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Full name | Catherine Northcutt Ball Condon | ||||||||||||||
Nationality | United States | ||||||||||||||
Sport | |||||||||||||||
Sport | Swimming | ||||||||||||||
Strokes | Breaststroke, individual medley | ||||||||||||||
Club | J.E.T.S. | ||||||||||||||
College team | University of Florida | ||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Catherine Northcutt "Catie" Ball Condon (born September 30, 1951) is a former American international swimmer who won a gold medal during the 1968 Summer Olympics.
Catie Ball was born in Jacksonville, Florida, and swam for the J.E.T.S. swim team in AAU competition as a teenager.
At the Mexico City Olympic Games in 1968, Ball was the world record holder in all four distances of the breaststroke, but she arrived at the Olympics with a case of influenza. She was too ill to swim in the qualifying heats of the 200-meter breaststroke event, and finished fifth in the 100-meter breaststroke. Ball won her only gold medal in the 400-meter medley relay, swimming the breaststroke leg of the four-person relay. After the Olympics, Ball attended the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida, and effectively dropped out of competition swimming because there were no women's college swim teams at the time. As a senior undergraduate at the University of Florida, she coached the Florida Gators swimming & diving team in Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) competition in 1972–1973. In their first year of intercollegiate competition, Ball's Lady Gator swimmers were undefeated in dual meets and placed second in the AIAW national championships during her single-season tenure.
Ball was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame in 1976, and the Florida Sports Hall of Fame in 2010. She currently resides in Pensacola, Florida, with her husband Tom Condon; together they have three children and a grandchild.
See also
References
- ^ Sports Reference, Olympic Sports, Catie Ball. Retrieved April 14, 2010.
- International Swimming Hall of Fame, Honorees, Catie Ball (USA). Retrieved July 13, 2010.
- ^ Jamie Secola, "Hall of Fame induction cements Ball-Condon's swimming legacy," Pensacola News-Journal (July 4, 2010). Retrieved July 13, 2010.