Lance Larson

Through The Mail Autograph Address-
Lance Larson Swimmer

Lance Larson
1131 La Limonar Rd
Santa Ana, CA 92705

Lance Larson (USA) was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame as an Honor Swimmer in 1980. The following text was included in the program for the induction ceremony of that year.

The Record: 1960 Olympic silver (100m Freestyle) and gold (Medley Relay - butterfly leg). 3 World Records (100m & 110 yd. Butterfly) and 2 World Records relays. 5 National AAU titles (100 Freestyle, 100 Butterfly & 200 I.M.) and 3 National AAU relays. 2 NCAA Championships (200 yd. I.M. & 400 yd. Freestyle Relay). 12 American Records (200m/yd. I.M., 110 yd. & 100m Butterfly and 6 Freestyle Medley Relays). First man to break a minute for the 100m Butterfly.

Lance Larson was the first man in the world to go under a minute for the 100m Butterfly. He was also the first high school swimmer to break the 50 second barrier in the 100 yd. Freestyle. He won his Olympic gold medal on the butterfly leg of the 400m Medley Relay with a split time of 58.0 seconds (another world record) at the 1960 Rome Olympics yet is best known for the controversy over his dead-heat 100m Freestyle silver medal in the same games, the last in which judges’ eyeball decisions were given precedence over automatic judging devices.* A superb all-around swimmer at the University of Southern California in the four-stroke individual medley, the butterfly, and the sprint crawl, Larson won AAU Nationals in all three.

*The Rome Olympics were staged in the days before automatic timing and judging. In the closing stages of the 100m Freestyle Larson, in an adjacent lane to Devitt, had surged forward with amazing speed. Two of the three first place judges gave Devitt their vote. Two of the second place judges put Devitt second. Of the six officials there, three by implication thought the Australian had won and three favored the American. The timekeepers had no doubt. They gave Larson 55.0, 55.1 and 55.1 against the 55.2 and 55.2 for Devitt. The unofficial manually-operated judging machine which recorded the touch on three paper tapes made Larson the clear winner. Despite all this evidence, Devitt was awarded the gold in an Olympic record of 55.2 thanks to a judging casting vote by the referee who technically did not have a vote! Larson got the silver and his time changed to 55.2 (Pat Besford, “Encyclopedia of Swimming”)

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