Susquehanna Selects New Swimming Coach

Selinsgrove, Pa. — World-class swimmer Dan Phillips has
been named head coach of Susquehanna University men's and women's
swimming & diving teams, and director of aquatics. He is the
second to assume the coaching position in Susquehanna's
history.
"Dan is an incredibly exciting hire for Susquehanna," said the
university's director of athletics Pam Samuelson. "His resume as a
coach and an athlete truly speaks for itself."
Phillips comes to Susquehanna from The Ohio State University,
where he was an assistant women's swimming coach from 2003 to 2008
for the NCAA Division I Buckeyes. During his time at Ohio State,
Phillips helped to produce three all–Big Ten Conference
performers, eight NCAA championships qualifiers — including a
championships finalist and an All–American — one Big
Ten champion, three world championships participants and an
Olympian.
Phillips has been the director of aquatics at Wedgewood Golf &
Country Club in Powell, Ohio, since earlier in 2008.
From 2001 to 2003, Phillips was an assistant men's and women's
swimming coach at the Division I University of South Carolina,
where he worked with an athlete who swam in four events at the NCAA
women's championships.
Phillips was the head coach of the Omaha Suburban Aquatic Club in
Omaha, Neb., from 2000 to 2001 and enjoyed two national age-group
top 16 finishes, including a first-place ranking. He was an
assistant coach for Carter Center Aquatic in Roanoke, Va., from
1996 to 1997 and an assistant for the Olympic Park Swim Team in
Roanoke in 1996. He was promoted to head coach of the Olympic Park
team in 1997.
A world-class athlete, Phillips was a 2000 U.S. Olympic Team
trials qualifier in the 50-, 100-, 200- and 400-meter freestyle
races. From 1997 to 2000, he was a member of the USA Swimming
National Resident Team that trained at the U.S. Olympic Training
Center in Colorado Springs, Colo.
As co-captain of the U.S. swimming team at the 1999 Pan American
Games, Phillips captured a gold medal as part of an 800-meter
freestyle relay and a silver medal as part of a 400 free relay. He
captured another silver — this time at the 1998 Goodwill
Games — as part of a 400 medley relay. He finished in the top
16 at the 1996 U.S. Olympic Tram Trials in the 200 free.
A 1996 South Carolina graduate with a Bachelor of Arts degree,
Phillips was a co-captain for Gamecocks swimming from 1994 to 1995.
He was the 1995 Southeastern Conference champion in the 200 free
and an All–American in 1993, 1994 and 1995. He was a 1993
World University Games gold medalist as part of an 800 free relay.
Phillips was ranked in the top 30 of the world in the 100 free in
1993.
Phillips replaces the late G. Edward "Ged" Schweikert III, who
died June 15 after succumbing to cancer.












