Mark Spitz Back In The Swim Arena As Brand Ambassador 46 Years On

19th April 1978: Mark Spitz who won seven gold medals for swimming in the 1972 Munich Olympic Games. (Photo by Graham Morris/Evening Standard/Getty Images)
Mark Spitz as an Arena ambassador the first time round - Photo Courtesy: by Graham Morris/Evening Standard via Getty Images, courtesy of arena

arena has announced the re-signing of American Olympic hero Mark Spitz, winner of a record seven gold medals at the Munich 1972 Olympic Games, as a brand ambassador, 46 years after he first collaborated with the company in the pioneering days of sports sponsorship.

Spitz, 69, was diagnosed with atrial fibrillation, or an irregular heartbeat, last year. The condition affects some 3 million Americans.

Spitz, a member of the board of directors of the International Swimming Hall of Fame, has worked with doctors over the last year to manage the condition, according to a social media post Wednesday, the 47th anniversary of winning his seventh gold medal at the Munich Olympics.

Spitz posted on social media: “I feel lucky that I was able to catch this before it put me at serious risk for other heart complications. I look forward to spreading awareness about AFib as I learn more about this condition and live with my own diagnosis.”

The seven golds record he set for a single Games was surpassed by fellow American Michael Phelps at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Phelps retired after the Rio 2016 Olympic Games, having amassed 28 Olympic medals, 23 of them gold, between 2004 and 2016. Nothing in Olympic history, all sports, comes remotely close to that tally.

Arena, the three-diamonds swimsuit maker issued the following statement:

Mark Spitz became an iconic figure at the 1972 Olympics in Munich, winning 7 gold medals, all in world record time, and helped to propel the efforts of entrepreneur Horst Dassler as he launched the arena brand in 1973.

In winning all his events in Munich – 100m & 200m freestyle, 100m & 200m butterfly, 4x100m & 4x200m freestyle relay, and 4x100m medley relay – Spitz set a record that stood for 36 years until Michael Phelps broke it with 8 gold medals at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing. He remains the second-most decorated Olympian in history (in terms of gold medals: 9) behind Phelps. Back in the 70s, the image of Spitz with his 7 gold medals and his moustache – grown as an act of rebellion in an era when other swimmers were shaving their body hair – transcended him from Olympic hero to cultural icon across the globe.

Spitz proved to be a pioneer not only through his performances in the pool, he was also a trailblazer in athlete sponsorship. Not long after his herculean effort in Munich, at the young age of 22 Spitz retired from swimming – still an amateur sport at the time – in order to become arena’s first sponsored athlete. Subsequently he was joined in the following years by other swimming icons, including Shane Gould, Don Shollander, Shirley Babashoff, and David Wilkie.

“There’s no doubt that swimming has changed since my day back in the 70s,” says Spitz. “It’s more technical, more professional, and the world’s top athletes have to be a lot more conscious of their behavior, since they’re expected to be role models for the younger generations. But there are also some fundamental things that are still the same – what it means to become a champion, what it means to be a leading brand; these are elements of the DNA, and they don’t change. This is where I think we can work really well together, so I’m very excited by our new collaboration. For me, to this day arena is still the best there is.”

mark-spitz

Mark Spitz – 1968. Photo Courtesy: Swimming World Archive

Mark-spitz

Mark Spitz – Photo Courtesy: ISHOF

Dassler’s recruitment of Spitz and other athletes in the 70s marked the birth of professionalism. Since then, sponsorship is the cornerstone for success in professional swimming, from the individual all the way through to the world’s most successful national federation, USA Swimming, for whom arena is today an official sponsor.

Forty years ago, prohibitive sponsorship guidelines, limited resources, and economic realities forced many elite swimmers to retire in the prime of their athletic ability. Today, however, the role of sponsorship has allowed athletic careers to thrive, providing athletes with the appropriate time and resources to dedicate to training and competition.In addition to being a pioneer in sports marketing, arena’s beginnings marked it as an innovator, and since then it has developed a reputation for being at the vanguard of technological innovation in swimming.

The company’s history includes decades of breakthrough products, including the X-Glide in the new millennium – one of Time Magazine’s 50 Best Inventions of 2009 – and most recently the Carbon range of racing suits, which led the field at FINA’s 2019 World Championships in Gwangju, South Korea.

The world of swimming has indeed changed over the past 47 years, and both Mark Spitz and arena played a material hand in initiating the changes that have ultimately brought the sport into the hi- tech, professional era that it finds itself in now.

With the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo now firmly in the sights of all aspiring champions, it is somehow fitting that these two icons of the pool will once again be working on the same team.“We’re very excited by the potential of our new collaboration with Mark,” said arena North America’s General Manager, Mark Pinger.

“He’s the first super-Olympian of the post-war era, and he’s also a successful businessman and an accomplished TV presenter and speaker. Then there’s a slightly rebellious side which adds a healthy amount of spice into the mix. We’re looking forward to working with him, exploring ideas together, and leveraging his cachet to bring arena to the front and center of the swimming world’s minds in North America.”

MARK SPITZ BIO

page3image57791984

Born: February 10, 1950; Modesto, California

Top Results

  • 1972 Olympics, Munich
  • 7 gold (100 & 200 free, 100 & 200 butterfly, 4×100 & 4×200 free relay, 4×100 medley relay)
  • 1968 Olympics, Mexico City
  • 2 gold (4×100 & 4×200 free relay) 1 silver (100 butterfly)
    1 bronze (100 free)
  • 1967 Pan American Games, Winnipeg
  • 5 gold (100 & 200 butterfly, 4×100 & 4×200 free relay, 4×100 medley relay)

Mark Spitz in The International Swimming Hall of Fame

Spitz’s coaches in the The International Swimming Hall of Fame:

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

Welcome to our community. We invite you to join our discussion. Our community guidelines are simple: be respectful and constructive, keep on topic, and support your fellow commenters. Commenting signifies that you agree to our Terms of Use

3 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Rich Davis
5 years ago

Imagine what he’d have done in 1976 if he’d been able to go.

Diane
Diane
5 years ago
Reply to  Rich Davis

As the parent of another Olympic swimmer who has A-fib.. contact Dr. Wald Salib. He is the head doctor for Electrophysiology at Cleveland Hospital, which is the number on medical facility in the US and in the world for this problem. Hope this helps..

Randall Scott Redman
5 years ago

Mark Spitz – Is the Back Stroke the hardest of the four strokes to learn for swimming. I know you need to learn to stay afloat. that’s one of my biggest problems.

3
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x