The Daily News Of Open Water Swimming

To educate, entertain, and enthuse those who venture beyond the shore

Newsletter

Random News

Suzanne Heim-Bowen Honored at the International Marathon Swimming Hall of Fame Class of 2024 Ceremonies in Cancún

Spread the love
This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is Screenshot-2024-05-19-at-3.27.02AM-1024x823.png

This is going to be the finale for a while…,” Suzanne Heim-Bowen famously commented to a TV reporter after finishing one of her cold water marathon swims in San Francisco Bay in 1984.

With a dramatic pause, a wide smile, and a twinkle in her eyes, the-then 25-year-old finished her comment to the reporter, “…until at least next week.”

Heim-Bowen was honored today at the Class of 2024’s International Marathon Swimming Hall of Fame ceremonies in Cancún, Mexico – along with the following luminaries of the sport:

The Legacy of Suzanne Heim-Bowen

Heim-Bowen is still swimming long, far, cold, and hard at the age of 65. She recently completed a 19.6 km swim across the Santa Barbara Channel in 5 hours 40 minutes and the 18.6 km Around Coronado Island Swim in 4 hours 26 minutes. Her full marathon swimming list is here on the Marathon Swimmers Federation database.

Ned Denison, chairperson of the International Marathon Swimming Hall of Fame, announced Heim-Bowen as an Honor Swimmer in the IMSHOF Class of 2024, recognizing the northern Californian for her prolific career as a marathon swimming competitor and soloist. Prior to receiving that honor, Heim-Bowen has also been inducted in the Masters International Swimming Hall of Fame as an Honor Open Water Swimmer in the Class of 2007.

Denison explains the background of her honors, “She won 1 Major, the 1988 FINA Long Distance Swimming World Cup at the age of 29.   She was the first to complete these major swims in the San Francisco Bay area: 41 km from Richmond Bridge to San Mateo Bridge in 1984, 33 km from Carquinez Bridge to the Golden Gate Bridge in 1983, a 2-way 19.6 km swim in the San Francisco Bay from the Bay Bridge to the Golden Gate Bridge in 1986, and 16 km from Bay Bridge to Ocean Beach in 1982.  After her pioneering swims, several of these swims are now standard offerings for marathon swimmers.

Suzanne set the female record in 2019 for the longest period to achieve the Triple Crown of Open Water Swimming at 34.1 years, which still holds at end 2023. She set two overall marathon speed records in 2021 (her fourth decade in the sport) at the age of 63: a 19.1 km Fastnet crossing in Ireland at 6 hours 9 minutes in 2021 (which was broken by a man in 2022) and the 33 km Washington, D.C. Marathon Swim at 7 hours 50 minutes which she still holds in 2023.

Suzanne swam the English Channel 3 times, all under 10 hours and 26 minutes, and held the 4th fastest female time from France to England (for her 1985 crossing in 10 hours 11 minutes, without GPS). She also holds numerous pool World Masters records. Suzanne worked over 45 years as an educational psychologist and special education teacher supporting individuals with significant physical and special needs.”

Steven Munatones has always been touched and inspired by Heim-Bowen, as many others in the sport and on dryland have. “Our sport has so many heroes, but it is rare that their story is put on film. Deborah McDonald captured the essence of what makes Suzanne a humble champion in every sense of the word in her documentary film 50 year old FRESHMAN. She is one of those rare individuals who brings smiles to the face of many, both in and out of the water.”

From her teens to her second half of her career, another honor richly deserved:

© 2024 Daily News of Open Water Swimming

to educate, enthuse, and entertain all those who venture beyond the shoreline

1 thought on “Suzanne Heim-Bowen Honored at the International Marathon Swimming Hall of Fame Class of 2024 Ceremonies in Cancún”

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top