Misplaced Pages

Silvia Poll

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Silvia Poll Ahrens) Costa Rican swimmer (born 1970) In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Poll and the second or maternal family name is Ahrens.
Sylvia Poll
Personal information
Full nameSylvia Poll Ahrens
NationalityCosta Rican
Born (1970-09-24) September 24, 1970 (age 54)
Managua, Nicaragua
Height1.92 m (6 ft 4 in)
Weight75 kg (165 lb)
Sport
SportSwimming
StrokesFreestyle, backstroke
Medal record
Women's swimming
Representing  Costa Rica
Olympic Games
Silver medal – second place 1988 Seoul 200 m freestyle
Pan Pacs
Bronze medal – third place 1991 Edmonton 100 m backstroke
Pan Am Games
Gold medal – first place 1991 Havana 100 m backstroke
Gold medal – first place 1987 Indianapolis 100 m freestyle
Gold medal – first place 1987 Indianapolis 200 m freestyle
Gold medal – first place 1987 Indianapolis 100 m backstroke
Silver medal – second place 1987 Indianapolis 50 m freestyle
Silver medal – second place 1987 Indianapolis 200 m backstroke
Silver medal – second place 1987 Indianapolis 4x200 m freestyle
Bronze medal – third place 1987 Indianapolis 4x100 m freestyle
Bronze medal – third place 1987 Indianapolis 4x100 m medley

Sylvia Úrsula Poll Ahrens (born September 24, 1970 in Managua, Nicaragua) is an Olympic medalist and a national record holding swimmer from Costa Rica. At the 1988 Olympics, she won Costa Rica's first Olympic medal, when she garnered the silver in the women's 200 free. As of 2009, she and her younger sister Claudia are Costa Rica's only Olympic medalists. Sylvia also swam for Costa Rica at the 1992 Summer Olympics.

She also won a total number of 8 medals at the 1987 Pan American Games; and 2 of her times from those Games still stand as Costa Rican Records in 2009 (100 free and 100 back).

Poll was born in Managua, Nicaragua. Her parents were Germans and they settled in Nicaragua where Sylvia and her younger sister Claudia were born. After the 1972 Nicaragua earthquake and rising political tensions, Sylvia's parents decided to move south to Costa Rica only shortly after Claudia's birth. She, her sister Claudia, and their mother are not related to Marlene Ahrens, another Olympic athlete and medalist and another Latin American-born daughter of German settlers.

Sylvia Poll is a famous backstroker and freestyle swimmer for Costa Rica, who won the silver medal in the Swimming at the 1988 Summer Olympics Women's 200 meter freestyle at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. Her silver medal was the first medal ever for a Costa Rican athlete.

At the 1986 Central American and Caribbean Games she set the Games Records in the women's 200 and 400 frees (2:02.80 and 4:17.98). Both records would last 20 years, until her sister Claudia bettered the times at the 2006 Games. Also at the '86 CACs, Silvia set the Games Record in the 100 m and 200 m backstroke (1:04.43, 2:19.32) that also stood until 2006.

Sylvia Poll is now a member of the ‘Champions for Peace’ club, a group of 54 famous elite athletes committed to serving peace in the world through sport, created by Peace and Sport, a Monaco-based international organization.

See also

References

  1. "Olympedia – Sylvia Poll".
  2. ^ Silvia Poll. sports-reference.com
  3. Women's 200 free and 400 free results from the 2006 CACs, retrieved 2009-06-21.
  4. Peace and Sport

External links

Pan American Champions in Women's 100 m freestyle
Pan American Champions in Women's 200 m freestyle
Pan American Champions in Women's 100 m backstroke
Central American and Caribbean Games Champions in Women's 100 m freestyle
Central American and Caribbean Games Champions in Women's 200 m freestyle
Central American and Caribbean Games Champions in Women's 400 m freestyle
Central American and Caribbean Games Champions in Women's 800 m freestyle
Central American and Caribbean Games Champions in Women's 100 m backstroke
Central American and Caribbean Games Champions in Women's 200 m backstroke
Central American and Caribbean Games Champions in Women's 200 m medley
Central American and Caribbean Games Champions in Women's 400 m medley
Central American and Caribbean Games Champions in Women's 4x100 m freestyle relay
Categories: