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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sherm Chavoor
Chavoor center, with his '68 triple gold medalists Sue Pedersen (left) and Debbie Meyer (right), 1967
Biographical details
Born(1919-04-10)April 10, 1919[1]
Hilo, Hawaii
DiedSeptember 3, 1992(1992-09-03) (aged 73)
Gold River, California
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1949-1954[2]Sacramento YMCA
Schoolteacher
1954-1985Arden Hills Swim Club
Carmichael, California
1989-1990Rancho Arroyo Swim Team
1967Women's Pan Am Team
1968, 1972US Olympic Swim Team, Women
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
His wimmers won 20 Olympic Gold Medals
Awards
'02 ASCA Hall of Fame
'77 Int. Swim. Hall of Fame
'68 ASCA Coach of the Year

Sherm Chavoor (April 10, 1919 – September 3, 1992)[3] was a Hall of Fame swimming coach from the United States. He coached Olympic swimmers Mark Spitz, Debbie Meyer, Mike Burton, Jeff Float, Susan Pedersen, John Ferris, Dave Fairbank, John Nelson and Ellie Daniel at Arden Hills Swimming and Tennis Club in Sacramento, California, which he founded in 1954 and coached through 1985.[4] Chavoor began coaching at the Sacramento YMCA prior to starting Arden Hills.[5]

Olympic coaching

He was head coach of the 1967 Women's Pan American team, and he was head coach of the USA's Women's Olympic Swimming teams in 1968 and 1972.[6]

Honors

He was named Coach of the Year by the American Swimming Coaches Association in 1968. He was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame in 1977.[5] He has been called one of the "three greatest coaches the United States has ever had."[7] His life is chronicled in the book Victory in the Pool by Bill George.[8] Chavoor published a book co-authored with Bill Davidson titled The 50-Meter Jungle, which told part of his life story.

Early life and career

He was born near Hilo, Hawaii the son of a sugar cane worker, and his birth name was IIzikiel Correa. He would later change his name to Sherm Chavoor while serving in the U.S. Army.[9] Born one of eight children, he was raised in the East Bay in Oakland and worked on the docks.[1] Just prior to World War II he enlisted in the Army Air Corps.

His first stint as a swim instructor was at the air base in Tonopah, Nevada. After his honorable discharge he married and moved to Sacramento where he was a school teacher and part-time swim instructor at the YMCA in 1946. In an era when minority swimmers were not allowed in most swim clubs, his first YMCA swim teams contained Black, White and Japanese American teenagers. His swimmers were immediately successful in AAU swimming. After coaching stints with two other swim teams, Chavoor founded the Arden Hills Swim and Tennis Club in 1955.[10]

Arden Hills' rise to a U.S. national power

Over distance training

Arden Hills quickly became one of the top swim clubs in the country. Chavoor was somewhat revolutionary in his approach to competitive swimming with what has become known as "over distance training". Chavoor pushed and motivated his students to often swim as much as twice the total distance per practice that other competitive programs were giving their swimmers, and some practices could last as long as four hours. When his swimmers saw a subsequent drop in their times and improvement in their technique, many programs adopted similar approaches as part of their training.[11] He was stern and serious as a coach, and stressed punctuality, but his swimmers truly believed he cared for them and followed his instruction carefully.[12]

Mike Burton and Joan Ferris qualified for the 1964 Olympic Trials, but neither made the team. By 1967 swimmers Debbie Meyer, Sue Pedersen, Mike Burton and John Ferris were setting U.S. and world records. In 1967 Chavoor was named head coach of the U.S. Pan American women's swim team, then tapped to be head women's coach for the 1968 Summer Olympics.

1968 Olympics

Burton, Sherm Chavoor, Debbie Meyer 1969

Arden Hills' Debbie Meyer won three gold medals, Sue Pedersen won two gold and two silver, Mike Button won two gold, John Nelson one gold and a bronze, and John Ferris two bronze medals as Arden Hills won 13 total medals. Chavoor's women's team won ten of a possible fifteen gold medals, eight silver out of twelve possible, and eight bronze out of twelve, a total of twenty-six medals out of a possible thirty-nine. The U.S. women won all three relays and scored sweeps in the 100-meter butterfly and 200-meter individual medley.[13]

1972 Olympics

Arden Hills' Mark Spitz won seven Gold Medals and Mike Burton one gold. Chavoor was once again head coach of the women's team. It won eight gold medals of a possible fourteen, five silver medals of a possible twelve, and four bronze medals of a possible twelve. Combining the 1968 and 1972 records, Chavoor’s women won nineteen of twenty-eight possible gold medals, twelve of twenty- four silver medals, and twelve of a possible twenty-four bronze medals. It was the last Olympic team Chavoor coached, and he went out on top. His two Olympic swimming teams had dominated the world competition and helped establish the U.S. women’s program as the finest on earth.[14]

20 Olympic gold medals

A total of 20 gold medals were won by his swimmers in three Olympics. His swimmers Mike Burton, Debbie Meyer, Susan Pederson, John Nelson, Ellie Daniel, and Mark Spitz won a combined 12 gold medals in the 1968 Olympics. Burton and Spitz then won a combined 8 gold medals in 1972, and Jeff Float, Chavoor's last Olympian, won 1 gold in 1984.[11]

Retirement

Chavoor sold Arden Hills in 1985 but continued training swimmers until his 1990 retirement from Sacramento's Rancho Arroyo Pool. He played racket ball frequently, and had earlier played squash. In early 1992 he was diagnosed with liver cancer. He died at home on September 3, 1992 in Gold River, California, east of Sacramento. His swimmers won 31 Olympic medals, set 81 world and 131 U.S. records.[15] He is the only swim coach to produce two James E. Sullivan Award (Mark Spitz and Debbie Meyer) winners.

External links

References

  1. ^ a b "Deaths, Sherm Chavoor", Modesto Bee, Modesto, California, pg. 58, 5 September 1992
  2. ^ "Chavoor's Swim Team", Sacramento Bee, Sacramento, California, pg. 35, 11 July 1985
  3. ^ Sherm Chavoor, 73, A Swimming Coach. Obituary published by the New York Times on September 5, 1992; retrieved 2014-01-17.
  4. ^ Our Story page, from the Arden Hills website; retrieved January 17, 2014.
  5. ^ a b Sherm Chavoor. International Swimming Hall of Fame.
  6. ^ Olympic Swimming Coach Sherm Chavoor, from West Sacramento Photo of the Day, August 3, 2008; retrieved 2014-01-17.
  7. ^ "The Mark Spitz". www.usms.org. Retrieved July 19, 2023.
  8. ^ George, Bill; Meyer, Debbie; Burton, Mike; Float, Jeff (May 10, 2023). Victory in the Pool: How a Maverick Coach Upended Society and Led a Group of Young Swimmers to Olympic Glory. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
  9. ^ George, Bill (2023). Victory in the Pool. London: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9781538173718.
  10. ^ George, Bill (2023). Victory in the Pool. London: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 17–26. ISBN 9781538173718.
  11. ^ a b "Students Swam Twice as Far", The Sacramento Bee, Sacramento, California, pg. 24, 4 September 1992
  12. ^ "Legacy: No Nonsense Swim Coach", Sacramento Bee, Sacramento, California, pg. 52, 16 July 1992
  13. ^ George, Bill (2023). Victory in the Pool. London: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 113–123. ISBN 9781538173718.
  14. ^ George, Bill (2023). Victory in the Pool. London: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 167–183. ISBN 9781538173718.
  15. ^ George, Bill (2023). Victory in the Pool. London: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 197–200. ISBN 9781538173718.
This page was last edited on 20 March 2024, at 22:25
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