A UCSB water polo player, sophomore Nicholas Johnson, was pulled unresponsive from the bottom of the Santa Barbara High School pool this morning, and after receiving treatment from lifeguards and EMTs, was pronounced dead later in the day.
19-year-old Johnson, who swam and played water polo at Santa Barbara High School, was home and completing his own swim practice in one lane while the high school team practiced in the rest of the pool. Three of the high school swimmers trained as lifeguards saw Johnson at the bottom of the pool, and according to local news source Noozhawk, pulled him to the surface and began giving him CPR.
An emergency medical crew was called around 9:45, Noozhawk reports, and began their own treatment of Johnson immediately when they arrived. Johnson was taken to Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital and was pronounced dead there.
As the UCSB campus and water polo program mourn the loss of one of their own, water polo coach Wolf Wigo called Johnson “the best kid, hardest-working kid, a first-class person and a wonderful students and brother to his teammates,” according to Noozhawk.
USA Water Polo posted the news on Facebook and Twitter today, saying “Our thoughts and prayers go out to his family, friends and teammates.
Such a tragedy. I reminded my daughter to not hyperventilate before a dive as this can result in shallow water blackout which is what may have happened to Nick.
Even when there -are- LGs “on duty”, they are not always very vigilant. In my previous job in a large 7-HS district here in TX (as Braden correctly noted about TX earlier), lifeguards are on duty at swim meets and (I think?) HS diving practices, but not at swim practices. In this district they are fairly well trained, rotate, keep eyes on pool, etc. Can’t comment on others but would be interesting to read some other evaluations.
When I worked as a lifeguard in college, we were instructed to scan CONSTANTLY, and we did. I even did a body count of how many were in the pool every time I saw someone get in or out and if my count… Read more »
This is a tragedy. I’ve never seen lifeguards stationed at a swim practice, be it at a club or high school or collegiate. Why is SB any different in this respect?
For what it’s worth, down here in Texas, there’s almost always lifeguards at practice now. Not sure who’s rule it is (districts, states, etc.) but they’ve all got them, and I know it’s a requirement for diving.
First of all, My condolences to the family, this is extremely saddening! But why is everyone quick to blame?? What happened?? This was not a child who did not know how to swim. He was an adult swimming laps. All of a sudden he is on the bottom of the pool. If he didn’t struggle, a lifeguard would not see him go down. A defib would only help if he was in cardaic arrest. This is very sad but lets find out what happened before we blame anybody of wrongdoings.
This is such a waste of a young life. There should have been a lifeguard on duty watching the swim practice/watching the pool. Why was there not? The coach is coaching, The swimmers are swimming, the Lifeguard would have been watching the water. My condolences to the family, this is extremely saddening and unforgivable by the facility holding the practice. Does the facility have a requirement for lifeguards to be on duty? If not, family and friends should become advocates for Nicholas Johnson, RIP
As a long-time guard, I have to say that having a guard there would not have been all that likely to have helped. While the extra 30 secs or a minute can really count, the biggest difference is made by having a defib on hand. They should be mandatory, or more mandatory, then they currently are.
I coached against Nick two years ago, if I remember correctly. He was part of a class team and program, and my heart goes out to his family, his 3(I believe) younger siblings, and his Gaucho family as well. The UCSB guys I’ve talked to about this say he will definitely be missed.
He was a son of California, he fought for the… Read more »
This one though may finally bring to light how the SB high schools pools are mismanaged and unsupervised. This tragedy has been in the making for some time. Being certified to be on a pool deck and supervising activities in the pool are very different things. When this plays out’, changes will finally be made in the swimmers favor, one can only hope. This family should not have lost their son. Tragic indeed.
Sad that this is probably going to result in a lawsuit against the high school and result in more and more restrictions regarding who can use the pools.