Frank Busch (born February 4, 1951) was a collegiate, national team and Olympic swimming coach from the United States best known for coaching the University of Arizona from 1989-2011.[2] He was a coach for the USA Olympic teams in 2004 and 2008.[3]
Biographical details | |
---|---|
Born | Cincinnati, Ohio | February 4, 1951
Playing career | |
1969-1973 | Loyola University |
Position(s) | Freestyle, Breastroke, Medley Water Polo Team |
Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
1967-1974 | Brookwood Swim Club |
1974-1978 | Northern Kentucky Pirhanas |
1979-1980 | Cincinnati Marlins |
1980-1989 | University of Cincinnati |
1989-2011 | University of Arizona Tucson Ford Aquatics |
2004, 2008 | US Olympic Coach |
Accomplishments and honors | |
Awards | |
NCAA Coach of the Year 6 times PAC 10/12 Coach of the Year 11 times USA Swim. Coach of the Year '98 US Olympic Committee Coach of the Year '98 ASCA Hall of Fame 2008 Paragon Award ISHOF 2018[1] | |
Biography
editBusch was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, on February 4, 1951.
He distinguished himself as a swimmer at an early age, setting Ohio age group records while swimming for the Brookwood Country Club at the age of only 12 in 1964, at the Kentucky Open Swim Meet. He again placed first and set national records in the 400 yard freestyle and medley relays while swimming for the Cincinnati Marlins and later the Covington YMCA. He would coach both the Marlins and the Brookwood Swim Clubs in his early coaching years.[4] In 1966, while attending St. Xavier Junior High School he set a record for the 100 yard individual medly of 1:03.[5][6][7] He graduated from Covington Catholic High School, just South of Cincinnati, in 1969. [8]
College swimming
editBusch swam and played Water Polo for Loyola University in Chicago from 1969-1973. He played on the first Loyola Water Polo Team that made the (NCAA) Championship and became a 2020 inductee to the Loyola Athletics Hall of Fame. His 1972 team lost to San Jose State 21-6 and the University of New Mexico (17-12) in the finals.[1]
Early coaching
editBusch began his coaching career at age 16 in Edgewood, Kentucky. After three years in summer league coaching at Brookwood Swim Club while he attended college from 1969-1974, and four years of AAU coaching for the Northern Kentucky Piranhas from 1974-1978, he joined the staff of the Cincinnati Marlins for the 1979–80 season as the associate head coach. The Marlins won the National Team Championship that season and placed six swimmers on the 1980 United States Olympic Team.[9]
College coaching
editFrom 1980 to 1989, Busch coached at the University of Cincinnati. From 1989 to 2011, he served as the swimming head coach for the Arizona Wildcats at the University of Arizona.[10] His swimmers won 49 NCAA individual titles, 31 NCAA relay titles, and 2 NCAA team championships. While at Arizona, he also led Tucson Ford Aquatics (previously Hillenbrand Aquatics) to several national team championships.[9]
He served as an assistant coach for the U.S. Olympic team at the 2004 and 2008 Olympics.[9] In addition to coaching 12 American Olympians during his tenure at the University of Arizona, Busch coached 22 international Olympians, representing 14 countries.
In May 2011, Busch began serving as USA Swimming's National Team Director, providing the overall vision and leadership for the sport's top coaches and athletes. Under his tenure, USA Swimming won 31 medals at the London Games (2012) and 33 medals at the Rio Games (2016). In both of these Summer Games, USA Swimming's successful campaigns represented 30% of Team USA's total medal count.[11][12] In September 2017, Busch announced his retirement from the Director position.[13]
Awards
editDuring his collegiate coaching career, Busch was named Coach of the Year by the NCAA six times, Pac-10 11 times, USA Swimming (in 1998), and the USOC (1998). In 2008, he was inducted into the ASCA Hall of Fame, and after retirement in 2018 received the Paragon Award from the International Swimming Hall of Fame.[1][9][13]
Personal life
editBusch is married (Patrice). They have five children - Frank, August, Peter, Sam, and Molly.
References
edit- ^ a b c "Collegiate Water Polo Association, Frank Busch Played Water Polo at Layola". collegiatewaterpolo.org. Collegiate Water Polo Association. July 2021. Retrieved 5 October 2023.
- ^ Busch's bio Archived 2013-05-11 at the Wayback Machine from the Arizona Wildcats' website (arionawildcats.com); published 2010; retrieved 2011-07-07;
- ^ USA Swimming hires Arizona coach for top job by Beth Harris, AP Sports Writer. Published by USA Today on 2011-02-02; retrieved 2011-07-07.
- ^ "Marlin Boys Top Swim Marks", Cincinnati Enquirer, Cincinnati, Ohio, pg. 18, 21 January 1964
- ^ "St. Xavier Cops Junior High Swim", "The Cincinnati Enquirer", Cincinnati, Ohio, pg. 57, 20 February 1966
- ^ "Marlins Win Kentucky Open", The Cincinnati Post, Cincinnati, Ohio, pg. 19, 6 January 1964
- ^ Koch, Bill (March 17, 1987). "Despite disadvantages, UC swimmers are top-notch". The Cincinnati Post. E. W. Scripps Company. p. 4C – via NewsBank.
But Frank Busch, in his seventh season as swimming coach at the University of Cincinnati, doesn't complain about the small Laurence Hall pool he must use. … "We have our work cut out for us right now," said Busch, a graduate of Covington Catholic High School.
- ^ "What's Happening". Covington Catholic Journal. No. 27. Park Hills, Kentucky: Covington Catholic High School. December 2016. p. 26 – via Issuu.
- ^ a b c d Hall of Fame subpage Archived 2011-07-17 at the Wayback Machine of the ASCA website (swimmingcoach.org); retrieved 2011-07-07.
- ^ Former Swimming & Diving Coach Frank Busch Named U.S. National Team Director Archived 2012-03-24 at the Wayback Machine from GoBearcats.com, website of the University of Cincinnati Athletics; published 2011-02-02, retrieved 2011-07-07.
- ^ Frank Busch named USA Swimming National Team Director Archived 2012-06-03 at the Wayback Machine, published by USA Swimming on 2011-02-02; retrieved 2011-07-07.
- ^ "Frank Busch to be named USA Swimming National Team Director; USA Swimming Confirms With Press Release". Swimming World Magazine. February 2011. Retrieved 3 February 2011.
- ^ a b "Team Director Frank Busch Announces Retirement". swimswam.com. SwimSwam. February 2017. Retrieved 5 October 2023.