Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Full name | Daniel Lee Harrigan | |||||||||||||||||
Nickname | "Dan" | |||||||||||||||||
National team | United States | |||||||||||||||||
Born | South Bend, Indiana, U.S. [1] | October 29, 1955|||||||||||||||||
Height | 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) [1] | |||||||||||||||||
Weight | 170 lb (77 kg) [1] | |||||||||||||||||
Spouse | Therese Rucker | |||||||||||||||||
Sport | ||||||||||||||||||
Sport | Swimming | |||||||||||||||||
Strokes | Backstroke, Freestyle | |||||||||||||||||
Club | Michiana Marlins | |||||||||||||||||
College team | North Carolina State University | |||||||||||||||||
Coach | Don Easterling (NCSU) | |||||||||||||||||
Medal record
|
Daniel Lee Harrigan (born October 29, 1955) is an American former competitive swimmer for North Carolina State University and a 1976 Montreal Olympic bronze medalist in the 200-meter backstroke. At the 1975 Pan American Games he won the 200 m backstroke event, but also contracted hepatitis and had to stop training for several months, managing to recover by the 1976 Olympics where he medaled in the event. [1] [2] He would later have a career as an architect. [3]
Harrigan was born in South Bend, Indiana on October 29, 1955. He began competitive swimming by the age of ten, and swam for both the Michiana Marlins and South Bend Adams High School, where he attended from 1970–74 and was coached by Steve Smith. Gaining recognition early in his swimming career, he set a national age group record in the 50-yard backstroke at the age of only 10. At the Michiana Marlins, a highly competitive AAU age group swim club in South Bend, he was coached by Tony and Karen Kowals, whom he strongly credited for improving his times and technique during his High School years. He was a two-time State Champion by his High School Junior year and trained four hours a day, with a one-hour morning session, and a three-hour session after school. In 1974, serving as his High School team co-captain, he set a national High School record of 4:42.2 in the 500-yard freestyle as a Senior at Adams High. [4] His 1974 High School state records included a time of 1:42.9 in the 200-yard freestyle, and an improvement in the 500-yard freestyle to 4:35.158, setting both records at the Indiana State Meet in February, 1974. As a Junior, he held Indiana state titles in both the 100-yard backstroke and 200-yard freestyle events. [5] [3]
Harrigan was an outstanding student who earned a 3.5 grade point average and majored in architecture at North Carolina State University (NCSU), [1] where he swam for the NC State Wolfpack swimming and diving team in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) competition. At NCSU, where he graduated in 1979, receiving a scholarship, he swam for Hall of Fame Coach Don Easterling, who coached NCSU from 1971-1995. Easterling was a demanding coach who led NCSU's swimming team to twelve consecutive Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) Titles from 1971-1982, which included ACC conference titles during Harrigan's tenure with the swimming team. [6] [7] In February 1978, Harrigan was voted the "Outstanding Performer" at the ACC Championship meet in Charlottesville, leading the team to another conference championship. He won the 100 and 200-yard backstroke, the 500-yard freestyle, and was the winning 400-yard medley relay and 800 freestyle relay teams. [8]
After his time at North Carolina, Harrigan studied for a Masters in Architecture at Pennsylvania State University, completing the degree in 1983, while spending time assisting with their swimming team. [9] [10]
In the summer after his Sophomore year in college in June, 1976, Harrigan had the third fastest 200 backstroke time of 2:02.96 at the U.S. Olympic Swimming trials in Long Beach, California, finishing third behind John Naber and Peter Rocca, as he would at the Olympics. [11]
After travelling with a strong team to Montreal in 1976, despite setting an Olympic record time of 2:02.25 in the 200-meter backstroke behind gold medalist John Naber in the preliminary heat, he placed only third in the final heat, taking a bronze medal with a still impressive time of 2:01.35. His time was .8 seconds behind the American silver medalist Peter Rocca who touched just behind American John Naber, which gave the Americans all three Olympic medals. Naber became the first swimmer to go under 2 minutes for the 200-meter backstroke with a time of 1:59.19. The American Olympic swimming team won 25 of 33 medals, becoming the most successful American swim team in U.S. Olympic history. [1] [12] [13]
Twenty years after his Olympic medal, Harrigan was a busy employee of the Spillman Farmer architectural firm in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, where he had worked since 1983, after studying at Penn State. His architectural achievements included designing Bethlehem's Calypso School and the outside of Lehigh University's Goodman Stadium, used for their football games. He and his wife, the former Therese Rucker, another All American swimmer from North Carolina State, had three sons. [3]
Continuing to swim during his professional life, he trained with United States Masters and competed in U.S. Masters backstroke competitions between 1985 and 1994 in the Delaware Valley area. [14]
In High School, Harrigan received the honor of "Athlete of the Year" by the American Athletic Union. He was made a member of the Indiana High School Swimming and Diving Hall of Fame, and was made a member of the North Carolina Swimming Hall of Fame in 1986. During his years at North Carolina State University, while swimming at the 1978 Atlantic Coast Championship, the coaches voted him the meet's outstanding performer. [8] [5] [3] In his Senior year at North Carolina State, he was awarded NCAA's "Top Five Award", for both athletic and academic excellence. The award was presented to only five outstanding NCAA American collegiate athletes. [15]
Duncan Alexander Goodhew, is an English former competitive swimmer. After swimming competitively in America as a collegian at North Carolina State University, he was an Olympic swimmer for Great Britain and won Olympic gold and bronze medals at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow. He also swam at the 1976 Summer Olympics.
John Joseph Murphy is an American former backstroke and freestyle swimmer who attended Indiana University and won a gold in the 4x100 freestyle relay and a bronze medal in the 100-meter backstroke at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich. Beginning around the mid-80's, he worked as a CPA in New Mexico, and coached age group swimming in Los Alamos and Santa Fe.
Ryan Thomas Berube is an American former competition swimmer and freestyle and individual medley specialist for Southern Methodist University who won the gold medal anchoring the U.S. men's team in the 4×200-meter freestyle relay at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. A business major at SMU, he would later work as a wealth manager, and serve two decades on various boards and committees of USA Swimming.
Lindsay Dianne Benko, known by her married name Lindsay Mintenko since 2005, is an American former competition swimmer, two-time Olympian, former world record-holder, and a managing director of USA Swimming. She represented the United States women as a Team Captain at the 2000 and 2004 Summer Olympics, taking a gold medal in freestyle relays both years. She held the short-course world record in the 400-meter freestyle at 3:59.53, for nearly three years from January 2003 to December 2005.
Steven Charles Furniss is an American former swimmer, business owner, Olympic bronze medalist and world record-holder.
Harold Thompson Mann was an American competition swimmer for the University of North Carolina, a 1964 Tokyo Olympic 4x100-meter medley swimming gold medalist, and a world record-holder in the 100-meter backstroke. After graduating pre-med from North Carolina, he went to the medical school of Virginia, and completed a residency and practice in San Francisco. In 1984 he returned to his home state to establish a practice in internal medicine in the greater Richmond area.
Jennifer Jo Kemp is an American former competition swimmer, an Olympic champion in the 4x100-meter freestyle relay, and a former world record-holder.
Matthew Haynes Vogel is a swim coach of over forty years, an American former competition swimmer for the University of Tennessee, a 1976 Olympic gold medalist in the butterfly and medley relay, and a former world record-holder in the 4x100-meter medley relay event.
Ronald Parker Mills is an American former competition swimmer for Southern Methodist University and a 1968 Olympic medalist in the backstroke. He later had a career in advertising in the Dallas area.
Steven Garrett Gregg was an American competition swimmer. He won silver medals in the 200 m butterfly event at the 1976 Olympics, 1975 Pan American Games, and 1973 and 1978 world championships. After graduating from North Carolina State University, he defended a PhD in exercise biochemistry and physiology at University of California, Berkeley, and eventually settled in the Chicago area with his family.
Jennifer Leigh Hooker, also known by her married name Jennifer Brinegar, is an American former competition swimmer who represented the United States at only 15 at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, Quebec. She swam for Indiana University where she received a business degree in 1984, and later practiced law after receiving a Juris Doctor degree from Vanderbilt University. After receiving a Master's in Sports Management in 1996 at Indiana University, she worked for their athletic department, becoming an assistant athletic director in 1999.
Holly Renee Magee, also known by her married name Renee Tucker, was an American former competition swimmer who represented the United States in the 100 meter backstroke at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, Quebec. In 1976, in Austin, Texas, she set a National High School Record in the 100-yard backstroke. She would later work as a District Attorney and be elected to serve as a Judge in Houston's 337th District Court from 2013-16.
Barbara Ann Marshall is an American former swimmer for the University of North Carolina, and a 1972 Munich Olympic 200-meter and 4x100-meter freestyle relay competitor. Notably in late August 1974, in a dual meet against American rival East Germany in Concord, California, Marshall swam on an American 4x100 meter freestyle relay team that set a world record in the event.
David "Dave" Charles Johnson is an American former competition swimmer and 1968 Mexico City Olympic competitor. He later graduated Yale Medical School and became an orthopaedic surgeon, specializing in sports medicine.
Philip Riker III is an American former competition swimmer for the University of North Carolina, and a 1964 U.S. Olympic competitor in the 200-meter butterfly.
Todd DeSorbo has been the head coach of the Virginia Cavaliers Swim team at the University of Virginia, since assuming the position in 2017. He served as an Assistant Coach for the 2021 US Tokyo Summer Olympics Women's Swim Team, and in September 2023 was named to be the Head Coach for the U.S. Women's Swim team at the 2024 Olympics in Paris.
Robert "Bob" Erwin Mattson was a competitive swimmer for North Carolina State and an ASCA Hall of Fame swim coach who founded Delaware's highly successful Wilmington Swim Club, serving forty years as coach from 1954 to 1994.
Robert A. Royer was an American competitive swimmer for Indiana University in the 1920's and later served as Head Coach of their swim team from 1931 to 1957, leading them to a fourth place finish in the NCAA Championship in 1957, and a third place in the competitive Big 10 Conference in 1956. He coached Indiana University's first NCAA swimming champion, Bill Woolsey, and their first two Olympic swimmers, Woolsey, and Sonny Tanabe who competed in 1956.
Kris Kubik was an All-American competitive swimmer for North Carolina State and Auburn University and the Associate Head swimming coach for the University of Texas under Head Coach Eddie Reese. In his thirty-four year tenure coaching swimming at the University of Texas at Austin from 1979 to 1981, and 1986 through 2016, he helped lead the Longhorns to 12 NCAA National team Championships, claiming titles in successive years for the 1989–91, 2000–02, and 2015–2016 seasons.
Don Easterling was a collegiate swim coach for North Carolina State University from 1971 through 1995 where he led the team to 17 Atlantic Coast Conference Titles, including twelve straight from 1971 through 1982. He was honored as the Atlantic Conference Coach of the year four times, and was named the National Collegiate Scholastic Swimming Coach of the Year in 1993.