
Swimming specialty: Breaststroke
Hair: Brown
Eyes: Blue
Height: 5’ 9” / 175cm
Marital status: single
Education: University of Arizona, major: Retail and
Consumer Sciences
Favorite swim meet: Olympics, all World Cup meets
Motto: Work hard, play hard
Favorite city: Monte Carlo, Monaco
Favorite country: Italy
Favorite music: Ben Harper, Jack Johnson, Grateful Dead,
Bob Marley
Post career wish: to open her own clothing boutique
Special interests: Animal lover. Works with group
“Defenders of Wildlife”
- Dazzling Swimmer
Amanda Beard went to the Athens 2004 Olympic Games a
veteran at just 22. She has already achieved more than
most of us would dare to dream of in a lifetime. Beard
has ridden the perilous rollercoaster of success and
failure, climbed to dizzy heights and plunged into dark
defeat only shake herself off and get back onboard for
that upward climb. Such a person does not come along
every day.
Beard, who has now proved she is one of the all-time
great swimmers, went to her first Olympics in 1996 in
Atlanta. The weedy 14-year-old, who took her teddy bear
along and was often ‘baby-sat’ by some of the other team
members, came home with three medals – a gold medal
(400m Medley Relay) and two silvers (100m & 200m
Breaststroke). Overnight she was a household name.
- A maturing experience
”Looking back I think it was real good for me to be
successful so young. At that age, you don’t understand
the real meaning of the Olympics and how intense it is,”
she has told reporters.
Then nature took its course. Beard left behind her
child’s frame and began to grow and grow – and grow.
Almost overnight she inhabited a body that was a
stranger to her, one that was an entirely different
shape and 15 cm taller. By the time the young adolescent
stopped growing she had shot up to 175 cm and had to
relearn how to propel her new form through the water
with the same speed and efficiency that she had deployed
at 14.
It was a very hard struggle.
Multi-Olympic medalist at 14, disappointing at 15,
considering retirement at 16, Beard turned the corner
and steadily climbed the road back up to the summit of
her sport.
Ranked only sixth in the country in 2000, Beard put in
an exceptional performance to make the US squad for the
Sydney Olympics and brought home a bronze medal for the
200 m in her favorite discipline, breaststroke. The
critics were silenced. Her confidence was refueled and
she rediscovered her love for her sport.
- Busy in the Pool
Beard, now based in Tucson and enrolled at the
University of Arizona, has again established herself as
a champion. She was a silver and double gold medalist at
the 2002 Pan Pacific Championships, and at the 2003
World Championships, she claimed her first individual
gold in a world meet when she tied the world record to
win the 200m breaststroke. Beard logged stellar
performances at the 2004 Spring Nationals, winning the
100m and 200m breaststroke and the 200m individual
medley, and she also brought home gold from the Speedo
Championship Series and Swim Meet of Champions events
that followed Nationals. An old pro at 22, she was up
for the Olympic challenge, but before the Games she was
still a little awed by the prospect.
”The Olympics are a huge deal, especially for a sport
like swimming,” she said in an interview. “People take
notice of our sport during this time, so it feels really
special to have a lot of support from your country.
Plus, it’s a great chance for athletes to come from all
over the world and have an amazing competition. It is
just very special – you look around and see some of the
best athletes in the world and it makes you really in
awe.”
Finally, Amanda Beard took home two silver medals (Women
4 x 100m Freestyle Relay & 200m Individual Medley) as
well as a gold medal (200m breaststroke) from the Ahtens
2004 Olympic Games.
- Coping with first race nerves
Although Amanda Beard is blessed with an engaging and
fun-loving personality and has the wisdom of experience
in and out of the pool to support her, she does admit
that she might have a few first race jitters.
“After the first event,” Beard says, “you get some of
the jitters out, and from then on you relax and take
each race as it comes.”
The 175 cm frame she now inhabits stands her in good
stead both in and out of the pool. She also works as a
model and is sometimes likened to film star Angelina
Jolie. Beard is flattered by the comparison, but she’d
rather be compared to Jolie for the actress’s charity
work. “I’m involved with a group called Defenders of
Wildlife. I’m an animal lover, and it’s great working
with people who are so passionate about protecting
animals and habitats. They’re educating me, and I’m
trying to help them out,” she explains.
Finally, Amanda Beard has no plans to stop swimming.
Having regained a natural feeling for her sport, this
athlete has truly hit her stride. “I haven’t ruled out
the 2008 Olympics in Beijing,” she says. “I just take it
year by year.”
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