Michael Phelps and Katie Hoff took home top
honors at the USA Swimming Foundation’s Golden Goggle
Awards, as the two Maryland natives were named Male and Female
Athlete of the Year. The Golden Goggle Awards, held at The Beverly
Hilton and hosted by late night talk show host Carson Daly (NBC’s
“Last Call with Carson Daly”), celebrated the swimming
accomplishments of 2007, a year in which USA Swimming had one
of its most successful international seasons to date.
Phelps finished the night with a total of three
Golden Goggle Awards. His record-setting seven gold medals and
four individual world records at the 2007 FINA World Championships
earned him the Male Athlete of the Year award, as well as the
Male Performance of the Year award for his world record-breaking
swim in the 200m fly at World Championships. Phelps, along with
his teammates Ryan Lochte, Klete Keller and Peter Vanderkaay,
also won the Relay Performance of the Year award for their gold
medal swim in the 800m free relay at World Championships. The
quartet trimmed more than a second off the former world record
set by Australia in 2001.
For the third year in a row, 2004 Olympian Hoff
was named Female Athlete of the Year, based on her triple gold
medal performance at World Championships. At Worlds, Hoff marked
her first individual world record with a win in the 400m IM,
won gold in the 200m IM, and also anchored the world record-setting
800m free relay team in Melbourne.
Lochte received his second honor of the night,
claiming the Perseverance Award. A swimmer with a stack of silver
medals – swimming against Aaron Peirsol and Phelps –
Lochte made his way to the top step at World Championships by
breaking the world record in the 200m backstroke and claiming
gold for his country in front of reigning world record-holder
Peirsol. With the win, he posted his first long course individual
world record, and later wrapped up the meet with a total of
two gold and three silver medals.
Ben Wildman-Tobriner was honored with the Breakout Performer
of the Year Award for his stellar performance in 2007. The Stanford
graduate upset the field and claimed the world championship
in the 50m free. The pre-med graduate of Stanford University
followed up the performance by earning the National title in
the event in August.
The Female Performance of the Year went to Kate
Ziegler for her record-breaking performance in the 1500m freestyle.
Ziegler shaved more than nine seconds off of swimming’s
longest-standing world record, previously held by Janet Evans,
at the TYR Meet of Champions last summer.
Bob Bowman, coach of multiple world-record-holders,
won the Golden Goggle for Coach of the Year for the second straight
year. Bowman coached Phelps, his headlining swimmer, to record
heights in 2007 and placed six Club Wolverine swimmers on the
2007 World Championships Team. The 42-year-old also was the
men’s head coach at World Championships, where Team USA
put together one of the most dominant performances in meet history.
Among the celebrity guests in attendance tonight were Chris
Williams, star of the hit movie “Dodgeball” and
David James Elliott, star of the CBS hit show, “JAG,”
as well as Olympic legends Bruce Jenner, Mark Spitz, Sippy Woodhead
and Lenny Krayzelburg.
Breakout Performer of the Year