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| Event type

Platform, Men

Date11 – 12 August 1984
StatusOlympic
LocationOlympic Swim Stadium, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California
Participants26 from 18 countries
Format10 metre platform.

It was Beamonesque – Greg Louganis ’s gold medal in this event, that is. You cannot summarize it more clearly than did the 1984 Olympic edition of Swimming World, which noted, “1) He became the first man ever to score over 700, shattering the all-time best he set in the prelims of 688.05 and bettering the record prior to the Olympics of 687.90, a score he did at the 1983 FINA World Cup; 2) He won the platform by the largest margin in Olympic history, finishing 67.41 points ahead of teammate Bruce Kimball, the silver medalist. 3) He became the first male diver to sweep the Olympic diving events since Pete Desjardins of the USA in 1928 and only the third [male] ever. Louganis averaged a score of over 8.9 per dive. He never received a counting score under 8 and didn’t have a counting score under 9 on seven of his 10 dives.” His coach, Ron O’Brien, said, “It was absolutely the most dominating diving display in history. Some reporter asked me to compare it to a performance in another sport. I’d say it’s like someone going 30 feet in the long jump or running the 100 meters in 9.5.”

Bruce Kimball’s silver medal was not unexpected but was a major comeback for a man whose life was a soap opera. A platform specialist, he had been bronze medalist at the 1982 World Championships and silver medalist behind Louganis at the 1983 Pan American Games. These occurred after a car accident in 1981 when he was struck head-on by a drunk driver and suffered multiple injuries, including several facial fractures, a broken femur, torn knee ligaments, a lacerated liver, and his spleen had to be removed. He was called “The Comeback Kid” for his efforts to return to the tower.

Kimball also won a bronze medal at the 1986 World Championships. He was expected to medal again at the 1988 Olympics until 1 August 1988 when he went to a bar and had about 12 beers. By then Kimball was drinking a lot and using cocaine. After leaving the bar he got in his car and was speeding down a road in Florida, where he had been training, when he plowed the car into a group of teenagers, killing two instantly, and injuring several others quite severely. He later pleaded guilty to two counts of vehicular manslaughter and was sentenced to 17 years in prison, of which he served five, and he permanently lost his driver’s license. Kimball actually competed at the 1988 US Olympic Trials, which was quite controversial, but did not make the team.

Chinese diver Li Kongzheng won the bronze medal followed by his teammate Tong Hui. Their coach Xu Yiming was unhappy that they did not win gold or silver and said of Louganis, “[He] is an excellent diver but has his shortcomings and new divers will solve those and pass him.” Nobody was quite sure what those shortcomings were.

PosCompetitor(s)NOC
1Greg LouganisUSAGold
2Bruce KimballUSASilver
3Li KongzhengCHNBronze
4Tong HuiCHN
5Albin KillatFRG
6Dieter DörrFRG
7Chris SnodeGBR
8David BédardCAN
9Steve FoleyAUS
10Miguel Ángel ZavalaMEX
11Jon Grunde VegardNOR
12Mark RourkeCAN
13 r1/2José Luis RochaMEX
14 r1/2Bob MorganGBR
15 r1/2Masashi NakashimaJPN
16 r1/2César HendersonDOM
17 r1/2Isao YamagishiJPN
18 r1/2Domenico RinaldiITA
19 r1/2Tom LemaireBEL
20 r1/2Park Jong-RyongKOR
21 r1/2Luis DiéguezESP
22 r1/2Abdullah AbuqraisKUW
23 r1/2Said DawEGY
24 r1/2Andy KwanHKG
25 r1/2Alaeddin SoueidanSYR
26 r1/2Amro HassanEGY

Qualifying (11 August 1984 — 10:00-12:00-15:00-17:00)

10 dives. Top 12 advance to the final.

PosCompetitor(s)NOCPoints
1Greg LouganisUSA688.05Q
2Li KongzhengCHN615.69Q1
3Tong HuiCHN608.04Q
4Bruce KimballUSA602.64Q
5Albin KillatFRG542.10Q
6Chris SnodeGBR507.96Q
7Jon Grunde VegardNOR494.67Q
8Miguel Ángel ZavalaMEX492.24Q
9Dieter DörrFRG489.84Q
10Steve FoleyAUS489.21Q
11David BédardCAN488.04Q
12Mark RourkeCAN485.58Q
13José Luis RochaMEX479.67
14Bob MorganGBR474.09
15Masashi NakashimaJPN466.74
16César HendersonDOM464.52
17Isao YamagishiJPN462.09
18Domenico RinaldiITA460.80
19Tom LemaireBEL455.61
20Park Jong-RyongKOR418.98
21Luis DiéguezESP361.23
22Abdullah AbuqraisKUW342.03
23Said DawEGY341.07
24Andy KwanHKG324.57
25Alaeddin SoueidanSYR317.88
26Amro HassanEGY316.35

Final (12 August 1984 — 11:00-13:00)

10 dives.

PosCompetitor(s)NOCPoints
1Greg LouganisUSA710.91
2Bruce KimballUSA643.50
3Li KongzhengCHN638.28
4Tong HuiCHN604.77
5Albin KillatFRG551.97
6Dieter DörrFRG536.07
7Chris SnodeGBR524.40
8David BédardCAN518.13
9Steve FoleyAUS479.43
10Miguel Ángel ZavalaMEX476.82
11Jon Grunde VegardNOR449.55
12Mark RourkeCAN434.13