Linda Leavengood Giddens |
1991
Hall of Fame Inductee
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A
Miami Herald sportswriter once said: "In all my years of
covering sports, I have never seen an athlete with more determination to
win." He
was talking about Linda Lee Leavengood. She was 17 at the time,
1968, and she was a member of the United States Water Ski Team that had
won the World team title in Sherbrooke, Quebec, the year before. As
the years passed, Linda cultivated that determination to become one of the
finest women water skiers, overshadowed in her peak years only by the
incomparable Liz Allen, her good friend who preceded her into the Hall of
Fame. Born
February 25, 1951, Linda began skiing at age five after her family joined
the Greater Miami (Fla.) Water Ski Club. By the time Linda was 11,
she was competing at the national level. She won the national Junior
Girls Overall Championship in 1964 and was off on a career that would
bring her international acclaim, especially as a jumper. One
of Linda's skiing characteristics that helped carry her to the top was her
ability--and determination--to hold onto the towline at all costs.
When she set a new Junior Girls' jumping record of 86 ft in 1964, she went
completely under the water on her landing but then bobbed back to the
surface still grasping the handle to ride off the course. She
won a place on the 1967 U.S. team by holding on in a desperate last
split-second cut toward the jump ramp on the robin Lake ski course at
Callaway Gardens in Georgia. A few weeks later, she treated the
startled spectators at the World Championships to one of her underwater
recoveries on the Slalom course. Linda
added the Girls Division Overall title in the 1968 Nationals to her early
accomplishments but her ability in the slalom and tricks disciplines paled
in comparison to her spectacular jumping. She
set a Girls' jumping record of 110 feet in 1967, then when she entered
Women and later Open Women Competition she began steadily rewriting the
record book. Her 119-footer in 1973 broke the old record held by Barbara
Cooper Clack, another Hall of Famer, by eight feet; then came a lea of 128
feet in the '76 Nationals, another 131 feet in the '81 Masters and a
136-footer in the '82 Masters. Her 1976 record gained her an
opportunity to compete in another world tournament this time in Milan,
Italy, where she won the jumping gold medal in 1977. Her
Masters leaps, along with another of 126 feet in 1981, were recorded as
new standards in the Women II Division. She finished he r
record-breaking with a jump of 119 feet in 1987 in Women III competition
for those 35 and older. In
all, Linda won 10 National jumping titles, five in Open Women. She
also took jumping honors five times in the Masters at Callaway Gardens,
the scene of her wedding to Leonard Giddens in 1973, the year when she
graduated at Georgia Southern College. At the time Linda was already
a fixture in the Masters Invitational. Her
string at the Masters began in 1966 and, with only one break, ended in
1983 for a total of 17 appearances, more than any other skier, male and
female, in the history of the tournament. Her only miss was in 1978
and she was there then as a spectator with her new born son Lance. Linda
has shared her expertise with countless youngsters who have trained at the
45-acre Giddens Lake near Eastman, Georgia. She and Leonard also
have organized nearly 100 tournaments through the years, including the
Southern Regionals as well as a number of intercollegiate meets. Along the way, Linda has attained a Senior rating as a tournament boat driver. She has coached U.S. Water Ski Teams in World competition, and she has served on American Water Ski Association committees devoted to her primary interest in the sport in recent years, the development of junior skiers. |
1251 Holy Cow Road * Polk City, Florida * 33868-8200
Phone: 863-324-2472 * Fax: 863-324-3996