The Devasated Univ of N. Dakota Swim Team Never Turned Its Back On Its Community

North Dakota Swimming
Photo Courtesy: FEMA - Photograph by Michael Rieger

Mike Stromberg, former student-athlete and head coach at the University of North Dakota Swim Team, recently penned a letter expressing his disappointment over the swimming and diving teams being cut.   Stromberg is a member of the UND Class of 1977 and was Head Coach of the men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams from 1980-2002, earning the title of NCAA Division II Coach of the Year in 1989 and 1999. In 2005, he was inducted into the University of North Dakota Hall of Fame.

Read Stromberg’s letter in full:

A legacy of UND Swimming and Diving came to an abrupt end this spring. To say I am disappointed by the decision is an understatement. There seems to be some who firmly believe the only way to create a successful Division I program is through athletic dollars.  But I pose this question: What is the definition of success?  How do we measure success and whose responsibility is it to raise those dollars?  A program whose success had already been built on drive and gumption isn’t the program that when gone, will save the University’s athletic budget. Over the years, exemplary student athletes charged the UND flag to the national level in swimming, diving, and desire. These swimmers and divers do so because it is as internal to their daily needs as eating or breathing. These athletes swim with their hearts, a passion as real to each student as seeing the sun rise and set each day.  And for emphasis, they do it their own dime! In the words of an old favorite movie, “If you build it, they will come.” And come they did.

It was March of 1997 and the University of North Dakota (UND) Men’s and Women’s Swimming & Diving teams had recently returned from NCAA Division II Nationals with a strong sense of accomplishment.  The women’s team finished third at Nationals, and was the thirteenth year in a row finishing top six in the nation and securing their legacy as the most successful athletic program in the history of UND Athletics. The men’s team finished tenth that year, the ninth year that the men’s program had secured a top ten finish at NCAA’s.

It was an exciting spring for UND athletics which also included an individual National Champion title in the Women’s 100 yard butterfly by junior Tania Younkin, a UND Women’s Basketball Team National Championship, and the UND Men’s Hockey team winning an NCAA Division 1 championship title.  After a long winter of snow and cold, it was especially gratifying.

A few short weeks later, the Red River started to rise as the winter of record breaking snowfall began to thaw.  Thousands of homes were at risk, and Sandbag Central was established as the community jumped in to help.  The men’s and women’s swimming and diving program was no exception.  

I received a call from the University’s administration who asked me to coordinate a quick response team to handle any requests of help that came into the University. The University provided us a few cell phones and we used one of the swimmer’s homes as a staging location.  For the final week prior to the city of Grand Forks evacuation order, the team responded to calls almost 24 hours a day to fill, carry, and put down sandbag after sandbag.  The final mission we conducted involved creating a sandbag wall around eight homes on 47th and Belmont.  At end of the day, the call for the city of Grand Forks evacuation was made by the Mayor and the swimmers looked at me with trepidation and said, “Coach, we have got to leave town.”  We knew we had done all we could do.

After the flood waters receded, I received a phone call from Dr. Wanless, our Athletic Director, requesting that I return for a meeting.  I met with Dr. Wanless and UND Housing Director Terry Webb that day at the Hyslop Sports Center. Terry Webb asked if I would coordinate the effort to house volunteers on the UND campus. Of course, I accepted and immediately knew I could count on my team to help.

It was no small feat.  We housed over 3000 volunteers that summer in the Hyslop Sports Center.  The volunteers arrived and our group located them according to the longevity of their stay.  We ensured each volunteer had a cot and daily meals, we assisted with transportation, and the Hyslop Swimming Pool locker rooms provided a place to shower – and even a place to swim if one so chose.  Days were long, but the reward was great and the experience was unforgettable.

That fall, the UND Swimming and Diving teams were back in the pool for another great season and gearing up to host the 1998 USA Swimming Junior Nationals at the Hyslop pool.  There was a movement to take this event from Grand Forks due to the flood damage and infrastructure that had to be rebuilt, but the community pulled it off. The Junior National swim meet had over 1000 swimmers, coaches, and fans from all over the western United States and Hawaii.  The event lasted five days and the news coverage was fantastic.  The UND Swimming and Diving team ran the meet.  In October of 1998, I secured Grand Forks as the processing center for United States Pan American team prior to participating in the 1999 Pan American Games in Winnipeg, Manitoba. All USA athletes, coaches, staff and news media went through Grand Forks and many of them stayed on campus and trained in the local schools throughout East Grand Forks, MN and Grand Forks, ND over the five week period.

After only two years since the flood, the community continued feel the flood’s devastation yet backed each of these efforts as each played a key role in giving our city the re-birth it so desperately needed following the flood.

Those three years flew by, and the UND Swimming & Diving Teams and coaching staff were taxed, but it hardly fazed us.  Giving back was embedded so deeply into our team culture; we always felt we were a part of something larger than ourselves. It was team tradition that each fall we took to the streets and helped our Grand Forks and East Grand Forks neighbors rake leaves, or completed odd jobs for the elderly population at their homes.  That is who we were.

As these stories point out, the success of the men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams over the years wasn’t always in the pool. UND Men’s and Women’s teams were continuously in the top academic rankings both at the school, and nationally – and that was expected of our athletes.  And while that is telling – our largest success was the family we created; something that was not created due to athletic scholarships or an overflowing budget.  We raised a third of our budget each year and it was not uncommon for a UND President or Athletic Director tell me, “UND swimming doesn’t need our help, you guys are successful. We have to focus our efforts on the teams that are not successful.”  The spirit of our success came from within – we loved to train, we loved to race, we loved being a part of a wonderful university, and a fantastic community. Kids came to swim at UND because this culture was apparent from the first contact; it certainly wasn’t due to scholarship dollars.

But that culture carried over to our success in the pool. The women’s program had more success than any other women’s program in the history of UND and produced more All-Americans than all the other women teams put together.  It has more NCAA National trophies than all UND Athletic programs put together. In 1984, the team produced the first and only individual Division I National Qualifier in Kimber Edwards, from Minot, ND.  In 1982, the UND Women’s Swimming & Diving program participated in its first NCAA National Championship for any women’s athletic team, and then went on to represent UND at NCAA’s for 24 years, placing in the top six in 22 of those years before becoming Division 1.  This year, the women’s program was beginning to make its mark at the Division I level as they won four of five relay titles at the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) Championships, and crowned numerous individual conference championships.

The Men’s program represented UND nationally for twenty-one consecutive appearances at the NCAA’s, finishing in the top 10 eighteen years in a row.  The men’s team had multiple NCAA National Individual Champions, along with NCAA National Championship Relays.  Over all those years it produced more All-Americans than all the other men’s sports put together.  After the University moved to Division I athletics, the men’s swimming and diving programs continued their success in the WAC.  Swimmers have been tenths of seconds from qualifying for the NCAA Championship meet, which is the fastest and most difficult meet to qualify for in the world – even faster than the Olympics.

During my years as coach, 90% of the student-athletes on the women’s team were paying their own tuition. On men’s team, 95% paid their own tuition. At present 60% of women and 70% of men pay their own tuition while representing UND in swimming and diving.  Both programs are near the bottom of all teams on a cost-per-athlete basis. 70% of the other athletic teams were costing the university more dollars to maintain. When tuition revenue is included, the program actually saves the University $180,000 per annum. For many years the UND Swim Lesson program, run by the UND Swimming and Diving programs, made more money for the Athletic Department than the football program. The UND Swimming and Diving programs brought approximately $23 million in economic dollars to the city of Grand Forks during my tenure.

It seems a bit too easy to simply close a door to one of the most successful athletic programs in the history of UND. There were NCAA Championship trophies, more than 202 All-Americans, and 30 Individual and Relay NCAA National Champions along the way.  A legacy was created and celebrated – so much so that many in the region grew up dreaming of one day attending UND and joining the team – and many did.

The University could have chosen a handful of options that would have achieved the same or perhaps a better financial goal.  Had they considered a reduction in scholarships? I feel certain that swimmers would have chosen to continue to swim. The pride in the UND program is reward enough for the long hours spent in the pool. UND has three primary forces at work that have driven athletes to the program year over year: a superior education, a culture of family and commitment, and a nationally acclaimed swimming and diving program. When UND swimmers and divers reflect on their years at UND, the love and passion spent in the pool is just as important, if not more so, than the degree hanging on the wall.  

In Grand Forks, the Red River Flood of 1997 was devastating. Today, in 2017, a similar feeling has overtaken me as our team, our legacy, has been willfully drowned by a flood of poor decisions. The UND Swimming and Diving Alumni are fighters. Together with swimmers from all over the state of North Dakota and the five state region, we will work tirelessly to bring this celebrated program back to UND and help create a new era of UND Athletics.

All commentaries are the opinion of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Swimming World Magazine nor its staff.

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Patricia Voelpel-Lang
6 years ago

Thank you for sharing this. Many do not get to see this side of the story and the impact a team has on the community it is in.

Irene Theders
6 years ago

very well said, …good luck to your program.

Kim AG
6 years ago
Reply to  Irene Theders

There is no more program. UND cut the program to make sure that our president could have a bartender at football and hockey games in his suite and to make sure that our overabundance of administrative positions wouldn’t take pay cuts.

John McCormack
6 years ago

Deb Wenman

Wendy Phelps Neale
6 years ago

Unfortunately UND does not see students/athletes anymore. My son (freshman swimmer) said he only felt like a $ and a number – and a very low number at that. He is now transferring!

Lisa Byerley Watters
6 years ago

Such a wonderful history! I have twin daughters that are seniors and one will swim in TX and the other in FL in college. Both looked for programs that were a good fit for swimming and academics, but also had volunteerism opportunities. Thank you for sharing and praying for good news for the future.??

Swim Giggles LLC
6 years ago

What a story and experience! Hopefully UND will bring back the swim program. In a strong swimming area in New Hampshire and we’re still waiting for the men’s team at UNH. What is going on in university and college programs?

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