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11 Swimmers Removed From Air Force Academy Men’s Team

The United States Air Force Academy has removed 11 swimmers from the competition for the men’s swim team due to what it’s calling ‘misconduct.’ 9 of those 11 swimmers were in Houston at the WAC Championships and were  sent home once the accusations came to light, a statement from the school said.

“The Air Force Academy holds its cadets, staff and faculty to the highest standards of conduct because our nation demands it of us and it’s the right thing to do,” a press release from the school reads. “Part of our mission to develop leaders of character, is to hold those unwilling to meet these standards accountable and to ensure they understand that representing the Air Force Academy is a privilege.”

Citing privacy reasons, an Air Force Academy spokesperson declined to comment on the nature of the violations or what further violations they might be facing.

The Air Force men sat 2nd behind Wyoming after day 1 of the 2018 WAC Championships on Wednesday evening.

Updated with confirmation that 9 of the 11 cadets were attending the WAC Championships.

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Sara Delaney
6 years ago

Well … this is simply a sad product of our times. We need more parents and educators who hold our children to a standard and not make excuses for mistakes and misdeeds. I personally feel that the new Super at the Academy has the greater good in mind .. did anyone see his video on-line that went viral? It is not easy … but what will our children become if they don’t understand there are consequences for their decisions and actions. It is obvious that an institution such as the United States Air Force only takes serious action, which this appears to be, when they have strong evidence of “misconduct.” If it was hazing, etc., it needs to be taken… Read more »

John
Reply to  Sara Delaney
6 years ago

Sarah, under the rules at USAFA if a cadet is under investigation they are not in good standing and can not represent the Air Force Academy. Being under investigation does not imply guilt or innocence; they are investigating to see if there was misconduct or not and if so to what extent. I do not think it is fair to say at this time if they have “strong” evidence of misconduct or not. For example several of the Lacrosse players investigated had no punishment or sanctions and were found innocent, others had punishment. The most prudent position is to wait and what they find.

flybirds
Reply to  Sara Delaney
6 years ago

Wow, Ms. Sara. You get my vote, great post. I read all the comments and I must say, there is a lot of misinformation and spin from what appears to be cadets and their parents. First you have 11 suspensions. If you count 11 cadets plus their parents you get 33; add a sibling or girlfriend and you reach 40. The average “likes” and “dislikes” on Swim Swam are usually between 5-8. This story, the most “dislikes” are between 29-40. LOL, it is noticeable that parents and suspended swimmers are trying to influence the swim world by clicking “dislike” against any sensibility. Smart swimmers (age 10 and older) figured it out already, including my 12 &16 year old daughters. My… Read more »

Swammer
Reply to  flybirds
6 years ago

I disliked most of your comments and I literally just read the site. Assumptions assumptions

John
Reply to  flybirds
6 years ago

Prejudice is a great time saver. You can form opinions without getting the facts!

NM Coach
6 years ago

Feel Sorry that Rob and Anthony had to deal with this! VERY FEW coaches in this country would send swimmers home between prelims and finals! I know there will be 100s of coaches that “say” they would do it…but actually do it during conference???? VERY FEW!

Janet
6 years ago

Just a bit of information. . . this investigation is done at the Air Force level not the Academy. The investigation has been going on since mid December. This was a PR ploy in my opinion. If the policy is to not participate in extras while an investigation is under way, why were they allowed to travel and start competition in the first place??? It is not like they slipped off base without anyone knowing.
Again I say it has been a PR ploy and you all have taken the bait.
Hold these men and women to a higher standard ABSOLUTELY, take care of wrong when it is done ABSOLUTELY, no question.
But please don’t trash good… Read more »

Reply to Janet
Reply to  Janet
6 years ago

I could not agree more

BRAD FLOOD
6 years ago

And when you post this under your real name and includes how you know this information, either firsthand or through some other verifiable method, I will put some credence to what you have presented.

Until then, your’s is nothing more than an anonymous contribution to a story that has not even been “officially” presented by the institution yet.

Up in the stands
6 years ago

I have friends that were at the meet last night in the stands. According to parents talking around them it was hazing. Applaud the Air Force coaches for taking this action even if it meant losing any shot at a title. The only unfortunate thing is it meant every championship final had 6-7 people and couldn’t bump up people from consoles.

Janet
Reply to  Up in the stands
6 years ago

Wait. . . Applaud the coaches????? Who was in charge?

Joe
6 years ago

Bravo Air Force officials! It is good to see that school officials still do the right thing and place morality over winning.. Whatever it is; it must be serious; I agree with comments below — probably hazing —and if yes, then those individuals should NOT be at the Air Force Academy. Let them go somewhere else where they can act like middle-school children. We need strong moral leadership in all sports — and especially in our country.

Reply to Joe
Reply to  Joe
6 years ago

You should not speculate about what happened until all the facts come out. You have no idea what happened and people like you make this worse than it needs to be.

Joe
Reply to  Reply to Joe
6 years ago

I am not speculating; I apologize if I did not make myself clear. Allow me to clarify. If eleven (11) AF athletes were suspended at a champion swim meet, then it can only be a moral-related violation. Logically, they were NOT removed because they were sick or for academic suspension. It had to be a serious moral, military, or NCAA violation. Everyone I have talked to in the swimming world (some high-powered NCAA FARs and coaches) praised AF school officials for sending a message throughout all NCAA D-1 sports. Over time, every university has to step up to the plate and make a course correction. Brown University and the Air Force Academy are stepping up to the plate this week… Read more »

John
Reply to  Joe
6 years ago

So it it obvious. You have no clue because you are speculating on what the suspension is about. I have no connection to the team but I do have a connection to USAFA. However, based your comments, time, energy and “every one You have talked to in the swimming world” you have an obvious emotional investment in seeing USAFA get a black eye. The Acadmies hold their students to a much higher standard than other schools. Behavior that most schools would not even look at is scrutinized at USAFA. I got one will wait to hear an official finding from before making broad declarations. Better to keep my mouth shut and and thought a fool than open it and remove… Read more »

Joe
Reply to  John
6 years ago

With all due respect, your statement is NOT a true statement; I praise all school officials who do the right thing. If you read earlier, I praised Brown University officials too. It is about teaching young men and women about real LEADERSHIP. It is about ethical and moral judgment— not a black eye. Sir or ma’am, it is disappointing that an adult would equate leadership and morality to “a black eye”, Standard NCAA procedures for athletic suspension are (1) establish “probable cause” (2) obtain legal advice, and (3) confirm evidence with NCAA FAR. Those are the basic steps. Finally, I have the utmost respect for all military academies; my family history would reflect it; however, this is about teaching one… Read more »

John
Reply to  Joe
6 years ago

Joe,
The military academies typically govern their athletic departments with standards that are more stringent than the NCAA including grades and behavior. They have their own process and it is reckless to assume what has or has not occurred. You are making statements about the quality of cadets, not letting them wash your dog, that the coaches lost the team. Your statements and assumptions demonstrate your level of emotional investment. Makes me wonder if you are making accusations against this team.

flybirds
Reply to  John
6 years ago

It is about the NCAA suspensions that result from improper behavior — not a team. I swam D-1 now an airline pilot. I fly with former military guys all day; they all say the same thing. AF does not put up with bad behavior, period.

John
Reply to  Joe
6 years ago

Hey Joe where are your praise and comments on the Amherst team?…yeah, I didn’t think so. It does not take any CRITICAL THINKING, to see who you are and your bias to toward Air Force.

John
Reply to  Joe
6 years ago

Joe please explain the situation and how they got it right. If you can’t explain the situation and how they got it right then you are only sounding off because you have an obvious bias against AF and our service academies. Read the press release. It states they are under investigation. IE no formal findings yet.

Tell me something I don't know
6 years ago

All of the service academies have long histories with hazing, sexual harassment/assault, cheating, drug rings, etc. It could be almost anything along those lines, and it would be par for the course. Google any of the service academies and you’ll find dozens of articles referencing immoral and unethical behavior… and we’re not even talking about the really serious stuff like the WWII comfort women of the Phillipines and southeast Asia, or My Lai, or Tailhook, or Abu Ghraib. The fact that cadets were actually punished is the surprising part, not that something bad happened.

completelyconquered
Reply to  Tell me something I don't know
6 years ago

It’s like you just now watched a Few Good Men.

Joe
Reply to  completelyconquered
6 years ago

Yes it is sad because everyone loses when team leadership fails; there are no winners — except maybe future AF swimmers. Future swimmers won’t have to deal with the flawed team behavior; time to rebuild. Again “Bravo” to school officials for doing the right thing.

Also, It is obvious that these comments are directly connect to the 11 suspensions (parents or cadets). They are too emotional and constantly trying to change the issue or attack someone’s character. It is a normal human reaction, but sad, because like the famous line in the movie states, “You can’t handle the truth.” But just remember initially everyone loses in these types of situations, and where there is smoke, there is fire. … Read more »

Swammer
Reply to  Tell me something I don't know
6 years ago

You fail to acknowledge that they’re 18-22 males. They’re discovering themselves just like all these other college-age people. People make mistakes. The best thing you can do is learn from these mistakes. You just see these”scandals” publicized more often than other agencies that cover stuff up. Get a grip.

J.Rushford
Reply to  Swammer
6 years ago

Agreed. Served a lot of yrs in AF. Academy Officers for most part are top notch. Standards they are held to are very high. Get a laugh out of some of the comments from folks who never served. The closest they ever got to a uniform was working at Burger King.

Joe
Reply to  J.Rushford
6 years ago

Sir, you assume way too much. First, you cannot attempt to persuade others with false assumptions. I don’t need to share me family military history with you, but I can assure you — you could never come close. Your false dichotomy only shows your ignorance, and if others are persuaded by your “logical fallacies”, then you are the problem — not the solution.

Now, the facts are we can only conclude it is related to morality, 18-22 year old men (especially military academy men and women) understand “right from wrong”. If they do NOT, then they do NOT belong at any military academy. In fact, I would not trust them to watch my dog. The reason is this —… Read more »

J.Rushford
Reply to  J.Rushford
6 years ago

All the self righteous garbage. Now I know why I stayed in military, and retired from the finest organization I have ever been associated with the USAF. Human beings make mistakes you feal with it, Academy did that. I’ll be leaving to go to Belize soon, fish for a couple of yrs and enjoy the scenery. Good luck to the self righteous former Burger king employees. Y’all definitely need to take a suppository. Later folks.

J.Rushford
Reply to  J.Rushford
6 years ago

Sorry for typo, supposed to be deal.

BRAD FLOOD
Reply to  J.Rushford
6 years ago

Hey @J.RUSHFIRD, where in Belize are you retiring to? We’ve been in Caye Caulker since 9/2017 and absolutely love it! You coming down for the “Grand Slam” (a Bonefish, a Tarpon & a Permit, all caught with a barbless salt water fly fishing gear)? I’m not an angler, rather get my aquatic retirement fix in SCUBA gear, but I’m told Belize is the bullseye when it comes to the “Grand Slam”.

Thank You for your service.

BRAD FLOOD
Reply to  BRAD FLOOD
6 years ago

Sorry for typo, supposed to be @J.RUSHFORD

flybirds
Reply to  J.Rushford
6 years ago

My kids just told me about J. Rushford comment. My daughter is a swimmer and she works part-time at Burger King, learning about “work ethic”, and “life-work balance”, so here we have a grown-adult (who claims to be retired military) degrading working-class kids who work, while they study and swim. That is extremely disappointing to hear. I don’t believe you are retired military or have any connection to military officers. The apple probably does not fall far from the tree. I read another comment that stated “…they’re 18-22 males. They’re discovering themselves just like all these other college-age people.” Wow, do I need to say anything else. If it were my adult-child being suspended, my reaction would be completely different.… Read more »

Steve Nolan
Reply to  Swammer
6 years ago

I mean, pretending that the military doesn’t cover stuff up is a bit much.

Pabalo.ricarditi
Reply to  Steve Nolan
6 years ago

Do you think they flew to GTMO

Everyone Knows
Reply to  Tell me something I don't know
6 years ago

Sounds like a lot of hate for a force that protects your freedom to say you hate the military.

Joe
Reply to  Everyone Knows
6 years ago

It has nothing to do with Hate; it has to do with MORALITY. Shame on you for trying to change the issue.

Everyone Knows
Reply to  Joe
6 years ago

Wasn’t responding to you Joe but thanks for your input

Steve Nolan
Reply to  Everyone Knows
6 years ago

We haven’t had a war to “protect our freedoms” since the 1940s.

Random guy who fights wars on your behalf
Reply to  Steve Nolan
6 years ago

The fighting we do over seas is so we don’t have to fight in your kitchen.

Joe
Reply to  Tell me something I don't know
6 years ago

I agree with you; it is probably hazing or closely related; if it is “how ignorant can the coaches and cadets be? How can a coach lose control of his or her team, and where is the captains? it appears the quality of cadet at all military academies has decreased dramatically. They act like middle school kids. They need to fix the culture; over the last year, it seems someone is finally taking charge at the Air Force Academy and now Brown University too. Did you read what they had freshman do — vandalize Home’s; how stupid can upper class men be? However, it is nice to see school officials do the right thing — because it is the right… Read more »

MichelleTheEconomist
Reply to  Joe
6 years ago

Joe – It may not quite be ‘hate’ but look in the mirror; your obvious intense dislike of the entire military culture is both clear and sad. The Academies maintain very high standards and try to incorporate such concepts as honor and accountability on a daily basis but with thousands of cadets, et al, comprised of college age people, is it any wonder some fall short? You’re quick to generalize and criticize, but I suspect you’d be just as quick to let those same people protect your rights and lifestyle.

2fly
Reply to  Tell me something I don't know
6 years ago

Oh and I’m sure it’s just the service academies. That’s hilarious. No matter what happened don’t try to spin this to mean that the over arching problem is with, and only with, the people laying down their lives for this country.

Military son
Reply to  2fly
6 years ago

That’s really irrelevant to this discussion as hardly any of the cadets at the academies will “lay down their life” the majority of people on front lines are enlisted and once you graduate from an academy you’re given the status of officer.

You Haven´t Ever Served, Have You?
Reply to  Military son
6 years ago

http://blog.nj.com/njwardead/2007/05/dennis_w_zilinski_november_19.html

Yes, they do. Some of them were swimmers just like you and I. Think, then post.

Jackie Moon
6 years ago

What happened?

Dan
Reply to  Jackie Moon
6 years ago

Good questions, but since it says 9 out of the 11 were at the conference meet. My guess is that this is related to something earlier in the season, maybe hazing?

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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