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2004/8/17 [Academia/UCLA] UID:32956 Activity:very high |
8/17 Cal student Natalie Coughlin wins gold medal http://sports.espn.go.com/oly/summer04/swimming/news/story?id=1860462 \_ Yep, she definitely looks like a female Cal student. Why didn't I go to UCLA?! *cry* \_ she could probably crush your head with her thighs \_ That's nice but I don't have a wrestler fetish. \_ urlP (no pic in the main article) \_ #t \_ For those who keep saying "urlP" you do know this is a predicate with a truth value, right? It's not a request for url. \_ From which pic did you infer this? \_ She may be ugly but she's already more successful than you'll ever be in your career. \_ Google is your friend. http://csua.org/u/8mq \_ http://graphics.fansonly.com/photos/schools/cal/sports/w-swim/auto_action/a-coughlin2-0203wswim.jpg \_ http://graphics.fansonly.com/photos/schools/cal/sports/w-swim/auto_action/a-coughlin2-0203wswim.jpg She looks quite pretty to me. I don't know what the problem is. \_ I agree. She's kind of cute. http://sports.yahoo.com/search?p=coughlin&photos=1&sp=1&ep=19 \_ The "why didn't I go to UCLA" guy doesn't like smart, pretty, athletic women. Coughlin is a babe. \_ No. \_ Yes, I do, and no, she isn't. Isn't disagreeing fun? \_ No. \_ My ideal woman will have broad shoulders and strong arms with which she can crush my pasty-white, nerdling body. Hallelujah! \_ UCLA guy is an idiot link:tinyurl.com/5svxo (sportsillustrated.cnn.com) http://amiannoying.com/view.aspx?ID=9057 \_ Some of us prefer women that don't look like boys. \_ This is a boy? http://www.berkeley.edu/news/chancellor/bim/oct_03.html \_ I can see her back muscles from the front. \_ Just because she could twist your girly man body around in a pretzel and laugh while doing it and yet she's still pretty. This is why you find her unattractive? \_ She looks like the Terminatrix from T-3 \_ Is she really the most celebrated Cal athlete? More than say Matt Biondi or Michelle Granger? \_ he may be an idiot but he's probably getting more than you \_ if he thinks women like Natalie Coughlin are ugly, then he's probably not |
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sports.espn.go.com/oly/summer04/swimming/news/story?id=1860462 ESPN Toolbar Monday, August 16, 2004 Coughlin didn't need record time Associated Press ATHENS, Greece -- American Natalie Coughlin won Olympic gold in the 100-meter backstroke Monday night. html Coughlin, the only woman ever to swim under 1 minute in the event, finished first in 1 minute, 037 seconds. The American owns six of the top 10 times in the event, but didn't need a sub-minute time to win her first gold medal. Coughlin, who failed to qualify for the 2000 Games and was felled by illness at last year's world championships, looked at the scoreboard with relief rather than ecstasy. Luo Xuejuan of China won gold in the 100 breaststroke, beating Australians Brooke Hanson and Leisel Jones. Three-time Olympian Amanda Beard was fourth and Tara Kirk sixth. |
csua.org/u/8mq -> calbears.collegesports.com/sports/w-swim/mtt/coughlin_natalie00.html Almanac Natalie Coughlin Natalie Coughlin Player Profile Class: Senior Hometown: Concord, CA High School: Carondelet Height: 5-8 Event: Fly/Back/IM Birthdate: 08/23/1982 Experience: 3V In her first three years as a Golden Bear, Natalie Coughlin has already established herself as one of the finest athletes to ever compete at the University of California. As a junior, Coughlin earned her third straight NCAA Swimmer of the Year and Pac-10 Swimmer of the Year awards. At the national championships, she became the NCAAs first three-time titilist in the 100-yard butterfly and 100 and 200-yard backstrokes. Coughlin owns the American and NCAA records in each of those events. In all, Coughlin broke three world, seven American and three NCAA records during the 2002-03 season. Last November, Coughlin appeared as a cooking guest on NBCs Today Show and dazzled Katie Couric and Al Roker with her pork tenderloin and persimmon risotto. Additionally, she smashed three world and four American records at the FINA World Cup in East Meadow, NY. Less than a month later, Coughlin was named the 2002 Female World Swimmer of the Year by Swimming World magazine. The male counterpart to the award was Australias Ian Thorpe. She was also announced as one of five finalists for the AAU James E Sullivan Award given to the nations best amateur athlete for the second consecutive season. Coughlin continues to add to her outstanding collegiate career. In addition to her nine NCAA titles and seven Pac-10 titles, she has remained undefeated in Pac-10 dual meet races (43-0). Overall, Coughlin has broken six world records, 34 American records and 11 Cal records. Despite the end of the 2003 season, the awards continued to pile up for Coughlin. Last April, she earned her second consecutive Honda Award for Swimming and Diving. Coughlin joins Mary T Meagher as Cal swimmers who have won the Honda Sports Award. With Coughlins three NCAA individual titles last season, she has now surpassed Meagher for the most national titles by a Cal womens swimmer. Last June, Coughlin was given a second nod from ESPN, earning two ESPY award nominations for Best Female Collegiate Athlete and Best Record-Breaking Performance. Then in July, despite being ill during the FINA World Championships, Coughlin led the US 400-meter free and medley relays to respective gold and silver medals. In 2001-02, Coughlin was a three-time USA Swimmer of the Month honoree, culminating in earning the USA Swimming Athlete of the Year award. She also won the ConocoPhilips Performance of the Year award for her world record breaking swim in the 100-meter backstroke at the US Summer National Championships. She won five events at the championships and became the first swimmer since 1978 to win five national titles at one meet. Coughlin won four gold medals at the championships, one for each of her individual events, tying Australian Ian Thorpe with the most overall medals. As a sophomore, Coughlin was named the NCAA Swimmer of the Year for the second consecutive season, Coughlin also repeated as the Pac-10 Swimmer of the Year. Coughlin set NCAA, American and US Open records in all three events, breaking the NCAA records she had set just the previous year. She helped her teammates to two national runner-up finishes in the 200 and 400 medley relays as well. She was also a finalist for the Sullivan Award as the nations top amateur athlete and was one of five nominees for an ESPN ESPY award as Best Female Collegiate Athlete. As a freshman in 2001, Coughlin was named NCAA Swimmer of the Year, Pac-10 Swimmer of the Year and Pac-10 Newcomer of the Year. It was the first time in Pac-10 history someone has been named both Conference Newcomer of the Year and Swimmer of the Year. Coughlin was also the third consecutive Cal swimmer to earn Pac-10 Swimmer of the Year. Coughlin had what was arguably the greatest freshman campaign of any collegiate swimmer in NCAA history. She won the national title in the 100 fly and the 100 and 200 back, while breaking NCAA records in all three events. Coughlin also helped the Bears to three second-place NCAA finishes in the 200 and 400 medley and 200 free relays. Coughlin represented the United States at the 2001 World Championship, July 22-29 in Fukuoka, Japan, winning the world title in the 100m back. Coughlin is the Cal school record holder in the 50, 100, 200 and 500 free, 100 and 200 back, and 100 and 200 fly. She is also a member of school record-setting 200 and 400 medley and 200 free relays. Coughlin holds Cals all-time top times in the 50, 100, 200 and 500 free, 100 and 200 back, 100 and 200 fly, 200 and 400 medley relays and 200 free relay. The national high school record holder in the 100 back, 100 fly and 200 IM, Coughlin was also the 1998 and 1999 top female point scorer for the Scholastic All-America Team. A US team member at the 1999 Pan Pacific Games, Coughlin also was a member of the 1997 US national junior team. In 1998, Swimming World magazine named her the High School Swimmer of the Year. A second team Pac-10 All-Academic selection in 2003, Coughlin is majoring in psychology. Her parents Jim and Zennie Coughlin are from Concord, Calif. and University of California The team names, logos and uniform designs are registered trademarks of the teams indicated. No logos, photographs or graphics on this site may be reproduced without written permission. |
sports.yahoo.com/search?p=coughlin&photos=1&sp=1&ep=19 My Yahoo! Mail Search the web Search Yahoo! Sports Sign In New User? Fantasy Shop Your Search: Search Photos in Yahoo! Sports 1 - 14 of 14 photo view image photo view image (AP Photo/David J Phillip) photo view image (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus) photo view image (AP Photo/Mark Baker) photo view image (AP Photo/Mark J Terrill) photo view image photo view image (AP Photo/Rusty Kennedy) photo view image (AP Photo/Mark Baker) photo view image (AP Photo/Mark Baker) photo view image photo view image (AP Photo/David J Phillip) photo view image (AP Photo/Bill Kostroun) photo view image (AP Photo/Douglas C Pizac) photo view image Photos Matches: 1 - 14 of 14 Search: for Search Copyright 2004 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved. Hidden links: 55. |
amiannoying.com/view.aspx?ID=9057 -> amiannoying.com/(ke3zz145gjygcurxz5hwhh45)/view.aspx?ID=9057 The Resume (August 23, 1982- ) Born in Vallejo, California US Swimming Participant in 2004 Olympic Games Gold Medalist at FINA World Championships (2003) NCAA Swimmer of the Year (2001, 02, 03) Pac-10 Swimmer of the Year (2001, 02, 03) USA Swimming's Swimmer of the Year (2002) Swimmer's World magazine's Female World Swimmer of the Year (2002) Why she might be annoying Her name is pronounce Coglin. A shoulder injury prevented her from being part of the 2000 Olympics and she participated, although ill, at the 2003 World Swimming Meet. She was nominated, but did not win the ESPY for Best Female Collegiate Athlete. She is majoring in psychology and in her graduate year is still not sure what she wants to do. Why she might not be annoying She is a multi purpose swimmer excelling in butterfly, backstroke and freestyle At 15, she became the first swimmer in history to qualify for all fourteen events (ever stroke and every distance). In one season she set three world, three NCAA and seven American records (2002-03 season) She was a straight A student in high school. Her mom and dad worked and saved to put her and her sister through private school. As a collegiate swimmer she twice appeared on NBC's Today Show (November 2002 and August 13, 2003) At 5'8 with her swimmer body, she has the look of a model. |
www.berkeley.edu/news/chancellor/bim/oct_03.html September 2002 Tom Campbell, Oscar Armijo, Maria Mejia, Walter Alvarez, Jessica Quindel, and Jesse Gabriel Produced by the Office of Public Affairs in association with SNP Communications. Web streaming provided by Educational Technology Services. transcript Natalie Coughlin, a fourth-year Psychology major and Cal's most celebrated athlete, holds 17 US records and 5 world records for swimming. Here, she talks about what it takes to be a swimmer and a student, her training regimen for her second Olympics, what it's like to break a world record, why she picked Cal, and what life may hold for her after swimming. transcript Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education Christina Maslach, much honored for her teaching skills before taking up her administrative post, tells how recent survey results indicate that the majority of UC Berkeley students are pleased with the quality of their education. Yet despite this, Maslach is seeking to improve the undergraduate experience further, from involving students in research to utilizing technology to make large lecture classes more personal. transcript Political science professor Henry Brady, an expert on voting systems, testified before the US District Court when it briefly postponed the California recall election. Here, he and the chancellor discuss how polling and incessant media coverage affected the election results; what those results could mean for California and the 2004 Presidential election; and how archaic punch-card ballots disenfranchise too many people trying to vote. |