It Took 70 Years To Break His First World Record – Now At 86, He Owns 29 Masters Records

Courtesy: Steve Thomas

In the summer of 1957, a promising 20-year-old Aussie breaststroker by the name of Tony Goodwin was keen to post a qualifying swim at the Queensland titles in his home pool of Fortitude Valley, and selection for the Australian Championships.

Unfortunately for him, the home pool advantage was the only thing he had in his favor.

Tony did not have an individual coach, nor did he have a choice of the three current distances to improve his chances. Until 1961, the 200m was the only breaststroke distance option to swimmers, and the Nationals that year were to be held in far away Perth.

Tony finished second in a solid time but the Queensland selectors only took the winner to Perth.

He recalled that the team for Nationals was only about 20 swimmers, a far cry from the present day! Bear in mind in the Olympic events in that era, there were only six individual events for the men. Three freestyle events, one of each form stroke and one 4×200 freestyle relay. In the women’s events, there were just five with two freestyle (no distance event), a form stroke, and the 4×100 freestyle relay.

As Tony was leaving the pool he was approached by a respected coach who said he had promise, inviting him to train with her going forward. But Tony had already decided he had enough of swimming, and saw little future behind the likes of Terry Gathercole, who had finished 4th in the final of the 200m breaststroke at the 1956 Melbourne Olympics.

As it happens the Nationals were to be held in Queensland the following year at the historic Tobruk Memorial baths in Townsville. Gathercole broke the world record, and then took gold at the 1958 British Empire and Commonwealth Games in Wales. So, we will never know how Tony might have performed had he taken up that coaching offer, as the young man had switched his interest to cricket!

Fast forward three decades to the late 1980s, where Tony and his wife Cush were living in Sydney with their two children Mark and Jenny who had both finished school. A friend’s chance to mention that he had been competing in the newly evolved AUSSIE Masters Swimming encouraged Tony to come down and join the Manly Club and swim a few carnivals.

His return to the pool was solid, but success was not overnight, but gradually State and National records were broken as he progressed through the age groups. But it was not until Tony started working with an age group coach, Oleg Bytchenkov that his momentum started to lift. Tony would swim in the public lane next to age groupers, and Oleg would shout out instructions to his much more senior pupil.

His first world record did not come until 2007, the year he turned seventy! Tony broke his pet event; the 200m breaststroke in February, lowering the time twice during the year and again the following year at the World Championships in Perth. He also set work records in the 100m breaststroke and the two Short Course marks by year’s end.

From that point forward, it was not about if I can, but more, by how much!  He competed successfully at the World Championships in Christchurch 2002, Stanford 2006, Perth 2008, Riccione 2012, Montreal 2014, Kazan 2015, Budapest 2017, and Gwangju 2019.

As the Covid-19 lockdown set in during 2020, there was not much opportunity for swimming for two years. However, for Tony the focus was solely with his wife. Cush was diagnosed as having a degenerative muscular disease, and after 18 months passed away this year.

She had been his “rock” for 62 years, and one thing that kept him going in these difficult times was the knowledge that Cush would want for him to continue with his swimming.

Tony set his sights on competing at the 2023 World Championships in Kyushu, Japan in August, but for the first time without his wife by his side. He was touched when his son and daughter made a surprise announcement one evening they would take time off and be his support team.

Tony managed only a couple of preparation meets leading into Japan. One was held in Brisbane at the Chandler pool in June. It was at that meet that retired Olympic Champion Susie O’Neill broke the Masters world record in the 50m butterfly with much associated international publicity. However, nothing was said of the other world record set that day, by Tony Goodwin in the 200m breaststroke.

In Kyushu, Tony produced an amazing performance. He swept the three breaststroke events, setting a world record in each, an effort that is seldom achieved in the sport. Add gold in the 200-meter individual medley and silver in the 50-meter butterfly, to round out his performance.

After his success in Japan, his world record total currently stands at twenty-nine. In the nine World Swimming Championships where Tony has competed, he has collected 23 gold, 13 silver and five bronze medals.

Last week he was nominated as NSW Masters Athlete of the Year, for the fifth time, with two wins thus far.

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Stephen J Thomas
8 months ago

Not deterred by the short turnaround, Tony headed off to World Masters in Doha, picking up gold in the three breaststroke events and another in the 200 IM. This makes it ten World Championships he has competed!

Stephen J Thomas
1 year ago

Just a quick update. Tony took out the New South Wales Masters Athlete of the Year award for the third time this week at an awards night in Sydney where he was included with all open athletes and teams.

Ropes
1 year ago

Tony congratulations on your achievements thus far. May the memories of your wife spur you into the Masters Hall of Fame. You deserve it. The pinnacle of masters swimming

Michigan fan
1 year ago

Congratulations to Tony! Im so grateful for masters swimming and the healthy community it offers. You don’t need to be super-competitive or have a youth swimming background. If you have the will, a good coach can get you doing laps in a short period of time. I encourage anyone who’s interested to just try it.

Kurt Dickson
1 year ago

Masters swimming is a war of attrition. Willard Lamb is over 100, I believe, and breaking records.
If a solid swimmer keeps swimming, doesn’t die, or have a lot of health problems (a lot of ifs), records are going down. Congratulations Tony.

Meathead
1 year ago

When you talk about all time greatest swimmer, Masters resume must be included in the conversation.

M d e
Reply to  Meathead
1 year ago

It absolutely must not.

It’s great to see older people healthy and doing a sport they enjoy competitively, but it’s not the same as open performance.

Last edited 1 year ago by M d e
Garbage Yardage
1 year ago

I’d like to think there is a little bit of Tony in all of us. It may take me 20 years to find the medal stand but that’s alright.

cynthia curran
Reply to  Garbage Yardage
1 year ago

Its good. I can’t stand a lot of yardage in workouts, but the qualifying times for Nationals slowdown in master’s because of COVID. So, I met the 200-yard time in breaststroke in the 60 to 64 age group and then this year the 100 yard in 65 to 69 age group and have missed the 50 by almost 2 seconds. That’s how I measure my performance goals.

Seth
1 year ago

I hope I’m still swimming at 86.

Mr Piano
Reply to  Seth
1 year ago

I hope I’m still alive at 86

Ropes
Reply to  Mr Piano
1 year ago

Dont we all- especially with all our health!

About Stephen Thomas

Stephen Thomas

A very different start to ending up poolside, with management positions in consumer banking and credit card business. Steve set-up a consultancy in consumer research and communications and soon after was charged with the concept development and ongoing marketing for Australia’s leading sports publication, Inside Sport magazine in 1991. In …

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