Bulgaria at The 1992 Summer Olympics - Swimming

Swimming

Men's 100m Backstroke

  • Georgi Mihalev (Gueorgui Mikhalev)
  • Heat – 56.59
  • B-Final — 56.85 (→ 15th place)
  • Dragomir Markov
  • Heat — 58.17 (→ did not advance, 34th place)

Men's 200m Backstroke

  • Georgi Mihalev (Gueorgui Mikhalev)
  • Heat — 2:02.24
  • B-Final — DNS (→ no ranking)

Men's 100m Butterfly

  • Dragomir Markov
  • Heat — 55.85 (→ did not advance, 32nd place)
  • Khristian Minkovski
  • Heat — 56.94 (→ did not advance, 45th place)

Men's 200m Butterfly

  • Denislav Kalchev
  • Heat — 2:03.73 (→ did not advance, 33rd place)
  • Khristian Minkovski
  • Heat — 2:05.18 (→ did not advance, 35th place)

Men's 200m Individual Medley

  • Denislav Kalchev
  • Heat — 2:06.51 (→ did not advance, 26th place)

Men's 400m Individual Medley

  • Denislav Kalchev
  • Heat — 4:31.49 (→ did not advance, 23rd place)


Women's 100m Backstroke

  • Mariya Kocheva
  • Heat — 1:06.17 (→ did not advance, 37th place)

Women's 200m Backstroke

  • Mariya Kocheva
  • Heat — 2:21.79 (→ did not advance, 36th place)

Read more about this topic:  Bulgaria At The 1992 Summer Olympics

Famous quotes containing the word swimming:

    Whenever parents become overly invested in a particular skill or accomplishment, a child’s fear of failure multiplies. This is why some children refuse to get into the pool for a swimming lesson, or turn their back on Daddy’s favorite sport.
    Cathy Rindner Tempelsman (20th century)

    The swimming hole is still in use. It has the same mudbank. It is still impossible to dress without carrying mud home in one’s inner garments. As an engineer I could devise improvements for that swimming hole. But I doubt if the decrease in mother’s grief at the homecoming of muddy boys would compensate the inherent joys of getting muddy.
    Herbert Hoover (1874–1964)

    Awareness of having better things to do with their lives is the secret to immunizing our children against false values—whether presented on television or in “real life.” The child who finds fulfillment in music or reading or cooking or swimming or writing or drawing is not as easily convinced that he needs recognition or power or some “high” to feel worthwhile.
    Polly Berrien Berends (20th century)