Jeff Farrell
Jeff Farrell
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Jeff Farrell

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Jeff Farrell

Felix Jeffrey Farrell (born February 28, 1937) is a Hall of Fame American former competition swimmer, and a 1960 two-time Olympic gold medalist, where he became a world record-holder in two relay events. After the Olympics, he worked as a swim coach abroad, and in the 1980s returned to America, living in Santa Barbara, where he worked in real estate. While training with Santa Barbara Masters, he would break numerous world and national age group records as a Masters competitor between 1981 and 2011.

By 1947, at 10, Jeff swam regularly at the Wichita Country Club, and was competing as a Junior by age 12.

In January 1952, while swimming for Wichita East High School, he swam a 58.7 for the 100-yard event, but would continue to lower his time threshold. At the end of February, 1953, Farrell set a new record for the 100-yard freestyle of 56.4, at a State Tournament though Wichita East lost the meet to frequent winner Coffeyville High School. By February 1953, Farrell had already swum a :56.1 for the 100-yard freestyle in High School competition, bettering the state record of 57.3, though the swim was in a regular dual meet, not in a state tournament.

Excelling in events longer than the 100 as he gained endurance in 1954, Jeff tied the National age group record for the 220-yard freestyle with a time of 2:11.8. Under Jeff's Swim Coach Bob Timmons, who would later become a legendary track coach at the University of Kansas, Wichita East swimming would eventually have eight straight undefeated seasons, 52 individual state champions, and seven state swimming titles. Benefitting from Timmons' coaching, by his Senior year Jeff was a nominee for Wichita's Downtown YMCA's Athlete of the Year Award, with only five other Wichita High School Athletes. Jeff graduated Wichita East in 1954, and was on the All-America team each year he swam.

Farrell was a Freshman at University of Oklahoma in 1955, and was swimming for the school in 1956 when he set a 100-yard record of 51.4 during a meet with Kansas. In February 1958, while swimming for the Sooners under Hall of Fame coach Matthew Mann, he set a new pool record in the 100-yard sprint of 52.8 at a Big 8 meet. Jeff made the All-American team each year at the University of Oklahoma. In the full span of his swimming career, Farrell took six national championships in the 100 and 200-meter freestyle swim events, and at various times set 25 American, world and Olympic records. Jeff graduated from Oklahoma around 1958.

In early September, Farrell won two gold medals at the 1959 Pan American Games in Chicago, in the men's 100-meter freestyle (56.3), and the Men's 4x100-meter medley. Besides Jeff, the 4x100-meter medley team consisted of Frank McKinney, Mike Troy, and Kenneth Nakasone who was not an Olympian. Both events were completed in Pan Am Games record time.

Jeff enrolled in the Navy ROTC Program at Yale by 1959 and was first commissioned as an Ensign, swimming with Hall of Fame Yale Coaches Bob Kiphuth and on occasion Phil Moriarty, though primarily in American Athletic Union competition, as his collegiate eligibility was completed at the University of Oklahoma. Jeff swam with some frequency with the U.S. team in 1959 and 1960 in International competition. While at the Yale ROTC and graduate program, Farrell swam at times with former Yale Coach Bob Kiphuth's New Haven Swim Club. Four months before the Olympic trials, while out of collegiate competition in April 1960 at 23, Jeff, as a Lieutenant Junior Grade would break records in the 100-yard freestyle with a 48.2, and another record in the 220-yard freestyle at the National Men's AAU Championship, held in the Yale Pool. Jeff would hold his ROTC Lieutenant's commission in 1960, and graduate with a Masters from Yale in 1963.

On August 2, 1960, only six days after having an emergency appendectomy on July 27, Jeff qualified at the U.S. Olympic Trials in Detroit. Despite swimming with his lower stomach tightly bandaged, and still having his stitches, Jeff won both his first preliminary heat and the semi-final heat for the 100-meters. He placed third in the final but was not selected as he needed to be in the top two finishers.

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