Tin Maung Ni

Tin Maung Ni (May 5, 1938 – April 2, 1974) was a Myanmar swimmer who took part in two Olympic Games.[1] Tin Maung Ni was born in Bhamo, Kachin State, Myanmar. He was the fourth of five siblings.

Swimming career

From the age of fifteen, he started his swimming career, after winning the regional swimming competitions. In 1958, he went to University of Rangoon after finishing the matriculation examination. In his freshman year, he participated in the Yangon All Clubs Swimming Competition and broke all the national records in 100 metres, 200 metres, 400 metre, 800 metres and 1500 metres.

In 1959, Matsui Dar, a Japanese swimming trainer, became his coach and participated in the South East Asian Games in Bangkok and wrote new records in 100 metres and 200 metres freestyle swimming.

In 1960, he participated in the Rome Olympics. He also won gold medals in 200 metres, 400 metres and 1500 metres and a silver medal in 100 metres swimming in second South East Asian Games in Jakarta, Indonesia.

In 1961, Tin Maung Ni participated in swimming competition in Hapoel Celebration in Israel and won gold medal in 1500 m swimming and silver medals in 200 and 400 metres swimming.[2]

In 1961 SEAP Games Yangon, he won gold medals in 1500 metres, 200 metres and 400 metres individual free style swimming and broke the records 400 metres in freestyle relay.

In 1962, he participated in Asian Olympic games and won gold medals in 1500m and 400m freestyle swimming. He also got a Bronze medal in 200 metres swimming.

With these results, Tin Maung Ni participated in 1964 Tokyo Olympic, racing in 400 m and 1500 m freestyles and finished 6th and 4th in his heats, respectively.

He died on April 2, 1974, before his 36th birthday.

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References

  1. Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Tin Maung Ni". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
  2. (ရေကူး), တင်မောင်နီ (4 July 2014). "တင်မောင်နီ (ရေကူး) ၏ အောင်မြင်မှုများ". Burma Irrawaddy.
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