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Mike Burton & the “Fast 66”: How Hard Work Shows You What is Possible

by Olivier Poirier-Leroy. Join his weekly motivational newsletter for swimmers by clicking here.

At the 1972 Munich Olympics the big story in the pool was Mark Spitz.

And with good reason.

The guy won seven gold medals in world record time, all while rocking a world-class moustache.

With most of the world transfixed on the Flyin’ Stache, his teammate Mike Burton somewhat quietly performed out of his mind, breaking the world record in the 1500m freestyle and repeating as Olympic champion in the event.

Burton was far from an unknown: he’d won a pair of gold medals in Mexico City four years earlier (while reportedly battling Montezuma’s Revenge). He’d also won a mitt-full of NCAA titles in the 1650.

The repeat performance in the mile—which he won in world record time—was all the more impressive as he barely squeaked onto the team at Trials a couple months earlier.

Despite being the defending Olympic champion, and having a metric-ton worth of NCAA hardware, Burton had suddenly become far from a sure thing to make the team: he’d been diagnosed with a vitamin deficiency in the months leading up to Trials, leading him to miss sizable blocks of training.

As a week of events at Trials unwound, Burton failed to make the team in his other events, the 400 free and 200 butterfly. With only the mile remaining, Burton’s chances at making the team were dismal at best.

On the last night he limped into the final of the 1500m freestyle—getting the last spot to swim in lane 8. Burton cobbled together a gut-ripping performance that qualified him to the Olympic team, placing third. (Each country could send up to three swimmers back then.)

Going Back-to-Back

In Munich Burton would shave a couple tenths off the world record in the 1500m freestyle, the fifth time he had broken it. Over a period of seven years, Burton had torn a chasm of nearly fifty seconds between the first time he broke the world record in the mile (16:41) to that Olympic gold medal winning performance in Munich (15:51).

This mind-blasting canon of work is accented by something particular: Burton wasn’t really built like a classic swimmer. He wasn’t excruciatingly tall; at five foot nine, he wasn’t the longest guy in the pool. He didn’t have over-sized hands and size 18 feet.

But the one thing he did have was a vociferous appetite when it came to hard work.

Here’s an example.

At the end of one particular week of training, Burton’s coach, the legendary Sherm Chavoor, a world war two pilot, decided to keep the group late after their usual Saturday morning two-hour practice to do some extra work.

When a couple of Burton’s teammates complained, Chavoor’s response was simple: Swim a ‘fast 66.’

(66 is the number of laps in a yard pool that make up a mile or 1650 yards. In other words, go sprint a mile of freestyle. Yay!)

Burton, sniffing blood in the water and sensing the challenge, swam his brains out, lapping his teammates up and down the pool.

“I was so shot afterward. I’ve never been that tired in my life, neither before nor after that Saturday,” he said years later, smiling[1]. “But I knew from that point on that there was nothing Sherm could give me that I couldn’t handle.”

Hard Work Teaches You What is Possible

What’s the big lesson?

(Don’t complain to your coach when they ask you to stay late after practice…?)

Hard work redefines what you think is possible. And what you think is possible matters a great deal. After all, your expectations and goals in the pool, by and large, are brewed in a pot of what you think is possible.

It goes a little something like this:

The harder you work –> the more you see is possible –> the more you expect from yourself –> the more awesome stuff you are positioned to achieve.

There is no shortcutting higher—yet plausible—expectations. We can expel all the bravado we want—“I can totally do that super hard set!”—but at the end of the day, it’s the doing of the hard work that moves things along.

Today at practice you will be pushed.

You will be challenged.

Take the hard work and redefine what is possible.

ABOUT OLIVIER POIRIER-LEROY

Olivier Poirier-Leroy is a former national level swimmer. He’s the publisher of YourSwimBook, a ten-month log book for competitive swimmers.

Conquer the Pool Mental Training Book for SwimmersHe’s also the author of the recently published mental training workbook for competitive swimmers, Conquer the Pool: The Swimmer’s Ultimate Guide to a High Performance Mindset.

It combines sport psychology research, worksheets, and anecdotes and examples of Olympians past and present to give swimmers everything they need to conquer the mental side of the sport.

Ready to take your mindset to the next level?

Click here to learn more about Conquer the Pool.

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LazyEp
6 years ago

Billings, MT needs to show more love to this guy. What a great role model and wealth of knowledge (as well as great stories) he’s shared with many of us who’ve lived there.

Pam
Reply to  LazyEp
6 years ago

Mike Burton was my Son’s (Ethan Harder) first Coach in the Junior Seahawk program at the YMCA in Billings MT when he was 6. Mike still swims with the Masters at the YMCA and is always willing to help out any swimmer that needs some help. Awesome person!

disco
6 years ago

1 mile = 1,760 yards ie., (70.4 x 25)

BlueSky75
Reply to  disco
6 years ago

1650 was originally set up to be the equivalent of the 1500 meter swim, not necessarily for a standard mile. Often is referred to as the mile swim, but more like the metric mile.

It is unique to the short course yard event program – not tied to the usual 50-100-200 segment. The 500 is a bit too long to be compared to the 400 meter.

Over the years, It is interesting that these 2 event record times (1650 yard and 1500 meter)
line up so closely.

PowerPlay
Reply to  BlueSky75
6 years ago

For short course not surprising the records line up, given its the same distance. The variance between scm and lcm for 1500 shows you time advantage of extra turns.

Swoman
6 years ago

Mike Burton, a true legend! Thank you for the reminder.

Joe
6 years ago

Four Champions, One Gold Medal https://www.amazon.com/dp/0964778211/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_vwhYBbFG3QXDF

Americans Tim Shaw, Brian Goodell and Bobby Hackett, and Australian Steve Holland.

AMAZING BOOK!

Alex
7 years ago

There’s a book about him right? By Chuck Warner. Wicked read. I’ve had some of my distance swimmers read it and they come to the pool stoked to tear into a hard set.

Joe
Reply to  Alex
6 years ago

https://www.amazon.com/dp/0964778211/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_vwhYBbFG3QXDF

Americans Tim Shaw, Brian Goodell and Bobby Hackett, and Australian Steve Holland.

anonymous
Reply to  Alex
6 years ago

Also, RIck Demont could not swim the 1500 because of his medication. If Demont swam the 1500 would Burton have won.

Noflykick
7 years ago

I wonder if that totally awesome 1650 at NCAAs last spring will have a similar effect on Clark Smith. That swim must have completely redefined suffering for him. In the interview after he said something about having to let his ego carry him to the finish.

PowerPlay
Reply to  Noflykick
7 years ago

Didn’t see much impact in him this summer. He’s no Mike Burton.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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