Tracey Wickham celebrates after setting a new world record in the 800m at the 1987 Edmonton Commonwealth Games (Photo: Colin Price)

April 13, 2016

Aussie swimming legend Tracey Wickham MBE, OAM – whose daughter Hannah died of cancer in 2007 – will be the special guest speaker at the Mayor’s Breakfast / Relay For Life Launch on April 29.

Hannah Ciobo was just 19 when she succumbed to synovial sarcoma, an extremely rare soft tissue cancer.

Tracey helped to establish “Hannah’s Chance” in her memory, a foundation to help raise money to fund sarcoma research.

The Mayor’s Breakfast will be held from 6:30am to 8:00am at the Kingaroy Town Common Hall in Oliver Bond Street, Kingaroy.

Cost is $30.

Bookings must be made to Bronwyn Barry on (07) 4189-9155 by Tuesday, April 26.

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Tracey Wickham has been described as the “greatest Australian swimmer never to have won an Olympic medal”.

Her Sport Australia Hall of Fame listing notes that this is because she “peaked” in non-Olympic years.

From the Sport Australia website:

Her 800m and 400m freestyle world records, set in 1978 stood for nine and 10 years respectively. When her records were broken by Janet Evans of the United States, they were the longest standing records in swimming at the time.

Tracey began swimming at the age of eight and broke her first State age group record in the 200m backstroke two years later.

Her first national gold medal came in the 200m individual medley at age 12, but it was the middle and distance freestyles which were to be her strongest events.

At the age of 13, she was the youngest Australian athlete at the 1976 Olympics, and although she gained invaluable experience, she did not make a final.

In 1977, Tracey broke the 1500m freestyle world record in a solo swim. Two weeks later she broke the 800m freestyle world record and only six months later, the 400m freestyle world record.

In 1978 at the Edmonton Commonwealth Games, Tracey won the 400m and 800m freestyle events, each time beating teammate Michelle Ford into second. In the 800m, both girls were inside the world record and Tracey took six seconds off Ford’s world record to win in 8 min 24.62 seconds.

Next came the Berlin World Championships and another record in the 400m freestyle, which held for nine and a half years.

She also went on to win the 800m freestyle a few days later, to be Australia’s only gold medallist at the championships. Six months later at the Australian championships in Perth she lowered the 1500m freestyle world record by 8.2 seconds to 16:06.63. She also won the 200m, 400m, and 800m titles.

Tracey was selected for the 1980 Olympic team but decided to withdraw due to family and health reasons.

Unlike the United States, Australia did not officially boycott the Moscow Games over the Afghanistan War but several Australian athletes elected to boycott them personally.

Tracey retired during 1980, but came back eight months later to win gold in the 100m butterfly and 200m freestyle at the Australian national championships.

Her coach, Laurie Lawrence, was her inspiration to start training for the 1982 Commonwealth Games in her hometown of Brisbane and with only a few months of serious preparation, everything went to plan. She repeated her 400m and 800m freestyle victories from four years earlier and won silver in the 200m freestyle.

Tracey retired for good soon after the Games.

She was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in December 30, 1978 for her outstanding service to swimming, becoming the youngest Australian to be awarded the MBE.

In 1992 she was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame at Fort Lauderdale and in June 2005, she was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) for her service to Australian swimming and to the development of young swimmers through teaching and coaching roles.


 

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