Russia’s First Olympic Swimming Champion Passes Away

by Rohan Singh 5

July 19th, 2015 Europe, News

After a long fight with illness, the Soviet Union’s first Olympic swimming champion, Galina Prozumenschikova Russian Olympian Dies has passed away at the age of 67 years old.

Galina Prozumenshchikova’s. She first became Olympic champion in 1964 in Tokyo in the 200m breaststroke and went on to achieve similar success in Mexico in 1968 and in Munich in 1972. Interestingly she actually preferred the 100m breaststroke but this only became an Olympic event in 1968.

Her success came in the breaststroke events and won 5 Olympic medals overall from 1964-1972 and five European championships medals in 1966 and 1970. She was also a 6 time world record holder.

Outside Swimming she enrolled in the Journalism Faculty in Moscow State University in 1966 before giving birth to daughter Irina three years later. In 1980 she returned to the sport, this time as a coach for the CSKA swimming club and further became involved in Masters Swimming in 1991. Like her Olympic career, her Masters career was full of success setting 35 National records in the master’s category.

While Prozumenshchikova was Ukrainian, she is credited as the first ever Olympic swimming gold medalist from either the Soviet Union or Russia.

Further awards were given to Prozumenshchikova later on in her life where she was awarded the Medal for Distinguished Labour twice and the Order of Friendship of Peoples in 1993. These awards go along with her Order of the Red Banner for Labour in 1972.

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Dottore Battistello
8 years ago

This comes as a surprising bad news. At the Swimming World Cup in Moscow 5th October 2014, she presented the awards. I have a picture of her giving the gold medal to Chad Le Clos.

brook
8 years ago

Galina was born in Sevastopol, Crimea,
it was 1948, it was Russia.

Crawler
8 years ago

Actually I believe she was Ukrainian, then part of the Soviet Union but not Russia.

Peter davis
8 years ago

http://www.newspapers.com/newspage/1174134/

I have research access from my roommates to a ton of sites, including the above. You can still read the abstract, but it’s, uh, abstract.

Lane Four
8 years ago

This saddens me. So many have said that Galina was a very warm person but fierce competitor. As an aside,I remember as a kid have the worst time trying to pronounce her maiden name and finally hit upon it as a teen – when she married and became Mrs. Stepanova.
Heading into the 1968 Olympic Games, swimming fans were looking forward to her clash with American Catie Ball, who had taken away Galina’s world records but had yet to face her in the pool. Unfortunately, Catie came down with a high fever and had to be removed from the Olympic 200 race after valiantly trying to compete in the 100 race while ill. No one ever had the chance… Read more »