
Kirsty Coventry starts IOC president term, reflects on Olympic swimming journey from Zimbabwe
Kirsty Coventry can remember the spot in her living room 33 years ago when, shortly after getting out of the pool and still wearing her swimsuit, she watched TV coverage of the Barcelona Olympics and a diver competing for her country of Zimbabwe.
'I knew as a 9-year-old that I wanted to go to Olympic Games and win a gold medal,' she said.
Now, at age 41, the seven-time Olympic medalist Coventry is the first female IOC president, the first IOC president from an African nation and the youngest person in the role in a century.
'It's not just about a multisport event,' she said Monday in a handover ceremony with outgoing IOC President Thomas Bach. 'It's a platform to inspire. It's a platform to change lives, and it's a platform to bring hope.'
Coventry, elected to the role in March, formally took office on the annual Olympic Day.
'Today is a day of joy, the joy of passing the torch to a new generation,' Bach, elected IOC Honorary President for Life, said at the IOC base of Lausanne, Switzerland.
Coventry was banned from family card games growing up. 'Because I hated to lose,' she said. She loved swimming so much that she slept in her suit. She was bullied and called names by classmates for saying she would one day win Olympic gold.
'Those same people, when I won my medal and I went back to Zimbabwe, were the first people that wanted a picture with me,' she said.
Coventry swam at five Olympics — 2000 through 2016 — and realized her dream from age 9, taking back-to-back 200m backstroke golds in 2004 and 2008.
In addition to watching the Barcelona Games, Coventry has vivid memories of her first Olympics in Sydney at age 17.
Like when she fell over while struggling to squeeze into a new racing suit. The swimmer next to her offered to help. Coventry looked up and saw her hero, gold medalist Susie O'Neill of Australia.
Or when she marched onto the Sydney Aquatic Centre pool deck for her first preliminary heat and felt '14,000 people all screaming and shouting for swimmers that they didn't even know.'
Coventry didn't make any finals in Sydney, but followed it with a deluge: titles at the Commonwealth Games, the NCAA Championships (with Auburn) and the World Championships, in addition to her world records and Olympic medals.
She went into the 2008 Beijing Olympics with a goal to win four individual golds. She took silver in her first three events, then capped it with that 200m back repeat victory.
'It was not the most enjoyable from my perspective,' she said, 'because I had pinned everything to it being successful, and it was only going to be success if it equated to four gold medals.
'I wish I had gone back and realized what I was actually achieving in the moment.'
In 2016, the year of her final Olympics, Coventry confided in her longtime coach, Kim Brackin, that she wanted to be IOC president one day.
By then, Coventry was already an IOC member on the athletes' commission.
'She has always known what she is capable of,' Brackin said minutes after Coventry was elected IOC president.
Kirsty Coventry thanks her family and friends for always keeping her grounded and humble, and expresses gratitude to the strong women in her life. pic.twitter.com/c0v50weE48
Coventry detailed her vision for an IOC presidency — one of if not the most powerful in global sport — in her candidate manifesto published last December (soon after she gave birth to her second daughter, Lily).
She wrote that she was guided by the collaborative Ubuntu philosophy: I am because we are.
'Whatever decision I make affects you,' she said last week. 'Every decision we make is going to have a ripple effect throughout our ecosystem.'
That in mind, Coventry already invited IOC members to what she called a 'pause and reflect workshop' this Tuesday and Wednesday. It's the first step toward a longer consultation process with broader stakeholders to strengthen the Olympic Movement in a collective way.
'As I've got a little bit older, you also realize that while you like to win everything, sometimes there's a little bit more benefit in the collaboration and working together,' she said, 'so that everyone wins, and it's not just an individual act.'
Nick Zaccardi,

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Oleksandr Usyk in shock split from promoter one month before Daniel Dubois rematch
Just one month before Oleksandr Usyk's rematch with Daniel Dubois, the unified heavyweight champion has split from his promoter Alex Krassyuk in a surprising move. Usyk is scheduled to defend his titles against Dubois, who holds the IBF belt, at Wembley Stadium on 19 July – two years after surviving a controversial low blow to stop the Briton. If Usyk, 38, can defeat Dubois again, he will become a two-time undisputed heavyweight champion, having previously reigned as undisputed cruiserweight champion. But while Krassyuk has been present for all of his compatriot's professional accolades, he will not be there on 19 July. Krassyuk has worked with Usyk for the entirety of the southpaw's professional career, following the boxer's Olympic gold-medal win at London 2012, but he released a statement on Sunday (22 June) to signal the end of their partnership. 'It's been a tremendous journey — 12 years of unbelievable success,' wrote the K2 Promotions chief on Instagram. 'Two young dreamers met each other to change the game. 'Back in 2013, I gave you my word — and I kept it. At the time, no one believed we were capable of achieving what we set out to do. But by the grace of God, we completed the mission impossible. 'Milestones we conquered together: September 2016 – WBO Cruiserweight Champion. January 2018 – WBO and WBC Cruiserweight Champion. July 2018 – Undisputed Cruiserweight Champion. September 2021 – WBO, WBA, and IBF Heavyweight Champion. May 2024 – Undisputed Heavyweight Champion. 'A dream come true!!! Thank you for all we've gone through and for the honor to be the lifetime promoter of the Double Undisputed. May the Lord bless you and guide your next steps. Thanks God for everything.' Usyk last fought in December, outpointing Tyson Fury for the second time in seven months to retain the unified heavyweight titles. In their first fight, last May, Usyk became the division's first undisputed champion in 24 years. After their first bout, he vacated the IBF belt to avoid a mandatory defence and enable a rematch with Fury, meaning interim champion Dubois was elevated to regular champion. Dubois, 27, knocked out Anthony Joshua at Wembley in September to retain the IBF title, before withdrawing from a February defence against Joseph Parker due to illness. Two days later, Parker stopped Dubois's replacement Martin Bakole, but his clash with 'Dynamite' was not reorganised. Instead, Dubois moved on to his upcoming rematch with Usyk, who is undefeated as a pro. In their first bout, in 2023, Usyk climbed off the canvas after a low blow by Dubois, before stopping the Briton in round nine. Dubois's team appealed the result, claiming the low blow was a legal body shot, but to no avail.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
4 theories on why there's so many NBA Achilles tears lately
The 2024-25 NBA season will be remembered for so much -- the Oklahoma City Thunder's first title in the city (we're not counting the Sonics' ring), the Indiana Pacers' incredible run that fell short in a Game 7 of the NBA Finals and beyond. But there's also the rash of Achilles woes that's led to eight players to suffer the devastating injuries this season: names like Tyrese Haliburton, Jayson Tatum, Dejounte Murray and Isaiah Jackson. So ... what gives? Why are there seemingly more Achilles injuries these days than in previous years? Is it heavier workloads? Too many games? The style of play? Let's share some theories that are going around: It could be the style of the modern NBA that's one factor There's this thought from Yahoo's Tom Haberstroh, after Tatum went down with the devastating injury against the New York Knicks: Tatum's assignment on the 7-foot [Karl-Anthony] Towns is representative of a growing expansion of the game's geometry. The wing player was tasked with banging down low and wrestling with Towns for rebounds, while also staying with him when he ventured out to the perimeter where Towns is comfortable launching from 30 feet. Guards are centers and centers are guards. Towns leads a growing trend of stretch 5s who demand defenders to follow big men for a much larger surface area on the floor. Whether it's Nikola Jokić in Denver, Chet Holmgren in OKC or Myles Turner in Indiana, having a stretch 5 is the norm for title contenders now. Hell, Draymond Green is averaging more 3-point attempts in this series (5.8) than Reggie Miller did in his postseason career (5.7). It's just a game of more movement now on both ends. That's an added load on the Achilles, possibly. Is it because there are too many games? This has been a discussion for some time now. There's 82 regular-season games, and if you're an NBA title contender, you're potentially going to play another 20-something contests on top of that. And what if it's an Olympics year? It just might be too much. Has it gotta be the shoes? This is a theory floated by ex-NBA point guard Nick Van Exel back in May: But this might be backed by science, per Basketball Network: That school of thinking is backed up by a 2010 clinical study, which concluded that the type of footwear can affect Achilles tendon loading during dorsiflexion. According to the research, high-top shoes reduce the tension on the Achilles tendon by 9.9 percent. With tied laces, high-top shoes also cut the peak dorsiflexion angle by 7.2% as compared to low-top sneakers. But in recent years and after the late Kobe Bryant started the revolution, players have preferred wearing low-top sneakers over high-tops because with more ankle freedom, it allows more agility which helps players make quick change in direction and fast lateral movement. But low-tops and mid-tops don't protect the ankle as much the the high-tops. Is it due to playing through other injures? Haliburton's injury came after a calf strain. Kevin Durant tore his Achilles after a calf injury back in 2019.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
IOC is in 'best of hands', says Bach as he hands over to Coventry
Kirsty Coventry became the president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), the most powerful person in sport, on Monday in a handover ceremony with her predecessor Thomas Bach. The Zimbabwean is the first woman and African to head the body and at 41 the youngest since Baron Pierre de Coubertin, who is credited with founding the modern-day Olympics. Advertisement Coventry accepted the Olympic key from Bach, who like her is an Olympic champion -- he won a team fencing gold in 1976 and she earned two swimming golds in 2004 and 2008. Stepping down after a turbulent 12-year tenure, Bach expressed his confidence that the Olympic movement was "in the best of hands" and Coventry would bring "conviction, integrity and a dynamic perspective" to the role. Coventry, who swept to a crushing first-round victory in the election in Greece in March, leans heavily on her family. Aside from her parents, who were present at the ceremony in Lausanne, there is her husband Tyrone Seward, who was effectively her campaign manager, and two daughters, six-year-old Ella, who Bach addresses as "princess", and Lily, just seven months old. Advertisement "Ella saw this spider web in the garden and I pointed out how it is made, and how strong and resilient it is to bad weather and little critters," said Coventry, who takes over officially at midnight Swiss time Monday (2200 GMT). "But if one little bit breaks it becomes weaker. That spider web is our movement, it is complex, beautiful and strong but it only works if we remain together and united." - 'Pure passion' - Coventry said she could not believe how her life had evolved since she first dreamt of Olympic glory in 1992. "How lucky are we creating a platform for generations to come to reach their dreams," she said to a packed audience in a marquee in the Olympic House garden, which comprised IOC members, including those she defeated, and dignitaries. Advertisement "It is amazing and incredible, indeed I cannot believe that from my dream in 1992 of going to an Olympic Games and winning a medal I would be standing here with you to make dreams for more young children round the world." Coventry, who served in the Zimbabwean government as sports and arts Minister from 2019 to this year, said the Olympic movement was much more than a "multi-sport event platform." "We (IOC members) are guardians of this movement, which is also about inspiring and changing lives and bringing hope," she said. "These things are not to be taken lightly and I will be working with each and every one of you to continue to change lives and be a beacon of hope in a divided world. Advertisement "I am really honoured to walk this journey with you." Bach, who during his tenure had to grapple with Russian doping and their invasions of the Crimea and Ukraine as well as the Covid pandemic, said he was standing down filled with "gratitude, joy and confidence" in his successor. "With her election it sends out a powerful message, that the IOC continues to evolve," said the 71-year-old German, who was named honorary lifetime president in Greece in March. "It has its first female and African to hold this position, and the youngest president since Pierre de Coubertin. She represents the truly global and youthful spirit of our community." Advertisement Bach, who choked back tears at one point during his valedictory speech, was praised to the rafters by Coventry, who was widely seen as his preferred candidate of the seven vying for his post. After a warm embrace she credited him with teaching her to "listen to people and to respect them," and praised him for leading the movement with "pure passion and purpose." "You have kept us united through the most turbulent times. "You left us with many legacies and hope, thank you from the bottom of my heart for leading us with passion and never wavering from our values." pi/gj