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Yale Bulldogs swimming and diving

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Yale Bulldogs swimming and diving
Founded1898; 126 years ago (1898)
UniversityYale University
Head coachJim Henry
ConferenceIvy League
LocationNew Haven, CT
Home poolRobert J. H. Kiphuth Exhibition Pool
NicknameBulldogs, Elis
ColorsYale blue and white[1]
   
Men's NCAA Champions
4 (1942, 1944, 1951, 1953)
Women's NCAA Champions
0
Men's Conference Champions
30
Women's Conference Champions
6

Since its inception in 1898, the Yale Bulldogs swimming and diving program has produced numerous champion athletes. Many Yale swimmers have gone on to earn All-American honors and even break world records. The team has won 4 NCAA championships, 30 EISL championships, and several AAU championships. Under legendary coach Robert J. H. Kiphuth, the Yale men swam to a record of 528 wins and 12 losses. As of February 2009, the men's program has a record of 1063 wins and 210 losses over 112 years. The first varsity women's team competed in 1975.

History[edit]

Yale Swimming "Flying Y" Logo

Coaches[edit]

Captains and season records[edit]

Men[edit]

  1. 1898-1899 ? 1-2
  2. 1899-1900 ? 1-1
  3. 1900-1901 ? 1-0
  4. 1901-1902 ? 5-3
  5. 1902-1903 ? 2-3
  6. 1903-1904 ? 2-1
  7. 1904-1905 ? 4-1
  8. 1905-1906 ? 3-2
  9. 1906-1907 ? 2-3
  10. 1907-1908 ? 3-2
  11. 1908-1909 Edward C. M. Richards 4-2
  12. 1909-1910 Edward C. M. Richards 7-0
  13. 1910-1911 William Howe 5-0
  14. 1911-1912 John Cameron Stoddart 3-2
  15. 1912-1913 Andrew Wilson 8-2
  16. 1913-1914 Paul Roberts 7-1
  17. 1914-1915 Daniel Summers 8-2
  18. 1915-1916 Carl V. Schlaet 7-2
  19. 1916-1917 Louis A. Ferguson 10-1
  20. 1917-1918 Richard Mayer 8-1
  21. 1918-1919 John M. Hincks 7-0
  22. 1919-1920 John M. Hincks 10-0
  23. 1920-1921 Lorrin P. Thurston 14-0
  24. 1921-1922 C. Dudley Pratt 14-0
  25. 1922-1923 William L. Jelliffe 15-0
  26. 1923-1924 Robert B. Colgate 10-4
  27. 1924-1925 Robert J. Sullivan 14-0
  28. 1925-1926 James D. Bronson 14-0
  29. 1926-1927 Phil W. Bunnell 14-0
  30. 1927-1928 James A. House, Jr. 14-0
  31. 1928-1929 John A. Pope 12-0
  32. 1929-1930 John V. Howland 14-0
  33. 1930-1931 Robert L. Messimer 14-0
  34. 1931-1932 Lloyd B. Osborne 11-0
  35. 1932-1933 Albert T. Hapke 14-0
  36. 1933-1934 Joseph Barker 14-0
  37. 1934-1935 David Livingston 12-0
  38. 1935-1936 Norris D. Hoyt 14-0
  39. 1936-1937 Richard A. Cooke 14-1
  40. 1937-1938 John Macionis 10-3
  41. 1938-1939 John W. Good 15-1
  42. 1939-1940 Russ P. Duncan 15-1
  43. 1940-1941 Willis H. Sanburn III 13-0
  44. 1941-1942 Howard R. Johnson 12-0
  45. 1942-1943 L.D. Dannenbaum 13-0
  46. 1943-1944 Richard Lyon 10-0
  47. 1944-1945 Alan R. Ford 8-1
  48. 1945-1946 Philetus Stetler 8-0
  49. 1946-1947 Edward K. Heuber 13-0
  50. 1947-1948 Allan M. Stack 12-0
  51. 1948-1949 Richard B. Baribault 13-0
  52. 1949-1950 Albert J. Ratkiewicz 13-0
  53. 1950-1951 Raymond M. Reid 13-0
  54. 1951-1952 James J. Carroll 13-0
  55. 1952-1953 Wayne R. Moor 14-0
  56. 1953-1954 Kenneth S. Welch 13-0
  57. 1954-1955 Malcolm P. Aldrich, Jr. 14-0
  58. 1955-1956 John P. Phair 15-0
  59. 1956-1957 William T. Clinton 14-0
  60. 1957-1958 Peter R. Taft 13-0
  61. 1958-1959 P. Timothy Jecko 13-0
  62. 1959-1960 Peter Lusk 14-0
  63. 1960-1961 Thomas Bissell 12-1
  64. 1961-1962 William McMaster 12-1
  65. 1962-1963 John Finch 13-0
  66. 1963-1964 Michael M. Austin 13-0
  67. 1964-1965 Stephen E. Clark 13-0
  68. 1965-1966 George S. Hill 12-1
  69. 1966-1967 Douglas Kennedy 14-0
  70. 1967-1968 Donald A. Schollander 14-0
  71. 1968-1969 Robert S. Waples, Jr. 15-0
  72. 1969-1970 Edward L. Bettendorf 14-0
  73. 1970-1971 Michael W. Cadden 12-1
  74. 1971-1972 Robert Kasting 10-3
  75. 1972-1973 Nate Cartmell 10-1
  76. 1973-1974 Chuck Holum 6-5
  77. 1974-1975 Bryan Smith 4-6
  78. 1975-1976 Bob Blattner 7-6
  79. 1976-1977 Quentin Lawler 8-3
  80. 1977-1978 Bill Lindsay 3-7
  81. 1978-1979 Jim Healy 5-6
  82. 1979-1980 Mark DeVore 5-6
  83. 1980-1981 Kurt Langborg 5-6
  84. 1981-1982 Bob Murchison 7-5
  85. 1982-1983 Jon Sharp 6-6
  86. 1983-1984 Geoff Pitt 3-8
  87. 1984-1985 Jason Green 7-5
  88. 1985-1986 Todd Kaplan 3-7
  89. 1986-1987 Bert Hazlett 7-4
  90. 1987-1988 Jeff Kaplan 3-7
  91. 1988-1989 Eric Breissinger 5-7
  92. 1989-1990 Dave Jacobs 7-4
  93. 1990-1991 Greg Reihman 10-3
  94. 1991-1992 Greg Reihman 9-1
  95. 1992-1993 Mike Englesbe 13-1
  96. 1993-1994 Sean Tesoro 10-2
  97. 1994-1995 Mike Kostal 11-5
  98. 1995-1996 John Mendell 7-7
  99. 1996-1997 Brian Hall 9-3
  100. 1997-1998 David Antonelli 7-4
  101. 1998-1999 Steve Gold 10-1
  102. 1999-2000 Mike Caperonis 10-2
  103. 2000-2001 George Gleason 10-3
  104. 2001-2002 Pat Dennis 14-1
  105. 2002-2003 Greg Palumbo 11-2
  106. 2003-2004 Alex Nash 10-2
  107. 2004-2005 Dave Lange 7-5
  108. 2005-2006 Brendan Everman 8-4
  109. 2006-2007 Geof Zann 7-3
  110. 2007-2008 Colin Stalnecker 8-3
  111. 2008-2009 Alex Righi 7-4
  112. 2009-2010 Thomas Robinson 5-6
  113. 2010-2011 Kyle Veatch 2-8
  114. 2011-2012 Christopher Luu 6-2
  115. 2012-2013 Jared Lovett 8-2
  116. 2013-2014 Ed Becker 7-3
  117. 2014-2015 Andrew Heymann 8-2
  118. 2015-2016 Brian Hogan
  119. 2016-2017 Alex Goss
  120. 2017-2018 James Bell
  121. 2018-2019 Adrian Lin
  122. 2019-2020 Matthew Slabe
  123. 2020-2021 Patrick Frith
  124. 2021-2022 Nathan Stern
  125. 2022-2023 Joseph Page
  126. 2023-2024 Sungmin Kang

NCAA Championships[edit]

  • 1942
  • 1944
  • 1951
  • 1953

[2]

Men's EISL Championships[edit]

Yale is in the Ivy League, but men's swimming traditionally competes in the Eastern Intercollegiate Swim League (EISL),[3] which pre-dates the Ivy League by 18 years. The EISL currently includes all the Ivy League schools.[4]

Women's Ivy Championships[edit]

  • 1978
  • 1992
  • 1993
  • 1996
  • 1997
  • 2017

Olympians[edit]

Athletes[edit]

  • 1912, Stockholm
    • Arthur McAleenan, diving
  • 1936, Berlin
  • 1948, London
    • Alan Ford, 100 Free silver
    • James McLane, 400 Free silver, 1500 Free gold, 800 Free Relay Gold
    • John Marshall (Australia), 400 Free bronze, 1500 Free silver
    • Allen Stack, 100 Back gold
  • 1952, Helsinki
    • Rex Aubrey (Australia), 100 Free, 1500 Free, 800 Free Relay
    • James McLane, 800 Free Relay gold, 400 Free, 1500 Free
    • John Marshall (Australia), 400 Free, 800 Free Relay
    • Wayne Moore, 800 Free Relay gold, 400 Free
    • Donald Sheff, alternate 800 Free Relay
    • Allen Stack, 100 Back
  • 1956, Melbourne
    • Timothy Jecko, alternate 800 Free Relay
    • John Marshall (Australia), 200 Fly
  • 1960, Rome
  • 1964, Tokyo
  • 1968, Mexico City
  • 1972, Munich
    • Erik Fish (Canada), 400 Medley Relay bronze
    • Robert Kasting (Canada), 400 Medley Relay bronze
  • 1976, Montreal
    • Lionel Bourcelot (France), 100 Back
  • 1984, Los Angeles
    • George Gross (Canada), Water Polo
  • 2000, Sydney
    • Stephen Fahy (Bermuda), 100 Fly, 200 IM
    • George Gleason (U.S. Virgin Islands), 100 Free, 200 Free, 200 IM
    • Emily de Riel, Modern Pentathlon silver
  • 2004, Athens
    • George Gleason (U.S. Virgin Islands), 100 Free
  • 2004, Athens (Paralympics)
    • Deb Gruen, 100m Breaststroke ("bronze"), 100m Freestyle, 200m Individual Medley, 400m Freestyle, 50m Butterfly
  • 2008, Beijing (Paralympics)
    • Deb Gruen, 400 Freestyle, 50 Fly, 100 Breast (American Record) bronze, 200 IM

Coaches[edit]

  • Robert J. H. Kiphuth: 1928, 1932, 1936, 1940, 1948
  • Philip Moriarty: 1960
  • Frank Keefe: 1984, 1988, 2000

[5]

Pan American Games Champions[edit]

Alumni[edit]

  • Ogden Mills Reid '07, Law '09; "Yale's first great swimmer" and later financial supporter and occasional coach.[6]
  • Robert Moses '09; future New York power broker resigned from the swim team as an undergraduate, in a dispute over fundraising.[6]

Facilities[edit]

The Robert J. H. Kiphuth Exhibition Pool, Yale University

The Yale Swimming & Diving teams train and compete in the Payne Whitney Gymnasium on Yale's campus. The third-floor practice pool is a 5-lane, 50-meter course with two moveable bulkheads that allow the pool to be divided into two 25-yard courses. The Robert J. H. Kiphuth Exhibition Pool is the competition venue, and is a 6-lane 25-yard course with seating for 2,178.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Yale Athletics Brand Guidelines" (PDF). December 1, 2021. Retrieved February 20, 2024.
  2. ^ History - Past Champions - NCAA.com
  3. ^ Eastern Intercollegiate Swim League. CollegeSwimming.com. Retrieved 2010-03-03. See also: Swimming & Diving. IvyLeagueSports.com. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
  4. ^ Although Army and Navy are members of the Patriot League, they have participated in the EISL championships at times since 1962. See: Men's History: Yearly Team Scores (1962-2007). The Psyche Sheet. February 6, 2007. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
  5. ^ Yale University Bulldogs, Official Athletic Site
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b Caro, Robert A. (1975). The power broker: Robert Moses and the fall of New York (Vintage Books ed.). New York: Random House. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-394-72024-1. Retrieved 3 February 2024. Reid, who had been Yale's first great swimmer, not only paid the team's expenses but, week after week, traveled up to New Haven from New York to do the coaching himself.

External links[edit]