Hall of Fame
The 1966-67 and 1967-68 seasons were some of the most memorable in Western men's swimming and diving history.
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The program was started just three years prior, but eventually led to a Rocky Mountain Faculty Athletic Conference League Championship in 1967. During the conference meet, the Mountaineers set seven conference records out of 17 events at the meet under coach Tom Muhic.
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That same year, three Mountaineers competed at the NCAA College Division Championships in Long Beach, California. Those swimmers scored 38.5 points, finished 14th as a team, and took home five All-American honors.
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Angel Kalehuawehe finished eighth in the 100-yard butterfly, while Nelson Shibasaki placed second in both the 200-yard and 100-yard backstroke. James Leong placed eighth in the 1-meter dive and 12th in the 3-meter competition.
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"This unique group of young men came from very diverse backgrounds, yet came together and became a very cohesive team and a powerhouse, representing Western and the city of Gunnison in a very special way," Muhic said in his nomination letter.
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The following season, 1967-68, Western placed second at the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference Championships and qualified nine for the National Championships under new head coach Ric Hutterly.
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At the NCAA College Division Nationals in 1968, the Mountaineers scored 50 points to secure a top-ten finish, placing ninth.
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Five Mountaineers recorded seven All-American honors that season. Kalehuawehe earned his second career All-American honor in the 100-yard butterfly, finishing seventh. Leong also earned another All-American title, placing 12th in the 1-meter diving competition. Fellow Western diver Rick Bunger placed 12th, also earning All-American honors in the 1-meter dive.
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Freshman Ron Koch earned two All-American honors for the Mountaineers. His first came in the 200-yard medley, where he finished 12th. Koch then placed third in the 400-yard medley.
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Shibasaki earned another All-American title in the 100-yard backstroke, with a fourth-place finish. In the 200-yard backstroke, Shibasaki became Western men's swimming and diving's first national champion. His time of 2:01 set a new NCAA College Division national record and qualified him for the NCAA University Division Championships and the Olympic Team Trials.
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Along with their athletic merits, these men's swimming and diving teams offered a lot more to the campus and Gunnison community. The swimmers formulated the first campus group dedicated to multiculturalism, with the Hawaiian Club.
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"In addition to being great swimmers, the Western swimming and diving men were outstanding people, and had a big influence on the student body of the college, making it much more cosmopolitan," Duane Vandenbushe said in his nomination letter. "They started a Hawaiian Club, taught Polynesian dancing and helped spread the word about the little school in the Rockies."
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