*** Welcome to piglix ***

Duncan Armstrong

Duncan Armstrong
Personal information
Full name Duncan John D'Arcy Armstrong
National team  Australia
Born (1968-04-07) 7 April 1968 (age 48)
Rockhampton, Queensland
Height 188 cm (6 ft 2 in)
Weight 74 kg (163 lb)
Sport
Sport Swimming
Strokes Freestyle
Club Western Australia
College team University of Florida

Duncan John D'Arcy Armstrong, OAM, (born 7 April 1968) is an Australian former competitive swimmer, Olympic champion, and former world record-holder. Armstrong is best remembered for winning a gold and silver medal at the 1988 Summer Olympics.

Armstrong was born in the Queensland city of Rockhampton, and began swimming at the age of 5. Convinced of his potential as a competitive swimmer, his family moved to Brisbane and he began training with the A.C.I. Lawrence Swimming Club as a teenager under flamboyant coach Laurie Lawrence. While training with coach Laurie Lawrence, Armstrong swam alongside 1984 Olympic gold medalist Jon Sieben; he viewed Sieben as a role model, and emulating Sieben's Olympic success became Armstrong's goal. He attended the selective Brisbane State High School in Brisbane, where was captain of the school swim team. Armstrong graduated from State High in 1985.

Armstrong made his international swimming debut in the 1986 Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh, Scotland. He won his first gold medal in the 400-metre freestyle in dramatic fashion by surging from behind, after he trailed by nearly 25 metres at the midway point of the race. Armstrong received his second gold medal as a member of the winning Australian team in the 4×200-metre freestyle relay.

Armstrong arrived in Seoul for the 1988 Summer Olympics, ranked 46th in the world, and facing the trio of past and current world record holders in the men's 200-metre freestyle, Matt Biondi of the United States, Artur Wojdat of Poland, and Michael Gross of West Germany. As a back-end swimmer, Lawrence planned for Armstrong to swim as close to Biondi's adjacent lane as possible, with Armstrong effectively drafting or surfing the American's wake. At 150 metres, Armstrong was in third place, but he surged past Sweden's Anders Holmertz and then Biondi in the final five metres to claim the gold medal with a new world record time of 1 minute 47.25 seconds. Holmertz placed second (1:47.89), and Biondi finished third (1:47.99).


...
Wikipedia

...