Douglas Dale Northway (born April 28, 1955) is an American former swimmer, who competed for the University of Washington and then the University of Arizona, and represented the United States at two consecutive Olympic Games. He won a bronze in the 1500-meter freestyle in the 1972 Munich Olympics, and swam an Olympic and world record time in the preliminaries of the 4x200 freestyle relays at the 1976 Mexico City Olympics. His qualifying preliminary heat led the American Men's 4x200 freestyle relay team to a gold medal in the 1976 Olympic finals, though he did not swim with the final team. He was a world record holder in the 400-meter freestyle in April, 1976.[1]

Doug Northway
Personal information
Full nameDouglas Dale Northway
Nickname"Doug"
National teamUnited States
Born (1955-04-28) April 28, 1955 (age 69)
Ontario, California
Height5 ft 11 in (1.80 m) '72
6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) '76
Weight160 lb (73 kg)
Sport
SportSwimming
StrokesFreestyle
ClubPima County Dolphins
Oasis Aquatic Club (Tucson)
College teamWashington University
University of Arizona
CoachBob Davis
(U. Arizona, Pima Dolphins)
Medal record
Men's swimming
Representing the United States
Olympic Games
Bronze medal – third place 1972 Munich 1500 m freestyle
Pan American Games
Gold medal – first place 1975 Mexico City 400 m freestyle

High school era swimming

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Born on April 28, 1955, in Ontario, California, to Mr. and Mrs. Mervyn Northway, Douglas swam and trained with California's Claremont Crocodiles Swim Club under Coach John Reese from the age of around seven. The exercise improved his breathing and helped him deal with his asthma.[2][3]

Sahuaro high school

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After a move to Arizona in 1969 at 14, Northway attended Tucson's Sahuaro High School where he was coached by Dick Cooper. Northway helped lead the Suhuaro High swimming team to the 1972 Southern AAA Championships and Class AAA State Championships, and was a High School All American by his Junior year. His National Interscholastic Swimming Coaching Association All American status was a result of his 3:44.1 time in the 400-yard freestyle.[4] With great depth and diversity in the swimming events in which he could compete, Northway entered 7 of a possible 9 events at the AAA Championships. By 17, Northway's best event was likely the 200 freestyle, where in 1972 he was on the honorary first team for the Tucson Daily Citizen. The 200 would remain a primary distance in his Olympic quests.[5]

He did the majority of his focused training with Tucson Arizona's Pima County Dolphins under Head Coach Bob Davis and later swam for Tucson's Oasis Aquatic Club in the mid-70's. Bob Davis started the Dolphins in 1967, and was also an accomplished coach for the University of Arizona beginning in the early 1970's.[6] When Davis moved to the Marin County Athletic Club in May, 1973, Northway followed him for the summer, though soon was busy with collegiate competition in the Fall.[6]

Northway swam a 16:11.62 for the 1500-meter event, placing second at the Los Angeles Invitational after Rick DeMont, a world record holder in the event, who finished a full eight seconds ahead. Northway also swam highly competitive times in the 200 and 400 freestyles. The 1500 win set up Northway as an excellent Olympic trials' candidate.[7]

Northway's pre-Olympic training regiment consisted of swimming 3-4 hours daily, training primarily with his Pima County Dolphin Coach Bob Davis.[2]

1972 Olympic bronze

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At the August, 1972 Olympic trials in Chicago, Northway swam a qualifying 15.57.68 for the 1500-meter event, a career best time. He placed second in the 1500 behind Rick Demont, who broke the world record with a time of 15:52.91. Northway swam the second fastest time in the world for 1972 in the event, and came within 5 tenths of a second of the former world record of 15:57.1.[8] Northway placed fourth in the 400 freestyle at the trials with a time of 4:02.84.[9] Northway trained with the U.S. team at Westpoint, Viginia.[2] The Men's head coach for the U.S. Olympic team that year was Peter Daland.[10]

Northway's participation in the 1500 Olympic final event may have been overshadowed by the disqualification of the world record holder in the event, Rick Demont as a result of doping charges on September 4, 1972. Demont stated that his asthma medication Ephedrine was the reason he failed the drug test, and that he had mentioned taking the medication on his olympic entry forms.[11]

Northway arrived at the Olympic Village in Munich on August 20, 1972. As a 17-year-old at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, Germany, he received a bronze medal for his third-place performance in the men's 1,500-meter freestyle (16:09.25).[12] Mike Burton, a former Carmichael, California swimmer for Sherm Chavoor's Arden Hills swim team, won the event with a world record time of 15:52.58, and Australian Graham Windeatt took second.[13]

College era swimming

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Northway attended and swam for the University of Washington in the Fall of 1973 through 1974. Rick DeMont, a world champion in the 1500-meter swim, would be on the University of Washington with Northway, and they would become friends. Northway's training was hampered in 1973 by a bout of mononucleosis.[3][6][14] Swimming for Washington under Coach Earl Ellis at the 1973 NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships at Long Beach, Northway recorded a 12th place for the 500 freestyle with a time of 4:34.1.[6]

Northway transferred to the University of Arizona around his Junior year where he swam for Head Coach Bob Davis, his former coach at the Pima County Dolphins.[15][16] By 1975, the University of Arizona under Bob Davis had taken 4 consecutive Western Athletic Conference titles.[6]

At the 1975 Pan-American Games, Northway won the 400-meter freestyle event, taking the Gold Medal. At the 1976 National AAU indoor swimming championships at Belmont Pool in Long Beach, Northway won the 400-meter event with a time of 3:56.48. Northway held the lead throughout the race.[17][18]

Northway won the 400-meter freestyle competition at the early April 1976 U.S. Outdoor Long Course Nationals in Long Beach with a world record time of 3:56.48 and was third in the 200 freestyle. He beat his formal personal best time in the event.[19] He grew from 5'11" at the 1972 Olympics to 6' 2" for the 1976 Olympics, and benefitted from a carefully planned weight training program.[20] In January 1976, Northway won two events and broke two Arizona state state records, with a 47.9 in the 100-yard freestyle and a 1:41 in the 200-yard freestyle at the Deb Secrist Invitational Swimming Meet at the University of Arizona.[19]

1976 Olympics

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At the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, Quebec, he swam for the gold medal-winning U.S. team in the preliminary heats of the men's 4×200-meter freestyle relay.[12] Swimming the leadoff 200-meter leg, Northway's relay team swam a combined world record time of 7:30.33 with Tim Shaw of Long Beach, Mike Bruner, and Bruce Furniss. Northway swam a 1:51.65 for his leg. The time was four seconds better than the Olympic record for the event set in 1972.[21]

He did not receive a medal for his 1976 relay effort, however, because only relay swimmers who competed in the event final were medal-eligible under the rules then in effect.

Northway qualified for the 4x200 freestyle relay at the 1980 Moscow Olympic trials, but they were cancelled due to an Olympic boycott. He had a successful four year career in professional swimming.[22]

In 1981 he competed in the New Zealand Games, taking medals in the 100 and 200 freestyle, and won the 100-freestyle at the Australia Speedo International Event. He swam professionally through around 1985, often focusing on open water and long distance races.[23] Northway won the Traversée internationale du lac St-Jean on July 19, 1984, having attempted the long distance swim in three prior years, but being unable to finish due to hypothermia. The marathon swim is 32 kilometers, or 19.8 miles long, and swum in Lake St. Jean between Peribonka and Roberval, Quebec, Canada. Northway led the race from start to finish, finishing in 7 hours, 37 minutes.[24]

Honors

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Northway was inducted into the University of Arizona Athletic Hall of Fame.[22]

He was the Arizona Daily Star's Athlete of the Year in 1972. He was Captain of the All Southwest Swimming Team for the Southwest Sports News Service in 1972.[4]

Later life

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In June, 1996, Northway was living in Tucson with his wife Linda and three young children. He coached swimming at Ventana Canyon, was a licensed minister, an associate pastor at a church, and taught Spanish to elementary students at Grace Christian School. He was studying for a Masters in Bilingual special education at University of Arizona.[25]

Northway plead guilty to "attempted child molestation" in April 1997, where he was charged in January with two counts of child molestation for allegedly molesting a girl in the summer of 1995. Those charges were dropped after he pleaded guilty in April to attempting to molest the girl, according to court records.[26] In June, 1997, he was sentenced to four months in jail, four months of home arrest, and a lifetime probation.[27]

Northway has since worked in accounting in Tucson and as an advisor for QuickBooks Professional, a software accounting application. He may have also worked for Phoenix College as an instructor.[28][29]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Olympics.com biography, Douglas Northway". olypmics.com. Retrieved December 5, 2024.
  2. ^ a b c "Lodge, Ray, Success Still Dazzles Northway", Tucson Citizen, Tucson, Arizona, 30 August 1972, pg. 59
  3. ^ a b "Johnston, Bruce, Northway:Making Waves Again", Tucson Citizen, Tucson, Arizona, 21 February 1976, pg. 20
  4. ^ a b "Reynard, Calvin, Northway Finds Bigger They Are", Arizona's Daily Star, Tucson, Arizona, 29 December 1972, pg. 51
  5. ^ "Jordan, Ed, Sahuaro's Doug Northway Tops Spring Sports Stars," Tucson Daily Citizen, Tucson, Arizona, 3 June 1972, pg. 11
  6. ^ a b c d e "Pima County Sports Hall of Fame, Bob Davis". pcshf.org. Retrieved December 4, 2024.
  7. ^ "Prep Swims to Easy 1500 Freestyle Win", Independent, Long Beach, California, 9 July 1972, pg. 77
  8. ^ "Olympic Trials, Men's 1500 Meter freestyle", Independent, Long Beach, California, 7 August 1972, pg. 22
  9. ^ "More Marks Fall in Swim Tryouts", The Times Standard, Eureka, California, 5 August 1972, pg. 7
  10. ^ "Historical U.S. Olympic Swimming Team Head Coaches (1924-present)" (PDF). usaswimming.org. Retrieved December 5, 2024.
  11. ^ "Doping Furor Clouds 1500", Arizona Daily Star, Tucson, Arizona, 5 September 1972, pg. 24
  12. ^ a b Sports-Reference.com, Olympic Sports, Athletes, Doug Northway Archived 2012-01-27 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved November 18, 2012.
  13. ^ "Record Breaker Spitz, Olympics, Finals, Men's 1500 Meter Freestyle", News Pilot, San Pedro, California, 5 September 1972
  14. ^ McCormack, Jim, Northway is Having Ball in Long Beach", Independent, Long Beach, California, 14 March 1976, pg. 67
  15. ^ "Backhaus Second in NCAA Swimming", Daily Independent Journal, San Rafael, California, 29 March 1974, pg. 46
  16. ^ "DeMont Headed for Washington", Oakland Tribune, Oakland, California, 29 April 1973, pg. 26
  17. ^ "Strege, John, Tim Shaw Fails to Qualify," The Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles, California, 2 April 1976, pg. 172
  18. ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Doug Northway". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on January 27, 2012.
  19. ^ a b "Northway Surprises With First", Tucson Citizen, Tucson, Arizona, 2 April 1976, pg. 57
  20. ^ "Johnston, Bruce, Northway's Hopes on Trial", Tucson Citizen, Tucson, Arizona, 12 June 1976, pg. 8
  21. ^ "Another Swim Mark Shattered", Alabama Journal, Montgomery, Alabama, 21 July 1976, pg. 13
  22. ^ a b "Northway", Arizona Daily Star, Tucson, Arizona, 26 June 1996, pg. 35
  23. ^ "Crevier, Glen, Doug Northway Pools His Assets", Arizona Daily Star, Tucson, Arizona, 1 May 1981, pg. 75
  24. ^ "Munatones, Steven, Open Water Swimming.com, Doug Northway, An Unexpected Triumph In The 1984 Traversée". Doug Northway triumph in 1984 Traversee. Retrieved December 5, 2024.
  25. ^ "Wood, Tara, Tucson Swimmer's Olympic Days Provided Memories", Arizona Daily Star, Tucson, Arizona, 26 June 1996, pg. 31
  26. ^ "Olympian pleads guilty to attempted molesting - Tucson Citizen Morgue, Part 2 (1993-2009)". tucsoncitizen.com. Retrieved October 18, 2023.
  27. ^ "Burstein, Jon, Ex-Olympian Gets 4 Months in Jail", Arizona Daily Star, Tucson, Arizona, 21 June 1997, pg. 21
  28. ^ "Doug Northway, Linked In". linkedin.com. Retrieved December 5, 2024.
  29. ^ "Doug Northway, Linked In". linkedin.com. Retrieved December 5, 2024.
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