It’s not every day you witness sports history that makes your heart swell and your eyes water.
But when Tom Daley and Greg Louganis – two Olympic diving champions from different eras, connected by both their sport and their identities as gay men – stepped onto the same platform in 2016, that’s exactly what happened. And luckily, we have a video of that historic event.
For those who might not know Greg Louganis (in case you’re not as old as me…), he’s diving royalty.
Four Olympic gold medals. The only male diver to sweep both springboard and platform events in consecutive Olympics (1984 and 1988).
The man literally hit his head on the springboard during a preliminary dive at the Seoul Olympics, got stitched up, returned to competition, and still won gold. Legend doesn’t begin to cover it.
But Greg’s greatest courage came years after his competitive days ended, when in 1995 he came out as gay, at a time when very few sports figures did.
More Than Just a Pool
Mission Viejo wasn’t any ordinary pool. For Greg Louganis, this California diving facility was hallowed ground – the very place where he learned to dive and mastered the skills that would earn him four Olympic gold medals in the 1980s.
“This is where I started diving, this is where I learned a lot of my dives through my career,” Greg explained to Tom in the video that captured the event, his voice reflecting decades of memories formed at that very spot.
The pool was scheduled for renovation, with the platform about to be torn down. This dive would be the last one ever performed on the platform that launched Greg’s extraordinary career – a fitting full-circle moment with the next generation of gay diving excellence by his side.
The Divers: Champions Across Generations
At 56, Greg Louganis was already a legend. After dominating the 1984 and 1988 Olympics with gold medals in both springboard and platform events, Greg made history again in 1995 when he came out as gay in an interview with Barbara Walters, simultaneously revealing his HIV-positive status.
At a time when being gay in sports often meant career suicide and HIV carried devastating stigma, Greg’s courage was revolutionary.
Tom Daley, then just 22, had already competed in three Olympics, earning bronze medals at London 2012 and Rio 2016.
His coming out in 2013 via YouTube – “Come spring this year, my life changed massively when I met someone, and it made me feel so happy, so safe… And, well, that someone is a guy” – had made him a beloved figure in the LGBTQ+ community.
The significance? Before Tom, there was Greg. Before the bronze, silver, and eventually gold medals Tom would earn as an openly gay athlete, there was a champion who couldn’t be open during his competitive years.
The invisible line connecting these two men represents decades of painful progress in sports.
The Moment: Captured on Camera
The video shows both divers climbing the steps to the platform, with Tom joking about his “first synchronized dive since Rio.” The nervousness in his voice is telling – this wasn’t just any diving partner, this was GREG LOUGANIS.
What makes the footage so touching is watching these two men – one who had to hide who he was during his career, and one who got to compete authentically – stand side by side, bodies momentarily aligned in perfect form before cutting through the water.
As they emerged from their dive to applause, the camera captured something beautiful – pure joy on both their faces. Their partners – Greg’s husband Johnny Chaillot and Tom’s then-fiancé Dustin Lance Black – were there witnessing this symbolic passing of the torch.
The Exchange: More Than Just Words
After drying off, someone off-camera posed the question that perfectly captured the admiration we all feel for Greg: “Tom, when you’re Greg’s age, are you gonna look this hot still?”
Tom’s humble response – “No, probably not” – followed by Greg’s playful “That’s a challenge” created a moment of levity that nonetheless carried profound meaning.
Considering Tom’s still breaking hearts at 31, I’d say he’s on track.
Watch the historic moment here:
The Legacy: Why It Still Matters in 2025
Looking back now, with Tom retired after his gold medal triumph at Tokyo 2020 and his silver medal swan song at Paris 2024, this moment at Mission Viejo feels even more significant.
Greg never got to dive as an openly gay Olympic champion. Tom got to stand on the highest podium while being exactly who he is – husband to Dustin and father to Robbie and Phoenix.
The distance between these realities represents a generational journey toward inclusion that affects every gay sports fan who’s ever felt excluded from athletics.
For every gay kid still struggling in sports, this footage offers evidence that the path, while difficult, has been made more navigable by champions like Greg and Tom.