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Indiana Associate Head Coach Jonty Skinner Retires Mid-Season

Veteran Jonty Skinner has retired from coaching, he told SwimSwam in a statement Tuesday.

Skinner was named associate head coach at Indiana University last spring after the program had lost three of its support staff under head coach Ray Looze after the 2018-19 NCAA season. Skinner said he had planned to retire after last season, which is also when his former boss at Alabama — Dennis Pursleyretired, but that Looze recruited him.

Jonty Skinner. (Photo credit: Indiana Athletics)

“I was essentially retired last May with plans to write a book about Brain Training for Swimming until Ray recruited me to work in Bloomington,” Skinner wrote. “The culture in the IU program is exemplary and there were no end of teaching opportunities in the program.  Since I love teaching as much as I enjoy coaching it was fun. The kids in the program are awesome, and I’ve really enjoyed helping them understand the sport of swimming in a way that allows them to take ownership over who they are and what they do. However, I’ve been coaching for 45 years and few months ago I asked myself how many of those 45 years was I off for more than a week or 2 weeks at any one time.  The answer was hardly ever.  When I faced that fact I knew it was time to start that book.  I’m extremely thankful for my short stint in Indiana and although my departure isn’t super timely, we’ve both benefited from the experience.”

Skinner, 65, is a decorated veteran of the sport with ample head coaching experience. His last stint at Alabama as senior associate head coach was his third with the program; Skinner joined the school as an assistant coach after graduating in 1977, returned as associate head coach and then head coach in the late ’80s, and held his last position there for seven years.

After his first stint with the Tide, Skinner coached the San Jose Aquatics Club to a USA Senior National team championship and five USA Junior National team titles. Under Purley’s watch as director of the USA National team in 1994, Skinner was chosen as the inaugural coach of USA Swimming’s Resident National Team, then spent the next eight years as USA Swimming’s director of performance science and technology. From 2009-2012, he worked in a similar capacity for British Swimming.

As a swimmer, the South Africa-native Skinner held the 100 free world record from 1976-1981 and was inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame in 1985.

Indiana’s remaining paid coaching staff consists of assistant coaches Cory Chitwood, Emily Eaton and John Long. After last season, assistant Kirk Grand moved to Colorado, associate head sprint coach Coley Stickels replaced Pursley at Alabama, assistant Caitlin Hamilton became the new head coach at Illinois State, and associate head coach Mike Westphal was fired in September after being arrested on intimidation charges.

SwimSwam has reached out to Indiana for further information. 

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OG Prodigy
4 years ago

Any update on who will be added to the staff?

swimmy
4 years ago

This isn’t about Coley, Alabama, or IU. This is about Jonty. He is a good man who cares about the students before ANYTHING else. He has never been anything but kind and professional. You never know what is going on in someone’s life (health, family, anything along those lines. You don’t know!). He is retiring and that is no ones business but his own. He is an amazing coach and an even better person. His success speaks for itself. These rumor mills are awful. He cares about the swimmers and about helping them. If you have met Jonty, you know he is a truly genuine person. Congrats on retirement, Jonty. I know it will serve you well!

swim my
Reply to  swimmy
4 years ago

Oh, I didn’t realize you are a spokesperson for IU and UA! I actually didn’t see the article where the schools agreed with this, weird! Because Jonty chose to leave UA last year… hm. And he’s retiring now… another hm. You obviously have never met him because he is the polar opposite of selfish. But gosh, my mistake! You are obviously claiming to be a to know EXACTLY how the schools feel, so I would love for you to send me where you got this information. Oh wait… it’s your opinion! And putting retire in quotes is hilarious, as it’s exactly what he is doing! Look at the above article to know!

ACC fan
4 years ago

We need Cody to vlog the truth

Paul
4 years ago

Eagerly awaiting what will be a literary masterpiece…Hope he addresses the ‘proper’ way to conduct “home cooking”…

Joel Hagler
4 years ago

One of the best of all time. Thanks Jonty

B-Rad
4 years ago

So Cory is gonna be an associate within a year of what he did at Arizona?

The end of Tyranny
4 years ago

Are you sure this isn’t because of his malicious abusive coaching tactics that would leave most swimmers shaking in their shoes? I’ve heard some of what has been said on deck and and the abusive his swimmers go through is truly unprofessional. Single others out too is not a way to build a championship culture especially at such a renowned and established program like IU. There has also been talks about how some swimmers have been forced to swim on their own as a means to discriminate based on unrealistic expectations set upon the swimmers by Ray Looze. It seems as if the focus of IU is to better their pro program and let all others who come be left… Read more »

You
4 years ago

Wait what! Where is he going?? Maybe he will start rock climbing

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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