|
Honor Coach
Richard
Quick was born in Akron, Ohio. His
family moved to Austin, Texas, while Quick was still young, and it was there
that he learned to swim, under the instruction of Bill Crenshaw for the Austin
Aquatics Club. He swam in his first meet at age nine.
Two years later, he moved to Wichita, Kansas, where he grew up swimming
for Bob Timmons, superstar swim and track coach, for the Wichita Swim Club and
Wichita East High School. At
sixteen, Quick moved to Dallas, Texas, where he graduated from Highland Park
High School. During his years in
Dallas he swam for Wally Hofrichter and Jerry Culp.
After high school, he attended Southern Methodist University, where he
swam for Red Barr and George McMillan and was an All-American swimmer in 1965
and 1966. After graduating with a
degree in physical education, he took his first coaching job at Spring Branch
Memorial High School in Houston, Texas, beginning a coaching career that would
make Richard Quick one of the most respected names in swimming worldwide. With
a name like Quick, it is no wonder that his swimmers swim fast.
Even from the beginning, his Spring Branch Memorial High School team won
six state championships. In
addition to his high school coaching, Quick was also head coach of the Dad’s
Club in Houston. From there he
served as assistant coach for the men’s swim team at Southern Methodist
University (SMU), his alma mater, under head coach George McMillan (1971-1975).
While in Dallas, Quick organized and coached the Dallas Swim Club that
produced his first National champion in 1975: Kim Dunson, American Record in the
100 yd. breaststroke, 1:05.3. During
this time he also coached Leslie Crozier , many time National finalist.
In 1976, Quick started the women’s swimming program at SMU and laid the
foundation for what would become one of the top programs in the country.
The 1977-1978 season saw him as head men’s coach at
Iowa State University, and then it was on to Auburn University as head
men’s and women’s coach for the next four years (1978-1982).
At Auburn, he developed Rowdy Gaines into a world class sprinter.
In 1982 Quick began coaching at the University of Texas, where his team
would win 5 consecutive NCAA National Team Championships (1984, ‘85, ‘86,
‘87, ‘88), the longest women’s swimming streak at that time.
In the fall of 1988, he took
the reins from Hall of Fame coach George Haines and became the head women’s
coach at Stanford University. Richard
Quick is now in his twelfth year at Stanford, and has guided the women’s swim
team to 7 NCAA National titles (1989, ‘92, ‘93, ‘94, ‘95, ‘96, ‘98).
He has also developed 32 NCAA champions, winning 48 individual and 22
national relay titles. In his
combined 23 years as a collegiate head coach, Quick has accumulated a 163-30
win-loss record, resulting in a .845 winning percentage.
He is a five time NCAA National Coach of the Year (1984, ‘85, ‘86,
‘89, ‘92), and of the total 15 NCAA national titles awarded, Quick-coached
teams have won 12 of them. But
those are only his achievements in the United States.
Internationally, Quick has guided the U.S. National teams and competitors
for over fifteen years. He has been
involved in nearly every international meet in which the United States has
participated since 1986, serving on five Olympic team coaching staffs (1984,
‘88, ‘92, ‘96, ‘00), four World Championship teams (1982, ‘86, ‘91,
‘94), three Pan Pacific Championship teams (1983, ‘85, ‘87), and Pan
American Games, World Student Games and Goodwill Games teams.
He was the first to be named as the U.S. National Team Coach in 1985. Swimmers
Richard has coached include Olympic gold medalists Rowdy Gaines, Jenny Thompson,
Summer Sanders, Lea Loveless, Catherine Fox, Lisa Jacob and Jill Sterkel. World
record holders include Betsy Mitchell (200 backstroke), Rowdy Gaines (100 and
200 freestyle), Jenny Thompson (100 freestyle/100 butterfly) and Lea Loveless
(400 medley relay). Other
Olympians include Tori Trees, Tracey McFarlane, Susan Johnson, Andrea Hayes,
Agneta Eriksson, Annabelle Cripps, Elin Austevoll, Claudia Franco, Angie
Wester-Krieg, Leigh Ann Fetter, Bill Forrester, Gabrielle Rose and Jill Johnson. Outstanding
national champions and international swimmers include Misty Hyman, Kim
Rodenbaugh, David McCagg, David Marsh, Andrea Hayes, Janel Jorgenson, Janet
Evans, Dara Torres, Kim Dunson, Leslie Crozier, Paul Hove, Andy Veris, Debbie
Risen, Lori Heisick, John Pennington, Kara McGrath, Jenna Johnson, Jessica Tong,
Jessica Foschi, Dede Trimble, Patty Sabo and Michelle Griglione. Richard
Quick has the ability to bring out the best in his swimmers, whether or not they
are his personal athletes, or athletes he is coaching on an international trip.
He has been chosen American Swimming Coaches Association Coach of the
Year three times. © 2002 ISHOF, Inc. |