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2018 Club Excellence Program Size Breakdown

USA Swimming released the list of its bronze, silver, and gold medal swim clubs for 2018 in late December of last year, with Nation’s Capital topping the list for the fourth straight year.

Click here to learn more about the recognition process.

One of the main criticisms that often arises in regard to the Club Excellence program is that it a favors enormous teams with a handful of satellite locations, but in reality, the team size breakdown shows that 72 percent of teams receiving gold, silver, or bronze honors have 400 or fewer members.

Granted, teams with multiple hundreds of swimmers aren’t “small,” but it does go to show that it doesn’t take 1000+ swimmers to get recognition or even reach gold medal status in most cases.

Just 20 percent of the 2018 gold medal clubs have over 900 swimmers.

It is worth noting that no team was able to achieve ‘gold’ status with fewer than 200 members, and only 1 team was able to achieve that status with fewer than 300 members.

This data was posted to Facebook by USA Swimming Sport Development Consultant Jeff Allen.

Check out the entire team size breakdown below:

BRONZE SILVER GOLD TOTALS %
1-100 8 5 13 6.50%
101-200 30 13 43 21.50%
201-300 27 27 1 55 27.50%
301-400 16 13 4 33 16.50%
401-500 8 7 3 18 9.00%
501-600 7 3 4 14 7.00%
601-700 2 1 2 5 2.50%
701-800 2 3 1 6 3.00%
801-900 2 1 3 1.50%
901-1000 1 1 0.50%
1001+ 5 4 9 4.50%
100 80 20

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Coach
6 years ago

I don’t know what some of the under 100 clubs look like. But good on them. Now, some may be prep-school programs, which is a little different. But you’ve still got to get some kids to go fast.

I’m impressed by Va Gators. i’m not sure what their numbers are – probably one of the smallest Gold Medal Clubs. But I think all their scorers are from on site – of about 150 or less swimmers. So, there’s that. Congrats Gators.

Coach MM
6 years ago

More then anything else, this award should consider median household income. Swimming is a sport for high middle class families. However there are few teams/coaches doing a great job at small and poor towns but this flawed award system give their teams no chance for recognition.

Dan
Reply to  Coach MM
6 years ago

How would you change the system?

Admin
Reply to  Dan
6 years ago

If I were USA Swimming, I wouldn’t change the system. HOWEVER, if I were the ‘king of swimming’ as we like to say, with unlimited wealth, and could just do whatever was best for all parties involved – I’d put in a tiered system. Your top 100 swimmers are weighted at X, your next 100 swimmers are weighted at .5X, your next 100 swimmers are weighted at .2x, etc. etc. etc. Purely hypothetical, but it would balance a sense of “well-run clubs should be growing and getting bigger, but all big clubs aren’t necessarily well-run.” In other words, clubs would benefit from being bigger, but it wouldn’t be an insurmountable benefit.

Adam
Reply to  Braden Keith
6 years ago

Don’t forget USA swimming’s outreach program. Our sport offers a lot of discounts for low income families.

Dan
Reply to  Braden Keith
6 years ago

I don’t mind the current Club Excellebcs system either, just curious on alternatives from people who voice displeasure.
Any thoughts on LCM being the only route to medals? You don’t see that mentioned; but I would think a lot of smaller and medium size clubs would be less likely to train LCM which may affect their LCM racing.

Adam
Reply to  Dan
6 years ago

I like the club excellence program and it is a great program for all clubs to follow.
However, as a coach from a 1 location team, I would like to see a program that rewards 1 location teams (no matter the pool size).

There are a lot of programs that do not train together or even compete together unless it’s a championship meet. I don’t mean to pick at these programs because obviously they are very successful, but in my opinion, a team should train together.

Dan
6 years ago

13 teams medaling with less than 100 and another 43 medalist in the 100-200 range is impressive! Am I in the minority that thinks Club Excellence is fair to all team sizes? The whole point of “Gold Medal” is recognizing the elite teams…everyone can’t be the most elite but this program has plenty of representation from small teams.

Seeger33
6 years ago

Article: Club size doesn’t matter

Rest of swimming: LOL! 90% of Gold Teams have over 400 swimmers

catch22
6 years ago

I’d like to see a breakdown as to how many teams there are of each size, 0-100, 101-200, 201-300 and so on, Then tell me what percentage of those teams achieved bronze, silver, or gold status.

SMALL TEAMS
Reply to  catch22
6 years ago

I concur.

Small Teams are People Too
Reply to  catch22
6 years ago

I believe the statistic is that nearly 70% of the club teams in the USA have fewer than 150 athletes registered. So it’s nice that “only 20%” of the medals were for clubs over 900 athletes, but that’s not reflective of the way the majority of clubs look today. This program is improving, but still has a way to go before being completely inclusive of our CURRENT club demographics.

Dan
Reply to  Small Teams are People Too
6 years ago

What is “completely inclusive” in your mind? 13 teams with less than 100 swimmers earned medals, that’s pretty inclusive. I think you are advocating equality of outcome versus equality of opportunity, two very different things. This program gives ever club a chance to earn medals regardless of team size, which is the definition of equality of opportunity.

Swim dad
6 years ago

The USA swimming formula favors the large. In reality,NCAP is a franchise of a handful of separate teams, run with their own profit centers, sharing a common brand. Try switching from one franchise to another, inside of NCAP. Constructively, I’d love to see an award for ratio of kids to, say power points, or kids to points at champs meets. It’d be telling.

SMALL TEAMS
6 years ago

Still…
My club team growing up had <100 members and still saw several NAG-ranked age group swimmers (a few even hitting #1 in the country in a given year). It seems that model just doesn't exist anymore. Now the goal is consolidate as many teams as possible so you have a larger pool of athletes for relays, national-meet travel teams, etc. In the end, this favors heavily-populated suburban areas near big cities.

Just saying.

Kathy
Reply to  SMALL TEAMS
6 years ago

The goal is not to consolidate as many teams as possible for the reasons you stated, the reality is that teams need to consolidate to pool (no pun) resources to remain financially viable. That’s why small clubs get gobbled up or merge, they are not financially viable without the big numbers (in most cases).

PVSFree
Reply to  Kathy
6 years ago

Swimming is also getting more and more popular with time

coachymccoachface
Reply to  SMALL TEAMS
6 years ago

We swim at one site and are a gold medal team.

Admin
Reply to  coachymccoachface
6 years ago

It is possible to run a gold medal team out of one site. coachymccoachface – without giving away your identity, I’ll point out that your “one site” includes an indoor 50m pool, indoor dive pool, an additional auxilary outdoor pool, and a separate site that hosts all of our learn-to-swim programs.

While the indoor part of the facility is shared – your team’s “one site” is one of maybe a less-than-5 places in the country where “one site” offers quite so much space without having to share with a university team/student body. Add to that 6000-people-per-square-mile, and a high level of affluence, and it’s a very unique situation indeed.

SMALL TEAMS
Reply to  Braden Keith
6 years ago

Yes, exactly!

One point of my rambling post in the beginning is that it appears this formula rewards both quantity AND quality, and those clubs without quantity will hardly ever get recognized.

Admin
Reply to  SMALL TEAMS
6 years ago

On the other hand, though, this is a nice recognition program that comes with perks – but the fear of changing it is that by putting things on a “per swimmer” basis, you’re incentivizing clubs to trim their slower swimmers. That’s not good for USA Swimming (fewer dues), the sport (fewer participants), the clubs (less revenue), or the athletes (because swimming has always been a place where the less-physically-impressive athletes can excel as compared to many other sports).

There’s no perfect system that I can think of. You can recognize clubs based on just their top X athletes (100, 150, etc.), but then that further focuses coaches on the ‘fast kids,’ which is their natural inclination anyway.

The current system… Read more »

coachymccoachface
Reply to  Braden Keith
6 years ago

I never said it was a small site!

But for real, we didn’t start this large. It took years of blood sweat and tears to build what makes our program successful. It’s a little insulting to see people think that teams “just get big and you’ll be good!” Our owners and staff built swim schools and our pool. It took over 10 years of fundraising and god knows what else to get it paid for and in the ground. Nothing was gifted. I understand some teams don’t have the same ability to grow based on either population or other factors, but I hope nobody thinks Rome was built in a day. (Not that any of these teams are Rome,… Read more »

About Torrey Hart

Torrey Hart

Torrey is from Oakland, CA, and majored in media studies and American studies at Claremont McKenna College, where she swam distance freestyle for the Claremont-Mudd-Scripps team. Outside of SwimSwam, she has bylines at Sports Illustrated, Yahoo Sports, SB Nation, and The Student Life newspaper.

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