Bobby Patten

Last updated
Bobby Patten
Biographical details
Borncirca 1963
Littleton, Colorado
Alma mater Southern Methodist University
Playing career
1981-1985Southern Methodist University
Position(s)butterfly, relay
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1985-1990Dallas Masters
Lone Star Masters
1990-1999Baylor/Lone Star Masters
1999-2021Dallas Aquatic Masters
2002-Hockaday School
Varsity Head Coach
2020-Pegasus Aquatics Masters
Director, Swim Training
Dallas
Accomplishments and honors
Awards
2010 USMS Coach of the Year

Bobby Patten is an American swimming coach who was a 2010 recipient of United States Masters Swimming's Coach of the Year. He was a competitive swimmer for Southern Methodist University where he was a five-time NCAA All-American specializing in butterfly. Since his college swimming career, he has won several open water competitions and as a U.S. Masters Swimmer has set numerous age group records in freestyle and butterfly events.

Contents

Early swimming

At the age of six, Patten began swimming competitively at the downtown Denver Athletic Club, under Coach Gene Mack, and later swam for the Denver University Hilltoppers Club under Coach Steve Hadley. Patten was ranked second nationally in the 100 Meter butterfly at age ten, in a time that was a Colorado State record. At 14, Patten set the National age group record in the 200-yard butterfly. [1]

Club swimming

When the DU Hilltoppers, a competitive year-round club, moved to the Englewood High School Pool, Patten moved with the team, and began swimming for Coach Mike Doane. When DU Hilltopers Coach Mike Doane left the Hilltoppers, Patten qualified for Senior Nationals under the coaching of Jimmy Railey, and Eric Craven. In Patton's meet records, the club was sometimes referenced as the Englewood Athletic Club. [1]

High School swimming

Patten swam for coach Stringy Ervin at Littelton High School in the Denver area. In one of his signature events, he was a High School Denver state champion in the 100 butterfly in 1979, 1980, and 1981. He was a High School All American in the three years he competed for Litteton, where he helped to lead the team to three State Championships. [1]

In July and August 1980, Patten swam in the Olympic trial preliminarys in Irvine, California for the 100 and 200-meter Butterfly, though the American team had boycotted the Games and did not participate. Patton did not make the finals. [1] [2]

College swimming for SMU

Patten received a scholarship to swim for Southern Methodist University under Coach George McMillion. As an SMU swimmer, Patten received NCAA All American honors five times, and represented America at the 1982 World Championships with three other Colorado swimmers. While at SMU, Patten swam butterfly for an NCAA Championship Medley relay in 1983, which set the US Open and American record. The record was made possible by a 51 second breaststroke leg swum by Olympian Steve Lundquist. [1]

In the summer before his junior year at SMU, Patten had successful surgery at the UCLA medical center to remove a cancerous tumor from his right arm. [3]

'84, '88 Olympic trials

In 1984, Patten swam in the Olympic Trails in Indianapolis, placing thirteenth in the Men's 200 Butterfly with a 2:02.77 in the finals, less than 3 seconds behind the first place qualifier, former world record holder Craig Beardsley, but not sufficient to make the finals round. [4] Continuing to compete at a high level, Patten was 26th in the 1988 Olympic Trails in Austin, Texas, in the 100-meter butterfly, and did not qualify, though with the large field, his preliminary time was only around 2 seconds behind first place finisher Matt Biondi. [5]

Continuing to swim competitively after college, Patten swam for the U.S. team at the 1987 Pan Pacific Swimming Championships. [1] He placed third in the 200-meter butterfly qualifying round, but did not medal in international competition. His qualifying time of 2:00.45 was within 2 seconds of the American Pan Pacific 200-meter butterfly gold medal winner, Melvin Stewart. [6] [7]

Open water and Master's swimming

An open water swimmer, Patten has placed first in the 1991 Waikiki Roughwater Swim, San Francisco's 1-mile Alcatraz Sharkfest Swim, and the Open Water 5-mile National Championship Swim at Lake Minnetonka. [8] Continuing to swim as a United States Master's swimmer, between 1990-2004, Patton set national age group records, primarily in the 400, 800, 1500, and 1650 freestyle and his signature event, the 200 butterfly. [8] [9]

Coaching swimming

Dallas Master's teams

After an active NCAA swimming career, and while still in college at SMU, Patten began working as a coach with the Dallas Masters swim program beginning around 1984. The club was founded by 1976 Olympian Jim Montgomery in 1981. The Club name was soon changed to Lone Star Masters.

Baylor/Lone Star Masters

Around 1990, Lone Star Masters Coach and founder Jim Montgomery began serving as an Aquatics Director at Baylor's Tom Landry Center, and had earlier taken part in designing their eight-lane Olympic 25-meter pool. To reflect the role the Baylor Landry Center would play as a Dallas Masters practice location, around 1990 the Club's name officially became Baylor/Lone Star Masters, where Patten continued as a primary coach, with additional administrative responsibilities. [10] [11]

Dallas Aquatic Masters

Renaming the Baylor/Lone Star Masters team, Patten was a co-founder of the Dallas Aquatic Masters club team around 1999 with partner and co-founder Jim Montgomery. Patten had both management and coaching responsibilities. Dallas's Southern Methodist University and Baylor's Tom Landry Center remained two of the larger Dallas area pools where practices were held, as well as Richardson's Pierce High School. [11]

Beginning in 2002, Patten began serving as Varsity Head Swimming Coach for the Hockaday School in Dallas for the winter season, taking place between November and February, and as of 2023 is still coaching there. [12]

Pegasus Aquatics Masters

Around 2020, Patten began coaching with Dallas's Pegasus Aquatics Masters Swim Program and is currently Director of Swim Training where he coaches, schedules practices, manages programs, and directs competitions. The swim program holds practices at the newly built Southern Methodist University indoor pool, but has also had facilities at Dallas's Highland Park High School pool, Garland ISD Pool, and the Oak Point Recreation Center. [13]

Honors

In 2010, Patten was made the United States Masters Swimming Coach of the Year. [8]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard Quick</span> American swimming coach

Richard Walter Quick was a Hall of Fame head coach for the women's swim teams at the University of Texas from 1982 through 1988 and at Stanford University, from 1988 through 2005. In an unprecedented achievement, Quick's Women's teams at Texas and Stanford won a combined 12 NCAA National championships, with his Men and Women's team at Auburn winning his final championship in 2009. His teams won a combined 22 Conference championships. He was a coach for the United States Olympic swimming team for six Olympics—1984, 1988, 1992, 1996, 2000 and 2004.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jim Montgomery (swimmer)</span> American swimmer

James Paul Montgomery is an American former competition swimmer, four-time Olympic medalist, and former world record-holder. Montgomery was the first man to break the 50-second barrier (49.99) in the 100-meter freestyle, at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, Quebec, where he won three gold medals and one bronze.

Misty Dawn Marie Hyman is an American former competition swimmer, Olympic gold medalist, and former world record-holder. Hyman won the gold medal in the women's 200-meter butterfly at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ian Crocker</span> American swimmer

Ian Lowell Crocker is an American former competition swimmer, five-time Olympic medalist, and former world record-holder. During his career, he set world records in the 50- and 100-meter butterfly and the 100-meter freestyle. He has won a total of twenty-one medals in major international competition, spanning the Olympics, the FINA World Aquatics Championships, and the Pan Pacific Swimming Championships. He coached for many years at the Western Hills Athletic Club and has helped coach the Longhorns swim camp in 2019 as well as other years. Since Spring of 2022 when the new facility opened, Crocker coaches at the Western Aquatics and Social Club at the Eanes Independent School District Aquatics center.

Stephen K. Lundquist is an American former competition swimmer who is an Olympic gold medalist and former world record-holder. At the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, he won gold medals in the 100-meter breaststroke and the 400-meter medley relay.

Martina Moravcová is a Slovak medley, butterfly, and freestyle swimmer. She made her international swimming debut in 1991 for Czechoslovakia, and has gone on to compete in five consecutive Summer Olympics (1992–2008). She is a two-time Olympic silver medalist, both achieved at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia. In the 100-meter butterfly, she finished second to Inge de Bruijn, and in the 200-meter freestyle, she finished eight one-hundredths of a second to home favorite Susie O'Neill.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Uğur Taner</span> Turkish swimmer

Mehmet Uğur Taner is a retired Turkish-born American swimmer who was a High School All American, national public school record holder and Washington state champion specializing in sprint freestyle and butterfly. He competed for Turkey at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics in five events, won a gold medal for the U.S. team in the September, 1994 Rome World Championships in the 4x100-meter relay, and was an All American swimmer at the University of California Berkeley.

Kathleen Elizabeth Hersey is an American competition swimmer who represented the United States at the 2008 and 2012 Summer Olympics and finished fourth in the 200-meter butterfly in 2012.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Doug Russell (swimmer)</span> American swimmer

Douglas Albert Russell is an American former competitive swimmer, Olympic champion, and former world record-holder in three different events.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jeff Farrell</span> American swimmer

Felix Jeffrey Farrell is a Hall of Fame American former competition swimmer, and a 1960 two-time Olympic gold medalist, where he became a world record-holder in two relay events. After the Olympics, he worked as a swim coach abroad, and in the 1980's returned to America, living in Santa Barbara, where he worked in real estate. While training with Santa Barbara Masters, he would break numerous world and national age group records as a Masters competitor between 1981-2011.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jerry Heidenreich</span> American swimmer (1950–2002)

Jerome Alan Heidenreich was an American competition swimmer, Olympic champion, and former world record-holder. He competed at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, Germany, where he received gold medals in the 4×100-meter medley relay, and 4×100-meter freestyle relay. He received a silver medal in 100-meter freestyle, and a bronze medal in 100-meter butterfly.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Matt Vogel (swimmer)</span> American swimmer

Matthew Haynes Vogel is a swim coach of over forty years, an American former competition swimmer for the University of Tennessee, a 1976 Olympic gold medalist in the butterfly and medley relay, and a former world record-holder in the 4x100-meter medley relay event.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Katinka Hosszú</span> Hungarian swimmer

Katinka Hosszú is a Hungarian competitive swimmer specialized in individual medley events. She is a three-time Olympic champion and a nine-time long-course world champion. She is owner of a Budapest based swim school and swim club called Iron Swim Budapest, and co-owner and captain of Team Iron, founding member of the International Swimming League.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Robin Backhaus</span> American swimmer

Robin James Backhaus is an American former competition swimmer, Olympic medalist, and former world record-holder.

Jill Ann Sterkel is an American former competition swimmer, Olympic champion, former world record-holder, and water polo player. Sterkel won four medals in three Olympic Games spanning twelve years from 1976 through 1988. She was the women's head coach of the Texas Longhorns swimming and diving team at the University of Texas at Austin from 1993 to 2006.

Claire Christine Donahue is an American competition swimmer. She won two gold medals at the 2011 Pan American Games and finished second at the 2011 National Championships in the 100-meter butterfly. She earned a gold medal for swimming in the preliminary heats of the 4×100-meter medley relay at the 2012 Summer Olympics.

Heather Ann Arseth is an American-born swimmer who competed for the East African Island nation of Mauritius, near Madagascar, in the 2012 and 2016 Olympics. Heather's French-speaking mother was born in Mauritius and Heather maintained a dual nationality. In other International Competition, she competed in the 2011 China, 2013 Spain, and 2015 FINA World Aquatics Championships in Russia, as well as the 2015 African Games.

Kenneth Owen Merten is an American former competition swimmer, three-time Pan American Games medalist, and former world record-holder.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gregory Jagenburg</span> American swimmer

Gregory "Greg" Jagenburg is an American former competition swimmer and a World Aquatics Champion in butterfly who swam for Long Beach State and the University of Arizona under Hall of Fame Coach Dick Jochums. In August 1975, Jagenburg swam a 2:00.73 in the 200-meter butterfly, just .03 seconds behind Mark Spitz's standing world record in the 1972 Munich Olympic Games.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Red Barr</span> American swim coach (1908 – 1971)

Alfred "Red" Barr was an American Hall of Fame swim coach for Southern Methodist University (SMU). He coached the Southern Methodist swimming team for twenty-four years from 1947 through 1971, where he led the Mustangs to seventeen Southwestern Conference Championships, including fifteen consecutive championships from 1957 through 1971.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Bobby Patten, U.S. Master's Swimming Biography" (PDF). coshof.com. USMS.
  2. "1980 Olympic Trial Results in Irvine, California (PDF)" (PDF). usaswimming.org. USA Swimming.
  3. Hauser, Melanie, "Patten Recuperating", Austin-American Statesman, Austin, Texas, June 26, 1983, pg. 52
  4. "Olympics, Swimming Trials, Men's 200 Butterfly", Longview Daily News, Longview, Washington, June 30, 1984, pg. 23
  5. "Olympic Trails, Austin, Men, Preliminaries, Top 8 Qualify", Austin-American Statesman, Austin, Texas, 10 August 1988, pg. 29
  6. "Swimming, Pan Pacific Championships", Times-Advocate, Escondido, California, 13 August 1987, pg. 45
  7. "Results of the 1987 Pan Pacific" (PDF). USA Swimming. August 17, 1987. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 March 2016. Retrieved March 4, 2014.
  8. 1 2 3 "Open Water Pedia Bio, Bobby Patten". www.openwaterpedia.com. Open Water Pedia, Wikipedia.
  9. "Bobby Patten, U.S. Master's Swimming Record Times". usms.org. USMS.
  10. History & Archives. usms.org
  11. 1 2 Dallas Aquatics Masters History in "Rabalais, Scott, First to Swim, James Paul Montgomery (Bio)". www.usms.org. USMS.
  12. "The Hockaday School, News, Bobby Patten". www.hockaday.org. The Hockaday School.
  13. "Pegasus Aquatics, Pool Locations". www.pegasusaquatics.org. Pegasus Aquatics.