Jump to content

Tim McKee: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
 
(born March 14 1953)
Line 5: Line 5:
{{MedalBottom}}
{{MedalBottom}}


'''Tim McKee''' was a [[medley]] and [[backstroke]] [[swimming|swimmer]] from the [[United States]]. He won a silver medal in the 400 m Individual Medley at the [[1972 Summer Olympics]] with a margin of 0.002 seconds to the winner. At the beginning, the scoreboard showed his as number one along with Larsson. He also came second in 400 m Individual Medley event at the [[1976 Summer Olympics]], after [[Rod Strachen]].
'''Tim McKee''' (born [[March 14]] [[1953]]) was a [[medley]] and [[backstroke]] [[swimming|swimmer]] from the [[United States]]. He won a silver medal in the 400 m Individual Medley at the [[1972 Summer Olympics]] with a margin of 0.002 seconds to the winner. At the beginning, the scoreboard showed his as number one along with Larsson. He also came second in 400 m Individual Medley event at the [[1976 Summer Olympics]], after [[Rod Strachen]].


==External link==
==External link==
* [http://www.ishof.org/98tmckee.html Tim McKee on the ISHOF-site]
* [http://www.ishof.org/98tmckee.html Tim McKee on the ISHOF-site]


[[Category:1953 births|McKee, Tim]]
[[Category:American swimmers|McKee, Tim]]
[[Category:American swimmers|McKee, Tim]]
[[Category:Swimmers at the 1972 Summer Olympics|McKee, Tim]]
[[Category:Swimmers at the 1972 Summer Olympics|McKee, Tim]]

Revision as of 10:05, 14 June 2006

Olympic medal record
Men's Swimming
Silver medal – second place Munich 1972 400m Individual Medley
Silver medal – second place Montreal 1976 400m Individual Medley

Tim McKee (born March 14 1953) was a medley and backstroke swimmer from the United States. He won a silver medal in the 400 m Individual Medley at the 1972 Summer Olympics with a margin of 0.002 seconds to the winner. At the beginning, the scoreboard showed his as number one along with Larsson. He also came second in 400 m Individual Medley event at the 1976 Summer Olympics, after Rod Strachen.

External link