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The Carmel Swim
Club Is Special
Since the early
1970s, the Carmel Swim Club has established a strong tradition as
the best swimming team in Indiana and one of the top club teams in
the entire USA. More important than accomplishments alone,
Carmel Swim Club takes pride in offering a program for all ages and
ability levels. From the inexperienced beginning swimmer all
the way up to the USA Swimming National competitor, everyone has a
special place on the Carmel Swim Club. Age group swimming
builds a strong foundation for a lifetime of good physical and
mental health by teaching time management, self-discipline and
healthy fitness habits. Carmel Swim Club teaches the ideals
of honesty, integrity, fair play and sportsmanship in addition to
the techniques and values of hard work and
dedication.
History of Carmel Swim Club - coaches
perspective
By Chris Nelsen
Nothing seems able to derail the powerful
juggernaut known as the Carmel Swim Club. For more
than 30 years, the club has managed to prosper and maintain its
greatness, despite numerous coaching changes and tremendous
growth.
The architect responsible for laying the
club’s early foundation was Ray Lawrence, who joined the club
in 1979 after a stint coaching the Indianapolis Swim Club. Within a
few years, he turned the Carmel Swim Club into one of the
state’s premier organizations.
“I wanted to create something that was
systemically different than before … and it takes five to
seven years to do that,” Lawrence said recently. “But
if somebody doesn’t try to make that happen, or doesn’t
continue that, it goes away in one or two years. The fact that we
established something, we worked hard to do
that.
“You exist for one reason,” he added,
“for everybody to get better.”
Lawrence, who became the Carmel High School boys
head coach in 1979 and the girls head coach a year later, credits
the girls high school state championship in 1981 for helping create
interest in the Carmel Swim Club. It was the first high school
swimming title for either of the Greyhounds
teams.
“The 1981 high school team is really what
sparked the club,” he said. “The state high school meet
is a small enough venue – it’s a lot smaller than an
age group (state meet). We were able to do that and it sparked the
development of the club. It was kind of an interesting
thing.”
Seeing the high school team succeed helped
motivate the younger club swimmers. In 1985, the club won its first
age group long course state championship. In 1986, it claimed short
course and long course state titles at the age group and senior
levels.
“When the club was different, where I knew I
could coach differently, was in 1987,” Lawrence said.
“That’s when I stopped being the guy who had to push
people, and became a guy that had to manage their will. I
didn’t have to say things like, ‘Fix your goggles,
start on time, swim to the wall.’ All of those things I said
over and over for years stopped being a
problem.
“There was a whole different level of
expectations if you were a Carmel swimmer after 1984, ‘85,
‘86.”
Lawrence’s passion and expertise rubbed off
on his swimmers and coaches during the club’s rise to
prominence.
“What Ray brought to the table was a vision
and attitude of: ‘Don’t be afraid to set high
expectations,’” said Tom Avischious, who became the
head age group coach of the Carmel Swim Club in 1985 and held the
position for 10 years. He currently works as the Field Services
Director for USA Swimming in Colorado Springs,
Colorado. “It was my
job to give that vision and expectations to the kids, as far as
making them believe the sky was the limit in what they could
accomplish.”
Lawrence, who always considered himself an
“age-group coach at heart,” began to experience great
success at the high school level once his club swimmers started
funneling into Carmel’s teams.
After winning the girls high school championship
in 1981, he led the Greyhounds to five straight girls titles from
1986-90 and five straight boys titles from
1990-94.
In 1991, Lawrence handed the reigns of the Carmel
Swim Club and the girls high school team over to Tony Young. In
1995, Young replaced Lawrence as the boys high school
coach.
“There was a strong tradition of excellence
… and I did not change what was working,” Young said.
“My goal was to learn how the program worked –
strengths and weaknesses – and build upon that to find what
that next level was. Why would I change a vision that emulated in
the eyes of the swimmers in the water the first day I interviewed
for the job?
“Ray would come back each season after
retirement to speak to the teams,” Young added. “Each
new coach at Carmel, no matter at what level during my tenure, was
taught to embrace these qualities of a successful organization. The
well being of one athlete or one goal was never sacrificed for the
well being of the team.”
Young’s ability to make a smooth transition
to the club and high school teams resulted in numerous state
championships at both levels. He led the girls
high school team to nine titles, extending the streak to 14
consecutive; and the boys high school team to three titles from
1995-97 (the ’95 crown was taken away by the Indiana High
School Athletic Association via the court
system).
He also guided the Camel Swim Club to 10 age group
long course titles; nine age group short course titles; nine senior
short course titles and seven senior long course
titles.
“I look back to Ray Lawrence and Tony Young,
I look back upon those years, and talking with those gentlemen,
they’re the ones that built a great foundation upon which
we’re still able to grow, improve and exist,” said
current club and high school head coach Chris Plumb, who took over
both programs in 2006. “Those two gentlemen, along with lots
of others, really put Carmel Swim Club on the
map.”
After Young’s departure from the club and
high school teams in 2000, the success didn’t end. Ken
Stopkotte took over as head coach and won three high school girls
titles, extending the streak to 17, and three high school boys
titles. He also led the club to three age group short course
championships and two age group long course
titles.
Tom Burchill replaced Stopkotte and won three high
school girls titles from 2004-06, pushing the streak to 20 in a
row, and a boys high school title in 2004. Burchill also won age
group long and short course titles each year with the
club. “We needed
to maintain the level of expectation of winning,” Burchill
said. “You’re always trying to improve what
you’re doing. You come into a program like Carmel,
you’re doing a lot of things right. I wanted to add things I
felt would make us even better.
“We also worked to grow with the community,
expand what people knew about the club. In the swimming world, we
were very well known. In our own community, the high school was
very well known, but the club was not. We really wanted to get our
name out there in a very positive light.”
Following Burchill’s tenure, Plumb took over
the high school and club teams. He has won three straight
girls high school titles, extending the streak to a girls national
high school record 23 straight, and has gotten the high school boys
team back into position to compete for state
titles.
With the club, he has won age group long and short
course titles every year. Currently, the Carmel Swim Club is the
top-ranked club in Indiana and the top-ranked Indiana swim club in
the Toyota Virtual Club Championships.
“It’s a tribute to the coaches,
athletes and administrators that came before us,” Plumb said.
“I think it goes back to Ray Lawrence; and whether or not he
knew it, he created a vision where repeated excellence occurred. To
have that vision and belief carry its way through today is
absolutely amazing.”
The only question now is how much larger and
better the Carmel Swim Club can become. With membership at nearly
400 boys and girls, ranging in age from 5 to 18, Plumb said the
club is exploring all options for further
growth. “We need to look at other places where
we can practice and have more water. The limiting factor we have is
the amount of water space available,” he said. “Right
now, we’re coming to a place where we can’t grow too
much bigger because we don’t have enough water. If we have
the chance and ability to find more water then we can continue to
grow, and if we don’t, we’re going to be
stagnant.”
No matter how much bigger the Carmel Swim Club
gets, members won’t suffer from a lack of
coaching.
“Having a large number of kids is good, but
having great instruction is equally as important,” said age
group coach Chris Webb. “Our club has been focused on getting
better, not just bigger, in recent
years.”
As long as the passion for swimming continues to
grow in the Carmel community and more youngsters become involved
with the sport, the possibilities for growth and improvement seem
limitless for the Carmel Swim Club.
“The club has a tremendous amount of parent
resources and the volunteer base is fantastic with so many people
willing to help out and spend an enormous amount of time,”
Burchill said. “There are a lot of great people in the club
who support the kids in ways you can’t even
imagine.”
Chris Nelson is a freelance sportswriter from
Indianapolis.
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