Mark Versfeld

Mark Versfeld
Personal information
Full name Mark Andreas Cornelis Versfeld
National team  Canada
Born (1976-06-13) June 13, 1976
Edmonton, Alberta
Height 1.86 m (6 ft 1 in)
Weight 75 kg (165 lb)
Sport
Sport Swimming
Strokes Backstroke
Club Pacific Dolphins
College team University of British Columbia

Mark Andreas Cornelis Versfeld (born June 13, 1976) is a Canadian former competitive swimmer and backstroke specialist. At the 2000 Summer Olympics, he finished in 26th position in the 100 m backstroke.[1] He won the same event and the 200 m backstroke two years earlier, at the 1998 Commonwealth Games.[2] At the 1998 Aquatic World Championships he won a silver in the 100-metre backstroke, and bronze in the 200-metre backstroke, breaking a Commonwealth record in the process.[3] He was named Canadian Male Aquatic Athlete of the Year in 1998.[2]

Biography

Two years after his birth, his family moved to Fort McMurray where he started swimming in a club at age 8. In 1981 his family relocated to Edmonton, and three years later to Calgary.[4] After departure of his Calgary coach Deryk Snelling, Versfeld moved to Vancouver, where he trained with Tom Johnson and studied psychology and political science at the University of British Columbia.[5]

In 2002 he retired from active swimming and in 2004 moved to Perth, Western Australia, where he took up surfing and swim coaching. He was part of the winning team in the Rottnest 21-kilometre open-water relay swim in 2006, along with Australian Olympians Bill Kirby, Todd Pearson and Duncan Armstrong.[4]

Family

His mother, Hella Rentema, is a former Olympic swimmer from the Netherlands. He has a sister, Kim, and a brother Niels, who is also a competitive swimmer.[5] His father Kees (Cornelis) won a Silver Medal in the 320+ age group relay at the FINA World Masters Swim Championships held in Montreal in 2014.

See also

References

  1. Mark Versfeld. sports-reference.com
  2. 1 2 2006 CIS championships: T-Bird women, men still teams to beat. cisport.ca (February 21, 2006).
  3. Jean-Louis Meuret (2007), HistoFINA Volume IV – Tome IV. MEDALLISTS AND STATISTICS. Special FINA WORLD SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIPS (50 m.) Before Rome 2009.
  4. 1 2 Mark Versfeld. woodbuffalosports.com
  5. 1 2 Anita Lonsbrough (September 1998). Day Three Personality: Mark Versfeld. Swim Magazine
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