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Scott Armstrong To Become New Head Coach At Johns Hopkins

Former Stanford assistant coach Scott Armstrong will return to his alma mater, Johns Hopkins, to take over the head coaching job with the men’s and women’s teams.

Armstrong has been an assistant with the Stanford men for the past four seasons. We reported earlier today that he would be leaving the program. You can read more about that here.

While a collegiate swimmer, Armstrong was a former Johns Hopkins captain and an 18-time All-American. He now returns to his former school to take over the head coaching position vacated by his former coach George Kennedy. Earlier this year, Kennedy announced his retirement after 31 years at the helm of the program.

Armstrong is already a member of the Johns Hopkins Athletics Hall of Fame. From our earlier report on Armstrong’s departure from Stanford:

Armstrong was an 18-time All-American at Johns Hopkins and a team captain in his senior season (2003). After finishing his competitive career, he became an assistant coach at the North Baltimore Aquatic Club. He was with the club through its heyday, including Michael Phelps’ run to 8 gold medals at the 2008 Summer Olympics and the peak of Katie Hoff’s World Record setting career. In 2009, he was named the Associate Head Coach at NBAC, serving under 2016 Olympic men’s head coach Bob Bowman, and helped lead the club to back-to-back number 1 rankings in the USA Swimming Club Excellence program.

For his work, he was named the head coach of the U.S. Women’s Team at the 2010 Junior Pan Pac Championships that won the meet title.

Johns Hopkins announced Armstrong’s hiring in a press release, which you can find below:

BALTIMORE, MD – Johns Hopkins Director of Athletics Tom Calder announced today the appointment of Scott Armstrong as the head men’s and women’s swimming coach. Armstrong replaces George Kennedy, who announced his retirement in February after 31 seasons with the Blue Jays. He becomes just the fourth head coach of the Hopkins swimming program since the 1968-69 season.

“We have been fortunate to have George Kennedy, one of the all-time great Division III Men’s and Women’s Swimming Coaches, guiding our program for more than 30 years,” noted Calder. “In Scott Armstrong, we have not only one of George’s most accomplished former swimmers, but also one of the rising stars in the coaching community. His knowledge of Johns Hopkins and experience as a highly-successful assistant coach at Stanford University will serve him well as he leads our men’s and women’s swimming programs in pursuit of excellence in the classroom, the community and the pool.”

Armstrong returns to Baltimore after serving four years as the assistant men’s swimming coach at Stanford. He also had coaching stints at Johns Hopkins, the North Baltimore Aquatic Club (NABC) and USA Swimming. Armstrong is a 2003 graduate of the University and was inducted into the Johns Hopkins Athletic Hall of Fame in 2015. He will be the fourth active member of the Blue Jay coaching staff that is a graduate of Johns Hopkins, joining Bob Babb ‘77 (baseball), Jim Margraff ’82 (football) and Dave Pietramala ‘90 (men’s lacrosse).

“I’d like to thank Tom Calder, Mike Mattia and George Kennedy for believing in me and giving me the opportunity to pursue a dream,” said Armstrong. “I would also like to thank Ted Knapp, Earl Koberlein and the amazing athletes I have had the privilege to work with at Stanford. Hopkins is a special place and I can’t wait to build on the great tradition George has created. This is a real homecoming for me and I look forward to building strong connections between my fellow alumni and the current student-athletes.”

Armstrong joined the Stanford coaching staff in 2012 and worked daily with head coach Ted Knapp on all aspects of team operations. He was instrumental in compiling top-five recruiting classes in the nation in each of his years in Palo Alto. He worked primarily with the distance and IM groups and mentored standout student-athletes Maxwell Williamson (Pan American bronze medalist), Curtis Ogren (400 IM school record holder) and David Nolan. Nolan won three individual NCAA titles and in 2015 set the NCAA, US Open and American record in the 200 IM. Armstrong’s distance and IM group has impressed at the PAC-12 Championships, putting five swimmers in the championship final in each of the last two seasons and claiming two titles in the 1650 Free. His swimmers have also competed at the World University and Pan American Games.

“Scott has a tremendous future as a head coach and I know he couldn’t be happier than to return to his alma mater,” Knapp commented. “He is extremely knowledgeable and passionate about swimming and has shown great success in coaching college athletes. He is a great communicator and brings both tremendous energy and challenge to the pool deck everyday. This is a fantastic opportunity for both Scott and Johns Hopkins – I know the future is bright.”

In the storied history of the Hopkins men’s swimming program, Armstrong ranks among the all-time greats as he dominated the distance events. He led the Blue Jays to four top-five finishes at the NCAA Championships, including runner-up finishes in his junior and senior years. He earned All-America honors 18 times, which ranked 10th in school history when he graduated and is still tied for 13th more than 10 years after his career ended.

“I am thrilled for Scott, our swimmers, the Johns Hopkins Department of Athletics and the entire Johns Hopkins community,” Kennedy said. “Scott values the relationships and connections with his athletes and colleagues. It is a wonderful feeling to end my career and turn it over to one of our own. I wish Scott and the program all of the best for a fantastic tenure.”

Armstrong accumulated 10 top-three finishes in individual events at the NCAA Championships, including six runner-up finishes. He was also a member of five relay teams that finished second at NCAAs. When he graduated, he held school records in the 500 Free, 1000 Free and 1650 Free. Armstrong’s record in the 1000 and 1650 Free stood until 2014, while his record in the 500 Free stood until 2015.

Armstrong joined the Blue Jay coaching staff after his graduation and helped the Hopkins men to an ECAC Championship as well as a fifth-place finish at the 2004 NCAA Championship. The JHU women finished in sixth place at NCAAs, at the time it was the second highest finish in program history. Armstrong joined the staff at NABC and spent eight years coaching with Olympic coaches Murray Stephens, Bob Bowman and Paul Yetter. He assisted and implemented daily and seasonal plans for the Elite training groups, which included Olympians Michael Phelps and Katie Hoff. Armstrong was also coach of the USA National Junior Team from 2007 to 2011, before moving to Stanford.

Armstrong and his wife, Toni, are the parents of a son, Owen, and newborn daughter, Evelyn.

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Bucc
8 years ago

Couldn’t think of a better person to carry on coach Kennedy’s legacy. I am excited for the future of the program!

Jerry Garcia
8 years ago

Congrats Scott! What an accomplishment and boy are the JHU swimmers lucky to have such a dedicated coach. Scott’s commitment to his swimmers are above any coach I’ve experienced before, and he truly understands how to improve and communicate to a collegiate swimmer. Great things for JHU Swimming to come! And huge shoes to fill by the Stanford program.

Mike
8 years ago

Congratulations Scooter! Scott was a tremendous addition to the stanford program and even produced remarkable results before Stanford during his days at NBAC. He knows how to relate to each individual swimmer and what makes them tick. Best of luck!

KSR
8 years ago

Armstrong was also instrumental in sending a full 18-man roster to the 2004 Men’s NCAA Championship for the first time in Hopkins history. Excellent hire by JHU. Great legacy, great work, greater person.

Chris Pickard
8 years ago

Congratulations to Scott and Toni (and little Owen and now Evelyn)! John Hopkins has made a fantastic hire. After swimming for Scott and working with him this past season on deck, Hopkins is getting not just an elite coach, but a world class human being and teacher (a very underrated quality in college swimming today). It cannot be stressed enough that the contributions he provided to the Stanford program will be sorely missed moving forward. During his time at Stanford he impacted every swimmer, teaching and coaching them to raise their level in and out of the pool. He built up strong swimmers, but more importantly high character men and was someone the team looked up to for leadership. After… Read more »

D.Le
8 years ago

Coach Scott is an incredible coach and motivator. He is a great person who truly loves his swimmers and gives his full effort and attention to not only their swimming but their lives as a whole. Excited to see his work at Johns Hopkins. Thank you for your guidance at Stanford

Coach
8 years ago

An unbelievable hire! The team must be so pumped!

BOP
Reply to  Coach
8 years ago

absolutely — we’re psyched!!

Log jammin
8 years ago

Way to go Scott!! Excellent coach but more so an outstanding person.

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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