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Matt
Anderson
Head Coach
Seventh Year
(Northern Illinois, 1997)
When Matt
Anderson took over the helm of Youngstown State’s
swimming and diving program six years ago, he came in
with lofty goals and a concrete plan to take the
Penguins to a new level of success. Now in his
seventh
season, Anderson has built a solid foundation to achieve
those goals and steadily push the program into the upper
echelon of the conference and region.
This year, the Guins have 23 members on the roster - 18
swimmers and five divers - as
Anderson finally has the numbers to
have depth and point-producing
individuals at several spots
throughout the lineup.
In Anderson’s first six seasons, the program has experienced
unprecedented success since its
rebirth in 1996. With his guidance,
the Penguins have achieved their
highest finish ever at the Horizon
League Championship, won three
individual conference championships
and currently own 19 school records.
Of those eight, including four of
the five relays, were set at the 2008-09 Horizon League
Championships. YSU has had 15
top-five finishes at the league meet
since he took over prior to the
2003-04 campaign.
At the 2009 Horizon League meet, YSU used a strong final day
push to finish fifth for the third
straight year. The Penguins finished
with a school-record 300 points led
by four top-five finishers. Distance
swimmer Olivia Arnold was third in
the 1,650 and fifth in the 1,000.
Ashley Williamson was fourth in the
100-yard butterfly while Megan Rupe
placed fifth in the 100 freestyle.
Arnold led the charge for the Penguins throughout the year.
For her efforts, during the year and
in her career, she became the first
swimmer to be named the YSU/The
Vindicator Female Student-Athlete of
the Year.
It is a stark contrast to the days prior to Anderson taking
over the helm before the 2003-04
season. Only three YSU swimming
records had been set from 1996
through 2002. YSU also finished last
in its two years in the Horizon
League by an average of nearly 25
points before Anderson arrived.
Anderson has also worked to keep Beeghly Natatorium a
top-notch facility. Over the past
three years, the entire pool has been resurfaced,
a new filtration system has been installed and
renovations to the lighting and sound systems have been
completed. Also, upgrades to the
locker room and coaches offices have
been completed.
Outside of the pool, the Penguins have maintained high
academic standards and have been
active on campus and in the
community.
The
team’s grade-point average has also consistently ranked
among the top of YSU’s
programs. For the 2008-09 campaign
YSU finished the year with a 3.37
cumulative grade-point average,
which ranked 29th in nation among
Division I women's programs
according to the College Swimming
Coaches Association of America. Six
student-athletes have earned Academic All-Horizon League
honors.
In 2008, the Penguins scored 295 points and placing fifth out
of eight teams. That was a
42.5-point increase from their
finish in the 2007 season.
The team broke nine school records at the 2008 Horizon League Championships,
including the 400 freestyle relay,
which had stood for 24 years. Freshman Ashley Williamson broke the 100 fly
record that had stood since 1985, placing second at the
championship. Fourty-one
personal-best times were posted at
the meet and 36 new entries were made to YSU's
top 10 performers list. During
the regular season, YSU defeated Horizon
League opponents Butler in a double-dual meet and
Cleveland State in a double-dual meet.
At the 2007 Horizon League Championships, YSU got a strong effort from its
freestylers to vault ahead of Cleveland State into fifth
place on the final day. The two squads were tied before
YSU outscored the Vikings 86-52 in the final day.
The Penguins had outstanding individual efforts that led to the breaking of two
school records that had stood for more than 20 years.
Brittany Senn, Rupe, Leigh Bareman and Jessica
Front teamed up to break the 200 freestyle relay record
that had stood since 1986, and Becky Bertuzzi
topped the 24-year-old school record
in the 200 free in her final
collegiate meet. YSU also defeated Horizon League opponents Cleveland State twice and Butler once
in dual meets during the year.
In his third year, Anderson led a young squad to an impressive list of individual
accomplishments. The team was small in number coming off
the loss of 10 seniors from the previous
campaign, but the
Penguins were still competitive and defeated in-state
and conference rival Cleveland State in a dual meet for
the first time since joining the Horizon League in 2001.
Arnold set the school record in the 1,000 free as a freshman, and she
posted times that rank her as the second-fastest swimmer
in the 500 and 1,650, which she
would later set school marks in. As a team, 29 new
individual entries and nine relay entries were added to YSU’s top-10 all-time performers list by the end of the
season.
The 2004-05 season saw the culmination of one of YSU’s best-ever recruiting
classes as 10 seniors competed in their final seasons.
In two years under Anderson’s leadership, that group
went on to break nine school records and win three
individual crowns at the league meet.
At the 2005 Horizon League Swimming and Diving Championship, Julia Darling broke
the school record in both breaststroke events and had
two top-10 finishes. She also swam the breaststroke leg
of both of YSU’s record-setting medley relays at the
meet. One of those relays - the 200 medley relay - broke
a mark that was set in 1984.
Erin Carter was part of two record-breaking relays. Individually, she
finished fourth in the 400 IM and added a fifth-place
finish in the 200 fly. Jordan Dunn also broke two
records at the conference meet. On the first day of the
Championship, she broke a 22-year-old record in the
1,000 free. She then broke a 19-year-old record on the
meet’s final day in the 1,650-free.
Diver Kalyn Leveto also culminated her career by winning the individual
conference crown in the one-meter board and qualified for
the NCAA Zone C Championship for the fourth time in her
career.
In Anderson’s first year in 2003-04, the Penguins picked up their first ever
victory against a Horizon League opponent.
Anderson earned his first career victory as a head coach against Radford on Oct.
26, 2003, as the Penguins won the final four events of the meet
to top the Highlanders 153-143. On Feb. 8,
2004, YSU earned
its first-ever victory over a Horizon League opponent as
it defeated the Butler Bulldogs 86-51 in a quadrangular
that also featured Wright State and Xavier.
The Penguins carried the momentum from their Horizon League victory against the
Bulldogs into the conference championships to place
sixth, the best finish in school history
at that point. Carter became
the first Penguin swimmer to capture an individual crown
at the Horizon League Championship, and Leveto defended
her title in three-meter diving to earn Horizon League Diver-of-the-Year honors for the second-straight season.
Anderson, who is the ninth head coach in the program’s history, came to YSU from
Ohio State where he was an assistant coach and
recruiting coordinator for four years. He also oversaw
the sprint groups for Head Coach Jeanne Fleck, helped
run camps, coordinated travel plans, was a key office
assistant and was the program’s academic adviser. In
each of his years, the team’s grade-point average
increased and was as high as 3.36 in 2002. Also, more
than 45 athletes were named OSU Scholar-Athletes and
more than 30 were academic All-Big Ten selections.
Before joining the OSU staff, Anderson was the top assistant for the men’s and
women’s programs at Northern Illinois University. At NIU,
he spent two years as a full-time assistant developing
and coaching all aspects of the Huskies’ middle distance
swimmers. He served as the program’s recruiting and
travel coordinator and was in charge of swimming camps
and fund raising for the program.
Anderson first became involved in coaching from 1994-97 as a volunteer assistant
coach at NIU following his swimming career. From
1990-94, he was a three-time letterwinner for the
Huskies, earning the team’s most improved swimmer award
as a sophomore and being named team captain as a senior.
He earned his bachelor’s degree in physical education from NIU In 1997.
Anderson is certified as a member of the College Swimming Coaches Association, a
member of the American Swim Coaches Association and a
member of United States Swimming. |