Biographical details | |
---|---|
Born | [1] Harrisburg, Pennsylvania | December 20, 1945
Alma mater | Syracuse University |
Playing career | |
Position(s) | Syracuse (1964-67) freestyle middle distance |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1967-1968 | University of North Carolina Freshman Coach |
1968-1977 | Johns Hopkins University |
1970-1977 | Homewood Aquatic Club AAU Age group swimming |
1977-2007 | University of North Carolina |
Head coaching record | |
Overall | 501-146-1 .773 Win % (1977-2003, UNC) 82-26 .759 Win %, (Johns Hopkins) |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Championships | |
1977 NCAA Team Championship (Johns Hopkins) 26 ACC championships 10 men 16 women (U. North Carolina) | |
Awards | |
ACC Coach of Year 4 for Men's Team 10 for Women's Team (U. North Carolina) | |
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. [2] Comfort coached 8 Olympic participants, four women, and four men, primarily at the University of North Carolina. [3]
Comfort was born on December 20, 1945, to Robert and Francis Meck Comfort, an educator, and Syracuse University graduate, and grew up in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. His father taught business administration as a professor at Shippensburg University in Pennsylvania. His mother served as the chief librarian at Harrisburg Area Community College. [1] Swimming for Harrisburg, he qualified for the Pennsylvania State Swimming Meet in March 1963, by placing fourth in the 200-yard freestyle, and third in the 400-yard freestyle at the Eastern Regional Meet. [4] Comfort also swam for Colonial Crest Swim Club of Harrisburg during his High School years and in July 1963 broke pool records in the 100 freestyle and butterfly events. [5] In July 1964 in the summer after his High School Senior year, swimming for West Shore Swim Club, he won two events, the 100-meter backstroke, and the 100-meter butterfly in a time of 53.1 at a Tri-County Swim League Meet. [6]
He graduated Syracuse University with a Bachelor's in History in 1968, where he was a three-year letterman in swimming from 1964 to 1967. In competition he excelled in middle-distance events and occasionally swam the 500 freestyle. [7] As a Syracuse college upperclassman in 1967, he also coached the Syracuse Jewish Community Center swim team, which had a wide range of age group swimmers. [8] He received his master's degree in physical education from Carolina in 1968, and coached their freshman swimming team to a perfect 7–0 record as well as assisting with the Varsity team as a Student Coach. [9] [10]
Before assuming the position as head coach at Carolina, between 1968 and 1977 Comfort served as the head swimming and diving coach at NCAA Division III Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Md. In nine seasons, the team achieved a record of 82–36 in dual meets. [11] Comfort led the Hopkins's Blue Jays to 8 Mid-American Conference (MAC) Championships, 4 Mason-Dixon Championships, two NCAA Runner-up finishes and most notably the 1977 NCAA Team Championship. While coaching at Hopkins, he also served as Director of Physical Education, Assistant Track Coach, and the Director of the Summer Athletic Program. [10]
In his career with Hopkins, he produced 159 All-Americans, 22 individual national champions in individual events and one relay national champion during his nine-year tenure at Baltimore. He coached the Johns Hopkins women in their first two seasons to a 12–5 record and back-to-back MAC Championships, and was the first coach for the women's program. [12] Upon leaving Hopkins in 1977, Comfort was replaced by Assistant Coach Tim Welsh. Comfort had also coached the Homewood AAU Aquatic club during his tenure at Hopkins, and had mentored nationally rated swimmers with the Homewood Aquatic team, Teresa Hecht, Nancy Thompson, 1976 Olympic medalist Wendy Weinberg, and Ellen Mangels. [13]
In the 30 years between May 1977 and July 2007, where he replaced Jim Wood as Head Coach, Comfort had an exceptional winning career at North Carolina. He led the university to 26 Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) championships, consisting of 10 men's teams championships, and 16 women's team's championships. [1] Comfort's women's team at Carolina finished in the NCAA's top 10 five times. Nearing the end of his tenure with the Tar Heels, by January 2003 he had won 500 dual meets and had achieved an exceptional career record of 501–146–1. [11] Comfort remarked in 2003, that "Getting the 500th is a great tribute to a lot of great swimmers and divers who've competed for me at Johns Hopkins and Carolina over the past 35 years". [11] [14] [15]
Comfort always noted that he stressed education first and swimming second. He required a minimum of three morning and six afternoon practices, rather than many programs that required five or six morning practices. He also established an Alumni Club for his swimmers to help build team loyalty and improve recruiting by creating a network of graduates who could look for top talent in their communities. [16]
The swimmers and divers under Comfort's management won both at North Carolina and previously at Johns Hopkins University with a frequency and consistency unparalleled by any former swimming coach. Of his 565 career wins, 303 came while coaching men and 262 while coaching women. He also had great success with his athletes in classroom academics while away from the pool, and his swimmers were active in numerous leadership roles in their college communities. [1]
Among his outstanding career swimmers, he has coached eight Olympic participants, four men and four women, and three swimmers inducted into the North Carolina Swimming Hall of Fame, which include Sue Walsh, winner of 10 individual national championships, 1972 Olympian Ann Marshall, and Bonnie Brown, 1976 100-meter record holder, and the first female recipient of Carolina's Patterson Medal for the year's most outstanding senior athlete. The women's team was outstanding in the late 1970s, and also included 1976 Montreal Olympian breaststroker Janis Hape. While at the University of North Carolina, Comfort also coached 1984 American Olympic participant Chris Stevenson, 1992 and 1996 French Olympic team participant Yann DeFabrique, and 1992 Puerto Rican Olympic team participant David Monasterio. Another American Olympic team member included 1996 Atlanta Olympic medalist David Fox, who Comfort worked with during his time as a graduate student at the University of North Carolina and likely in subsequent years preparing for the 1996 Olympics. [15] [17]
Comfort coached several American and foreign Olympians and NCAA, AIAW and U.S. swimming national champions. He served eight times as head coach or an assistant on international trips for the U.S. National Team and 10 times for U.S. teams on domestic trips. He was Head Coach of the U.S. National Team at the World Junior Championships and Goodwill Games, and served as the Sport Coordinator for the 1987 Swimming at U.S. Olympic Festival in North Carolina. [10] [15] Comfort was head coach for U.S. teams which competed against the Soviet Union in August 1982 in a dual meet in Knoxville, Tenn. This U.S. team, in May 1983 also competed in the Hapoel Games in Tel Aviv, Israel. He was an assistant coach for U.S. teams in the August 1981 World University Games in Bucharest, Romania, for the July 1982 U.S.-West German dual meet in Gainesville, Fla., as well as for the League of European Nations meet in Rome in August 1990. [1]
In April 2006, Comfort retired from collegiate swim coaching, to become effective at the end of the 2006-07 swim season. Before fully retiring, by 1998 he spent time, likely summers in Sullivan County, Pennsylvania, in the Eagle's Mere area. [14] His long serving assistant coach Rich DeSelm replaced him as Carolina's designated head coach on July 1, 2007. [1] In his time away from collegiate coaching, he volunteered as an assistant basketball coach, and held a strength training program for both the boys' and girls' basketball teams at Pennsylvania's Sullivan County High School, and since 1967 held a position as an officer with the Sullivan County Scholarship Association. Since 1998, he was a member and was on the board of the Eagles Mere Community Church. Both his children, a son, and a daughter were University of North Carolina graduates. [1] [10]
As late as 2022, Comfort commented on the efforts of Sullivan County resident Mary Blondy to build a Sullivan county area fitness center, to be known as the Summitt Wellness Center, that would include a modern pool. [18] Sullivan County is a highly rural, and lightly populated area where Comfort retired. In 2022, Comfort was still helping with Sullivan County's basketball team, and would make a 35-mile one-way drive to swim at a YMCA in a neighboring county. [19]
Befitting a coach with over 40 years of experience, and an unparallelled number of winning meets, Comfort was widely recognized in the swimming community. He was chosen as the ACC Coach of the Year for the University of North Carolina's Women's team 10 times (1982, 1984, 1985, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001 and 2002) and as Coach of the Year for the Men's team four times (1991, 1993, 1996 and 1997). [11] In 1979, he became the youngest coach to ever receive College Swimming Coaches Association of America's (CSCAA) Master Coach Award. [1] He was inducted into the Maryland Swimming Hall of Fame in 1966 and the Johns Hopkins Athletic Hall of Fame in 1997. [12] In 2007, he was named as a Carolina Priceless Gem, University of North Carolina's most distinguished athletics award, and was honored with the North Carolina High School Athletic Association Award of Distinction. [10]
Most remarkably, for achieving his outstanding record of winning meets, Comfort was selected by the College Swimming Coaches Association of American (CSCAA) for the list of the 100 greatest Coaches of the Century. [2] In May 2011, Comfort was honored with the Charles McCafree Award by the College Swimming Coaches Association of America for an individual who achieved great success in life, and made great contributions to society and the sport of Aquatics. [20]
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.
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.
Jeremy Porter Linn is an American former competition swimmer, Olympic medalist, world record-holder and current swim coach. Linn set an American record in the 100-meter breaststroke while winning the silver medal in that event at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, in a time of 1:00.77. With a burst of speed in the final stretch, he finished just .12 seconds behind the gold medal winner from Belgium who had previously set the World Record.
David Marsh is the associate head coach at University of California, Berkeley and head coach of Team Elite in San Diego, California, and the ‘Professional Adviser’ of the Israel Swimming Association.
Peter Daland was an International Swimming Hall of Fame U.S. Olympic and collegiate swim coach from the United States, best-known for coaching the University of Southern California Trojans swim team to nine NCAA championships from 1957-1992. Daland started Philadelphia's Suburban Swim Club around 1950, an outstanding youth program, which he coached through 1955, then served briefly as an Assistant Coach at Yale from 1955-56, where he was mentored by Olympic Coach and long serving Yale Head Coach Bob Kiphuth.
Daniel Lee Harrigan is an American former competitive swimmer for North Carolina State University and a 1976 Montreal Olympic bronze medalist in the 200-meter backstroke. At the 1975 Pan American Games he won the 200 m backstroke event, but also contracted hepatitis and had to stop training for several months, managing to recover by the 1976 Olympics where he medaled in the event. He would later have a career as an architect.
David Ashley Fox is an American former competition swimmer who won a gold medal at the 1996 Summer Olympics held in Atlanta. He was also a four-time gold medalist at the World University Games, also known as the Summer Universiade.
Janis Lynn Hape, also known by her married name Janis Dowd, was an American competition swimmer.
Barbara Ann Marshall is an American former swimmer for the University of North Carolina, and a 1972 Munich Olympic 200-meter and 4x100-meter freestyle relay competitor. Notably in late August 1974, in a dual meet against American rival East Germany in Concord, California, Marshall swam on an American 4x100 meter freestyle relay team that set a world record in the event.
Philip Riker III is an American former competition swimmer for the University of North Carolina, and a 1964 U.S. Olympic competitor in the 200-meter butterfly.
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.
Todd DeSorbo has been the head coach of the Virginia Cavaliers Swim team at the University of Virginia, since assuming the position in 2017. He served as an Assistant Coach for the 2021 US Tokyo Summer Olympics Women's Swim Team, and in September 2023 was named to be the Head Coach for the U.S. Women's Swim team at the 2024 Olympics in Paris.
Don Megerle, a competitive swimmer at Bethany College, was a long-serving coach of the men's swimming team at Tufts University, a Division III New England Small College Athletic Conference school. In his 33 years as Tufts Head Coach from 1971 to 2004, he led the team to an overall record of 268-81, producing 92 Division III All-American swimmers, and 2 National champions.
Frank Elm was an American competitive swimmer and a Hall of Fame swimming coach for Rutgers University from 1961 to 1993. He was the first coach of the Rutgers Women's Swimming team from 1974 to 1993, and served on the staff of three U.S. Olympic Teams, as an Assistant in 1968 and 1976, and as Head Coach in 1980.
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.
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.
Dave Hrovat was a competitive diver and coach who dove for Clemson University and coached diving at the Clarion University of Pennsylvania from 1990 to 2021, where he led his teams to 48 individual championship titles and 294 All-American finishes.
Don Easterling was a collegiate swim coach for North Carolina State University from 1971 through 1995 where he led the team to 17 Atlantic Coast Conference Titles, including twelve straight from 1971 through 1982. He was honored as the Atlantic Conference Coach of the year four times, and was named the National Collegiate Scholastic Swimming Coach of the Year in 1993.
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.
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.