Deborah Babashoff | |
Fullname: | Deborah Babashoff |
Nicknames: | "Debbie" |
Strokes: | Freestyle |
Club: | Mission Viejo Nadadores |
Collegeteam: | University of Miami |
Birth Date: | 1970 |
Birth Place: | Whittier, California |
Deborah Babashoff (born 1970) is an American former competition swimmer who excelled in freestyle distance events.
Debbie won her first national title in the 500 freestyle at the Short Course Nationals, in March, 1985.[1] Showing consistency at longer distances, she placed third in the 1500 M freestyle with a time of 16:48.37 at the Speedo Swim Meet of Champions at Mission Viejo on June 23, 1985. Her 4x100 Freestyle Relay team composed of the Mission Viejo Nadadores, also took first place.[2]
On June 24, 1986, she qualified for that years World Aquatics Championships which was to be held in Madrid by winning the 400 meter freestyle at the World Aquatics Trials in Orlando, Florida, with a personal best time of 4:09.97. At the time, she was training with the Mission Viejo Nadadores. Later, in Madrid, she won the bronze medal in the 800-meter freestyle event at the World Championships.[3]
Next year she won a silver medal at the 1987 Pan American Games in the same event, and in 1989 a national title in the 1500-meter freestyle.[1]
In 1988, she took second behind Janet Evans in the 1500 freestyle at the U.S. Indoor Championships at Orlando, Florida with a time of 16:27.40.3.[4]
Debbie was born to Vera and Jack Babashoff in Whittier, California. Her father had been a swimming instructor in Hawaii and always wanted his own children to become Olympians.[5] Both of her parents are second-generation Russian Americans.[5] She attended Fountain Valley High School near Huntington Beach, California.[6] Prior to college, she was coached by Flip Dar with the Irvine Novaquatics which she switched to around June 1987. She had previously swum for the Mission Viejo Nadadores under head coach Mark Schubert, but moved to the Novaquatics to improve her times. While swimming at the meet to qualify for the Olympic Trials in 1986, Deborah qualified in the 400 and 800 freestyle when she was a High School Senior. At the trials in Austin in August 1988, she did not qualify for the final heat to make the U.S. Olympic Team.[7]
In 1988, her demanding workout schedule consisted of weight training three days a week, five hours of training on Saturdays, and two workouts every weekday, with one before and one after school. In that year, she had been voted Most Valuable Swimmer in the Sunset League three years in a row, and won Fountain Valley High School's Athletic Coronet Award, the school's highest recognition for service or achievement.[8]
Her older sister Shirley (b. 1957) and older brothers Jack, Jr., (b. 1955) and Bill (b. 1959) were also swimmers who competed internationally.