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Bill Mulliken
William Danforth Mulliken (August 27, 1939 – July 17, 2014) was a Hall of Fame American competition swimmer who attended Miami University in Oxford and was a 1960 Rome Olympic champion in the men's 200-meter breaststroke. He later practiced law in Chicago, and served as a twenty-year President of the Chicago Masters Swim Club.
Born August 27, 1939, in Urbana, Illinois, to Jean Forrest and Wallace Mulliken, he attended Champaign High School, which lacked a swimming team. While competing at the Central AAU Senior Men's Swimming meet on August 2, 1956, at 16, he set a record age-group time in the 200-meter breaststroke of 2:52.7 bettering a record that had stood for nineteen years. He trained largely on his own, though usually represented the Champaign Country Club, a strong Chicago area team that competed in the Central Illinois Country Club tournament and under whose name he was entering competitions by the age of 14. Mulliken competed against his cousin Lynn Mulliken of Bloomington High School, and won the 200-yard freestyle in a new record time of 2:04.9 at the Big 12 High School Championship on February 11, 1956.
Despite lacking strong team training, at the Illinois High School Swimming and Diving Championships, he won state titles in the 100-yard breaststroke of 1:03.9 and the 200-yard freestyle of 1:59.8 for 1956-7 during his time at Champaign High School.
Mulliken represented the United States at the 1959 Pan American Games, where he captured a gold medal winning the 200-meter breaststroke, his signature event, in 2:43.1, though he would improve significantly on his time in the 1960 Olympics.
He swam for Miami of Ohio University, known as Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, graduating in 1961 with a bachelor's degree. While swimming for Miami, Mulliken became the University's first NCAA and Olympic swimming champion and set 15 school records before graduating. In the 1959 NCAA Swimming Championships, he set both an American and NCAA record time of 2:21.3 in the 200-yard breaststroke. In Mid-American Conference Collegiate competition, during a three year period, he won nine individual titles and captured four new records.
Coached by Miami University's first swimming coach, Raymond Ray, who led Miami from 1952–74, and coached five all Americans during his tenure, Mulliken held the national collegiate record in the 200-yard breaststroke, the national record in the indoor 220-yard breaststroke, and set 200-meter breaststroke records in both Olympic and Pan American competition.
Despite being ranked only 17th in the world going into the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, in a performance that exceeded expectations, Mulliken captured a gold medal for winning the men's 200-meter breaststroke with a time of 2:37.2, a new Olympic record. Three of his opponents were heavily favored to outperform him; Yoshihiko Osaki of Japan, Georgi Prokopenko of the Soviet Union and Australian world record holder Terry Gathercole. On his third turn in the 50-meter course, coming into the final length, Mulliken realized that with a strong finish he could overtake Osaki, and likely set a new Olympic record. Finishing a second after Mulliken, Osaki of Japan won the silver, but Australian Gathercole finished sixth, and Russian Propkopenko finished tenth, unable to qualify for the finals.
His unexpected win inspired the U.S. team, as an American had not won the Olympic event since Joe Verdeur at the 1948 Games in London. Mullikin was managed by Head U.S. Olympic Swimming Coach Gus Stager in 1960, a Hall of Fame Coach for the University of Michigan.
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Bill Mulliken
William Danforth Mulliken (August 27, 1939 – July 17, 2014) was a Hall of Fame American competition swimmer who attended Miami University in Oxford and was a 1960 Rome Olympic champion in the men's 200-meter breaststroke. He later practiced law in Chicago, and served as a twenty-year President of the Chicago Masters Swim Club.
Born August 27, 1939, in Urbana, Illinois, to Jean Forrest and Wallace Mulliken, he attended Champaign High School, which lacked a swimming team. While competing at the Central AAU Senior Men's Swimming meet on August 2, 1956, at 16, he set a record age-group time in the 200-meter breaststroke of 2:52.7 bettering a record that had stood for nineteen years. He trained largely on his own, though usually represented the Champaign Country Club, a strong Chicago area team that competed in the Central Illinois Country Club tournament and under whose name he was entering competitions by the age of 14. Mulliken competed against his cousin Lynn Mulliken of Bloomington High School, and won the 200-yard freestyle in a new record time of 2:04.9 at the Big 12 High School Championship on February 11, 1956.
Despite lacking strong team training, at the Illinois High School Swimming and Diving Championships, he won state titles in the 100-yard breaststroke of 1:03.9 and the 200-yard freestyle of 1:59.8 for 1956-7 during his time at Champaign High School.
Mulliken represented the United States at the 1959 Pan American Games, where he captured a gold medal winning the 200-meter breaststroke, his signature event, in 2:43.1, though he would improve significantly on his time in the 1960 Olympics.
He swam for Miami of Ohio University, known as Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, graduating in 1961 with a bachelor's degree. While swimming for Miami, Mulliken became the University's first NCAA and Olympic swimming champion and set 15 school records before graduating. In the 1959 NCAA Swimming Championships, he set both an American and NCAA record time of 2:21.3 in the 200-yard breaststroke. In Mid-American Conference Collegiate competition, during a three year period, he won nine individual titles and captured four new records.
Coached by Miami University's first swimming coach, Raymond Ray, who led Miami from 1952–74, and coached five all Americans during his tenure, Mulliken held the national collegiate record in the 200-yard breaststroke, the national record in the indoor 220-yard breaststroke, and set 200-meter breaststroke records in both Olympic and Pan American competition.
Despite being ranked only 17th in the world going into the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, in a performance that exceeded expectations, Mulliken captured a gold medal for winning the men's 200-meter breaststroke with a time of 2:37.2, a new Olympic record. Three of his opponents were heavily favored to outperform him; Yoshihiko Osaki of Japan, Georgi Prokopenko of the Soviet Union and Australian world record holder Terry Gathercole. On his third turn in the 50-meter course, coming into the final length, Mulliken realized that with a strong finish he could overtake Osaki, and likely set a new Olympic record. Finishing a second after Mulliken, Osaki of Japan won the silver, but Australian Gathercole finished sixth, and Russian Propkopenko finished tenth, unable to qualify for the finals.
His unexpected win inspired the U.S. team, as an American had not won the Olympic event since Joe Verdeur at the 1948 Games in London. Mullikin was managed by Head U.S. Olympic Swimming Coach Gus Stager in 1960, a Hall of Fame Coach for the University of Michigan.