Junior Christel Bouvron will be the first non-American ever to compete in the NCAA Championships for Notre Dame.

Christel Bouvron To Become First Current Notre Dame Student to Compete in Olympics in 84 Years

Aug. 13, 2004

Rising junior Christel Bouvron (Singapore, Singapore/Raffles Girls’ Secondary School) will become the first current University of Notre Dame student since 1920 – and second overall – to compete in the Olympic Games. She will represent her native Singapore for the second time in the Olympics, swimming the 200-meter butterfly on Tuesday, Aug. 17 in the Olympic Aquatic Centre of the Athens Olympic Sports Complex. The Games of the XXVIII Olympiad officially kick off with today’s opening ceremonies in Athens, Greece (televised by NBC beginning at 7 p.m. in South Bend). While Notre Dame has had 25 different former or future student-athletes compete in the Olympics, the only one to do so while enrolled at the University was August “Gus” Desch, who won the bronze medal in the 400-meter hurdles at the 1920 Antwerp Games. Fencing foilist Sara Walsh attended the 1996 Atlanta Games as an alternate while she was a Notre Dame student, but she did not compete. The preliminaries of the 200 butterfly begin at 10:44 a.m. (Eastern European Summer Time), which is 2:44 a.m. (Monday night/Tuesday morning) in South Bend. The top 16 then move on to the semifinals, scheduled for Tuesday at 7:20 p.m. (EEST) (11:20 a.m. in South Bend). The top eight swimmers will compete in the final on Wednesday evening at 7:42 p.m. (EEST) (11:42 a.m. in South Bend). NBC is scheduled to cover the 200 fly during its evening coverage on both days (beginning at 8 p.m. in South Bend) and might also feature prelim action on Tuesday (its coverage starting at 12:30 p.m. in South Bend). In the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia, Bouvron competed in both the 200 fly and the 400-meter freestyle. She did not advance out of the prelims in either race, posting times of 2:17.62 and 4:25.16, respectively. The official website of Irish athletics, www.und.com, will feature coverage of all of the 10 Olympians with Notre Dame ties competing in this year’s Games. Included in that coverage will be diary entries and photos documenting Bouvron’s time in Athens. In her first two years of collegiate action, Bouvron has earned all-BIG EAST honors four times, highlighted by a runner-up finish at the conference meet in the 100-yard butterfly in 2003. In 2003-04, she was among the team’s top four swimmers in the 1,650-yard freestyle (3rd, 17:34.38) and the 100 (4th, 55.78) and 200 butterfly (3rd, 2:02.90). Additionally, Bouvron swam the butterfly legs of Notre Dame’s top 200- and 400-yard medley relays. The latter quartet finished second at the BIG EAST Championships with an NCAA “B” cut that ended up as the 27th-quickest time in Division I. Her top individual result at the league meet was an eighth-place finish in the 100 fly. Bouvron just missed an invitation to the NCAA Championships as a rookie, though she was among Notre Dame’s top six competitors in five different races. She was the top Irish swimmer in both the 500 freestyle (4:57.33) and 100 fly (54.57), while she came in third in the 200 fly, fourth in the 100 free, and sixth in the 200 free. She posted her top time as a collegian in the 200 butterfly at the 2003 BIG EAST Championships, taking eighth with a mark of 2:02.28. Bouvron completed a trio of top-15 finishes in individual action by taking 13th in the 500 free. She also swam on a pair of third-place relay teams, covering the butterfly portion of the 200 medley and leading off the 800 freestyle. Bouvron already has a great deal of international experience. In addition to making her second trip to the Olympics, she also has taken part in the world championships three times (1998, 1999, 2002), as well as the Asian Championships on three occasions (1996 2000, 2002), taking eighth in the 200 fly in her most recent outing. Last December, she won six medals (three gold, two silver, one bronze) at the Southeast Asian Games in Hanoi, Vietnam. Bouvron took gold in the 200 butterfly and was a member of the winning 400 medley and 400 freestyle relays. Her 800 free relay squad won the silver, while Bouvron was the runner-up in the 400-meter freestyle and the third-place finisher in the 100 fly. She also has participated in the Commonwealth Games. She stands as one of the top swimmers in the history of Singapore, an island-chain nation located between Malaysia and Indonesia. Before arriving at Notre Dame, Bouvron broke the national record in the 400 freestyle, while also setting Singapore under-17 records in both the 400 and 800 freestyle. She also broke under-14 national marks in the 100, 200, and 400 free, as well as both butterfly events. Each of the last three Olympic Games have featured future Irish representatives in the swimming events. Jilen Siroky, who graduated in May after an injury-plagued collegiate career, competed at the age of 15 in the 200-meter breaststroke for the United States in the Atlanta games in 1996. In addition to Bouvron’s appearance in 2000 in Sydney, she will be joined by men’s swimmer Andrew MacKay (Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands/Cayman Prep & H.S.), who will swim the 200 and 400 IM for the Cayman Islands. MacKay will be a freshman at Notre Dame this fall. Since the Antwerp Games in 1920, Notre Dame has been represented (by current, former, or future athletes) in 15 of the 20 Summer Olympics, including each of the last 10. A total of 10 Olympians in the Athens Games have ties to the Irish, by far the most of any Games. The previous high was three in both the 1992 and ’96 Olympics. Irish athletes have won nine medals, most-recently a silver by Swedish epeeist Bjorn Vaggo in the 1984 Los Angeles Games. That total includes a pair of golds, both in men’s basketball (Vince Boryla in ’48 and Adrian Dantley in ’76). For more information on the Olympics, see www.athens2004.org, while complete television listings of coverage by the NBC family of networks can be found at www.NBCOlympics.com.