Amy Van Dyken (USA)
2007 Honor Swimmer
FOR THE RECORD: 1996 OLYMPIC GAMES; gold (50m freestyle, 100m
butterfly, 4x100m medley, 4x100m freestyle), 4th (100m freestyle); 2000
OLYMPIC GAMES: gold (4x100m medley, 4x100m freestyle); ONE WORLD
RECORD: (50m butterfly-sc); 1994 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: silver
(4x100m freestyle, 4x100m medley), bronze (50m freestyle); 1998 WORLD
CHAMPIONSHIPS: gold (50m freestyle, 4x100m freestyle, 4x100m medley);
1995 PAN AMERICAN GAMES: gold (100m butterfly, 4x100m freestyle,
4x100m medley), silver (100m freestyle); 1994 NCAA NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS:
gold (50m freestyle).
Amy VanDyken set the world on fire when she qualified in five events for the
1996 Atlanta Olympic Games and won an unpredicted four gold medals - 50
free, 100 fly and both relays, the most ever by an American woman at one
Olympic Games and a feat achieved only two other times in women's Olympic
swimming history.
An asthmatic since childhood limiting her to about 65% of normal lung capacity,
she was advised by her doctors to take up swimming. A slow starter, it took
her a few years to finish one length of the pool. But after winning a race, she was
hooked. As she matured, she became a Spartan, no-nonsense competitor who
tried to psych out her opponents with pre-race claps, growls and stares. After her
stellar Atlanta Olympic performance, she won three gold medals at the 1998
Perth World Championship and another two more Olympic gold medals at the
2000 Sydney Games as a member of the 4 x 100 meter freestyle and medley
relays giving her a total of six career Olympic gold medals.
Amy competed in the 1995 Pan American and Pan Pacific Games winning
four gold and three silver medals in freestyle and butterfly events. She was
the NCAA Female Swimmer of the Year at Colorado State University in
1994 and then trained with US National Team coach, Jonty Skinner.
At 6'0” and 145 pounds, Amy is one of the world's great freestyle and butterfly
sprinters who held the World Record in the 50m butterfly - short
course. She was the 1996 U.S.O.C Female Athlete of the Year and the
Associated Press Worldwide Female Athlete of the Year. She is seen on the
Wheaties cereal box, Got Milk ad and TV and radio programming along
with husband Tom Rouen, NFL punter who has won two Super Bowl rings
with the Denver Broncos.