Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q2535154> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 80 of
80
with 100 triples per page.
- Q2535154 subject Q13295675.
- Q2535154 subject Q13295677.
- Q2535154 subject Q15215224.
- Q2535154 subject Q6547526.
- Q2535154 subject Q7030410.
- Q2535154 subject Q7948642.
- Q2535154 subject Q8000329.
- Q2535154 subject Q8137456.
- Q2535154 subject Q8462208.
- Q2535154 subject Q8602432.
- Q2535154 subject Q8667486.
- Q2535154 subject Q8695939.
- Q2535154 subject Q9722018.
- Q2535154 abstract "Rafael Antonio Vidal Castro (January 6, 1964 – February 12, 2005) was a Venezuelan competition swimmer, Olympic medalist and sports commentator.Vidal was born in Caracas, Venezuela in 1964. At age 20, he became the first Venezuelan swimmer to win an Olympic medal in the 200-meter butterfly competition at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California. Although he was one of the smallest men in the pool at 5-foot-11, Vidal was well ahead of West Germany's 6-foot-7 Michael Gross at the finish. However, one of Gross' elongated arms managed to touch the poolside first, robbing Vidal of silver. That heroic bronze-medal finish made him a national celebrity, with his image splashed on magazine and newspaper covers throughout Venezuela. His mark ranks him as the eighth of the top ten swimmers in the 200-meter butterfly of all time.A year later, Vidal left Venezuela to pursue a career in administration and earned his bachelor's degree in computer and information sciences from the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida, where he swam for the Florida Gators swimming and diving team in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) competition under coach Randy Reese from 1981 to 1985. Vidal was a member of the Gators' NCAA national championship teams in 1983 and 1984, and received six All-American honors.After returning to Venezuela, Vidal was employed by a local television channel as a sports commentator and became a well-known television personality. Early on the morning of February 12, 2005, Vidal was killed in a traffic accident when another driver crashed his speeding Hummer into Vidal's car. The second driver was participating in an illegal street race. Vidal was 41 years old.A "Million Meter Swim" (Un Millón de metros por Rafael Vidal) [1] was held on February 12, 2006, at which more than fourteen million meters were swum by swimmers from Venezuela and around the globe. The tribute has been held every year since then.".
- Q2535154 birthDate "1964-01-06".
- Q2535154 birthPlace Q1533.
- Q2535154 deathDate "2005-02-12".
- Q2535154 deathPlace Q1533.
- Q2535154 height "1.8".
- Q2535154 weight "72000.0".
- Q2535154 wikiPageExternalLink Default.aspx.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q1078515.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q13295675.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q13295677.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q15078788.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q15215224.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q1533.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q15437231.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q213487.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q230186.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q245249.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q271805.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q3099292.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q31920.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q31987.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q3879688.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q501758.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q5461414.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q57404.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q6547526.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q6603088.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q6603094.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q7030410.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q713750.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q717.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q748643.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q762853.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q7656642.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q7948642.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q8000329.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q8137456.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q8456.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q8462208.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q8602432.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q8667486.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q8695939.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q9722018.
- Q2535154 wikiPageWikiLink Q994966.
- Q2535154 birthDate "1964-01-06".
- Q2535154 birthPlace Q1533.
- Q2535154 deathDate "2005-02-12".
- Q2535154 deathPlace Q1533.
- Q2535154 fullname "Rafael Antonio Vidal Castro".
- Q2535154 name "Rafael Vidal".
- Q2535154 type Person.
- Q2535154 type Agent.
- Q2535154 type Athlete.
- Q2535154 type Person.
- Q2535154 type Swimmer.
- Q2535154 type Agent.
- Q2535154 type NaturalPerson.
- Q2535154 type Thing.
- Q2535154 type Q10843402.
- Q2535154 type Q215627.
- Q2535154 type Q5.
- Q2535154 type Person.
- Q2535154 comment "Rafael Antonio Vidal Castro (January 6, 1964 – February 12, 2005) was a Venezuelan competition swimmer, Olympic medalist and sports commentator.Vidal was born in Caracas, Venezuela in 1964. At age 20, he became the first Venezuelan swimmer to win an Olympic medal in the 200-meter butterfly competition at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California.".
- Q2535154 label "Rafael Vidal".
- Q2535154 name "Rafael Antonio Vidal Castro".
- Q2535154 name "Rafael Vidal".