Hall of Famer
Michelle Cameron-Coulter
Inducted in 1991
Member Details
Career Highlights
Gold medal, duet, Rome and Spanish Opens
Gold medal, duet, Commonwealth Games
Gold medal, duet, World Championships
Gold medal, duet, Spanish Open
Gold medal, duet, FINA World Cup
Gold medal, duet, Olympic Games
Story
The combination of athletic ability, precise performance, and communication are the minimum requirements for elite competition in a sport such as synchronized swimming. It takes an extraordinary capacity to communicate with one's partner, while at the same time ensuring technical precision in one's own performance. It was this aggregate of skill and instinct that made Michelle Cameron and Carolyn Waldo our nation's most successful synchronized swimming duo. Michelle Cameron took up competitive synchronized swimming in 1976 with her hometown club, the Calgary Aquabelles. Under the tutelage of coach Debbie Muir, the Aquabelles won six of eight national championships between 1981 and 1988. It took Carolyn Waldo several years to overcome her fear of water following a near drowning at the age of three. Once back in the pool, she quickly mastered the skills of synchronized swimming. In 1982, the reputation of Muir and the Aquabelles lured Waldo to Calgary. It was coach Debbie Muir who saw that Cameron and Waldo were a perfect match for the duet event and paired them up in 1985. With complementary body types, matching skills in flexibility and endurance, and seamless communication, these two swimmers were able to give the impression that they were mirror images of each other. This dynamic duo won nearly every major duet competition they entered, including the 1985 Rome and Spanish Opens, the 1985 FINA World Cup, the 1986 Spanish Open, the 1986 Commonwealth Games, the 1986 World Championships, the 1987 Pan Pacific Championships, and the 1987 FINA World Cup. At the 1986 World Aquatic Championships, Canada swept the entire competition with Waldo's solo gold, Waldo and Cameron's duet gold, and the Aquabelle team gold, marking the first time that one country has won all three events since 1975. Favoured to win the gold in Seoul in 1988, the duo did not disappoint. The pair used their powerful manoeuvres to build an insurmountable lead in the compulsories and then swam their free routine to win the gold over the Josephson twins of the United States. Both Waldo and Cameron retired following their tremendous Olympic success.