Liz Allan Reid |
1982
Hall of Fame Inductee
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When
Liz Allen made the decision to retire from active water ski competition in
1975, the world's finest women skiers heaved a collective sigh of relief. They
could hardly be blamed. From the time she won two event victories in
her fist national championships at the age of 11 in 1962, Liz had amassed
a competitive record that probably will never be matched by another skier,
male or female. In
13 seasons, she won 42 national titles and never failed to win at least
two in any year. Three times Liz make a clean sweep of all three
events in the Nationals, once a Junior Girl, once in Women's Division
competition and a third time after creation of the Open Divisions. In
1969, Liz won all three events in the Nationals, the World Championships
and the Masters, a feat almost without parallel in any sport. Those
first Nationals victories were scored on Robin Lake at Callaway Gardens, a
course she was destined to claim as her very own. After warm-up
tries in her first two Masters in 1964 and 1965, Liz then proceeded to win
the overall title every time she entered this most prestigious of water
skiing's invitational events, nine times in all. When Callaway
Gardens inaugurated the Masters Cup for women-- to match the Masters
Trophy for men-- the intent was to permit retention of either prize by a
skier who won a Masters overall crown three times in a row, considered
virtually an impossible accomplishment. When Liz retired the Cup in
1968, the Gardens management changed the new Masters Cup and the Masters
Trophy to "perpetual" status the following year. "Ski
Miss in a Hurry," an article on Liz published in the April-May, 1965,
issue of the Water Skier, proved to be prophetic. The 14-year-old not only
breezed through the U.S. Team Trials but hurried off to Australia and the
World Championships, returning with the women's overall crown and jumping
title as well. It
was the fist of her three world overall championships, and launched her
remarkable international career that included an unmatched eight world
event titles. Liz
began skiing at the age of five when her family moved to Winter Park,
Fla., in 1955 from West Germany where her father, Colonel William D.
Allan, was stationed prior to his retirement from the Army Corps of
Engineers. Not long after the Allan's' joined a water ski club, Liz
became interested in competition. She entered her first tournament
in 1961, finishing second in slalom and fourth in tricks. Tournament
officials wouldn't permit her to enter jumping because she was too small. A
year later, she met a Junior Girls Division national record of 66 feet.
Jumping
quickly became her favorite event, and she demonstrated her enthusiasm by
setting one record after another. Liz broke her own junior record
twice in 1963, first at 70 feet, then 79 feet. The following year,
she established a new Girls Division standard at 100 feet, to become the
third female skier in history to join the Century Club. She raised
this record to 106 feet at the 1966 Masters. Her string of
record-breakers in Women's competition included cracking the 110-foot
"barrier" in the '68 Masters and yet another
"impossible" mark for women at 125 feet in the 1974 Nationals. Little
less impressive were her consistent victories and records in slalom and
tricks. For example, she won slalom six times and tricks on three
occasions in the Masters. From the time she entered Women's competition in
the Nationals in 1968, she won five slalom titles and seven trick titles
prior to her retirement in '75. Bowing
out of competition opened up a whole new area of contribution to water
skiing for Liz Allan. For several years prior to her retirement, she
and her husband, William B. (George) Shetter, had operated a ski school
near Groveland, Fla., but the training center really didn't take off until
Liz was able to give it full attention. Even
so, the magic name of Liz Allen from the very first attracted ambitious
skiers from all over the world. Her training methods and her
one-on-one instruction techniques are credited with the steady improvement
in performances of many skiers outside the U.S. as well as within.
She also has shared her expertise by writing a regular column for Spray's
Water Ski Magazine. Skiers of both sexes have looked up to Liz as their personal role model, and they could hardly have picked a better one. In addition to her determination and self- discipline on the ski course, she has always displayed modesty and graciousness seldom found in champions under pressure. Although on many occasions she would have been justified in protesting, Liz Allan in all her years of intense competition never once questioned a judge's decision. |
1251 Holy Cow Road * Polk City, Florida * 33868-8200
Phone: 863-324-2472 * Fax: 863-324-3996