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1964 Olympic Gold Medalist Dick Roth, Whose Appendix Is In the Hall of Fame, Dies at 77

By Braden Keith on SwimSwam

1964 Olympic gold medalist Dick Roth died on September 23. He was 77 years old, and due to turn 78 three days later.

Roth, a native of Palo Alto, California, won an Olympic gold medal in the 400 IM when he was 17 years old. That legendary win came the day after being stricken by acute appendicitis; he postponed surgery until after his race.

His appendix is currently part of the collection at the International Swimming Hall of Fame.

His time of 4:45.4 in the 400 IM in the Olympic final broke the World Record by 3.2 seconds (which was his record, set 10 weeks earlier, and broke the previous mark by 1.6 seconds). In total, he held the record for almost four years before Soviet Andrey Dunayev broke it by a tenth ahead of the 1968 Games.

Roth also broke the World Record in the 200 IM at the 1964 US National Championships, but ultimately didn’t swim that race at the Olympics (where the U.S. won gold, silver, and bronze).

A year later in 1965, after battling shoulder tendinitis, he won World University Games gold medals in the 400 IM and 800 free relay. He was named the Swimming World Magazine World Swimmer of the Year in 1965.

In total, he won 11 AAU National Championships, almost all of which were in the IM events.

Roth grew up racing under Hall of Fame coach George Haines at the Santa Clara Swim Club alongside the likes of Don SchollanderSteve ClarkWayne AndersonDonna de VaronaGary IllmanClaudia Kolb ThomasTerri Strickles StrunkEd Townsend, and Mike Wall, all of whom competed at the 1964 Olympic Games.

He then matriculated to Stanford, where he won the 1967 NCAA Championships in the 200 IM, 400 IM, and 800 free relay.

Roth was inducted into the International Hall of Fame in 1987.

After his swimming career ended, he moved into what he called a “hippie lifestyle” living in a commune in Santa Barbara and Elko County, Nevada for 17 years. He then spent a decade working for the Stephen Covey Leadership Center at Utah State University before eventually retiring to Park City, Utah.

Earlier this year, Roth wrote a book called “Swimmer, Hippie, Cowboy” recounting his life.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: 1964 Olympic Gold Medalist Dick Roth, Whose Appendix Is In the Hall of Fame, Dies at 77

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