Champions in the Water
From the very beginning, emphasis was on the team. In the first month of practice, Chad Cradock ‘97, head coach of the swimming and diving teams, called out the names of student athletes and had them describe what the team meant to them. Students cited their determination, their sacrifice, their love of the sport and their support for each other. The men were hungry for another championship and the women were not about to let the men hog the spotlight. “It created such a positive environment,” Cradock said.
It looks as if that positive environment paid off. Both men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams clinched 2011 America East Championships, the eighth consecutive such victory for the Retriever men and the third crown won by the women since they joined the conference.
“The coaches and staff are really proud of our athletes for buying into the hard work,” said Cradock. “They’re not your average student athletes. They get up and swim at six in the morning, then come back in the afternoon to train again.”
There were several stand-out athletes at the championship, and some new records were set. Brad Reitz ’11 earned the “Male Coaches’ Award” with 223 points earned during his four years as a Retriever. At the championship, he broke both the school and pool record for the 200-yard butterfly with a time of 1:47.26.
Abbey McKenney ’12 earned the award for “Most Outstanding Female Swimmer.” Her 100-yard freestyle time of 49.66 seconds is a new record for both UMBC and the America East Championship.
Johan Rohtla ’14 was named “Most Outstanding Male Rookie,” after he won gold and set a school record in the men’s 200-yard backstroke with a time of 1:46.80, breaking a record he had set earlier that day by 1.5 seconds.
Several other Retrievers earned medals and contributed to their teams’ victories. Pierre De Waal ’11 earned gold in the men’s 1,650-yard freestyle, Eric Jones ’11 won silver in the men’s 100-yard freestyle and John Mendenhall ’12 brought home the silver medal in the men’s 200-yard breaststroke.
In the women’s 200-yard butterfly, Tara Morrissette ’13 earned silver and Jennifer Kotonias ’13 brought home bronze. Amy Fay ’13 won bronze in the women’s 1,650-yard freestyle and set the second-fastest time in school history.
UMBC also brought home the award for “Men’s Co-Coaching Staff of the Year.” Cradock said they earned the award “solely on the performance of our men.”
Elsewhere in what was a busy weekend for UMBC athletics, the men’s track and field team took fourth place and the Retriever women took sixth at the America East Indoor Championships, earning three gold medals in the process. Read more about track and field here.
(2/22/11)