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Teams: Men's Swimming & Diving: Team
Overview
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Matera is NESCAC's Performer
of the Week
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2004-09 Top 5 Times
By Event
►Alumni
Questionnaire

The Tufts University Men's Swimming & Diving team is a competitive
force in the New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC)
and on the NCAA Division III level. Coached by Adam Hoyt, now in his
sixth season, the Jumbos regularly finish among the leaders at the
conference championships and annually earn All-American awards at
the national meet. In the past five seasons, Tufts swimmers have
rewritten the school record book with 36 new marks.
The Jumbos took second place at the competitive NESCAC meet last
winter. That marked the second consecutive year and the third time in the last
four years that
Tufts was the conference runner-up. Fifteen Tufts records were
broken at the NESCAC meet, where the Jumbos won two conference
titles, recorded four second-place efforts and swam several NCAA
qualifying times. Nine Jumbos earned All-Conference honors for
placing among the top three at NESCAC's.
Three Tufts relays swam honorable mention All-American times (top
16) at the 2009 NCAA Division 3 Swimming & Diving Championships.
Diver Rob Matera was an All-American on the 1- and 3-meter boards at
the 2008 NCAA Championship meet. In 2007, Greg Bettencourt swam two
national top 20 times at the NCAA meet. The Jumbos earned a 10th place finish at the 2006
NCAA Championships. Tufts swimmers won All-American honors in
five events and Honorable Mention All-American honors in four
events that year.
Hoyt was hired to lead the Jumbos after veteran coach Don Megerle
retired from coaching after 33 years in 2004. Under Hoyt's training,
the Tufts program has continued its run as one of New England's top
programs. Hoyt was named NESCAC Coach of the Year in 2006. That was
the third Coach of the Year award in four years for the Tufts program. Megerle was the conference's Coach of the Year in 2003 and 2004.
The assistant men's and women's swimming coach at Trinity College
from 2001-04, Hoyt is a native of Orange, Connecticut and a 2001
graduate of Hamilton College. He took over a Tufts program that was
in the national spotlight under Megerle, a five-time regional Coach
of the Year, longtime NCAA championship meet coordinator and member
of the International Swimming Hall of Fame. With last year's 6-3
dual meet record, the Tufts team now has an impressive 38-8 record
in five seasons under Hoyt. Tufts defeated Division I Boston
College each year from 2006-08.
Members of the NESCAC, Tufts is part of the nation's most
competitive small college conference academically and athletically.
The NESCAC is a group of highly selective liberal arts colleges and
universities that share an academics-first philosophy for
intercollegiate athletics. The 2008-09 Jumbos were ranked among the
top 20 in the College Swimming Coaches Association of America (CSCAA)
Academic Team rankings with a 3.34 cumulative grade point average.
Five team members were awarded CSCAA Individual Scholar All-American
honors.
Located right outside of Boston, Tufts offers a
well-rounded collegiate experience to student-athletes. Within its
picturesque small-college campus, Tufts is a major university with
"an unprecedented diversity of programs, exceptional faculty and
staff, and bright and talented students," according to President
Lawrence S. Bacow. The Athletics Department sponsors a varsity
program of 28 sports that is among the most competitive in the
NCAA's Division III. Tufts finished 10th in the 2009 Learfield
Sports Directors' Cup, which awards points based on NCAA
performances. The
University's proximity to a world-class city renowned for its
academic institutions is also a major draw.
Hailing from across the world, the men of Tufts Swimming & Diving
maintain an unparalleled sense of team camaraderie, resulting in its
consistent level of success. Each year during the winter recess, the
team travels to Ft. Lauderdale, Florida for a fun and intensive
two-week training program, increasing the physical strength and
endurance of each swimmer and enriching the bonds within the
program.
Veteran diving coach Brad Snodgrass was the NCAA Division III Diving
Coach of the Year in 2008. Now in his 23rd season coaching with
Tufts, he has developed one of the area's strongest programs. His
success as a diving coach includes two NCAA national champions and
several All-Americans. A New England High School champion who
competed collegiately at Maine and Columbia, Snodgrass is also
active in United States Diving, recently serving as the regional
technical director, registrar and treasurer for New England.
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