Paulo Radmilovic, King of the Welsh Olympians by Bruce Pope of BBC Wales
A diving exhibition by Paul Radmilovic at the River Taff.
Paulo Radmilovic is not just Wales' most successful Olympian.
For 80 years he was also Britain's most successful until rower Sir Steve Redgrave won a fifth gold medal at the 2000 Games in Sydney.
Born in Cardiff, Radmilovic was an excellent swimmer over all distances but it was as a water polo player that he reached full fame.
Radmilovic appeared in five Olympics between 1908 and 1928, winning four gold medals including the first claimed by a Welshman.
That came at the 1908 London Games when as part of the British water polo team, 'Raddy' scored two goals in the final in a 9-2 victory over Belgium.
Radmilovic was then drafted into the 4x200 metres swimming relay team after another athlete withdrew through illness.
The British four set a world record in the semi-finals before winning a thrilling final over Hungary, the United States and an Australasia team.
The victorious 1908 Great Britain Team with George W Hearn. The team comprised of George Cornet, Charles Forsyth, George Nevinson, Paul Radmilovic (WsM SC), Charles Sydney Smith (goalkeeper, captain), Thomas Thould (WsM SC), George WilkinsonIt was a great Games for Wales as, nine days after the water polo final, rower Sir Albert Gladstone also struck gold as part of the men's eight.
One of Radmilovic's teammates in the relay squad was fellow swimming great Henry Taylor, who became the first Briton to win three gold medals at a single Games having also won the 400m and 1,500m.
That record for a British athlete was not equalled until 2008 when track cyclist Sir Chris Hoy won three gold medals at the Beijing Olympics.
Radmilovic won two further water polo golds, in 1912 in Stockholm and eight years later in Antwerp, beating hosts Belgium 3-2 in a sometimes brutal final with the Cardiffian scoring the late winner.
He also played in the 1924 Paris and 1928 Amsterdam Olympics, by which time Radmilovic was 42 years old. He had made his debut for the Wales national water polo team in 1901 at the age of 15.
Radmilovic was no shrinking violet, hardly surprising given the rough and tumble of competitive water polo where the clash of bodies and limbs below the surface are hidden from the casual viewer.
In an interview for BBC Radio, recorded in 1951, the Welshman also demonstrated he was not one for false modesty: "Don't think I'm blowing my trumpet because if you're on the mic [microphone] you've got to say what you can do.
"I'm the only man in the world today - not the only Welshman but the only human being in the world today - than ever represented in six Olympic Games [Radmilovic included the 1906 Intercalated Games in Athens that is now not officially recognised by the International Olympic Committee].
"That stands out definitely because all the States of America, everybody is asking: 'Who is this man?'.
"And it's proved I had six Olympics which stands out as a world record, and there's another record that goes to me.
"I'm the only man in the world that's won the sprint and the long-distance [Amateur Swimming Association] championship, nobody in the world has ever won a sprint and a long-distance, but Radmilovic as a Welshman I did it for Wales."
The son of a Dubrovnik-born father and a mother of Irish extraction, Radmilovic was raised in the Tiger Bay area of Cardiff, where his father was landlord at the Glastonbury Arms in Bute Street.
At that time the neighbourhood of the docks also produced another Welsh sporting great, 'Peerless' Jim Driscoll, the British featherweight boxing champion.
The water lured Radmilovic from an early age, but the canals and rivers of Cardiff nearly claimed his life.
"I started swimming when I was quite a young boy, perhaps at the age of five," said Radmilovic who later became known as 'the Shark Man of the Taff'.
"But I couldn't swim because I tried to swim in the Cardiff canals before the Corporation Baths were built and I nearly drowned twice!
"They pulled me out of the canal and my father said, 'well now they've built the new Corporation Baths, put the child in the bath and let him learn to swim'.
"Then when I went on a few years I started to enter the competition and won everything I went in for. I won the Junior Welsh Championships and at the age of 14 I represented Wales as an international swimmer... that was my first [senior] international."
Radmilovic followed his father into the licensed trade, eventually settling in Weston-super-Mare where he ran the Imperial Hotel and played for the star-studded local water polo team.
In 1967, a year before his death, Radmilovic was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame, only the third Briton to receive this honour after pioneering English Channel swimmer Captain Mathew Webb and coach Matthew Mann.
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