Swimmer Mark Tewksbury won Canada’s first gold medal for the 100-meter backstroke at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, roaring back from his slump in the world rankings.

Four years earlier, Tewksbury entered the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, South Korea while ranked second in the world, winning a silver medal as part of the 100-meter relay team. However, the late 80s emergence of underwater swimming techniques such as the “dolphin kick”, saw Tewksbury, a strong surface swimmer, slip down the rankings following the games.

This was when he decided to work with synchronized swimming coach, Debbie Muir. At the time, working with a female coach was something unheard of in the “male-dominated” world of swimming, Tewksbury told CNBC.

The swimmer said training with Muir forced him to be “open-minded” and to “innovate”, helping him to shave time off his record, climb back up the world rankings and win the gold medal.

Tewksbury said another important part of the process with Muir was getting the time and room to be himself as he fought back to the top of his sport.

“Part of that process was the technical, but it was also having somebody that created the space for me, as a closeted gay person back in the eighties and nineties – a totally different world and also in the world of sport, which still isn’t very progressive on most issues – this space to be me,” Tewksbury explained.

This “empowering” experience led Tewksbury, who came out in 1998 and was Canada’s first Olympian to do so, to start his own journey to help others find that same safe space for themselves.

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Production engineer and certified swim coach. Full-time IT consultant, spare-time swimming aficionado. 2 sons, 2 daughters and a wife. President of the Faroe Islands Aquatics Federation. Likes to run :-)

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