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Kirsty Coventry

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Full name
  
Kirsty Leigh Coventry

College team
  
Weight
  
62 kg

National team
  
Name
  
Kirsty Coventry

Spouse
  
Tyrone Seward (m. 2013)

Sport
  
Role
  
Swimmer

Education
  
Club
  
Longhorn Aquatics

Height
  
1.73 m


Kirsty Coventry dataamiritenetquoteauthorimages52a639e056649jpg

Born
  
16 September 1983 (age 40) (
1983-09-16
)
Harare, Zimbabwe

Olympic medals
  
Swimming at the 2008 Summer Olympics – Women's 200 metre backstroke

Similar People
  
Profiles

Wada talks with kirsty coventry


Kirsty Leigh Coventry (born 16 September 1983, Harare) is a Zimbabwean former swimmer and former world record holder. She attended and swam competitively for Auburn University in Alabama, in the United States. At the 2004 Summer Olympics, in Athens, Greece, Coventry won three Olympic medals: a gold, a silver, and a bronze, while in the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing she won four medals: a gold and three silver. She was subsequently described by Paul Chingoka, head of the Zimbabwe Olympic Committee, as "our national treasure". Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe has called her "a golden girl," and awarded her US$100,000 in cash for her 2008 Olympic performance.

Contents

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Another world record for swimmer kirsty coventry


Biography

Kirsty Coventry Kirsty Coventry named the Female African Swimmer of the

Coventry attended Dominican Convent High School, Harare in Zimbabwe. In 2000, while still in high school, Coventry became the first Zimbabwean swimmer to reach the semifinals at the Olympics and was named Zimbabwe's Sports Woman of the Year.

Kirsty Coventry For The Record 7

As a student at Auburn University, Coventry helped lead the Tigers to National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Championships in 2003 and 2004. In 2005, she was the top individual scorer at the NCAA Championships and captured three individual titles including the 200-yard and 400 y individual medley (IM), and the 200 y backstroke for the second consecutive season. She was named the College Swimming Coaches Association Swimmer of the Meet for her efforts. Other awards include 2005 Southeastern Conference (SEC) Swimmer of the Year, and the 2004–05 SEC Female Athlete of the Year. She was also the recipient of the 2004–05 Honda Sports Award for Swimming and Diving, recognizing her as the outstanding college female swimmer of the year.

Kirsty Coventry PANGOLIN AMBASSADOR KIRSTY COVENTRY

At the 2005 World Championships in Montreal, Coventry improved on her 2004 Olympic medal count by winning gold in both the 100 m and 200 m backstroke and silver in the 200 m and the 400 m IM. She bettered her Olympic gold-winning 200 m backstroke time with a performance of 2:08.52. Although she was one of just two swimmers from Zimbabwe excluding rising junior Warren Paynter. Her performance allowed her country to rank third in the medal count by nation. In addition, she picked up the female swimmer of the meet honors.

In Melbourne at the 2007 World Championships, Coventry won silver medals in the 200 m backstroke and 200 m IM. She was disqualified in the 400 m IM when finishing second to eventual winner Katie Hoff in her heat. Coventry finished in a disappointing 14th place in the 100 m backstroke in a time of 1:01.73, failing to qualify for the final. She continued her good form of 2007 by winning four gold medals at the International Swim Meet in Narashino, Japan. She led the way in the 200 m and 400 m IM as well as the 100 m and 200 m backstroke.

In 2008, Coventry broke her first world record in the 200 m backstroke at the Missouri Grand Prix. She bettered the mark set by Krisztina Egerszegi in August 1991, the second oldest swimming world record. Her new record was 2:06:39. Coventry continued her winning streak at the meet by winning the 100 m backstroke and the 200 m IM. Coventry is the third woman in history to break the 1:00 minute barrier in the 100 m backstroke, and the second to break the 59-second barrier.

At the 2008 Manchester Short Course World Championships, Coventry broke her second world record, setting a time, whilst winning the gold medal, of 4:26:52 in the 400 m IM. The following day saw Coventry win her second gold medal of the championships in the 100 m backstroke. Her time of 57:10 was a new championship record and the second fastest time in history in the event. Only Natalie Coughlin has swum faster (56:51). Day three of the championships saw Coventry break another championship record in qualifying fastest for the final of the 200 m backstroke. Her time of 2:03:69 was a mere four tenths of a second outside the current world record set by Reiko Nakamura in Tokyo in 2008. Coventry then bettered this time to take her second world record of the championships by winning the final in a time of 2:00:91. She then went on to shatter the short course World Record in winning the 200 m individual medley in 2:06:13. Due to her performances at the World Championships, Coventry was named as the FINA Female Swimmer of the Championships.

Coventry represented Zimbabwe at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. Coventry won the silver medal in the 400 m individual medley on 10 August 2008, becoming the second woman to swim the medley in less than 4:30, the first being Stephanie Rice who won the gold in the same event. Coventry beat the world record by just under two seconds, and was only just beaten by Rice to a new world record. Coventry, in the second semi-final of the 100 m Backstroke, set a new world record of 58.77 seconds. However, in the final of that event she was beaten to the gold medal by Natalie Coughlin. Coventry was again beaten by Stephanie Rice in the 200 m individual medley, despite swimming under the old world record. Coventry did defend her Olympic title in the 200 m backstroke, winning gold in a world record time of 2:05.24.

Awarded US$100,000 by President Mugabe for her success at the Olympics, Coventry gave that money to charity. On 28 November 2008, Coventry's short course 400 IM World Record was broken by American Julia Smit. At the 2009 World Championships in Rome, Coventry won a gold and a silver. She won the 200 m backstroke world title with a world record time and came second in the 400 m individual medley. She came fourth in the 200 m individual medley final and eighth in the 100m backstroke final. At the 2012 Olympics in London, Coventry finished third in her semifinal heat of the 200m individual medley, just edging her into the final, where she placed 6th with a time of 2:11.13. In the 200 m backstroke, she finished outside the medals in sixth place with a time of 2:08.18.

In 2012, she was elected to the IOC Athletes' Commission. She will serve as an IOC member for eight years.

Personal life

On 10 August 2013, Coventry married Tyrone Seward who has been her manager since 2010.

Medals

With seven Olympic medals, Coventry is the most decorated Olympian from Africa. Together with Krisztina Egerszegi, she also won the most individual Olympic medals in women's swimming. She competed at five Olympics, from 2000-16. She retired from competition following the 2016 Summer Olympics.

2002 Commonwealth Games medals

  • Gold in the 200 m IM (2:14.53)
  • 2004 Olympic medals

  • Bronze in the 200 m IM (2:12.72) – Zimbabwe's second Olympic medal
  • Gold in the 200 m backstroke (2:09.19)
  • Silver in the 100 m backstroke (1:00.50)
  • 2005 World Championship medals

  • Gold in the 100 m backstroke (1:00.24)
  • Gold in the 200 m backstroke (2:08.52)
  • Silver in the 200 m IM (2:11.13)
  • Silver in the 400 m IM (4:39.72)
  • 2007 All-Africa Games

  • Gold in the 200 m IM (2:13.02 CR)
  • Gold in the 400 m IM (4:39.91 CR)
  • Gold in the 50 m freestyle (26.19)
  • Gold in the 800 m freestyle (8:43.89 CR)
  • Gold in the 50 m backstroke (28.89 AR)
  • Gold in the 100 m backstroke (1:01.28 CR)
  • Gold in the 200 m backstroke (2:10.66 CR)
  • Silver in the 100 m breaststroke (1:11.86)
  • Silver in the 4 × 100 m medley (4:21.60 NR)
  • Silver in the 4 × 200 m freestyle (8:38.20 NR)
  • 2007 World Championship medals

  • Silver in the 200 m backstroke (2:07.54)
  • Silver in the 200 m IM (2:10.74)
  • 2008 Olympic Medals

  • Silver in the 400 m IM (4:29.89 AR)
  • Silver in the 100 m Backstroke (59.19)(58.77 WR semis)
  • Silver in the 200 m IM (2:08.59 AR)
  • Gold in the 200 m Backstroke (2:05.24) WR
  • 2009 World Championship medals

  • Gold in the 200 m backstroke (2:04.81) WR
  • Silver in the 400 m IM (4:32.12)
  • 2011 All-Africa Games

  • Gold in the 200 m IM (2:13.70)
  • Gold in the 400 m IM (4:44.34)
  • Gold in the 100 m backstroke (1:00.86 CR)
  • Gold in the 200 m backstroke (2:12.40)
  • Silver in the 100 m butterfly (1:02.20)
  • Silver in the 4 × 100 m medley (4:24.01)
  • Silver in the 4 × 100 m freestyle (3:57.81)
  • Silver in the 4 × 200 m freestyle
  • 2015 All-Africa Games

  • Gold 100m Backstroke (1:01.15)
  • Gold 200m Backstroke (2:13.29)
  • Gold 200m Individual Medley (2:16.05)
  • References

    Kirsty Coventry Wikipedia