Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||
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Full name | Richard Walter Gilbert | |||||||||||||||||
Nationality | American | |||||||||||||||||
Born | Lancaster, Pennsylvania, USA | 23 September 1943|||||||||||||||||
Sport | ||||||||||||||||||
Sport | Diving | |||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Richard Walter "Rick" Gilbert (born September 23, 1943) is an American former diver and coach who competed in the 1968 Summer Olympics. He was born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. [1] He won two World University (FISU) Games gold medals, was silver medalist on 3-meter in the 1963 Pan American Games and amassed five Big Ten and seven national titles while at Indiana University. He was a six-time NCAA All-American and four-time AAU All-American and won one NCAA and six national AAU titles. Gilbert was on the 1968 United States Olympic Team that competed in Mexico City. After Mexico City, he became coach of diving at Cornell University, where he coached 39 years until his retirement in 2007. Gilbert was named Eastern Intercollegiate Swimming League Women's Diving Coach of the Year in 1991, 1992 and 1993 and Men's Diving Coach of the Year in 1984. He was chairman of the NCAA Diving Rules Sub-Committee from 1976 to 1980. He was inducted into the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame in 1973, the Indiana University Athletic Hall of Fame in 1997, and into the Pennsylvania Aquatics Hall of Fame in 2019.
Gilbert graduated from McCaskey High School in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, where he was a three-time PIAA state diving champion and two-time Eastern Interscholastic Champion. Gilbert only lost one high school meet during his four years of high school, when he finished second, seven tenths of a point behind the winner. He was 7th in the one-meter National AAU Championships held at Yale University his senior year in high school. After graduating in 1962, Gilbert enrolled at Indiana University. He was named to the McCaskey High School Hall of Fame in October, 1987. [2]
Gilbert dived for the legendary coach Hobie Billingsley at Indiana, after being heavily recruited to become the cornerstone of Billingsley's emerging program. While Gilbert was the cornerstone, his success enabled Billingsley to attract additional top-tier divers including Lesley Bush, Ken Sitzberger, Cynthia Potter, Win Young, Jim Henry and Mark Lenzi. Despite the fact that Indiana was on probation when Gilbert was recruited, he chose Indiana after being assured by 1956 Olympic springboard Champion Bobby Clotworthy that Hobie and the Hoosiers were an emerging force. In 1962, Gilbert won the AAU 3-meter title, the first freshman in 25 years to win the event. [3] At the time, freshmen were ineligible for Varsity collegiate NCAA competition. In his junior season, Gilbert became Big Ten champion on both one- and 3-meter boards, and the NCAA 1-meter champion, both of which were Billingsley and Indiana University firsts. He repeated his Big Ten sweep as a senior. Gilbert amassed five Big Ten and one NCAA title while at Indiana, plus six national AAU titles. He was a three-year collegiate All-American. [4] Gilbert was named a member of the Indiana University Athletics Hall of Fame in 1997, having won diving letters in 1963, 1964, and 1965. His cumulative awards during his Indiana years included six NCAA All-American Honors, four NAAU All-American Honors, one and 3-meter Big Ten titles, the NCAA 1-meter championship in 1964, and four NAAU indoor and two NAAU outdoor titles, in addition to the 3-meter and 10-meter titles at the World University (FISU) Games in Budapest in 1965, and the 3- meter Silver medal in the 1963 Pan American Games.
After narrowly missing the team for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, Gilbert was named to the 1968 Olympic team for the 10-meter platform. While in Mexico City awaiting the start of the Games, he sprained his ankle, but still managed to place 17th after initially being favored to finish much higher.
Rick provided 39 years of distinguished service to Cornell University athletics, where he coached and inspired generations of Cornell divers, while guiding the athletic and academic demands of Cornell's student athletes. His divers won 12 Eastern titles and four earned All-American status. Gilbert was named Eastern Intercollegiate Swimming League Women's Diving Coach of the Year in 1991, 1992 and 1993 and Men's Diving Coach of the Year in 1984. He was Chairman of the NCAA Diving Rules Sub-Committee from 1976 to 1981. As a result of Gilbert's influence on the sport and the many students, Bob and Maura Dughi named “The Richard W. Gilbert Diving Coach” chair in Gilbert's honor, and permanently endowed Cornell's diving coach position.
It was not only Cornell students who dived with Gilbert over 39 years. Starting in the early 1970s, he created the Rick Gilbert Diving Camp. This nationally recognized camp attracted age group and high school students from all over the country. There were national and international caliber divers who went to train with Gilbert during the summer and school year, including Phil Boggs, a 1976 Olympic Gold Medalist. These divers benefited from Gilbert's tutelage and included many future Cornell divers. [5] [6]
One of Gilbert's most direct impacts is that many of his divers have gone on to coach diving themselves, paying back some of what Rick modeled and taught.
Gilbert's coaching was not just on the board, but also emphasized family, and specifically development of the diving family. He and his wife, Jo, opened their hearts and home to the divers and established a unique bond among them, regardless of when their time was spent in his programs. This included the admirable quality of being able to leave his ego behind and focus on maintaining a sense of perspective for the divers. Rick and Jo had the ability to make individuals all feel like their favorites, and they have emphasized the importance of staying in contact over the years. Diving reunions are common and link many generations of diving veterans with Gilbert as a gifted coach and mentor, and with Rick and Jo together as the focal point of their diving family.
Hobart Sherwood Billingsley was an American diver and coach. Billingsly started diving in the local YMCA, where he taught himself how to dive. Reaching state championships as a senior in high school, Billingsley was recruited to Ohio State University, where he won the NCAA title in both the one-meter and three-meter event. After leaving school to enlist in the United States Armed Forces during World War II, Billingsly returned to complete his post-graduate education. Billingsly's coaching career started at the high school level, where he built a program that won a state high school championship. He was quickly recruited to coach at the college level for Indiana University, where he coached for 30 years, leading them to six NCAA championships. During this time he also coached the U.S. Olympic Diving team on three occasions. After his coaching career, Billingsly stayed involved with diving by providing technical direction to divers and diving coaches. He was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame and published a book on diving and coaching. In 1996, he took the oath for all officials at the Atlanta Olympics.
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