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The first diving competition was held in 1885, in Germany. [2] In the first Olympic diving competition in 1904, American George Sheldon won gold in platform diving. Women's diving in the Olympics started with Women's diving at the 1912 Summer Olympics, won by Greta Johansson. University of Washington, 1915
In platform diving, the diver jumps from a high stationary surface. The height of the platforms – 10 metres (33 ft), 7.5 metres (25 ft) and 5 metres (16 ft) – gives the diver enough time to perform the acrobatic movements of a particular dive. There are additional platforms set at 3 metres (9.8 ft) and 1 metre (3.3 ft).
Until 2018, the only permanent regulation-size high diving platform in the world is located in Austria, but it is not used during the winter period. In 2018, Zhaoqing Yingxiong High Diving Training Center, [10] which contains the first year-round regulation-size high diving platform, opened at the Zhaoqing Sports Center in Zhaoqing, China. [11]
A recently developing section of the sport is High Diving (e.g. see 2013 World Aquatics Championships), conducted in open air locations, usually from improvised platforms up to 89 feet (27 m) high (as compared with 33 feet (10 m) as used in Olympic and World Championship events). Entry to the water is invariably feet-first to avoid the risk of ...
Women's diving debut happened at the 1912 Summer Olympics in the platform event and was expanded to springboard diving at the 1920 Summer Olympics. A parallel platform diving event for men, called "plain high diving", was presented at the Games of the V Olympiad. No acrobatic moves were allowed, only a simple straight dive off the platform. [3]
Quan Hongchan of China opens with perfect 10, then wins gold on the 10-meter platform. STEPHEN WADE. August 6, 2024 at 12:48 PM. ... which was the country’s first medal ever in Olympic diving.
Diving from these platforms is restricted to individuals who are properly trained to dive at such heights. [2] The 20 metre platform is believed to be one of the tallest indoor diving platforms in North America, if not the world. [3] The pool was used as a filming venue for the Olympic-themed film Nadia, Butterfly. [4]
0–9. Diving at the 1904 Summer Olympics – Platform; Diving at the 1908 Summer Olympics – Men's 10 metre platform; Diving at the 1912 Summer Olympics – Men's 10 metre platform