Published September 16, 2024 1:17pm PDT
Bay Area man still diving at age 97
Bob Sherman is still diving at age 97.
LAFAYETTE, Calif. – He has done it thousands of times. Even as he approaches the age of 97, walking up the ladder to his beloved diving board is a well-worn routine.
“It’s a reflex, so I don’t have to think,” Bob Sherman said recently at his family’s longtime swim school in Lafayette, the Sherman Swim School. “I’m in the air and everything’s a reflex.”
The end of that board is like a second home for Sherman, who fell in love with diving as a kid in the East Bay and has been diving for almost a century.
He smiled while remembering just how long he has been a diver.
“You know, I didn’t think I’d live this long,” Sherman said, who is turning 97 on Sept. 26. “It’s in my blood. It’s a natural thing.”
Sherman grew up in the Bay Area and now lives in Walnut Creek.
He was swimming at age four and diving took hold and never let go.
He dove for City College of San Francisco and San Francisco State University. He even dove when he was serving in the military.
He never stopped diving, even while raising his four children with his wife of nearly 70 years, Shirley. They now have 14 grandchildren.
“He’s something to keep up with,” Shirley Sherman said with a smile. “He’s a go, go, go.”
Bob Sherman founded the Sherman Swim School in Lafayette and, of course, made sure there was a diving pool.
His son, Steve Sherman, an All-American diver and who competed in college for Brigham Young University, took over his father’s business and has now become his father’s coach.
Of course, the diving board is always there for Dad.
“He wants criticism,” Steve Sherman said of his father. “He wants to know what he could do better.”
Bob Sherman has a box full of diving medals at home and still continues to compete in the 90-and-over category. He’s now down to his three best dives: A front, back and half twist.
When he is not in the pool, he is likely on a golf course, and he only started using a cart last year.
Bob Sherman also knows he wants to keep diving, even though every year he said it is a little harder and a “couple of things are falling apart.”
Still, even with ailments and injuries, it’s not about whether the dive is perfect, it’s about getting to the end of the board.https://static.ktvu.com/segment/newsletter-signup.html?metadata=eyJkb21haW4iOiJrdHZ1LmNvbSIsInR5cGUiOiJkYWlseSIsInRpdGxlIjoiREFJTFkgTkVXU0xFVFRFUiIsImRlc2NyaXB0aW9uIjoiQWxsIHRoZSBuZXdzIHlvdSBuZWVkIHRvIGtub3csIGV2ZXJ5IGRheSIsInN0YXRpb25JZCI6Imt0dnUiLCJvcmlnaW4iOiJhbXAifQ==#amp=1
News
- Local
- National
- Crime
- 2024 Election
- Drought
- Wildfires
- Business
- Consumer
- Web Links
- West Coast Wrap
- FOX News Sunday
Mornings
Weather
- Weather Alerts
- Live Bay Area Weather Cameras
- Air Quality Map
- Wildfires
- Earthquakes
- Severe Weather
- Weather App
- FOX Weather
Sports
- San Francisco 49ers
- Golden State Warriors
- San Francisco Giants
- Oakland A’s
- San Jose Sharks
- Oakland Roots
- USFL
- FIFA Women’s World Cup
Investigations
- California EDD
- Homelessness
- Cost of California
- Powerless In Prison
- Unleashed Force: Power and Police Dogs
Specials
- California’s Electric Revolution
- The Four
- High Stakes: Sports Betting in California
- Made in the Bay
- Powerless In Prison
- Sports Focus
- Talk of the Town
- This Is Me: Transgender Journeys
- Unleashed Force: Power and Police Dogs
- Voices For Change
- West Coast Wrap
- Zip Trips
- Brand Spotlight
Money
Regional News
About Us
- How To Stream
- KTVU Staff
- Jobs and Careers
- Contact KTVU
- FOX Shows and Programming
- KTVU’s Schedule
- Live News Stream Schedule
- Mobile Apps
- Subscribe To KTVU’s Newsletter
- FCC Public File
- FCC Applications
- New Privacy Policy
- Your Privacy Choices
- FCC Public File
- EEO Public File
- About Us
- Jobs and Internships
- Contact Us
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. ©2020 FOX Television Stations