Gordon Downie (swimmer)
Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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Full name | Gordon Hunter Downie | |||||||||||||||||||||
National team | Great Britain | |||||||||||||||||||||
Born |
Wisconsin, United States | 3 March 1955|||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Weight | 91 kg (201 lb) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Sport | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Sport | Swimming | |||||||||||||||||||||
Strokes | Freestyle | |||||||||||||||||||||
Club | Warrender Baths Club | |||||||||||||||||||||
College team | University of Michigan | |||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Gordon Hunter Downie (born 3 March 1955) is a British former competitive swimmer who swam in the 1976 Summer Olympics and won a bronze medal as a member of the British 4x200-metre freestyle relay team.[1] Although Downie was born in the U.S. state of Wisconsin, his father was Scottish[2] and he swam for Great Britain, Scotland, and the Warrender Baths Club in Edinburgh.[3][4] While attending the University of Michigan on an athletics scholarship, he swam for the Michigan Wolverines swimming and diving team in collegiate competition.[5][6]
Downie represented Great Britain at the 1973 World Aquatics Championships in Belgrade, Yugoslavia where he broke the Scottish record for the 200-metre freestyle.[3] The next year he represented Scotland at the 1974 British Commonwealth Games in Christchurch, New Zealand. In 1975 he swam for Scotland at the 8-nations tournament in Prague, Czechoslovakia.[3] and won a silver medal at the 1975 World Championships in Cali, Columbia as part of the British 4x200-metre freestyle relay with Alan McClatchey, Gary Jameson, and Brian Brinkley. At the same championships he won a bronze medal as part of the British 4x100-metre medley relay with David Wilkie, James Carter and Brian Brinkley.[7] Apart from winning his bronze medal, he was sixth in the 200-metre freestyle at the 1976 Montreal Olympics when he set a British record that stood for six years.[8] He swam in the 1977 European Aquatics Championships in Jönköping, Sweden, and represented Scotland in the 1978 Commonwealth Games in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.[2][3][6] Downie held both the Scottish 200-metre and 400-metre freestyle records for 10 years from 1972 to 1982.[8]
Downie graduated with a medical degree from Northwestern University in 1986.[9] In 2004 Downie was a doctor (pulmonologist) at The Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University[2] and in 2014 he was practicing in Mount Pleasant, Texas at the Titus Regional Medical Center.[9] He specialises in lung cancer clinical and research work.[8]
Downie was inducted into the Scottish Swimming Hall of Fame in 2014.[8]
See also
References
- ↑ "Olympics". sports-reference. Retrieved 5 May 2012.
- 1 2 3 Hutson, Jeannine (27 August 2004) Physician, Bronze Medallist Reflects on Past Olympics Pieces of Eight, University of East Carolina faculty and Staff Newspaper, Page 8, Retrieved 29 May 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 Gilmour, Jamie (1990). One Hundred years of Warrender baths Club. Macdonald Lindsay Pindar. ISBN 0951678701.
- ↑ Staff (15 January 2013) Permanent wall exhibition to chart 125 year history of Warrender Swimming Club The Scotsman, Retrieved 24 january 2013.
- ↑ Michigan the Olympics 1976 - Montreal
- 1 2 Lange, Ed (23 January 1975) Downie Swims for Blue... and Britain The Michigan Daily, Retrieved 29 May 2013.
- ↑ Medallists at the FINA World Swimming Championships HistoFINA, Volume IV, Tome IV, Before Rome 2009, Retrieved 22 April 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 Gordon Downie Scottish Swimming, Retrieved 21 November 2014.
- 1 2 (2014) Dr. Gordon H Downie MD, Pulmonologist US News and World Report, Retrieved 21 November 2014.