Kenyon 499.5, Denison 500.5

When Parini became Denison's coach in 1987, his former Kenyon mentor, Jim Steen, asked him about his plans for the Big Red. "I played a major role in Kenyon winning its first title," Parini told his former coach. "Rest assured, I'm going to play a major role in your last one." Sure enough, that's what happened on March 26, when the men's swimming and diving team won Denison's second-ever national championship. (The first went to the 2001 women's swimming and diving team.) The men's final score?

Kenyon 499.5

Denison 500.5

Photographs by Ben K. Moser

issue 01 | spring 2011
Kenyon 499.5, Denison 500.5
Swimmer

Carlos Maciel '14 swam in the 800 freestyle relay as well as the 400 freestyle relay that placed third and secured the title for the Big Red.

"In the past 31 years, I've watched a lot of teams come, and I've watched a lot of teams go, trying to unseat Kenyon. It's an impressive list of schools and teams, places like Johns Hopkins and Williams and Claremont-Mudd and UC-San Diego and St. Olaf and Emory and, yes, even Denison teams. There have been a lot of pretenders to the crown until this year. And that's when 15 guys embraced the challenge of taking on the heavyweight champ ... a champ that had beaten them by over 400 points just a year ago." –Gregg Parini, Head Coach

Swimming lanes

Quinn Bartlett '13 and Sean Chabot '14 placed twelfth and eleventh, respectively, in the 100 backstroke. Bartlett also placed first in the 200 backstroke, setting the national record.

Below swimmers

Denison took two divers to the meet: Gabe Dixson '13 and Cody Smith '11. Dixson (at left) placed fourth in both one-meter and three- meter diving. Smith was eleventh in one-meter and fifth in three- meter. Together, the pair scored 50 points for the Big Red in their first NCAA championship appearance.

"On Saturday night, the last night of the national championships, we had a concert in Swasey Chapel, the Vail Series... [My wife, Tina] was nudging me because I was periodically looking at my BlackBerry to see what the latest scores were." –Dale Knobel, President

Team huddle

The men's swimming and diving team get together before every meet to do their team cheer. The national championship was no exception.

Swimmer finished

Al Weik '14 swam the 1650 freestyle, finishing first by more than 25 seconds and shaving 25.5 seconds off his best time. He broke the national record–set in 2004–by eight seconds.

Spencer Fronk '14 cheers on his teammates from behind the blocks.

Gym team

The Big Red bench erupts when the number "3" flashes next to Denison on the scoreboard. The final relay team–Carlos Maciel '14, M.J. Barczak '12, Andrew Krawchyk '11, and Spencer Fronk '14–had to finish third in the race to clinch the national title and dethrone the Lords. And they did–0.32 seconds before Emory.

"This program has been pretty great for a long time, but I'm confident in saying that this year's accomplishments are just going to be the start of an even greater tradition." –Jake Lewing '11, Co-Captain

Published April 2011
Back to top