Making Waves is a stunningly honest look at the life and career of an elite Olympic athlete. Shirley Babashoff has always been an inspiration to me and countless others, and certainly belongs on top of the Mount Olympus of history's greatest swimmers. Combine that with someone who stood up for what she believed was the truth and you have a true champion. Thank you, Shirley. Janet Evans, five-time medalist at the 1988 and 1992 Olympics
In 1976, Olympic swimmer Shirley Babashoff had the ability to equal Mark Spitz's legendary seven gold medals, had she been competing on an even playing field. Sadly, the competition was not fair and the media chose to ignore the truth, and Shirley's inability to conceal her disappointment made her the biggest victim of those Games. In Making Waves, she gets to balance those scales with a poignant and revealing memoir. Shirley deserves this hearing and, through her insights and observations, you'll learn more about this remarkable heroine than has ever been revealed before. John Naber, five-time medalist at the 1976 Olympics
She should have been celebrated and honored, a role model for young girls and women everywhere. Maybe now Shirley Babashoff will be recognized for what she has been all along an American hero. In Making Waves, she speaks her truth, and though much of it is tragic and painful, she speaks it anyway. This is a gutsy book about a gutsy woman. Mary Carillo, sportscaster
In hindsight, the coaches should have been the ones speaking out, but it was considered 'unsportsmanlike.' Shirley paid the price for having the courage to tell the truth. . . . She'll be remembered as the victim of cheating who never got the timely recognition that she deserved. I believe the records should be adjusted, as there is definitive proof of systematic East German cheating. Mark Schubert, Babashoff's legendary coach and former head coach and general manager of USA Swimming's national team
Shirley Babashoff was visibly robbed of Olympic gold medals in 1976 and publicly humiliated in the media. She was the first athlete to accuse the East Germans of doping, but the world was not ready listen. Forty years later, Chris Epting finally tells the truth for the world to hear. Brent Rutemiller, publisher of Swimming World
Shirley Babashoff was our star going into those Games, possibly the greatest female American swimmer ever. . . . She was as competitive, talented, and relentless an athlete as America has ever produced. She received one gold medal (a relay), five silvers, a thousand taunts and insults, and many death threats. Scott Ostler, San Francisco Chronicle
''Shirley should have the gold medals she's one of America's greatest athletes ever and she had a lot of guts. Even today, athletes won't speak up for fear of being called a sore loser, but that didn't stop Shirley.'' Jill Sterkel, part of the storied 1976 relay team that defeated the East Germans, now coordinator of athletics at the University of Texas
I totally applaud what Shirley Babashoff did. It was the right thing at the right time, and looking back, it had a tremendous effect. John Carlos, U.S. sprinter who along with Tommie Smith raised a black-power salute on the medal podium at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City
In light of the recent Russian doping scandal, Babashoff, a former Olympic medal winning swimmer, reveals in her timely memoir how the East German government turned their female swimmers into elite athletes with an experimental drug program. Her narrative deftly recounts her humble California beginnings, with her strict parents pushing her to triumph in a series of amateur meets and Olympic trials. Babashoff, assisted by veteran writer Epting, covers some painful terrain about her father molesting her for years, a crime he was eventually arrested for after similarly assaulting several neighborhood girls. Once the acclaimed swimmer gets on the big Olympic stage in 1972 and 1976, she witnesses the horror of the Munich massacre, the glory of gold medal winner Mark Spitz, and the evolution of the muscular East German female swimmers, who were groomed in the lab to smash world records. It's like swimming against aliens, Babashoff tells skeptical reporters, who doubt that the women's new Charles Atlas bodies are the result of doping. Unforgettable and brave, Babashoff's whistle-blowing memoir poses a host of disturbing questions about Olympic regulations, performance-enhancing drugs, anti-doping agencies, media arrogance, winning cleanly, and life after competition. Publishers Weekly