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Maritza Correia - Olympic Athlete
Born
December 23, 1981 to Guyanese parents in Puerto Rico. Became
first black woman to qualify for an Olympic swim team in 2004.
Correia is only the second black swimmer to make a US Olympic
team, following Anthony Ervin. Correia started swimming as a
seven-year-old when a doctor suggested the sport could help with
her scoliosis, a curvature of the spine.
- 2004 Olympic silver
medalist in 400m free relay
- Became the first
African-American woman to be on the U.S. Olympic swim team
and first African-American woman ever to set an American
record in swimming
- American record-holder in
50y free (previously held by Amy Van Dyken)
- Finished fourth in the
50m free at the 2005 World Championship trials
- Gold medalist in the 400m
free relay at the 2004 short course World Championships
- Took first in the 400m
free relay at the 2003 World Championships; relay gold
medalist (800m free relay), silver medalist (400m free
relay) at 2001 World Championships
- Won four events at 2002
NCAAs (50y, 100y free, 200y and 400y free relays) in
American-record time
- Former American record
holder in the 100y free, which was previously held by Jenny
Thompson
- Dubbed "Relay Woman" by
the swimming world for her ability to anchor relays with
great success and run down opponents – "As soon as I dive
in, my goal is to catch as many people as I can," Correia
said.
- Needs someone to make her
laugh before races "so my team calls out my nickname or
something”
- Began swimming in Puerto
Rico at age seven when her doctor recommended swimming as
therapy for her severe scoliosis
- Works with inner city
schools and detention centers to get kids involved in
sports, especially swimming
- Family moved to Florida
when she was eight years old
- Born two days before
Christmas in 1983 in San Juan, Puerto Rico
- Nickname is "Ritz" and
has two dogs, Malibu and Tyson
After a
disappointing performance at the 2000 Olympic Trials, Correia
almost quit the sport. However, with her Georgia teammates,
coaches and her mother, Correia was convinced to give it another
shot at the 2004 Olympic Trials. “Looking back at 2000, I was a
very inexperienced international swimmer, and changes needed to
be made,” Correia said. “I knew that I had to make more national
teams and more trips and gain some experience, which would help
my confidence. Within the past four year, I have broken SEC
records, NCAA records, American records, been to two world
championship meets, and have continuously been one of the top
swimmers in my events at meets throughout the years.”
Quote: On if she is going
to be the next Amy Van Dyken or Jenny Thompson: "I'm not gonna
be the next Amy Van Dyken. I'm gonna be the first Maritza
Correia. I want people to know me for me. And being the first
African-American woman to hold an American record definitely
sets that tone.” |