You are working on Staging1

Kevin Thorburn: My Friend, My Mentor, My Coach

Kevin,

I have had many excellent coaches, but when I utter the words “my coach” you are the person I am referring to.

Growing up in Regina was hard at times and wonderful at times. Many of those great experiences were created by your gift and ability to develop an environment where my teammates and I could thrive together.

The legacy of the team that you and Murray (Drudge) built is something special. After being part of and studying several successful programs I believe Regina was unique.

We were the epitome of the “Mouse That Roared.” As you said to me in our last conversation, you gave us a template for the rest of our lives. We dreamed big and you taught us how to forge the path.

At every opportunity you molded our mindset. Carefully picking movies like Hoosiers for us to watch when riding the bus and teaching us about Vince Lombardi and the Green Bay Packers. To this day one of my favourite movies is Hoosiers along with one of my favourite books being When Pride Still Mattered.

I know I was not your ideal athlete to coach. Although I possessed some talent as a swimmer I never bought into your philosophy of being great at all 13 Olympic events. As an age grouper I believed anything over 100 meters was simply silly.

Even with my defiance and stubbornness you believed in me. That belief was stronger than I had in myself.

Years later when I asked what I was like as a swimmer your answer made both of us laugh, “You never ever missed a practice. Through blizzards and other obstacles you were always there.”

You continued, “You only had two speeds really fast and really, really, really, really slow.”

No matter how much I pissed you off, which I know I did, you still had faith in me.

You fostered my love of the sport. Swim (later SwimNews) magazine was one of your prized possessions. No one dared to touch your copy without being bone dry and having hands that were close to being sterilized.

You went over the numbers in those pages with a fine tooth-comb. As you shared that information you spoke with enthusiasm and certainty of how we would use it to become a dominant age group team in the country.

And we did.

The first time an article of mine was published in SwimNews one of the reasons I was so excited is I knew you would read it with pride. Also that you would never allow the pages to be smudged, creased or have a corner folded over.

It is because of you I fell in love with the sport and ultimately built my life around it. It is because of you I have been coaching for 25 years and have a successful writing career. It is because of you I hope I have helped many fall in love with swimming through both my coaching and my writing.

You not only shaped my life in the water, but you literally saved it. As a teenager I faced challenges beyond my comprehension, but they did not seem to be beyond yours.

There were many times I came close to ending my life, but the pool was a safe haven because I knew no matter what there was always one person who believed in me and was there for me.

It was only later that I found out we battled similar demons. A lot was unspoken between us when it came to this, but because you sensed it you were able to convince me life was worth living.

When I began my coaching career the excitement you expressed over any glimmer of success I had motivated me even more. The pride you had when speaking with me about my writing did the same.

There are so many conversations we had that seemed like they would never end. You were always two steps ahead in your thinking, which is why those talks involved awkward silences where you waited for me to catch up. I am not sure I ever did.

We had several chats that were meant to be parts of articles I was going to write about your coaching tactics and ability to build successful programs.

I never shared the reason why those articles were never written. Pen was not put to paper because I was worried my words would not live up to how I felt about you as a coach and more importantly a person.

You once told someone you couldn’t wait to see those articles because, “Jeff makes everyone look so good.” I didn’t then, but I hope my words do now and they put a smile on your face.

When Murray recently passed you told me you felt like saying to him, “What were you thinking? You have another 30 years ahead of you!”

You also quoted Jim Morrison from Roadhouse Blues, “The future is uncertain and the end is always near.”

Unfortunately now those words echo in my head.

With all the love I could express to anyone rest in peace my friend, my mentor, my coach.

Jeff

In This Story

15
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

15 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Selam
4 years ago

What a pity that coach Thorburn was robbed by COVID of seeing Summer McIntosh qualifying for Olympics 2020 at just 13 years old! The way those two were working towards this goal since September was amazing! What a loss!

David McInnes
4 years ago

Jeff,
Thanks for so eloquently putting to paper what many of us who swam under, and coached under, both Kevin and Murray, felt. Two really great guys and incredible mentors lost well before their time.

Darrell Toth
4 years ago

Excellent article Jeff! From the heart!!

Darrell Toth

Heather
4 years ago

Beautiful tribute Jeff!

Nathalie
4 years ago

This is absolutely beautiful, thank you for sharing Jeff. Kevin was a great, great coach.

mike
4 years ago

My understanding was that Sean Baker was also part of that early Group? Is he also in one of those pictures. Sean Baker was also a friend who was recently fired from Oakville Swim club.

Jeff Grace
Reply to  mike
4 years ago

Sean joined the Dolphin family after the first wave or initial wave of incredible success we had. He actually came to Regina the year I moved to Brampton. Sean became an incredibly important of the history of success in Regina as he was a big part of the overall legacy.

Rob
Reply to  Jeff Grace
4 years ago

I think Sean Baker has the same philosophy of swimmer (and personal) development as had Kevin Thorburn and Murray Drudge. It sounds like they had this philosophy when they coached you in Regina. Do you know where it originated?

I don’t know what’s happening with GTA clubs these days: problems at MSAC; Mr. Drudge let go after 24 successful years at NYAC; Sean Baker fired from OAK after ten successful years. There was little chance of that happening at Eswim: Kevin was well-liked by parents and swimmers, both for his very calm, kind demeanor and for his philosophy of athlete training. I’m going to miss his exposition of that philosophy at the annual Coaches Night; though I’ve now heard it… Read more »

Selam
Reply to  Rob
4 years ago

Rob, my deepest condolences to ESWIM family!
What is ESWIM’s plan now? Are you guys going to hire someone from outside? Is Sean Baker considered? Or anyone from the club will be appointed a head coach, as you have an amazing team of coaches?

Rob
Reply to  Selam
4 years ago

Thanks Selam. I honestly don’t know what’s going to happen next. I’m not on the board and I haven’t talked to anyone who is (not about the future, that is; trying to come to grips with the present is enough for now). COVID prevents us from coming together as a club at the moment, but it does also relieve the pressure to make any quick decisions.

Coach John
Reply to  Rob
4 years ago

I know Murray cut his teeth coaching with Etobicoke and Paul Bergen in the 80’s and he got a lot of influence off of him.

Swimtrick
Reply to  Rob
3 years ago

Swim boards with members who have no knowledge of the sport and putting their own kids first is what’s happening.

Ghost
4 years ago

Thanks for sharing Jeff! I am sure it was hard to put down on paper how you were feeling!

Retired coach
4 years ago

Well done Kevin! I believe our sport is blessed with countless similar examples of the impact coaches have had that go far beyond society’s definition of winning. Thank you Jeff, for sharing this story.

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, …

Read More »