Biographical details | |
---|---|
Born | circa 1932 |
Alma mater | Springfield College '57 |
Playing career | |
1952–1957 | Springfield College |
Position(s) | Swimmer, freestyle |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1957–1966 | Springfield College Freshman Coach Asst. Varsity Coach |
1966–1999 [1] | Williams College |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 181-72 0.715% (Williams Men) 145-26 0.848% (Williams Women) |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Championships | |
'82, '83, '92, NCAA Div. III Nat. Champions 13 x New England Champions (Williams Women) 14 x New England Champions (Williams Men) | |
Awards | |
1980 N. E. Coach of the Year | |
Carl Samuelson swam freestyle for Springfield College and was the swim coach for Williams College from 1966 to 1999, where he led the team to 14 Men's New England Championships, and 13 Women's New England Championships. The Women's team were National NCAA Division III Champions three times, and the Men's team were in the top five NCAA finishes 10 times. In an exclusive honor, Samuelson was named to the College Swimming Coaches of America Association's (CSCAA) 100 Greatest Swim Coaches of the Century. [2]
Samuelson grew up in Middletown, Connecticut where he attended Middletown High School. As a Freshman, he had to convince his principal at Middletown to start a High School Swim Team in 1949. [3] [4] Despite having no swimming pool, Samuelson succeeded, and the school held meets and practices at a local YMCA pool. Samuelson also participated in Track and Field at Middletown High. [3]
At the Connecticut State Swimming Championship in New Haven in March 1950, he swam third for the Middletown High Tigers in the winning 200-yard freestyle relay, recording a combined team time of 1:43.4. [5] At the Connecticut Central Interscholastic Swimming Championships in February 1950, his 200-yard freestyle relay team from Middlebrook High won the event and set a new record of 1:47.2, exciting the crowd in a very close race with rival Manchester High, who were overall winners in the meet. [6] While at Middletown, he met his wife Nancy who was a student at Connecticut's Woodrow Wilson High. The couple would have three children, two girls and a boy. [2] [3] [7] [8]
After graduating Middletown High, [9] he attended Springfield College, under Head Coach Charles E. Silvia. Silvia believed in bringing out the best in each swimmer, but was skilled at reducing stress at meets. [10] At Springfield, Samuelson was a swimmer all four years, and received a B.S. in Physical Education. While excelling as a sprinter at Springfield, he helped the team win two New England Inter-scholastic League Team Championships. [11]
Though he was originally in the Class of 1956, Samuelson spent two years in the Military which delayed his graduation from Springfield. After graduating in 1957, he also taught Physical Education in addition to coaching, and worked closely with Charles Silvia, who was both his swim coach, and his mentor as a new instructor at Springfield. [12]
He remained at Springfield to earn a master's degree in Physical Education and coached their Freshman Swimming Team from 1957 to 1966, which aligned with his own professional goals. One of Samuelson's most outstanding coaching successors at Springfield was Coach Peter Avdoulos, who coached diving at Springfield from around 1985–2024, leading the team to several national championships. [13] Samuelson learned a great deal about coaching while assistant coaching under Hall of Fame Head Coach Charles Silvia. Samuelson also assisted with the Varsity team at Springfield during this period. [14] While obtaining his master's degree, he also coached Suffield Academy in the 1956–57 year. His 1964–65 Springfield freshman team were the first to ever beat the Harvard freshmen. [7] [8]
Later the coach of Wesleyan University, Hugh McCurdy, called Samuelson to ask him if he would like his name put in contention for the position of Head Swimming Coach at Williams College, as their current coach Bob Muir was retiring. Familiar with Bob Muir and the Williams College swimming program, Samuelson agreed to become a candidate for the coaching job.
After a strong interview at Williams College, Samuelson was offered the position of Head swimming coach in the Spring of 1966, and he began coaching in the 1966–7 season. In 1970 Williams became a coed University, and Samuelson, as a Swim coach and the Director of Physical Education helped the school transition to a fully coeducational institution. He coached the women's teams as well as the men's and their performances were equally outstanding. [14]
During Samuelson's tenure as head coach, the Williams Men's team were New England Champions 14 times with 8 consecutive championships, and he mentored 285 All-Americans. The Men's team had 10 top five NCAA finishes and 3 undefeated seasons. Over more than a quarter century at Williams, swimmers mentored by Samuelson received All-America status 340 times, and took 39 individual, and 23 NCAA relay titles [2]
The overall Men's record was 181 wins, 72 losses, which earned Samuelson's teams a .715 winning percentage.
Samuelson began coaching the Williams Women's swimming team in the 1975–76 season. Always one to pioneer new ventures, Samuelson started the team with just three talented women who swam with the Men's Junior Varsity that year, as there was not yet a women's team. The three included Olympic trials qualifier Leslie Teal from Kansas City, who had finished only a few seconds shy of qualifying for the Olympics in butterfly. The three had asked him if there was a New England Championship for Women. Samuelson wasn't sure, but was told after his first inquiry they couldn't swim in the championship as they had competed exclusively against men that year. Not satisfied with that answer, Samuelson, requested the New England Women's league coaches take a vote, and to his surprise, they voted to include his three women swimmers as participants in their first New England Championships. During Samuelson's tenure, his women's team grew and with outstanding new recruits won 13 New England Championships which included seven consecutive championships. [2] One of his outstanding women swimmers in the mid-1980's was Joan Horgan, who in her career held five NCAA Championship titles, and served as a Williams team captain in the 1986-87 swim year. Horgan noted that Samuelson employed a relaxed personal approach to each swimmer which greatly eased her feelings of burn-out after a long swimming career, and believed "Sam cared more about me than about my swimming". [8]
Continuing to improve in competition, in 1982 the Women's team won their first NCAA Division III championships and gained national rather than exclusively regional recognition. The team won the NCAA Division III again in 1983, showing dominance in the sport with back-to-back national championships. In 1992, his Women's team repeated again as National Champions. Samuelson believed that those first two championships helped the women's team gain national recognition, helped improved funding and attendance for the program and helped him to convince more competitive student athletes to give the team a chance. [14] During his tenure as coach, Samuelson's Women's teams had eight undefeated seasons, with two consecutive undefeated seasons, and had 11 top five NCAA finishes. [2]
The Williamson Women's team overall record through the 1995 season when Samuelson was inducted into the Springfield College Hall of Fame was 145 wins and 26 losses for an outstanding .848 winning percentage. Nonetheless, Samuelson's approach was to always keep the fun in swimming, and to let the team members feel like a family rather than a pressured squad of military recruits. Samuelson streesed that academics came first. [2]
After 33 years coaching at Williams, Samuelson retired in 1999, and was replaced by University of Pennsylvania swimmer and prior Harvard Coach Steve Kuster. In 2016 around the age of 84, he began living at the Sweetwood Retirement Living Community in Williamstown. In September 2020, Samuelson's wife Nancy died. [1] [15]
In 1968, Samuelson was elected as President of the New England Intercollegiate Swimming Association. His friend Hugh McCurdy, the coach at Wesleyan College who had helped him obtained his position as Head Coach for Williams College was selected as Secretary-Treasurer. [16]
Samuelson was the 1980 New England Coach of the Year and received the honor two more times. His home town selected him for the Middletown Sports Hall of Fame in February, 1999. [3] Impressively, he was also chosen as one of the 100 Greatest Swimming and Diving Coaches of the Century in 2021 by the College Swimming and Diving Coaches Association of America (CSCAA). [17] In 2000, the Williams College Swimming Pool, was renamed the Samuelson-Muir pool, to honor him, and Coach Muir, who had been a long-term acquaintance and friend for many years. [1] When Carl Samuelson as Swim Coach, and Nancy, who served as the Health Center's Medical Secretary, both retired in 1999, alumni established a scholarship fund in their honor. [15]
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.
Springfield College is a private university in Springfield, Massachusetts, United States. The institution's mission, called the Humanics philosophy, calls for educating students in spirit, mind, and body for leadership in service to others It is also notable for its historical significance as the birthplace of basketball, which was invented on campus in 1891 by Canadian-American instructor and graduate student James Naismith.
James Steen served as a swim coach at Kenyon College from 1976 to 2012, where he became the first coach in NCAA collegiate history to have his men's and women's teams win a combined 50 Division III NCAA championships.
Jack Bauerle is the former head coach of the University of Georgia (UGA) men's and women's swimming teams. He served as coach for the 2020 US Olympic Swim Team at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan.
Ed Reed was coach of Brown University’s water polo team from 1971 to 1992, where he led the team to seventeen consecutive New England Championships between 1975-1991. Prior to 1974, Brown's Water Polo team had been a Club Team, but achieved Varsity status that year. Initially, he was also head coach of the varsity swim team at Brown.
Mike Whalen is an American college athletics administrator and former college football and collegiate wrestling coach. He is the athletic director at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut, a position he has held since 2013. Whalen served as the head football coach at Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts from 2004 to 2009 and at Wesleyan from 2010 to 2014, compiling a career college football head coaching record of 64–24. He was also the head wrestling coach at Williams from 1996 to 2004. Whalen played football and wrestled at Wesleyan.
William Albert "Bill" Yorzyk Jr. was an American competition swimmer, Olympic champion, and one-time world record-holder.
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Kris Kubik was an All-American competitive swimmer for North Carolina State and Auburn University and the Associate Head swimming coach for the University of Texas under Head Coach Eddie Reese. In his thirty-four year tenure coaching University of Texas at Austin swimming from 1979 to 1981, and 1986 through 2016, he helped lead the Longhorns to 12 NCAA National team Championships, claiming titles in successive years for the 1989-91, 2000-02, and 2015-2016 seasons.
Frank Rockwell Comfort was a competitive swimmer for Syracuse University and the head swim coach for the University of North Carolina from 1977 to 2007 where he led the Tarheels to 349 dual meet wins. Combined with his prior wins coaching Johns Hopkins University, in 2004 he reached 578 dual meet wins, a number that uniquely distinguished him as the coach with the most wins in collegiate swimming history. In the year before beginning his long service as coach for North Carolina, he led the Johns Hopkins Swim team to a 1977 NCAA National Championship. Comfort coached 8 Olympic participants, four women, and four men, primarily at the University of North Carolina.
Charles Eaton "Red" Silvia was an All-American competitive swimmer for Springfield College, and a Hall of Fame swimming coach for Springfield from 1937 through 1978 where he led his teams to ten New England Intercollegiate Championships. A 1956 Assistant Olympic swim coach, he was an outstanding contributor to the swimming community and served as President of the College Swimming Coaches Association of America, as well as chairing the Board of the International Swimming Hall of Fame. He authored seven books on swimming, Life Saving, and Scuba Diving, and was best known for his book, Life Saving and Water Safety Today.
Steve Kuster was an All-American competitive swimmer for the University of Pennsylvania and a swim coach for Williams College from 1999 through 2024 where he led the Williams men to 21 New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC) Conference team championships and the Williams women to 20 NESCAC Conference team championships from 2001 to 2024. As of 2022, his men and women's teams have combined for 52 NCAA Division II and New England Small College Athletic Association (NESAC) national individual titles. Of these, 37 individual combined titles for both men and women have been in NESCAC Conference Championships.
Susan Bassett was a competitive swimmer in high school and a swim coach and assistant director of athletics at Union College from 1987 through 1995, where she led the Union men to a New York State Championship in 1995 and the Union women to New York State Championships in 1990 and 1994. She later served as a Director of Athletics at Hobart and William Smith Colleges from 1995 to 2005, Carnegie Mellon University from 2005 to 2013, and then Ithaca College beginning in 2013. She had the distinction in 2022 of being selected to the list of the College Swimming Coaches Association of America's (CSCAA) 100 Greatest Coaches of the Century.
Charles McCaffree Jr., known as "Coach Mac", was a collegiate swimmer for Michigan University, and a Hall of Fame Head Coach for Michigan State University from 1941 to 1969, where he led the team to 8 Central Collegiate Conference championships, a National AAU title, and a Big Ten Conference Championship in 1957. He was an Asst. Manager to the U.S. Olympic swim team in 1972, and as a major contributor to the swimming community in the 1960s, served as President of the College Swimming Coaches Association and Secretary of the U.S. Olympic Swim Committee.
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