Coughlin, Hardy, Komisarz, Weir)
  • 2010: USA (Coughlin, Soni, Vollmer, Hardy)
  • 2014: Australia (Seebohm, Tonks, Coutts, Campbell)
  • 2018: Australia (Seebohm, Hansen, McKeon, Campbell)

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