Serving as a Co-captain at the 1972 Munich Olympics, Colella received a silver medal in the women's
200 meter butterfly event, finishing with a time of 2:15.57. In the event final, American
Ellie Daniel, the 1968 Mexico Olympic bronze medalist in the event, took the lead on the first lap over the 100-meter butterfly champion, Mayumi Aoki of Japan, but Rosemarie Kother of East Germany took a substantial 100 meter lead over both competitors. Kother held her lead through 150 meters, but at the 150-meter turn American Ellie Daniel recaptured the lead, with world record holder American Karen Moe on her heels. Moe took and never relinquished the lead at the 170 meter mark. At roughly the same time, American Karen Moe took the lead at the 170-meter mark, Colella passed both Daniel and Kother. In a highly competitive race and close finish, the Americans swept the finals, with Karen Moe winning the gold, Colella taking the silver only .77 seconds behind Moe, and American teammate Ellie Daniel taking the bronze only .4 seconds behind Collela. In international competition at the 1973 World Championships in Belgrade, Lynn won bronze medals in both the 200-meter breaststroke and butterfly events. At the 1971 Pan American Games in Cali, Lynn won golds in both the 200-meter breaststroke and butterfly, a silver in the 4x100-meter medley relay, and a bronze in the 100-meter breaststroke. She won three golds at the Universiade in Turin in the 100-meter butterfly, the 200-meter medley, and the 4x100-meter medley relay. In 2008, as Lynn Colella, she was living in Redmond, Washington, around eleven miles Northeast of her hometown of Seattle. She had four grown children, and was single. She had taken up soccer as a sport to retain her fitness. A former electrical engineering major at U. Washington, she had owned a software business, and was studying the technology of the world wide web, possibly anticipating a return to the high technology industry. Continuing to swim for fitness, Colella competed with United States Masters Swimming as a member of the Puget Sound Masters in meets in 2023 at the age of 73, in freestyle, breast, butterfly, and individual events.
Honors In 1971 Lynn and her brother Richard won the
Seattle Post-Intelligencer Man of the Year award. Colella was admitted to the University of Washington's Husky Hall of Fame in 1980. She was the first women to gain entrance into the honorary, and was awarded four consecutive years of varsity letters for each of her years of attendance. Lynn is also a Seattle Public High School Athletic Hall of Fame inductee, and was admitted to the Pacific Northwest Swimming Hall of Fame in 2004. ==See also==