Posted in Champions.
Peter Williams
Peter Rowan Williams (born 20 June 1968) attended Grey High School in Port Elizabeth, where he was coached by Tom Connell. Swimming for Eastern Province, Peter won the 100 and 200 freestyle events at the 1987 South African swimming championships. He accepted a scholarship to the University of Nebraska in 1987 - ten years before Penny Heyns would follow in his footsteps to Lincoln, Nebraska.
He set a new world record in the 50-meter freestyle in a Time Trial the day after the 1988 NCAA Championships, on 10 April 1988. Williams covered the distance in 22.18 seconds, knocking .05 off the mark held by Tom Jager. Even though the International Swimming Federation (FINA) did not recognize South Africa, it had recognized previous records by South Africans, notably the 100-meter mark set by Jonty Skinner.
In 1991 Peter competed at the South African swimming championships, held at the Newlands Pool in Cape Town, representing his old team Easter Province. At the Olympic Games in Barcelona, Peter fished tied 4th in the 50m freestyle. Tom Jager (USA) took the bronze medal in 22:30, although his best was the WR he set at 21:81, set in 1990. Peter's 1988 world record time of 22:18.
Peter returned to South Africa, where he set up the Waterborn swimming club in Johannesburg.
Peter, back at Grey High, with coach Tom Connell.
By the end of the 1988 season, Peter Williams could hardly be considered an overnight sensation but he was sensational. The then-freshman at the University of Nebraska had proven all season long that he was one of the top collegiate swimmers in the United States. But on April 10, he was on top of the world. Competing in an all-comers time trial meet following the NCAA Championships, Williams, then 19, stunned the swimming world when he set a world best in the 50-meter freestyle. His time of 22.18 made him the fastest swimmer in history when he eclipsed the old mark of 22.23 set in March by former UCLA national champion and 1988 Olympian Tom Jager.
During his first full season of competition, Williams was ranked high on the national charts, qualifying for the NCAA meet in both the 50-yard and 100-yard freestyle. When the water had calmed in Indianapolis, the site of the NCAA meet, Williams had earned All-America honors with a third-place finish in the 100-yard free and honorable-mention merit in winning the consolation final of the 50-yard free for ninth place. He was also a member of the Huskers' 400 medley and 400 and 800 free relays that earned honorable-mention All-America recognition.
In all, Williams scored 25 of the Huskers' team-record 125 points in leading them to 10th place, their best-ever NCAA finish. As a freshman phenom, he began turning heads in December when he turned in a 22.63-clocking in the 50-meter free at the U.S. Open on Dec. 21. It was the eighth-fastest time in history at the time. In addition to the world's best, he has also posted times of 22.38 and 22.57. Prior to his arrival in Lincoln, Williams' previous best in the 50-meter free was 23.27, with a best of 51.91 in the 100-meter free. He has since lowered that to 50.72. A native of Port Elizabeth, South Africa Williams came to Nebraska as an unheralded recruit with a limited background in swimming let alone the sprint freestyle events.
Without the benefit of modern facilities near his home, Williams' training was much less than year-round. But while his training was limited, his talent was not. Williams won three gold medals at the 1987 South African National Championships and came to Nebraska with the potential to help the Huskers in three different strokes. He ended the 1988 season as the team's No. 2 swimmer in the 100-yard breaststroke after finishing fifth at the Big Eight Conference Championships.
However, because of his South African citizenship and his country's policies, Williams will be unable to compete in the Olympics and select international competitions. It's a fact that he is resigned to living with, but one that has not diminished his goal to be the best and fastest—ever. With Chapter One of his career now closed, Williams, now 20, has started re-writing the record books in the sprint free and has helped usher in a new era of swimming in Husker history. A top-10 finish as a team has put Nebraska on the national map, and individual success has put Peter Williams on top of the world.
Peter Williams swimming for the University of Nebraska 1988-89-90 [14-Time All-American]
- 50 Freestyle, 9th (19.78), 1987-88
- 100 Freestyle, 3rd (43.50), 1987-88
- 800 Freestyle Relay, 10th (6:32.49), 1987-88
- 400 Medley Relay, 12th (3:18.14), 1987-88
- 50 Freestyle, 10th (20.22), 1988-89
- 100 Freestyle, 16th (45.01), 1988-89
- 200 Freestyle Relay, 5th (1:19.47), 1988-89
- 200 Medley Relay, 11th (1:30.91), 1988-89
- 400 Medley Relay, 11th (2:57.84), 1988-89
- 50 Freestyle, 3rd (19.67), 1989-90
- 200 Freestyle Relay, 6th (1:20.36), 1989-90
- 400 Freestyle Relay, 4th (2:55.37), 1989-90
- 200 Medley Relay, 12th (1:30.25), 1989-90
- 400 Medley Relay, 14th (3:18.01), 1989-90
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Wikipedia: Peter Williams' 1988 time was officially recognized, but not as a world record, because South Africa was banned from international competition at the time.
Discussion:
...thru the last 20 years this has been a very controversial subject. The obvious case of this is when Peter Williams set the World Record in a Time Trial the day after the 1988 NCAA Championships on 4-10-88. About 15 days prior to this at the Nationals in Orlando, Tom Jager broke his own WR in the 50 Meter Free of :22.32 and went a :22.23 swimming against Matt Biondi who went :22.42 in this 8 swimmer heat.
Peter Williams competed at the NCAA Championships and didn't final in the 50 Yard Free and went :19.89 and swam to first in the consolation heat at :19.78 swimming for Nebraska. The day after the meet the bulkheads were moved back and swimming in a time trial 50 meter Free all by himself he went :22.18 to break Tom Jager's 15 day record. There was a lot of outcry about this swim because the SCY time really didn't match up to the LCM time. Tom Jager and Matt Biondi criticized this World Record if it were to stand. At that time South Africa was an apartheid nation and there was a rumor that the record would not count for that reason.
There were sensionalized stories about the conditions of the race and the swim was bogus. I happen to talk to Dale Neuburger about this about 4 weeks ago and he was there at IUPUI Natatorioum when this swim took place and said every FINA requirement was made in this World Record breaking swim. Peter Williams was not very big or tall and that would probably explain the reason why his short course swim did not match this World Record effort. FINA was suppose to review this and render a decision. A decision was not made by the 1988 Olympics and there Matt Biondi broke the record by .04 with a :22.14 and won the gold medal in the 50 Meter Free.
Peter Williams did not swim in the Olympics because South Africa was banned then. To this day the swim was never recognized as a World Record but remains in lists of the top 100 times of all time for the 50 Meter Free. Most people assume that because FINA did not count this as a World Record it was because he was from the country of South Africa and not because it was from a time trial. Others think with the public outcry that maybe FINA did not want to count this swim from the time trial as a World Record.
There was never a press release explaining any of this and it was just kind of forgotten. In the modern era of FINA World Records since 1957, Peter Williams would be the only swimmer in history to be discriminated against getting a World
.... As I remember FINA was supposed to make a decision on this but by the time they did, Tom Jager had already broken the World Record and it was a moot point. I am not sure if they ever took the record off the books. Rowdy Gaines, had broken the American Record of :49.99 held by Jim Montgomery in 1980 with a time of :49.61 in a competitive USS swimming meet. The next time he broke the American Record was at a time trial after the Longhorn Invitational in April 1981 and he went :49.47 for a new American Record but fell short of the World Record of :49.44 by Jonty Skinner of South Africa. On his second attempt at the time trial, he went :49.36 and set the World Record which stood until Matt Biondi came along in 1985.
http://forums.usms.org/showthread.php?9385-21-64 - search for Peter Williams
1991 - South African championships, Newlands, Cape Town. Peter Williams had returned from Nebraska to swim at the South African championships, representing his old team Easter Province. Seen here at Newlands with Larry Kreel and a Western Province official. Below is the start of the men's 50 m freestyle in the very shallow end of Newlands pool, and the finish shows his new national record time of 22,95. Bottom is Peter Williams in Eastern Province colours collecting his gold medal.
In March 1992 the South African Olympic Trials were held in the King's Park Pool in Durban.
Los Angeles Times
July 10, 1991
SOUTH AFRICA’S RETURN TO THE OLYMPICS
Getting Teams Ready to Be Toughest Task : Aftermath: Track and field athletes are ready to compete, but those in other sports face difficulties.
For 31 years, South African sports officials sought to get back into the Olympic Games, an arena that was closed as part of an international ban preventing South African athletes from leaving their country to compete against the rest of the world.
Tuesday, South Africa finally reached its goal. The nation is now cleared to compete in the 1992 Summer Olympics at Barcelona in July. However, South Africa’s first Olympic opportunity could come at the 1992 Winter Games at Albertville, France. Some Olympic officials have said that there would not be enough time for South Africa to prepare a team for those Games, which are only seven months away.
...
Peter Williams, who in 1988 swam a world-record time for the 50-meter freestyle (the record was not recognized because Williams is South African), said he learned much while competing for four years at the University of Nebraska.
Williams, who has returned to South Africa, said he discovered that being an athlete who grew up in South Africa made him different from others: His dreams did not, or could not, include the Olympic Games.
“After the 1988 Olympics, all my American friends approached me and said: ‘Gee, you must be so disappointed that you didn’t get to go to the Olympics. You must be so sad that your record was not ratified.’
“My response to them was that it didn’t matter. Here, you grow up without the possibility of the Olympics. You can’t carry on entertaining this notion that you are going to the Olympics.
“It’s not going to happen, and you will get yourself frustrated. If I had those thoughts and dreams inside my head, I would have been crushed as a sportsman.”
Today, Williams is allowed to dream.
Peter the Great, Part I
by Chris Morgan of swimswam.com - April 15th, 2012
On the eve of the South African Olympic Trials at the Kings Aquatic Centre in Durban, South Africa, all eyes (and diehard swimming result junkies like me) will be following the ups and downs of the SA results; who makes the team, who misses out, and who surprises! Those who have somewhat followed the swimming results in South Africa over the last decade will, of course, remember the “upset” 4×100 freestyle relay at the 2004 Games in Athens, Greece; or, how about the great breaststroke performances from Penny Heyns, Terence Parkin in the 2000 Games in Sydney (Bronze and Silver respectively). Finally, nobody in swimming has forgotten the great Jonty Skinner, whose career was made complicated by the unforgettable Apartheid.
Unbeknownst to many swimming fans of South Africa, there has been a coach quietly yet methodically tinkering away with swim technique and training theories for the past 15 years. His name is Peter Williams. Peter was a swimmer, not a good swimmer…an AMAZING swimmer. He was once the worlds’ fastest man! On April 10th, 1988, Peter broke the World Record in the 50m freestyle. His time of 22.18 is still considered fast when compared to all the crazy “suit enhanced” times of the last few years. Unfortunately, as was the case earlier on with Jonty Skinner, the political situation in South Africa prevented Peter from attending the Olympic Games in Seoul, South Korea in the summer of 1988. The only appearance Peter made at the 1988 Games was in the whisperings and conversations of some coaches and top swimmers that Peter’s time was, “the time to beat!”
Not long after, Peter had a short, yet successful career at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (when they still had a men’s swimming team). He received a scholarship, swam for the team, and reached the NCAA finals. In 1992, with the fall of Apartheid, Peter was finally able to go for GOLD during the Barcelona Games in Spain–result…4th place, the “chocolate medal.” This unfortunate result, however, probably sparked the journey which Peter would undertake…the next 5 years Peter would dabble in the world of coaching, and fortunately, for a privileged group of athletes, especially 2 young men, Peter would find his calling with a small club in Johannesburg, South Africa named WATERBORN…
Peter the Great, Part II
The first time I met Peter Williams was in 2003 at the Summer National Championships in Switzerland. He was there to support his young, but very talented 200 freestyle swimmer, named Dominik Meichtry (“Dom” as most people call him, is a Swiss Citizen but trained exclusively with Peter in Johannesburg from 2000 to 2005). I enjoyed talking with Peter about swimming; his ideas were interesting and refreshing. We made a plan to speak more, but unfortunately, Peter would have to rush back to South Africa to rejoin his team. This was a definite missed opportunity for me. I would meet up with Peter again during the preparation camp for the 2004 Athens Olympics. This camp was held in a beautiful part of Switzerland on the shores of the Lago Maggiore. I found Peter at the pool during a rest period for the athletes. He was alone in the pool…swimming. His freestyle was PERFECT! I could not believe that 16 years after he swam the World’s fastest 50-meter time, he could look so smooth…flowing and majestic.
I of course bombarded Peter with questions about swimming technique and more specifically, how he worked with Dominik. I listened to every word. While he was explaining his theory of freestyle and training, he referred several times to another young athlete he had on his squad named Jean Basson.
Dominik joined forces with Peter in 2000, and actually just by chance! Dominik (actually Swiss) had just moved to South Africa from Hong Kong. His father’s work brought the Meichtry family to South Africa and “Dom” attended a German-speaking school where he met another Swiss youngster named Gregory Widmer. Gregory himself was no joke in the swimming pool as he went on to split a 48.63 on the Swiss relay at the Rome World Championships. Gregory convinced Dominik to come to join his swim team and thought his coach (Peter) would accept “Dom” into the squad. Dominik first met Peter while on crutches after a severe skiing accident in Switzerland. Peter emphasized that his team was primarily “technique” oriented, and if Dominik wanted more volume, he should seek out another coach. Fortunately, he did not! Jean Basson was already a member of the small team in Johannesburg, and the two athletes would begin a journey together that has an almost “Hollywood” ending. These two young men, who would train side by side for all those years in a small corner of Johannesburg, would go their separate ways; Jean to Arizona and Dominik to Berkeley. They would on August 10th, 2008 do the unthinkable and qualify 1st and 2nd for the semi-finals of the 200m freestyle at the Beijing Olympic Games. (Dominik 1:45.80 and Jean 1:46.31)
Is it just coincidence that Peter Williams coached 2 young men to the pole positions–lane 4 and 5 of the Olympic semi-final 200m freestyle? The answer must certainly be NO! When you get to know this coach and listen to his passion for swimming and how it is more than just a sport, that it teaches us about life and its challenges; then you really understand the potential of this incredible swimming mentor.
Peter continues to work with some incredible young talents in South Africa, and though he has not always conformed to the requests of some of the administrators of the South African Swimming Federation, Peter is, and will continue to be as talented a coach as he was a swimmer…WORLD CLASS!!!
In a blog, just after the Olympic Games in Beijing 2008 Peter wrote, “Jean and Dom choose to believe in themselves. They have each overcome immeasurable odds to achieve international status as specialist free “stylers”. In the crazy world of competitive chaos, they have created order and understanding. As their coach and friend, I am humbled by their conviction and faith in the Waterborn process. Life has affirmed the relationship between the three of us. We share an unbreakable bond. Jean and Dom have helped me complete one of life’s circles. Thank you!” PW
https://swimswam.com/peter-the-great/
Peter hails from Port Elizabeth where he achieved Top 20 World Rankings as an 18-year-old in 1987. He was awarded a full swimming scholarship to the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. During his first year in the USA Peter broke the World Record for 50 m Freestyle (22.81). Upon readmission to international swimming, Peter placed 4th at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. He was a multi-medallist at the Division 1 NCAA Championships from 1988 to 1990. Peter's unique understanding of the dynamics of the sport in South Africa has led him to establish the most successful club in the country (since 1997).
Over the past 25 years, Peter has proved what is achievable with passion, focus, and commitment. Peter's continuing drive is to select coaches to work within the Waterborn collective who are committed to superior coaching. Peter has represented South Africa and Switzerland at the International Senior Level as a coach on numerous occasions. In August 2022 Peter was the founding member of Swimpartners; a group of Elite South African Coaches who are committed to working together.
The spawning of a 'New Generation'
In 2008 Peter's Waterborn swimming club published this, quoted from a Supersport website:
Despite all the melodrama of the past few weeks South Africans, athletes, and the general populace, have finally realized what a monstrous event the Olympic Games is. However, despite controversy, there has been a spawning of a new generation of athletes.
South African middle distance freestyle ace, Jean Basson impressed with his mature, articulate and consise pre games interview on Supersport which was not only a credit to this talented athlete but to his excellent support mechanism that has been his extended Waterborn family.
His comments about progress and more specifically the advice his coach Peter Williams gave, knocked my sox off !
Good on you Peter.
Nice touch Jean.
After the semi-final of the 200m freestyle event, Basson sent this text message to Williams,
“How many people would have thought that Waterborn would have had two guys in the final of the 200 free at the Olympics? I know of three for sure – me, Dom and you! Congrats Pete. It’s a tribute to your awesome coaching abilities and what an amazing person you are! I am so proud to represent you and Waterborn.”
So mission accomplished and history will record that Basson went on to gain South Africas highest placing at the Beijing Olympic Games in the pool with a creditable fourth in amongst some of the greatest freestylers the world has known.
But where did it all start.
Peter has responded in the Waterborn monthly newsletter which was passed onto me and I feel duty-bound to share this with you :
"It’s a privilege to have watched an Olympic Games in its entirety.
During South Africa’s sports isolation, we were fortunate to watch any international events. My coach was Scottish and sourced BBC recordings of the Olympics which we would watch many months later (though always after training and maybe if the water temperature dipped below 10º C).
In 1988 as a World Record Holder I hoped to see my name on the Seoul Olympic events programme. However, a last-minute protest by the United States had Tom Jager’s name reinstated in the programme (South Africa was not an official member of FINA). I chose not to watch and instead applied pent-up energy into training that week.
In 1992 South Africa’s last minute (you have no idea) readmission allowed me to participate in the first international competition of my athletic career. In order to stay focused on my event, I spent my time and creative thoughts in Barcelona’s art museums rather than get caught up in the catastrophe that was taking place in the South African residence in the Olympic Village (some of our relays and individual entries had been omitted). I had a great time in the best city in the world and was proud of my performance despite not having trained much during my 3 years prior to Barcelona (I had stopped swimming owing to injuries and insufficient means or motive to continue training).
I missed the 1996 Atlanta Olympics despite having achieved the qualifying time. I was unfairly victimized for publicly criticizing Swimming South Africa and N.O.C.S.A.. I was subsequently victimized by being unlawfully banned from competitions during my build-up to Olympic Trials owing to an article I had written commenting on the pedantic Olympic support programme. While many of my friends from all over the world were competing, I treated myself to a trans-continental road trip cruise across Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, Montana, the Pacific North West and Alaska. Treat yourself to something similar at least once in your lifetime…..
By 1997 I was coaching and promised myself to not watch any international swimming event until one of my swimmers was participating. Sydney 2000 was a yawn since my training programme had not yet produced a qualifier (can anyone tell me something interesting about Australia?). Besides I lived in a commune with mates at the time and nothing could have distracted us from fun!!!
By 2004 Waterborn’s 8-year plans had kicked in. Dominic Meichtry became the training programme’s first Olympian. The good-natured Swiss and generous Meichtry family treated coach and athlete to 3 months in Europe before the Olympics. Dom and I enjoyed a unique life opportunity to share a special period of our lives together. I traveled to Athens solo where Dom achieved a semi-final in the 200m Free. Happily I saw the S.A. 4 x 100m freestyle World-Record and Olympic gold performance after having humorously argued with the American relay coach shortly beforehand that they stood no chance against South Africa. Not to be outdone though, or underdone, I celebrated in fine style at the Zurich Love Parade with 1.5 million other highly spirited folk.
The 2008 Olympic games however had me glued to the television, albeit at 4 a.m.
The Beijing Olympics has been the most significant international swimming event in history. The quality of athletes participating, depth in performance, World and Olympic Records and of course Michael Phelps’ superhuman effort have left the international swimming fraternity agasp; with good reason. The sport of swimming has experienced a watershed event. Never again will a swimmer be internationally competitive purely because of physical talent. Swimming has been a late arrival in the world of professional sport but has announced its arrival in an unprecedented and mind-blowing style.
South Africans (athletes and the general populace) have finally realized what a monstrous event the Olympic Games is.
And amidst all the melodrama of the past few weeks two extremely calm and collected, well prepared, and well-rehearsed young Waterborn 200m freestylers Cooley went about their races with the maturity of post gold-medalist world record holders. Dom and Jean have quietly become the 7th and 8th fastest 200m freestyle performers of all time.
You may be excited by an All-Black / South African encounter or some other sporting event. Fortunately, I realized early in my coaching life that watching one’s protégé outperform themselves, at whatever level of competition, is the biggest thrill.
So, despite numerous debates in the public arena about malcontent amongst administrators, coaches and athletes, inadequate financial resources, mismanagement, false confidence, under-preparedness and disorganization, Waterborn’s two undersized 200m freestyle specialists maintained their focus throughout and sensibly managed their emotional intensity with the good sense Waterborn and their respective families have instilled in their competitive psyche.
By consistently applying great technique, developing a healthy self-esteem and positive attitude towards overcoming life’s obstacles, rehearsing superior race-strategy and following a well-planned, structured scientific-based training programme you can upset the world’s best, and ultimately outperform yourself.
Nothing beats positive life-force……it costs nothing, and everything you put into sustaining it makes you stronger and wiser for the next life challenge.
Jean and Dom choose to believe in themselves. They have each overcome immeasurable odds to achieve international status as specialist free “stylers”. In the crazy world of competitive chaos, they have created order and understanding. As their coach and friend, I am humbled by their conviction and faith in the Waterborn process.
Life has affirmed the relationship between the three of us. We share an unbreakable bond. Jean and Dom have helped me complete one of life’s circles. Thank you!
With kindest regards
PETER WILLIAMS