Our Event's Guest Speaker, David Marsh
David Marsh
is the former men's and women's swimming and diving coach at
Auburn University and currently the CEO/Head Elite Coach
of the Mecklenburg Aquatic Club. After becoming head coach
in 1990, Marsh led the men's team to seven
NCAA national championships (1997, 1998, 2003, 2004,
2005, 2006, and 2007) and the women's team to five
national championships (2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007).
He finished his coaching career at Auburn at the conclusion
of the 2007 season, after which he became the Head Elite
Coach and CEO of the
United States Olympic Committee Center of Excellence
with
Mecklenburg Aquatic Club.
As of February
2006, Marsh has been named National Coach of the Year eight
times.
Marsh has coached over 22 Olympic swimmers.
Individual Champions
Marsh's swimmers have combined to win 89
individual NCAA titles and 277 individual SEC titles. Auburn
swimmers have also brought home 90 medals from international
competitions such as the World Championships, Goodwill
Games, Pan-American Games, and the Olympics.
Success At Auburn
David Marsh is the
most successful Auburn coach regardless of sport and he is
arguably the most successful in the state of Alabama and the
SEC. Marsh's 12 NCAA titles surpass the six won by football
coach
Bear Bryant at Alabama. Even breaking down the Men's and
Women's titles separately, Marsh's seven men's titles beat
Bryant. Marsh has won 17 SEC titles (13 men and 4 women), by
far the most of any Auburn coach or team.
In 2003 he led
both the men's and women's teams to a sweep of the NCAA
titles, a first in collegiate Swimming and Diving. Marsh and
the Tigers went on to repeat this accomplishment three more
times (2004, 2006, and 2007).
Marsh inherited a
strong swimming program that was a fixture in the national
swimming scene and regularly in the top 20 but was in a
slump and turned it into a dynastic powerhouse. Since Marsh
took over the Auburn swimming and diving program, Auburn's
men have finished in the Top 10 every year but his first two
years (1991 & 1992's Auburn teams finished 20th and 15th).
In 1990, the year before Marsh came to Auburn, the team
failed to qualify any swimmers for the NCAA Meet and Marsh
made the jump to #20 in year one at a meet that usually sees
around 60 teams represented. In 1993 the Tigers finished #6
in the NCAA's and have not fallen out of the top 10 since,
with the lowest placing in that time being #7 in 2001. The
women have been equally successful, jumping from #30 in
Marsh's first year to #8 in his second of 92. The lowest
finish for the Tiger women since 1992 was #13 in 1995.
SwimMAC Carolina
(formerly known as Mecklenburg Aquatic Club )
David Marsh, Head
Coach at
Auburn University, become CEO & Director of Coaching for
SwimMAC CarolinaMecklenburg
Aquatic Club in the summer of 2007. Coach Marsh's
primary role as CEO of SwimMAC will be to provide leadership
and vision, directed toward continuing to develop the USA
Swimming Club into the premier competitive swim in
American's number one sport, swimming. Marsh will also focus
his attention on developing an Elite component of the
program, for athletes who rise to a world class level from
within the SwimMAC program, as well as those relocating to
North Carolina, such as post graduarte and professional
swimmers focusing on their Olympic Dreams. Coach Marsh
states, “I am thrilled to have the opportunity to move to
Charlotte and join one of the countries premier
programs. I have a long history with SwimMAC athletes and
have found them to be remarkable individuals. SwimMAC
athletes such as Aaron Ciarla, Daniel Slocki, and Catherine
Caldwell have been a key part of the championship program we
have built at Auburn. I look forward to joining the quality
coaching staff at this club and working with the coaches,
athletes and parents to build a championship program in
Charlotte”.
Olympians
Marsh has coached
22 Olympians while at Auburn. Five of his Olympians have
brought home medals from the games. In the 2004 Athens
games, three Auburn swimmers won a total of five medals, two
golds, a silver, and two bronze.
Kirsty Coventry became the first Auburn woman to medal
in the Olympics and the first Auburn swimmer to win a gold,
silver, and bronze in a single games.
Individual
Champions
Marsh's swimmers
have combined to win 89 individual NCAA titles and 277
individual SEC titles. Auburn swimmers have also brought
home 90 medals from international competitions such as the
World Championships, Goodwill Games, Pan-American Games, and
the Olympics.
Coaching Honors
NCAA Women's Coach
of the Year: `01, `02, `03
NCAA Men's Coach of the Year: `94, `97 `99, `03, `04
SEC Men's Coach of the Year: `92, `93, `97, `98, `99, `01,
`03, `04, `05
SEC Women's Coach of the Year: `93, `02, `03
Knoxville News-Sentinel Men's Coach of the Year: `93, `95,
`98, `99, `01, `03, `04
Knoxville News-Sentinel Women's Coach of the Year: `92, `93,
`03
Inside the Auburn Tigers Coach of the Year: `93, `96, `97,
`03, `04
2005 USA World Championships Assistant Men's Assistant Coach
2003 USA World Championships Head Coach
2005, 2003 USA Men's Mutual of Omaha Duel in the Pool Head
Coach
2003 & 2000 National Collegiate and Scholastic Swimming
Trophy
2003 Board Member of the Greater Lee County Boys and Girls
Club
2000 USA Men's Olympic Team Assistant Coach
1999 USA Men's Pan-Pacific Team Assistant Coach
-
1996 USA Men's Olympic Team Assistant
Coach
-
1995 USA Men's Pan-Pacific Team Head
Coach
-
1994 USA Women's Assistant Coach-World
Championship Team
|
|
Save the Date for our 14th Annual Wine Spectacular!
October 1, 2011
Hosted by:
The Rotary Club of
Lake Norman - Huntersville
.gif)
TOP
LEVEL SPONSORS
Presenting

Wine
.png)
|
|
|