YMCA of Central Florida to Disband Competitive Teams Indefinitely due to COVID-19, 22 Clubs Affected

YMCA International Aquatic Center Orlando
The YMCA International Aquatic Center in Orlando. Photo Courtesy: YMCA Aquatic Center

The YMCA of Central Florida competitive aquatic sports have been disbanded indefinitely because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Florida has been hit harder than most states during the pandemic and the YMCA made the decision to discontinue the competitive programs at the 22 YMCA of Central Florida locations. That includes swimming, diving, water polo and artistic swimming.

“This decision was just about the aquatic teams and has nothing to with the aquatic centers themselves. They will likely re-open as soon as it is safe to do so, but the teams will not be a part of it,” YMCA of Central Florida District Executive Director Mike Brady told Swimming World.

Athletes will need to find new places to train, which is not an easy task with COVID-19 wreaking havoc on Florida.

The YMCA of Central Florida sent out an email to all coaches and participants that discussed the details.

“As a result of our assessment, it’s with heavy hearts that we inform you today that we won’t be able to bring back our YCF Aquatic Teams at any of our family centers for the foreseeable future until further notice,” the email reads. “We’re currently exploring the option of recreational level programs potentially being offered in the future, but we wanted to be as transparent and timely as possible with our competitive-level athletes so they can explore other program options outside of YCF. 

“We know this news comes as a deep disappointment which we share together with you. Our hope is that these programs may return sometime in the future if we have the capacity to offer them in a financially sustainable and safe manner with the level of quality they require.”

Brady said this is the decision for the foreseeable future, but is hoping it is not permanent.

“Definitely this was nothing that we wanted to do. The long and short of it is we are assessing what we can bring back in a safe way and fiscal way,” he said. “We are not ruling out the chance of brining these programs back in the future. We are trying to be as transparent as we could be to give people the opportunity to find somewhere else to train. We aren’t sure when and if we can re-open (the competitive programs).”

This decision does not affect the YMCA facilities themselves. Brady said those facilities will try to open when it is safe to do so.

“We are still working on a phased approach to bring the facilities back. But with everything going on, including staff furloughed since March, we don’t have the answer to how to bring (competitive teams) back,” he said. “Some of the stand-alone programs are opening cautiously. We have had lap swim by reservation in some of those, but even that is presenting some challenges, so how do we think we can bring back 30-40 kids safely? Like any business, we are trying to be as transparent as we can and serve our population as much as we can.”

The YMCA of Central Florida clubs include:

  • Avalon Park
  • Downtown Orlando
  • Golden Triangle
  • Osceola County
  • Rosen
  • Titusville
  • Blanchard Park
  • Dr. P. Phillips
  • J. Douglas Williams
  • Oviedo
  • South Orlando
  • Wayne Densch
  • Cocoa
  • Frank DeLuca
  • Lake Nona
  • Roper
  • Tangelo Park
  • Winter Park
  • South Lake
  • Horizon West
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

Welcome to our community. We invite you to join our discussion. Our community guidelines are simple: be respectful and constructive, keep on topic, and support your fellow commenters. Commenting signifies that you agree to our Terms of Use

112 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Kristi Mustard Tully
4 years ago

Wow, those poor swimmers?

Sarah Tyler
Sarah Tyler
4 years ago

USA Swimming has clear, safe, workable plans to allow swim teams practise time. The Y could check it out. It is working othere places, even Arizona and Texas. This is heartbreaking for the swimmers, lazy on the part of the Y.

Barb Martin Binkley
4 years ago

Wow…that is ridiculous….but people can go to the beaches and bars!!!

Kevin Fallon
4 years ago

Barb Martin Binkley and gather in large crowds for protests / marches

Must be one smart virus to be able to pick and choose where it spreads

Mateo Golloshi
4 years ago

Barb Martin Binkley just letting you know that bars have been ordered to close too (I think the order was done last week if I’m not mistaken)

David
David
4 years ago
Reply to  Mateo Golloshi

Swimming won’t be the only sport cancelled. It’s hard to see any land sport other then tennis and golf that can be successfully. It sucks.

Barb Martin Binkley
4 years ago

Kevin Fallon….All I am saying it’s not fair to swimmers and their sport!

Kevin Fallon
4 years ago

Barb Martin Binkley oh I totally agree with you 1000% …..I was being super sarcastic because there is so much nonsense going on with this

Jessica Middleton Newman

Mateo Golloshi not all

toni Lavette
toni Lavette
4 years ago

Many of these Ymcas are not reopening! The Cocoa Y with there Olympic size pool is closed permanently along with a few others? This article is not 100% true.

Rob Duguay
4 years ago

Looks like we’re going to need to coach the kids via an online coaching model similar to triathletes.

TK Shelley Causey Christie

Extremely disappointing.

Laura Steward
4 years ago

Ridiculous

Susan Steeper Magnanelli

Kim Beaver, isn’t this the facility that we went to for NCAAs?

Kim Beaver
4 years ago

Susan Steeper Magnanelli yup

Susan Steeper Magnanelli

Kim Beaver bummer

Katherine Karaconstantis LaLime

John Steven LaLime John LaLime

Jenn Cheri
4 years ago

Maybe teans can b o for and pillage in the water? That seems to not spread the virus. ?

Rebecca Lauterbach
4 years ago

Complete BS! Please fight back people! If people can go to beaches, riot and protest then surely the kids should be able to swim! Stop the fear this is getting ridiculous!

Gary Yaglenski
4 years ago

All those families should leave the Y then they’ll rethink their position.

Dan
Dan
4 years ago
Reply to  Gary Yaglenski

These Y aquatic center “decision makers” don’t care!

Sharon Chocko Gallagher

Letting fear ruin the sport. Pathetic

Jessica Middleton Newman

Ridiculous

Corrine Kohlmeyer-Hyman

This is just so sad.

Katy Bateman Brown
4 years ago

So sad

Juan Carrillo
4 years ago

This is BS

Joe Countryman
4 years ago

Stupid

Stephanie Harrison Greeby

So they say that they will open again but no teams. What is the logic? Members can lap swim and exercise but they are against practicing for the team. We need to demand more of our public officials.

Clark Bickling
4 years ago

Bad call. I understand that water is at a premium and the Y wants to rebuild their membership base, but swim teams bring in members AND program fees. Plus swimmers will take unpopular pool time (early AM, late night).

Mary Beth Lyles LeSeure

“can bring back in a safe way and a fiscal way”. One key word there?

Lola Forrester
Lola Forrester
4 years ago

Yep key word, is fiscal.

Kathleen Cornelius
4 years ago

I understand taking a year off but not indefinitely. Kids need an outlet. I feel bad for these kids

Maria Del Pilar Pantall

Kathleen Cornelius your thoughts is the most makes sense un comparison to the others comments. Is serious this virus, and the people with no IQ wasn’t responsible stay at home. Now is the consequences.

Jason Cronk
4 years ago

Maria Del Pilar Pantall People with no IQ caused this? Wow

Erin Carne McConkey
4 years ago

So sad

Savannah Carson
4 years ago

WHAT

Jen Hintz
4 years ago

What!!!

Emma Volz
4 years ago

Maria Zambito

Jodie Tengen
4 years ago

This so incredibly disheartening!!?

Jenny Johnson
4 years ago

Lisel Johnson – Wow! Just Wow!!!

Ja Bounce
4 years ago

Booooooooo!!!

Ashley Christenson
4 years ago

Jennifer Lathrop Tonkyn

Kurt W
Kurt W
4 years ago

So all these facilities are just gunna sit there empty? What a joke.

Dave Hoover
4 years ago

Joel Dodds ??

Joel Dodds
4 years ago
Reply to  Dave Hoover

Worse than that, CFY is abandoning the facility at the campus formerly known as BCC (the team and pool Logan swam for/at). Years ago when BCC cut funding for their team, pool, and associated facilities, Central Florida Y came in and took over those resources. I wouldn’t be surprised to hear of the pool being filled in or removed, and the land being used for a new classroom building for diversity studies.

Jennifer Heron
4 years ago

Complete BS!!!! I’m so sorry to my Florida peeps.

Jenn Corb
4 years ago
Reply to  Jennifer Heron

This is an excuse to get rid of teams. “How can we bring back 30-40 kids safely?” Maybe by taking a peak at all the USAS guidelines and following them like other clubs?!?!?!

Jennifer Heron
4 years ago
Reply to  Jennifer Heron

Jenn Corb so irritating and infuriating

Angela Cappellazzo
4 years ago

Does chlorine kill the Covid germ

Doug Schack
4 years ago

Angela Cappellazzo It does. But when Fauci pulls a number out of thin air to “jolt” America. Where will you get the truth from. There are always “buts”. Chlorine kills it, BUT!…. These clowns don’t know.

Aquaboss
Aquaboss
4 years ago
Reply to  Doug Schack

According to industry professionals, chlorine is guaranteed to kill viruses in the coronavirus family on a kick board or other similar materials in under 30 minutes. Not instantly.

Craig Lord
4 years ago
Reply to  Aquaboss

Thanks Aquaboss. Important to add that, with any chlorine, in pools in general and on equipment etc, ‘guarantee’ comes with no guarantee because the efficacy of chlorine depends on the prevailing circumstances: if a small pool is full of folk who entered the water straight from a day on the trail, running, jogging cycling, bit of beach volleyball etc – without showering – the efficacy of the chlorine will be significantly reduced by the ‘amount of effort/work’ the chlorine present has to do straight up. In similar but more extreme circumstance, one kid having an accident requires a pool (at all times nit just because of any particular virus) to be cleared immediately because the efficacy of the chlorine is compromised in a critical way.

Sarah De
4 years ago

? Omg, that’s arguably my son’s teams largest competitor. We are in that pool several times a year. It is muggy and stale in there, and the only time there is fresh air is when you’re sitting up near the top windows in the back, that’s if you’re lucky enough to have a breeze- usually in January or February the air circulates up there well. But wow!

Eta– This is one I didn’t see coming. If there is a YCF parent/family on this page, I’d love to hear what your plans are and how you’re taking this.

Swim Parent
Swim Parent
4 years ago
Reply to  Sarah De

Hi! I am a parent. You know what stinks the most? Absolutely no communication whatsoever from the coaches. Nothing. We’ve been left in the dark about this for months now. I find it heartbreaking that they are looking to bring recreational swim back BUT are throwing out the competitive teams.

Jennifer
Jennifer
4 years ago
Reply to  Swim Parent

Are you sure the coaches knew this fate? It says all staff was furloughed back in March. It sounds like this was just decided. They may have gotten the same “no notice” also. They lost their jobs at a very hard time to be a full-time coach. Has anyone made contact with them? Were you in contact in March-May as a team?

Anna Bicicleta
Anna Bicicleta
4 years ago
Reply to  Swim Parent

My guess is the coaches themselves were left in the dark.

Lola Forrester
Lola Forrester
4 years ago
Reply to  Swim Parent

Yes, the coaches were left in the dark. This article is misleading though. The Aquatic Center will reopen, but under new management. It will no longer be a Y, thank goodness! You can’t imagine that the largest swim facility in the Southeast can stay close like this for more than a year, right? This same thing happened back in 1992. A lot of these businesses are using Covid as an excuse. The YMCA is all about $$$$$. Good riddance to them.

Toni L Lavette
4 years ago
Reply to  Sarah De

Sarah De This article is BS! A few of these Ymcas are not financially sound and not reopening
Cocoa Ymca
Rosen Center/ Aquatic Center
Not about Covid
This is so heartbreaking ?
Jeff Girten

Sarah De
4 years ago
Reply to  Sarah De

Toni L Lavette I realize that. They were also rehabbing part of Rosen the past year (small stuff, bathrooms) and we assumed more improvements to the pool area would come next since we were told face to face by Admins there at meets that they were making it “more comfortable for spectators and athletes” (not sure you’ve been, but their bathroom situation for spectators had become a nightmare in the past 2 years). ? If they’ve known about these problems (this stuff doesn’t happen overnight), why would they say that to people? ☹️

Toni L Lavette
4 years ago
Reply to  Sarah De

Sarah De The Cocoa Ymca has a beautiful Olympic size pool and for the last 2 years we have been fighting to keep it open, Covid came along and there’s your excuse to close down
Aquatic Center , Cocoa and few others every year never came close to making budget.

Sarah De
4 years ago
Reply to  Sarah De

Toni L Lavette Sarasota Y was having trouble a year or so ago, too… At least one location was at risk of being shut down. They have a beautiful pool too, but our location doesn’t compete down there anymore for some reason.

Toni L Lavette
4 years ago
Reply to  Sarah De

Sarah De boo

Cheri Wood
4 years ago

I feel your pain. We are over in the UK and our club runs out of a YMCA pool which they are mothballing with no date of reopening if ever. 45yrs our club has been going. They should be ashamed ?

Sean Judge
4 years ago

What a tragedy. A terrible and extremely hurtful indictment of a needlessly botched response to the worst global pandemic in 100 years. I hope that when we are able to recover to the new normal, we can make this right with our kids. Stay safe, wear a mask, stay apart and Godspeed to everyone.

Paula Alford
4 years ago
Reply to  Sean Judge

Hmm…A needlessly botched response? ? Guess then .the whole world “botched this one then.?” All those other pandemics were and future ones will be handled perfectly though ..so never fear. .? And in the meantime, am sure “our children” will welcome all efforts to “make it right with them.” ??

Sasha
Sasha
4 years ago
Reply to  Paula Alford

Hopefully some of you understand that the pandemic is far worse in the U.S. than elsewhere because of the attitudes displayed in this thread.

Mary
Mary
4 years ago

This is ridiculous. We’ll be quitting the Y immediately.

Karin Knudson O'Connell

Heart breaking for the athletes. ?

Lisel Johnson
4 years ago

Megan Sherwood OMG!!!!

Megan Sherwood
4 years ago
Reply to  Lisel Johnson

Lisel Johnson wow!! Thats sad! ?

Clay Parnell
Clay Parnell
4 years ago

Everyone must understand what exactly is going on here. This is nothing more than a business decision using the COVID-19 as an excuse to get rid of A program that does not make them enough money. Having to pay qualified coaches to run a program that uses up a lot of pool time and space is not profitable enough for the YMCA. They can make a higher profit running recreational competitive swimming programs using $10 an hour coaches. I’m sure they will still rent the pool out to high school and college teams and want to run all the big money swim meets though.

Anyone in the Swimming business knows that the safest activity to run during this time is a competitive swim team. Nothing can be as controlled as that particularly in a chlorinated environment.

As usual the wonderful nonprofit YMCA goes for the money.

Jane Meltzer
4 years ago

Maybe if Florida had a Governor who took it seriously from Day 1 this would have been avoided.

Kristen Clure Maples
4 years ago

Our Y in Oregon did the same thing. Sad

John Clark
4 years ago

So sad.

Claire Kennedy
4 years ago

Sarah Harris will Lizzie be ok to go back? Xx

Sarah Harris
4 years ago
Reply to  Claire Kennedy

Claire Kennedy yes Claire, Lizzie’s team have had to make some changes but all currently still good. Really sad to hear this news though that will obviously affect many swimmers x

Claire Kennedy
4 years ago
Reply to  Claire Kennedy

Sarah Harris that’s good ? x

Robert Hayon
4 years ago

Isn’t this pool owned by Roudy Gaines? If I am wrong sorry, but I can’t imagine he would go along with this

Jan Miller
4 years ago
Reply to  Robert Hayon

Robert Hayon my understanding is that he’s on the Board of Directors but he doesn’t own the pool. The Rowdy Gains Masters Classic is there every October.

Toni L Lavette
4 years ago
Reply to  Robert Hayon

Robert Hayon no it is owned by the Central Fl Ymca

Toni L Lavette
4 years ago
Reply to  Robert Hayon

Robert Hayon Rowdy was employee there but no longer

Jen
Jen
4 years ago
Reply to  Robert Hayon

Yes. We were at a stroke clinic last fall with him at the Aquatic Center. My kid just moved up to competitive in January. She’s devastated.

John Ian Bobbitt
4 years ago

Oh nooooo…. ? it’s come to this? REALLY!?

Jennifer Brurok
4 years ago

Ridiculous!!!! Talk to practicing physicians instead of politicians and “Public Health” officials who are all in the political pockets!!! This is just so stupid!!! On our way to total socialism?

John Ian Bobbitt
4 years ago

I don’t even have a witty or sarcastic response to this. If not for the YMCA’s youth swimming program, I never would have made swimming my sport, or advanced to USS, or collegiate level.

If not for swimming, I never would have got the scholarship that paid for college, and my degree, and the life I have now….

It’s come to this? And why swimming? Of all sports? This is BS. Someone in Florida go over to the Y and smack the s*** out of someone in charge. I got your bail money

Toni L Lavette
4 years ago

John Ian Bobbitt my daughter swam here 8 years and received 4 yr ride to DU
This is not about Covid
It’s about $$$$$$$$

Sarah De
4 years ago

Toni L Lavette It is about Covid though… extrapolate deeper behind the article. Had they not spent too much somewhere else (to say mismanage funds would be insinuating something more sinister that I’m not going to do), then they’d have enough to keep it running. This has been seen everywhere… overextended budgets pre Covid, little cushion for a rainy day- so businesses cutting programs, staff, what-have-you, because they don’t plan well enough for emergencies (not that anyone could see this one coming).

It’s a nice facility compared to many, and always enjoyed meets there because they’re so large. Just a shame this is happening.

Ronald Vearrier
4 years ago

Sad.

Adam
Adam
4 years ago

This will cost the ymca. I guarantee that competitive teams bring in the memberships for for the ymca, not the other way around.

It’s too bad. They won’t realize the error until it’s too later and whatever director/s made this decision will be out a job.

Nicole Ervin Amare
4 years ago

Oh no…

112
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x