Trischa Zorn

American Paralympic swimmer (born 1964) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Trischa Zorn

Trischa Zorn (born June 1, 1964, in Orange, California)[1] is an American Paralympic swimmer. Blind from birth, she competed in Paralympic swimming (S12, SB12, and SM12 disability categories).[1] She is the most successful athlete in the history of the Paralympic Games, having won 55 medals (41 gold, 9 silver, and 5 bronze),[2] and was inducted into the Paralympic Hall of Fame in 2012.[3] She took the Paralympic Oath for athletes at the 1996 Summer Paralympics in Atlanta.[4]

Quick Facts Sport, Disability class ...
Trischa Zorn
Zorn at the 2012 Summer Paralympic Games
Sport
Disability classS12, SB12, SM12
Medal record
Women's para swimming
Representing  United States
Paralympic Games
1980 Arnhem100m backstroke B
1980 Arnhem100m butterfly B
1980 Arnhem100m freestyle B
1980 Arnhem200m individual medley B
1980 Arnhem400m individual medley B
1980 Arnhem4x100m freestyle relay A-B
1980 Arnhem4x100m medley relay A-B
1984 New York100m backstroke B2
1984 New York100m butterfly B2
1984 New York100m freestyle B2
1984 New York200m individual medley B2
1984 New York400m individual medley B2
1984 New York4x100m medley relay B1-B3
1988 Seoul50m breaststroke B2
1988 Seoul50m freestyle B2
1988 Seoul100m backstroke B2
1988 Seoul100m breaststroke B2
1988 Seoul100m butterfly B2
1988 Seoul100m freestyle B2
1988 Seoul200m breaststroke B2
1988 Seoul200m individual medley B2
1988 Seoul400m freestyle B2
1988 Seoul400m individual medley B2
1988 Seoul4x100m freestyle relay B1-B3
1988 Seoul4x100m medley relay B1-B3
1992 Barcelona50m freestyle B2
1992 Barcelona100m backstroke B2
1992 Barcelona100m breaststroke B1-B2
1992 Barcelona100m freestyle B2
1992 Barcelona200m backstroke B1-B2
1992 Barcelona200m breaststroke B1-B3
1992 Barcelona200m individual medley B2
1992 Barcelona400m individual medley B1-B3
1992 Barcelona4x100m freestyle relay B1-B3
1992 Barcelona4x100m medley relay B1-B3
1996 Atlanta100m backstroke B2
1996 Atlanta200m individual medley B2
1984 New York4x100m freestyle relay B1-B3
1992 Barcelona100m butterfly B2-B3
1992 Barcelona400m freestyle B2-B3
1996 Atlanta50m freestyle B2
1996 Atlanta400m freestyle B2
1996 Atlanta4×100m medley relay B1-B3
2000 Sydney100 m backstroke
2000 Sydney100 m breaststroke
2000 Sydney100 m butterfly
2000 Sydney200 m individual medley
1996 Atlanta100 m breaststroke
1996 Atlanta100 m freestyle
1996 Atlanta4 × 100 m freestyle
2000 Sydney50 m breaststroke
2004 Athens100 m backstroke
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Biography

Summarize
Perspective

Zorn studied special education at the University of Nebraska and school administration and supervision at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis and law at the IU Robert H. McKinney School of Law.[5]

She competed in the 1980, 1984, 1988, 1992, 1996, 2000 and 2004 Paralympic Games and won a combined total of 55 medals (41 gold, 9 silver, 5 bronze).[1][2][6][7][8][9] In the 1996 Games in Atlanta, she won more medals than any other athlete: two gold, three silver and three bronze. She had also topped the individual medal table at the 1992 Paralympic Games in Barcelona,[1] with ten gold medals and two silver.[10] She had won seven gold medals during her first Games in 1980.[11]

After the Sydney Games in 2000, she also held eight world records in her disability category (50 m backstroke, 100 m backstroke, 200 m backstroke, 200 m individual medley, 400 m individual medley, 200 m breaststroke, 4×50 m medley relay, 4×50 m free relay).[12]

On 1 January 2005, Zorn was one of eight athletes honored during New Year celebrations in Times Square in New York City. The other seven were Ian Thorpe of Australia, Nadia Comăneci of Romania, George Weah of Liberia, Françoise Mbango Etone of Cameroon, Gao Min of China, Félix Sánchez of the Dominican Republic and Bart Conner of the United States. The eight athletes were "centre stage during the festivities in the countdown leading up to ringing in the New Year".[2] In 2012, she was inducted into the International Paralympian Hall of Fame.[13]

Although no longer competing as a swimmer, Zorn works as a legal professional for the Department of Veterans Affairs and lives near Indianapolis, Indiana.[14]

Paralympic medals

The medals without relay races from 1980 Summer Paralympics to 1988 Summer Paralympics, are 46 (32, 9, 5) for IPC.[15] The relay team of United States, in the category of Zorn, won 5 gold and 1 silver in these three Paralympics. The question marks in the infobox refer however to 9 gold medals (not 5 gold and 1 silver medal), this is to confirm the total number of 55 (of which 41 gold), reported in many websites including that of the official IPC in another of his article.[11]

More information Paralympics, Individual ...
ParalympicsIndividualTeam[16]Total
1980 Arnhem 500200700
1984 New York 500110610
1988 Seoul 10002001200
1992 Barcelona 8202001020
1996 Atlanta 222011233
2000 Sydney 041000041
2004 Athens 001000001
Total308472137105
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See also

References

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