South Florida Bulls swimming and diving
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The South Florida Bulls swimming and diving program represented the University of South Florida in the sport of swimming. The program consisted of separate men's and women's teams which competed in NCAA Division I at the time of the program being discontinued in 1987.
South Florida Bulls swimming and diving | |
---|---|
Founded | 1965 (men); 1972 (women) |
Folded | 1987 (both) |
University | University of South Florida |
Location | Tampa, FL |
Nickname | Bulls |
Colors | Green and gold[1] |
Women's NCAA Champions | |
1985 | |
Men's NCAA Runner up | |
1971 | |
NCAA Championship appearances | |
Men: 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1976 Women: 1983, 1984, 1985 |
The 1984–85 women's swimming team is the only varsity team in South Florida Bulls history to win an NCAA National Championship. The men's and women's teams also combined for 17 individual and relay national championships in their history.
The USF men's swimming team was founded in 1965 as one of the first teams to be sponsored by the young university. In the team's first NCAA Championship appearance in 1969, Joe Lewkowicz won the first individual national championship in school history in the 200-yard butterfly event.[2] Two years later, the team would place second in the NCAA College Division. Members of the team would go on to win six individual national championships and one relay national championship.[3]
The women's swimming team, known as the Lady Brahmans at the time, was founded in 1972 after the passing of Title IX.
The 1984–85 South Florida Lady Brahmans team won the NCAA Division II National Championship, which was the first, and as of 2023, only NCAA National Championship in school history in any sport.[4]
Every member of the team along with head coach Bill Mann and assistant coach Lou Manganiello was inducted into the University of South Florida Athletic Hall of Fame's inaugural class in 2009.[5]
Year | Athlete(s) | Competition | Time |
---|---|---|---|
1969 | Joe Lewkowicz | 200-yd Butterfly | 2:01.83 |
1971 | Rick Morehead | 100-yd Breaststroke | 1:01.60 |
1971 | Rick Morehead | 200-yd Breaststroke | 2:14.94 |
1971 | Rick Morehead | 200-yd Individual Medley | 2:01:01 |
1972 | Rick Morehead | 200-yd Breaststroke | 2:13.28 |
1972 | Rick Morehead | 200-yd Individual Medley | 1:59.25 |
1972 | John Stevens, Rick Morehead, Joe Lewkowicz, Mike Sheffield | 400-yd Medley Relay | 3:38.06 |
Year | Athlete(s) | Competition | Time |
---|---|---|---|
1983 | Theresa Day | 200-yd Individual Medley | 2:09.05 |
1984 | Alicia McHugh | 100-yd Freestyle | 51.21 |
1984 | Nancy Bercaw, Merit Greaves, Margaret Mortell, Alicia McHugh | 400-yd Freestyle Relay | 3:31.25 |
1985 | Alicia McHugh | 100-yd Freestyle | 51.65 |
1985 | Dawn Hewitt | 100-yd Backstroke | 58.40 |
1985 | Dawn Hewitt | 200-yd Backstroke | 2:05.85 |
1985 | Suzanne Crenshaw | 500-yd Freestyle | 4:54.92 |
1985 | Suzanne Crenshaw | 1650-yd Freestyle | 16:50.74 |
1985 | Dawn Hewitt, Merit Greaves, Margaret Mortell, Nancy Bercaw | 200-yd Medley Relay | 1:47.86 |
1985 | Dawn Hewitt, Nancy Bercaw, Margaret Mortell, Alicia McHugh | 400-yd Medley Relay | 3:55.54 |
14 men's and women's swimming coaches and athletes that were part of the USF swimming teams have since been inducted into the University of South Florida Athletic Hall of Fame. They include head coach Bill Mann, assistant coach Lou Manganiello, the 10 members of the 1984–85 women's swimming team, Joe Lewkowicz, and men's head coach Robert Grindey.[9]
Both the men's and women's swimming teams were disbanded after the 1986–87 season due to financial difficulties along with the sport not being sponsored by the Sun Belt Conference.[10]
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