User:Dcw2003
Biographical details | |
---|---|
Born | New York City, New York | April 12, 1921
Died | October 20, 2014 Thousand Oaks, California | (aged 93)
Alma mater | Harvard University, Swathmore College |
Playing career | |
Position(s) | breastroke, freestyle |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1947-1955 | Rose Valley Suburban League, Pa. |
1956, 1958 | Asst. Coach, Yale University |
1957-1992 | University of Southern California |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Championships | |
9 NCAA Championships 14 AAU Men's National titles 2 AAU Women's National titles | |
Awards | |
Olympic Coach Women's Swimming (1964) Olympic Coach Women's Swimming (1972) International Swimming Hall of Fame[1] | |
dcw2003 was a technical writer and trainer who worked two decades writing documentation for companies focusing in the area of network management software. He received a BS in Political Science from Tufts University in 1977, and studied Political Theory, International Relations, and Soviet government and history. He received a Masters in Teaching in 1979, an Associates in Electronics Technology in 1981, and later trained as a paralegal. He has currently completed over 43,000 edits, and is a Master Editor. He swam with a college swim team, mostly for the exercise during college, and was an enthusiastic masters swimmer for thirty years. He is currently adding and editing the bios of olympic swimmers, distance swimmers, and swim coaches.
A brief list of boxing articles created and most heavily edited include but are not limited to:
- Abraham Jacob Hollandersky
- Austin Rice
- Dave Palitz
- Mosey King
- Captain George Fried
- Joe Glick
- Syd Terris (From Small Stub)
- Jack Bernstein (boxer)(From small stub)
- Abie Bain
- Jack Silver (boxer)
- Jimmy Goodrich
- Phil Bloom
- Venice Borkhorsor
- Solly Seeman (In progress)
- Mushy Callahan (from small stub)
- Benny Valgar
- Joe Bernstein (Added references and boxing table)
- Joe Benjamin (boxer) (In progress)
- Eddie Kelly (boxer)
- Tom McCormick (Added image, table, and two sections of text)
- Matt Wells (From small stub)
- Harry Lewis (boxer) From short stub
- Mike (Twin) Sullivan
- William "Honey" Mellody
- Frank Erne
- Tommy Freeman (boxer)
- Al McCoy (From short Stub)
- Joe Gans - (Fixed in-line references for web-sites)
- Al Hostak
- Rube Ferns
- Solly Krieger
- Pat Bradley
- List of welterweight boxing champions (Added seven champions)
- Mike Glover (boxer)
- Ray Bronson
- Waldemar Holberg
- Isadore Schwartz
- Newsboy Brown (From Stub)
- Kid Norfolk (Added five references, and removed references needed warning)
- Added sources for boxer Johnny Coulon, and section titles
- Wrote Frankie Neil from scratch, bantamweight boxing champion
- Added Record box and photo for boxer Montie Attell, also photos, and did minor grammar edit
- Created Harry Forbes from scratch, included table, photos, and many references
- Created Boxer Eddie Martin, bantamweight, as Eddie Martin (boxer)
- Updated and added greatly to Abe Goldstein, bantamweight champion boxer, photo, 25 references, etc.
- Added 23 references to Terry McGovern, from the existing three, as references were required. Improved headers and added text.
- Wrote Ike Weir from scratch.
- Added photo, references, and section headers to Torpedo Billy Murphey
- Added greatly to Young Griffo, which had been a short stub. Created an additional twenty references, photos and text.
- Created articles Ben Jordan
- Created article Eddie Santry from scratch
- Created article Mike Ballarino, Jr. Lightweight champion
- Created article Tippy Larkin from tiny stub
- Heavily edited and organized article on Thai flyweight boxer Chartchai Chionoi
- Created from scratch Flyweight Champion Filipino boxer Bernard Villacampo
- Heavily added to and edited Lou Salica from very small stub. Added photo, content, and over 20 references
- Created article Eddie Connolly (boxer) Need to add disambiguation pages
- Added references to boxer Harry Harris, and much text
- Completed article Georgie Abrams from stub
- Wrote most of Izzy Jannazzo article
- Completed and improved article Ruby Goldstein and added photo and many references
- Completed Petey Sarron, boxing stub
- Completed Johnny Jadick, boxing stub
- Completed Al Foreman, boxing stub
- Completed most of Pinky Silverberg from tiny stub, 25 references added, photo, etc.
- Added photograph, text, better headers, boxing record, and numerous references to Pete Sanstol, boxer
- Created Tod Morgan from tiny stub, adding 30 references, photos, and several pages of text
- Updated boxer Steve Cruz from small stub, added numerous references
- Updated boxer Frankie Burns from small stub with no references
- Created from scratch Bantamweight title claimant, "Little" Jackie Sharkey
- Added greatly to tiny stub for 1920's heavyweight Bill Brennan (boxer)
- Updated and greatly added to boxer Floyd Johnson, added references, and photo
- Added to 1860's Jewish American Lightweight Boxing Champion Young Barney Aaron, adding important primary source references, photos
- Greatly added to Jewish boxer Maxie Berger's bio from small stub adding photos, and more accurate and complete data
- Completed boxer's Ike Williams and Juan Zurita's bios from small stubs.
- Sammy Angott from stub
- Lew Jenkins from small stub
- Completed boxing bios for Paddy DeMarco and Jimmy Carter from stubs
- Completed entry for George Chip, middleweight champion
- Rewrote boxers Julie Kogon, Leo Rodak, Petey Scalzo, Joey Archibald, adding hundreds of inline references
- Added boxers Alphonse Halimi, Robert Cohen, Freddie Gilroy, Raul Macias, John Henry Lewis, and Ben Jeby from small stubs
- Rewrote and added Benny Leonard, PT-109, PT-59
This user participates in WikiProject Biography. |
The following Rhodium Editing Star on left is from: Wikipedia:Service awards/Table
Editor Status[edit]
{{Infobox college coach | name = Eddie Sinnott | image = | image_size = | alt = | caption = | birth_date = Grenwich, Connecticut | death_date = Error: Need valid birth date (second date): year, month, day Eddie Lawrence Sinnott is an American former All-American competition swimmer for Southern Methodist University, who coached the Southern Methodist swim team for thirty years from 1989-2019, leading them to 16 league crowns and 11 top NCAA Division finishes.[2]
February 24, 1954 | birth_place =Sinnott was born in Greenwich,CT on February 24, 1954, to Anita and Lawrence Sinnott.[3]
Swimming at SMU from 1972-76, he earned All-America honors in 1973 and 1974, was a four-time letter winner, and in 1973 captured the Southwest Conference Championship in the 400 IM.[2]
In his first coaching position, he Assistant Coached Louisiana State University in 1988 when they were winners of the Southeastern Conference Title.[4] As Head Coach at SMU from 1989-2019, his teams won 16 conference championships, consisting of four WAC Championships from 1997-2000, five in the NIC conference from 2001-2005, and seven in Conference-USA from 2006-2010, and 2012-2013. He had 16 Coach of the year honors with 3 with the Southwester Conference, 3 with the Western Athletic Conference, 3 with the NIC conference, 6 with Conference-USA, and 1 with the Big 8 Conference.[4]
In 1996, Sinnott coached SMU swimmer Ryan Berube to a gold medal as a team member of the U.S.A. 4×200 free relay team. In the summer of 2000, Lars Frolander became the fourth SMU swimmer to capture a gold medal at the Olympic Games, winning the 100 butterfly in Sydney, Australia. During Sinnott coaching tenure, both Berube and Frolander were recipients of the NCAA Swimmer of the Year award within two years, with Berube in 1996, and Frolander in 1998.[5]
References[edit]
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
ISHOF
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ a b c "Legendary SMU Swimming Coach Eddie Sinnott Passes Away". smumustangs.com.
- ^ "Edwin Lawrence Sinnott". obits.dallasnews.com.
- ^ a b "Former SMU Head Coach Eddie Sinnott Dies". swimswam.com.
- ^ "Coach Eddie Sinnott Leaves Tremendous Legacy". swimmingworldmagazine.com.
Your first barnstar[edit]
The Working Wikipedian's Barnstar | |
Thank you for contributing so many good articles, Keep up the great work! — Cmr08 (talk) 08:21, 20 May 2015 (UTC) |
== Boxing barnstar ==Louis
The Sport Barnstar | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Awesome work creating/restoring articles related to boxers whom history has unfairly obscured! MaxPayne888 (talk) 19:48, 10 August 2016 (UTC)|}
Frank Elm was an American competitive swimmer and a Hall of Fame swimming coach for Rutgers University from 1961-1993 , and the first coach of the Rutgers Women's Swimming team from 1974-1993. He served on the staff of Olympic Teams, as an Assistant in 1968 and 1976, and as Head Coach in 1980.[1] [2][3] Elm was born on October 30, 1929, and was an All-American swimmer at Indiana University.[1] He would later serve as a swimmer/coach in the Marine Corps.[1][3] One of his first coaching assignments was at Summit, New Jersey's YMCA where his men's team won 68 consecutive meets, and his girls team won 70 consecutive meets.[3] Coaching Rutgers[edit]Elm coached Rutgers teams from 1961 though 1993. From 1961 through 1972, his men's team captured 11 consecutive winning seasons, achieving an overall record of 79-42. The Eastern Seaboard Championships, created in 1965 improved Rutger's Athletics, with the contributions of top swimming performers Bill Clark in 1963, Larry Jones and John Wasylyk in 1964, Don Galluzzi, and Marty Flickenger in 1965, and diver Roy Nicholas, an Eastern Champion, in 1964.[3] Simultaneous with coaching the men's team, Elm started the Rutger's Women's team, coaching them from 1974 through 1993. Judy Mellick, from the class of 1977 was the first woman to swim for Rutgers. Impressively, Elm's women's team started the season with three successive undefeated seasons from 1975-77, and dominated the Eastern Championships. At the 1977 National Championships, they became the only Eastern team in the East to place in the top ten.[3] Honors[edit]Elm was inducted into the American Swimming Coaches Hall of Fame in 2004, and the Rutgers Athletics Hall of Fame in 1998.[3] He died on October 30, 1929 in Piscataway, New Jersey at the age of 92.[2] References[edit]
References[edit]
{{Infobox college coach |
name = Charles Kawamoto | full_name = Charles Kiyoichi Kawamoto | image = | image_size = | nickname = "Sparky" | alt = | caption = | birth_date = Charles "Sparky" Kiyoichi Kawamoto was a swim coach for the 1956 U.S. Olympic team, Hilo High School, and the highly competitive Hilo Aquatic Club, in Hilo, Hawaii, which he founded in the mid-1930's. He produced several High School All Americans and Olympic trial swimmers, and two Olympic medalists during his coaching years, Sonny Tanabe, and Yoshi Oyakawa, Hawaii's first Olympic gold medalist in 1956.[1] Early life[edit]Royer was born in Hilo, Hawaii on July 6, 1908 to Seki Kawamoto and Annie Hila.[1] Coaching[edit]Kawamoto initially started the Schinmachi Town Swimming Club in the mid-1930s, which became the highly competitive Hilo Aquatics Club. In his early years, prior to having access to pools, Kawamoto used the Wailoa River for training.[1] Outstanding swimmers[edit]Yoshi Oyakawa, who became his single greatest protege, and Hawaii's first Olympic gold medal winner, swam with Kawamoto at the Hilo Aquatics Club, and briefly at Hilo High School. Oyakawa won a gold medal in the 100-meter backstroke at the 1952 Helsinki Olympics.[2] He trained Richard "Sonny" Tanabe at Hilo High School as well as at the Hilo Aquatics Club, who would compete for the U.S. in the preliminary heats of the 1956 Olympic men's silver medal winning 4×200-meter freestyle relay. Kawamoto coached both Oyakawa and Tanabe in the 1952 Olympic trials in Detroit, Michigan.[3][4] Other outstanding swimmers included Edward Kawachika, Dennis Baker, Laurence Hao, Masami Takahata, Yoshinobu Terada, Joe Kalua, Walter Silva, Jr., Roy Tanabe, Curtis and Robert Carlsmith, Carl Fujita, and Masa Onuma.[5][1] Retirement career[edit]Kawamoto retired from his sales job at American Factors (AMFAC) in 1972, but continued coaching and conducting swimming classes for children. In 1973, he started a swimming-based exercise program for retired Hawaiians at the Senior Program of the Parks and Recreation Department. The program, which attracted wide attention was named "Aquathentics", which aided stroke patients and provided therapeutic benefit for handicapped individuals.[5] Kawamoto died at Hilo Hospital on April 7, 1982. He is survived by his wife Haruko, three sons and seven grandchildren.<ref> References[edit]
References[edit] |
July 6, 1908