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History

The origin
of fancy diving goes as far back as the 17th century in connection
with the great gymnastic movement in Germany and Sweden. In
the summertime, gymnasts moved their equipment to the beaches,
and acrobatics over the water became a part of their activities.
Diving, then, is more related to gymnastics than to swimming.
However, since swimming and diving both use a water medium,
they have naturally become linked.
Platform
diving (33 feet high) achieved international notice in the 1904
Olympic Games in St. Louis when it was included as an event
on the men's swimming program. Springboard diving was added
for the 1908 Games in London. Women's diving was slower in being
accepted. It was not until 1912 that plain high diving was included
in the Olympics, and 1920 that the first women's springboard
contest was conducted. Fancy high diving for women came into
being in 1928 internationally.
As could
be expected, Germany and Sweden dominated the early competition.
It wasn't until 1920 that the United States reached worldwide
prominence in diving by winning three of the gold medals in
the Olympics (men's and women's springboard and men's platform
events). From that time through 1992, the United States has
been the world leader in diving. The total count is 46 of 75
Olympic gold medals for the United States.
Two men have
been most important in the development of U.S. diving supremacy.
Ernst Bransten, who is called the "father of diving in the United
States," came to this country from Sweden shortly before the
1920s.
Bransten
brought with him a thorough knowledge of the fundamentals of
the sport and some revolutionary ideas for developing divers.
Among his many contributions was the construction of a "sand
pit" -- a diving board mounted over sand. This apparatus allows
the diver to practice many of the movement patterns of diving,
especially the approach and takeoff, more efficiently.
Mike Peppe,
the swimming and diving coach at Ohio State University from
1931 to 1963, did more to promote and develop diving in this
country than any other man. By maintaining a strong squad of
divers on his collegiate swimming teams and treating diving
and swimming with equal importance, Peppe encouraged other schools
to emphasize diving in order to compete with his teams evenly.
Peppe's influence
on college programs has resulted in improved facilities for
diving, more practice time being made available, greater respect
for the sport, and the birth of a new type of coach -- the diving
coach. It is for this reason that he might be designated "the
father of collegiate diving in the United States."
Since 1904,
Olympic diving has changed in leaps and bounds and is still
progressing rapidly. In the early days there were 14 platform
and 20 springboard dives. Today there are 63 dives on 1-meter
springboard, 67 dives on 3-meter springboard and 85 dives on
platform. Difficulty has changed from the point where a double
somersault from the platform was dangerous in 1904, to flawless
performance of the reverse three and a half somersaults today.
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