Biographical details | |
---|---|
Born | circa 1955 Memphis, Tennessee |
Alma mater | North Carolina State Auburn University '78 |
Playing career | |
1973-1978 | North Carolina State Auburn University |
Position(s) | backstroke |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1977-1978 | Auburn University Student Asst. Coach |
1979-1981 | University of Texas Assoc. Coach w/Eddie Reese |
1981-1986 | Nashville Aquatics Club Longhorn Aquatics Club |
1986-2016 | University of Texas Assoc. Coach w/Eddie Reese |
2007 | Pan American Games Asst. Coach |
2008 | U.S. Olympic Team, Beijing Special Asst. |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Championships | |
12 NCAA National Team Championships 1981, 1988-91, 1996, 2000-2002 2010, 2015, 2016 (University of Texas) 33 Conference Championships (University of Texas) | |
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 swimming at the University of Texas at Austin 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. [1]
Kubik was born mid-1955 in Memphis, Tennessee to Dr. Burdette Kubik, a Dentist, and former coach, who moved to Memphis in 1948, and Mrs. Zelma Kubik an English teacher at Memphis State. The couple married in 1941, when Dr. Kubik was in Dental School at St. Louis University. [2] By three, Kris was active in Cub Scouting, where his father served as a scoutmaster. He grew up the youngest of four siblings in a swimming family, and was active in competitive swimming by the age of seven, first learning to swim at a Red Cross swimming program. As serious age-group competitors who performed strength training and practiced twice daily, by High School he and each of his siblings were on at least one state swimming championship team and garnered many first-place finishes. [3]
Excelling early, at the age of only eight in April, 1964, Kris broke the Southeastern AAU age group record for boys eight and under in the 25-yard butterfly with a time of 15.6, and tied the age group record for the 25-yard freestyle with a time of :14.9. [4] [3] [5] [6] [7]
In 1966, in an International competition with Canadian swimmers in Ontario, Canada, Kris took two gold medals, winning the 10-and-under 50-yard butterfly while setting a Canadian Open age group record with a time of 30.8. Kris was also on the winning 200-yard medley relay team. [6] In 1966, at the age of 10, Kris had earlier recorded the second best American time in his age-group for the 50-yard butterfly with a 31.3, qualifying him for the Canadian meet. [8]
Kris attended and swam for the Memphis White Station High School Spartans under Coach Larry Heathcott where he graduated around 1973. By his Junior year, at 16, he held two Southeastern AAU records, and would compete in the city's Interscholastic Athletic Associations' swimming title in the 100-yard butterfly, 200-yard freestyle, and 200 Medley Relay. [9] In highly competitive age group swimming, from an early age he also swam under Coach Dick Fadgen for the Memphis Athletic Club team founded in 1956, and later the Memphis State Swim Club Team, which practiced at the Memphis State University campus. [7] Dick Fadgen, Kris's primary High School Coach, would produce seven state championship swim teams with the Memphis Athletic Club and coach Memphis State University beginning in 1972. [10] [11]
Kris had hopes of qualifying for the 1972 Olympic swimming trials, and at a high point in his high school swimming career at seventeen, he qualified by swimming a 1:02.3 in the 100-meter backstroke at a meet in Cincinnati. Three other Memphis State Swim Club participants made the trials with him. Kubik competed in the trials in early August in Chicago but did not make the U.S. team, as his preliminary time of 1:03.55 was around 3.3 seconds short of qualifying in the highly competitive trials. [11] In 1972, he also qualified for the AAU National Meet in Louisville, Kentucky while swimming for the Memphis State Swim Club and recorded a qualifying time of :54.6 in the 100-yard backstroke. [10] [12] [13] [14]
Kris was an All-American swimmer for North Carolina State, where he swam under Head Coach Don Easterling. [15] [16] In 1974, Kubik swam a conference record 1:57.07 in the 200-yard backstroke, breaking his own record by a second, and helping to lead North Carolina to its fifth straight victory in the Atlantic Coast Conference's swimming title. By February 1975, while at North Carolina State, Kubik held Atlantic Coast Conference records in the 100-yard backstroke of 51.98, and in the 200-yard backstroke of 1:55.30. North Carolina State dominated the conference records with Kubik's teammate Steve Gregg holding records in three events. [17]
He transferred from North Carolina State to Auburn University where he graduated in 1978, and swam under Hall of Fame Coach Eddie Reese, with whom he would also serve as a student coach through the 1979 season. Kubik would later have a long career as Associate coach when he would leave Auburn to follow Reese to the University of Texas. [18] [16]
Kubik was Associate Head coach for the University of Texas under Head Coach Eddie Reese, from 1979 to 1981, and from 1986 through 2016.
Kubik left University coaching and academics for four years, where from 1981 to 1983, he was an age group coach for the Longhorn Aquatics Club, a high achieving age group swim club. After two Assistant Coaches left, from around 1983-1985 he filled in as an Assistant Coach for the Nashville Aquatic Club, a quality program with 220 members. In Nashville, one of his outstanding swimmers, Jennifer Lowe, was a backstroker hoping to qualify for the 1984 Olympic Trials. Kubik specialized in the younger swimmers in Nashville, and sixteen of the group had competed in the junior national championships. [16] [19] [20]
With an exceptional chemistry working together, Kubik coached a total of 34 seasons with Eddie Reese as Head Coach and won 12 NCAA National team championships. Making an immediate impact, in Reese and Kubik's second year together, they led Texas to an NCAA runner-up finish at the 1980 NCAA Championships and gave Texas its first NCAA men's swimming team championship in 1981. The 1981 team featuring Scott Spann, Kris Kirchner, backstroker Clay Britt, and butterflier William Paulus remained at the top of their conference in 1981 and had the rare honor of leading the nation in college competition. [21]
After Kubik returned to Texas after a stint with age-group coaching in the mid-80's, Kubik and Reese had four consecutive NCAA National Championship from 1988 to 1991, and won their sixth National Championship in 1996. They won consecutive titles from 2000 to 2002, won again in 2010, and took titles from 2015 to 2016. Benefitting from the press coverage and publicity brought to the university in 1989, their third NCAA championship while coaching together, Kubik received a 9% bonus in pay as did Reese. [1] [22]
During Kubik's tenure, Texas swimming had 26 NCAA finishes in the top-three and 32 NCAA showings in the top-five. Texas had a total of 54 NCAA individual titles and 42 NCAA relay titles during Kubik's tenure, and had 32 Olympians who captured a total of 36 gold, 16 silver and eight bronze medals. The team of Kubik and Reese took conference team titles in 33 of its 34 seasons working together. [1]
In Kubik's final season in 2016, Texas had a perfect 10–0 record in dual meets, took it's 37th consecutive conference title, recorded seven NCAA American records, and more significantly won their 12th NCAA National team title. [1]
Four swimmers from the 2016 season, Townley Haas, Jack Conger, Clark Smith and Joseph Schooling, were expected to attend the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Outstanding swimmers, mostly Olympians, coached by the team of Kubik and Reese included three-time Olympic gold medalist Ian Crocker, Rick Carey, three-time Olympic gold medalist Brendan Hansen, two-time Olympic gold medalist Neil Walker, three-time Olympic gold medalist Josh Davis, Olympic gold medal winner David Walters, Scott Spann, five time Olympic gold medalist Aaron Peirsol, and Will Licon. [23] [1] [24]
Kubik served as coach for several international teams. He was Asst. Coach for the U.S. team at the 2007 Pan American Games and served as a special assistant for the Coaching Staff of USA Swimming at the Beijing Olympics in 2008.
He was the Team USA Asst. Coach at the FINA World Championships in 2009 and the 2015 World University Games. [23]
Kris was married to April Russell, David Russell's daughter. Russell was an outstanding defensive back on two University of Texas SEC Champion football squads from 1959 to 1961. [16]
High accomplished as a grade school and high school athlete, in 1973 as a High School Senior at White Station High, Kubik received the local Commercial Appeal newspaper's "Best- of-the-Preps" trophy for the outstanding Memphis High School area athlete in the sport of swimming. [25]
In 2011, Kubik was inducted into University of Texas's Athletics Men's Hall of Honor. [23] A recipient of the organizations highest recognition for coaching achievement, Kubik was selected to receive the National Collegiate and Scholastic Trophy by the CSCAA in May, 2017. [26] In a more exclusive honor, Kubik was more recently 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). [27]
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.
Neil Scott Walker is an American former competition swimmer, four-time Olympic medalist, and former world record-holder in multiple events.
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.
Elizabeth Cynthia Barr, later known by her married name Beth Isaak, is an American former competition swimmer for the University of Texas who was a backstroke specialist and 1988 Seoul Olympic silver medalist for the United States in the women's 4×100-meter medley relay. After her swimming career ended, she worked as a lobbyist, and in public relations in Washington D.C., and Phoenix, Arizona, and in 2010 returned to her native Pensacola to teach and coach swimming with her company BARRacuda Swimming Works.
David "Dave" Charles Berkoff is an American former competition Hall of Fame swimmer, Olympic champion, and former world record-holder in two events. Berkoff was a backstroke specialist who won a total of four medals during his career at the Olympic Games in 1988 and 1992. He is best known for breaking the world record for the 100-meter backstroke three times, beginning at the 1988 Olympic trial preliminaries, becoming the first swimmer to go under 55 seconds for the event. He is also remembered for his powerful underwater backstroke start, the eponymous "Berkoff Blastoff" which after a strong push-off from the side of the pool used a horizontal body position with locked arms outstretched overhead and an undulating or wavelike aerodynamic dolphin kick to provide thrust and build speed.
Edwin Charles Reese is a Hall of Fame American college and Olympic swimming coach, and a former college swimmer for the University of Florida. Reese won 15 NCAA team championships as the head coach of the University of Texas at Austin men's swimming and diving team from 1978 until retiring in 2024, having previously served as the men's head coach at Auburn University from 1973–1978.
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Scott Spann Jr. is a former American competition swimmer and Pan American Games medalist.
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.
Bryce Hunt is an American former competition swimmer who swam for Auburn University and represented the United States at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece in the 200 meter backstroke.
Holly Renee Magee, also known by her married name Renee Tucker, was an American former competition swimmer who represented the United States in the 100 meter backstroke at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, Quebec. In 1976, in Austin, Texas, she set a National High School Record in the 100-yard backstroke. She would later work as a District Attorney and be elected to serve as a Judge in Houston's 337th District Court from 2013-16.
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.
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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.
Francis Townley Haas is a retired American competitive swimmer who specialized in freestyle events. He is an Olympic gold medalist in the 4 × 200 m freestyle relay from the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. Haas competed collegiately for the University of Texas at Austin from 2015 to 2019 under head coach Eddie Reese where he was a 10-time NCAA Champion, a 17-time All-American, and a 3-time NCAA team champion. He is the former American record-holder in the 200-yard freestyle (1:29.50) and represented the Cali Condors in the International Swimming League.
Clark Smith is a former American swimmer who specialized in freestyle and butterfly. He earned an Olympic gold medal at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. He is the son of John and Tori Smith, who both swam for the University of Texas. His father was an NCAA champion for the Texas Longhorns. His mother represented the US at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.
Katherine Cadwallader Douglass is an American competitive swimmer. A versatile swimmer who competes in many events, Douglass won her first major international medal at the 2020 Olympic Games and won three medals at the 2022 World Championships. Douglass then won six medals, including two golds, at the 2023 World Championships. At the 2024 World Championships, she won five medals, including two golds. Douglass won four medals, including two golds, at the 2024 Olympic Games; she became the Olympic champion in the 200 m breaststroke.
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