Matt Biondi, Living Legend Of Olympic Swimming, Returns As Director Of The Swimmers’ Alliance

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Matt Biondi, the director of the Athletes' Union, with Adam Peaty in London - Photo Courtesy: Craig Lord

Matt Biondi, Olympic legend of Seoul 1988, has been appointed Director of what was referred to as a type of athletes’ union but will be known as the International Swimmers’ Alliance by world-class swimmers determined to make the coming year one of 2020 vision on rights and the voice they feel they have been denied for decades.

Biondi, American winner of five gold, a silver and a bronze at the 1988 Games, and 11 Olympic medals in all, remains one of the greats of the sport. He met the latest wave of Olympic and World champions and podium placers in London today to set out the next steps of creating the Alliance and build legal and professional representation the swimmers insist must be included in the governance structures of their sport.

Biondi has the backing of the best swimmers in the world, including all attending the International Swimming League’s European derby in London this weekend.

The former 50m and 100m freestyle world record holder is perhaps the best-placed man in the world to explain to the current generation what life was like as a soaring achiever who tried to change the Lothar of athletes but was beaten back by the system and those governing the sport in a way that placed their own interests ahead off those of swimmers.

Biondi told Swimming World today: “My story was in ’88 when it started. I got too intermix with some of the other Olympic sports. Tennis had just opened up in the Olympics and Steffi Graf had had to be an amateur for two weeks prior to the Games.

“We had all these trust funds and I was in Bonn at a meet in Germany with my sponsor arena and I got a fax from USA Swimming saying if I took part I would lose my eligibility. Arena was putting food on my table. I mean, it wasn’t a lot of money but it meant I didn’t have to do what generations before me had done – and that was carry bags in hotels and deliver pizzas and so on.

“I was able to make some money as a swimmer. So, I was outspoken as a swimmer with USA Swimming, I did some articles with the press to try to bring some light to the issues and, quite honestly, I paid a big price for it.”

“They didn’t publicly try to repress my visibility but privately they did and I was so upset. I mean this is my country, I won 11 Olympic medals for the United States and they not only did not support me, they actively put their thumb to actively keep me off the screen, out of the pool. It was just unimaginable.”

“I was so mad that I became a school teacher and I’ve been teaching high-school math for 17 years.”

As a math teacher at the Sierra Canyon School in Chatsworth, California, Biondi did not only mould the academic aspect of his students’ lives: after classes were done, he coached the the swim team, passing on skills that spilled beyond the water:  teamwork, hard work, discipline, dedication and determination.

The first man inside 49 seconds in the 100m freestyle when he clocked 48.95 in 1985 for the second of his four global standards over two long-course laps, Biondi took his competitive spirit to the board of his own school, railed against what he saw as poor practice. His lone voice was not enough and his contract ended.

Lucky for swimmers and swimming.

Biondi is back

Matt Biondi in the shadows too long – Photo Courtesy: Griffin Scott

… and he intends to make it count and take back the years stolen from him at a time when athlete interest was rarely, if ever, the priority for the guardians of their sport.

The fates conspired to deliver Biondi to his destiny at then right time, right moment, just as athletes were shoaling for strength in numbers.

The son of ISL founder and president Konstantin Grigorishin, Ivan, and Biondi’s son Nate had become friends at Cal Berkley. Contact was made and a calling was reborn.

Biondi met Grigorishin and the ISL team and team managers of the LA Current and Cali Condors, respectively Lenny Krayzelburg and Jason Lezak, both Olympic gold medal winners for the USA. The 1988 legend liked what he heard and the role he might play talked to him. Biondi tells me:

“My goal is just what your question suggests: to see if the athletes can coming together with a common purpose. I started this 30 years ago so its’ very interesting and it will be extremely rewarding for me to be able to have the athletes stand together.”

It was, he believed, “easy” for organisations to deal with individuals but “if the athletes can all stand together as one, then that will be a real force.”

Bringing Aquatic Legends Back To The Pool

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Debbie Meyer – Photo Courtesy: International Swimming Hall of Fame ISHOF)

One of the first tasks that Biondi will perform, as part of a team that will include legal representation, is a move awaited like the rain in a desert after a drought of decades: to bring the greats of the sport back to the water’s edge.

He is in the process of inviting greats of the past to the ISL’s Final Match in Las Vegas on December 20-21. Says Biondi: “They’ll be in the VIP area. They won’t have much of a role but just for them to show their support is…”

This interviewer intervenes and reminds Biondi of a memory that still grates. In 2008 FINA hosted a centenary dinner during the Olympics in Beijing. I first heard about the dinner more than a year out and during an interview with triple Olympic champion Debbie Meyer (1968, the first woman and the last before Katie Ledecky in 2018 to win the 200, 400 and 800m freestyle titles) asked if she had received her invitation. Meyer had no idea there was to be a dinner. I said I’d ask. Six months on, she had still not heard. She was not alone: no Gould, no Matthes, no Biondi, no great at all barring those who might be connected to the machine as commentators or commission folk and trusted insiders.

Biondi grimaces and says:

“The swimmers should realise they’re a big part of the show and a big reason why sponsors are contributing billions  to it all; how many kids are inspired by it. It’s really a beautiful business plan for the IOC to be able to expect that all to work without the athlete befitting financially nor being able to contribute their voices to the decision-making process.”

Biondi was speaking a couple of yards away from Adam Peaty as one of the prime athlete voices in the current era was having his muscles and might caught by a snapper honing in on the tattoos of lion, Poseidon and other portents of the kind of fighting spirit that refuses to lie down, no matter how long it takes.

Adam Peaty: ‘…don’t be afraid to speak out because that’s what it’s going to take’

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Adam Peaty speaks his Athletes’ Voice – Photo Courtesy: Craig Lord

Peaty told Swimming World: “You know from me, I’m not afraid to speak my mind and I think we need more athletes who do that. We’re not afraid of the repercussions because realistically there are no repercussions. No-one’s gonna stop me from swimming; no-one’s gonna stop me from racing. And if you do even try that, you’ve already seen what happens.”

That was the voice the union of swimmers would take to the top tables of sports governance, he said:

“So, that’s the first thing to say to athletes: don’t be afraid to speak out because that’s what it’s going to take. With an athletes’ union, the most powerful thing is, instead of 10 or 20 voices fizzling out you’ve got one direct voice with about 100 of the world’s best athletes behind it. We’re the 100 top athletes and if we don’t like things, we’ve got the power to change things.”

Peaty added: “It’s great to have Matt as the director of the Athletes’ Union (Alliance). He’s a man who missed out so much on the financial side of things as an athlete.”

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Adam Peaty of London Roar – Photo Courtesy: Arena

Athletes had long been “dispensable” as far as those running the sport were concerned, Peaty opined. That had to change:

“The athletes’ union is the only way where we can get a unified voice and be taken seriously. I can say what I need to say and be mature about it, be direct but that will fizzle out because they will just say ‘bide your time, someone will replace him’, there’s always someone else who will come along and win the gold medals.”

Signing up to the Alliance would also form a contract with your fellow athletes, said Peaty.

“If you’re bound by a contact, hen if someone is being treated unfairly, legally you have to step in and stand with this athlete. It’s a higher level of seriousness.”

Athletes had been trapped in a weakness of their own making, Peaty suggested. It was one thing to “say ‘I’m behind Chad on this issue’ but another when they (federations/organisers) say ‘OK, well, we won’t let you swim at that event then’ and swimmers say ‘I really want to swim’… so nothing happens, nothing changes. If there’s a contract in place, its professional, like a normal trade union and there are repercussions if you’ve agreed to stand with your fellow athletes and then don’t.” He added:

”I’m glad it’s in the hands of Matt. We have a meeting (today) and, as you know, it’s taken a long time to get to this. We’re almost there. Every sport is getting to the point where the athletes realise they need professional and legal support and representation. It’s the most important thing a sport can do right now so that athletes have leverage and a voice.”

Katinka Hosszu: ‘… If we keep doing the same things over and over again, we’re definitely falling behind others sports’

Katinka Hosszu – Photo Courtesy: Foto Giorgio Scala / Deepbluemedia /Insidefoto

Triple Olympic champion of 2016, Katinka Hosszu was delighted by development, saying: “We’re further on than ever before. We’re closer to really having a united front. Everyone is getting together … it’s been a much longer process than I thought [would be needed] back in 2017.”

That was the year the Hungarian took on FINA over changes made to its World Cup rules without consultation with swimmers. On the way to Budapest hosting the World Championships in 2017, Hosszu clashed with the Hungarian federation, claimed leadership scalps and announced her intention to form a Professional Swimmers’ Association.

In London today, she explained: “We’ve never been closest to getting all the athletes together and really understanding what we are trying to do and what could be the goal … what we want to achieve. It’s not that we want war, not so we must be going against governing bodies; it’s more that we are pushing the sport forward. If we keep doing the same things over and over again, we’re definitely falling behind others sports.

“Swimming is a great sport for everyone not just swimmers. We’re trying to promote swimming and we’re hoping through the ISL that we’re moving forward and I think we’re doing really well so far.”

What is the vision? Do you see a time when whoever is representing you will sit at the table with ISL, FINA, whoever and whatever the issue is and have an athletes’ voice directly and not one filtered through those chosen by the organisations you have to deal with?

“That’s pretty much it: you summed it up,” Hosszu confirmed. “Basically, so far, we swimmers didn’t have a say … we really lived through times a lot of experiences where there were changes to competition formats, or points systems or whatever it was and, obviously the athletes were not represented to see what we wanted as swimmers.

“We’re the ones doing the work in the pool and the ones who are working to make sure the show we put on is the best. I think the goal will be good even for the governing bodies. If we are working together we can push everything forward and everyone will profit more than before.”

Cate Campbell: ‘… not just about us and our futures; its’s about safeguarding the sport for future generations as well’

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Cate Campbell; Photo Courtesy: Delly Carr/Swimming Australia Ltd.

Asked what the rise of the ISL had taught her about the power of athletes, Australia’s Cate Campbell replied: “It has shown the power of the united athlete front and something to unite behind is really important. There has been a bit of talk among us athletes for a couple of years but there was no direction to put that energy into. I think what the ISL has a done for us is to allow us to come together as one and focus those energies.

“It’’s a good thing for the sport. I don’t think any change comes through doing the same thing you’ve been doing over and over. We live in a world that’s constantly changing.” She added:

“Competition drives excellence and we’re hoping that the competition between FINA and ISL will drive excellence for the sport … for athletes but also for swimming fans all round the world. This is about the growth of swimming in the future. This is not just about us and our futures; it’s about safeguarding the sport for future generations as well.”

From the SwimVortex Archive, with permission:

25th anniversary Matt Biondi Reflects On His High-Water Mark – by John Lohn

He was one of the most recognizable figures in global swimming, an all-timer who established a legacy which continues to weigh heavily in the sport. He was a star in both the freestyle and butterfly events. He was an individual who made coaching staffs feel much better about their relay hopes. He was a man whose medal haul from the Olympic Games would force a normal person to visit the chiropractor for neck pain.

If a Mount Rushmore for men’s swimming is ever constructed in the United States, the choices for inclusion would be simple. Johnny Weissmuller would be the pick from the early era. Mark Spitz and Michael Phelps, forever tied by their Olympic exploits, would be slam-dunk selections. The other slot would go to Matt Biondi, the Californian who shone over three Olympiads and accumulated 11 Olympic medals during his career.

Matt Biondi

Believe it or not, we find ourselves celebrating the 25th anniversary of Biondi’s excellence at the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, a weeklong stretch which saw him win seven medals – five gold, a silver and a bronze. In today’s age of constant media (print, television, Internet), Biondi would have received similar coverage to that devoted to Phelps during his Olympic stints.

As it was, Biondi was under the microscope in 1988, a Sports Illustrated cover boy and focal point of Olympic coverage. Now, in retrospect, we can say he was the bridge – and one heck of a sturdy connector – between the much-ballyhooed exploits of Spitz and Phelps. In what was a less-than-spectacular showing by the United States in Seoul, evident in the 18 medals picked up by the Stars and Stripes, Biondi was a bright spot, along with the incomparable Janet Evans.

“It doesn’t seem like 25 years ago because that sounds like a long time,” Biondi said in a recent interview with SwimVortex.

“I was just at the (California Southern Section) Division III Championships and that was a big meet, an that’s just one state in the union. To think of Seoul, I was able to distinguish myself not just in America, but as a great Olympian. That was my high-water mark.”

Over eight days in South Korea, Biondi ruled the pool. Coming off a 1984 Olympic appearance, Biondi gradually surged to status as the world’s top gun. At the 1986 World Championships, he walked away with a gold medal in the 100 freestyle, his prime event, and bronze medals in the 50 free and 200 free. There was a silver in the 100 butterfly and three relay medals, and the whole lot suggested Biondi had the ability to be the headliner in Seoul.

He didn’t disappoint. Biondi won gold medals in the 50 and 100 freestyles and was the primary fuel to a trio of American relay triumphs. Although he fell a hundredth of a second shy of Surinam’s Anthony Nesty in the championship final of the 100 fly, his time of 53.01 was a career best. Biondi, too, set a personal record in the 200 freestyle, where he earned bronze behind surprise champion Duncan Armstrong of Australia and Sweden’s Anders Holmertz.

For Biondi, the 50 free victory was the most meaningful moment of his Seoul experience. The 1988 Games marked the first time the 50 free was held in Olympic competition since 1904, and the event was a 50-yard free 84 years earlier. More, Biondi had the chance to duel his American teammate Tom Jager, and the event was his last individual foray.

“The 50 free was it for me,” Biondi said, when asked to identify his most special moment. “I have a picture of my reaction and it was the most jubilant I’d ever been. It was a world record (22.14). That swim made it for me.”

These days, Biondi makes the lives of youngsters. As a math teacher at the Sierra Canyon School in Chatsworth, Calif., Biondi molds the academic aspect of his students’ lives. After school, he serves as the coach of the swim team, providing the chance for his athletes to learn the importance of teamwork, hard work and discipline, among other characteristics.

This past season, Biondi guided one of his swimmers to the CIF Southern Section Division III Championships. Meanwhile, his 400 freestyle relay cut 20 seconds off its best time at the league-championship meet. Clearly, Biondi is having an impact, and from his words, he’s clearly enjoying his role at Sierra Canyon. Said Biondi:

“The opportunity to work with kids athletically is such an important chance to teach values of life. I get the chance to work in a fun, physical environment and the kids get to give of themselves for the benefit of a team. They’ll remember this experience. It’s fun to coach a champion, but whether or not someone swims well, you still get to learn life lessons.”

Matt Biondi

Matt Biondi

Biondi consistently finds himself in the pool, putting in about five hours of work each week. Just last year, Biondi returned to competition for a brief period, even setting a Masters world record in the 50 freestyle at the Southern Pacific Championships. He also dueled with Jager at the RCP Tiburon Sprint Classic.

Yet, there is no plan to return to Masters competition anytime soon, as Biondi isn’t pulled to the blocks. However, he is planning to compete at an upcoming 40-and-over water polo tournament, a sport in which Biondi was first a star.

“I don’t have any swim meets planned,” he said. “It will be a while. I don’t have the competitive desire.”

Twenty-five years ago, Matt Biondi was the primetime figure in the sport. Twenty-five years down the road, he’ll still be remembered as one of the finest athletes the sport has seen. More important, his students can remember him as a man who made an impact on their lives and shared valuable lessons.

“That was a peak year,” Biondi said of 1988. “It’s hard to think about it. Like other people, I’m a guy who will burn a bagel in the toaster, but I got to take that trail. It’s kind of amazing.”

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Peter Crippen
Peter Crippen
5 years ago

I feel certain Fran Crippen, would applaud this effort, I hope it succeeds, and includes a safety first attitude for all meets Including open water meets and their athletes

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