By Andy Cheng on SwimSwam
To see all of our 2021 Swammy Awards, click here.
2021 BRITISH COACH OF THE YEAR: DAVE MCNULTY (NTC – BATH)
Dave McNulty, National Lead Coach at British Swimming’s National Centre Bath, has been awarded the 2021 Swammy Award for British Coach of the Year. This marks his second year in a row receiving this honor.
McNulty continues to make an impact in British Swimming, having coached four swimmers to five Olympic silvers in the previous two games. He made a big splash this summer when nine University of Bath-based swimmers were selected to Team Great Britain, five of whom took home gold medals.
That selection included James Guy, Ben Proud, Freya Anderson, Matt Richards, Tom Dean, and Calum Jarvis.
Tokyo Olympic Medalists Trained Under McNulty
- James Guy: 4×200 freestyle relay gold, 4×100 medley relay silver, mixed 4×100 medley relay gold
- Freya Anderson: mixed 4×100 medley relay gold
- Matt Richards: 4×200 freestyle relay gold
- Tom Dean: 200 freestyle gold, 4×200 freestyle relay gold
- Calum Jarvis: 4×200 freestyle relay gold
Tom Dean rose to Olympic heights in Tokyo this past summer when he won the 200 freestyle, becoming the first British swimmer to win Olympic gold in that event. He also swam on the European Record-setting team in the 4×200 freestyle relay. Dean, Guy, and Richards swam on that finals relay that won gold, and Jarvis swam in the qualifying heats.
Guy also contributed to another European Record in the men’s 4×100 medley relay, where Team Great Britain finished second. He also won gold in the mixed 4×100 medley and helped set a new World Record in the process. His Bath-based teammate Freya Anderson swam that relay in qualifying heats and set a new Olympic and European Record as well.
Dean and Guy each won two golds at the same Olympic Games. Adam Peaty, who trains under Mel Marshall, did as well. They became the first male British swimmers in 113 years to accomplish this feat.
Proud placed fifth in the 50 freestyle at the Tokyo Olympics. A few months later, he won gold in that 50 freestyle at the 2021 FINA Short Course World Championships.
Earlier in December, McNulty received Coach of the Year honors given by the British Swim Coaches Association (BSCA). He received the award in recognition of his “sustained excellence and dedication to the British swimming programme,” according to Team Great Britain’s website.
He first made his international debut as coach in 2001 at the World Championships. After the Beijing Olympics, he was appointed head coach of the British Swimming Bath Intensive Training Centre.
Honorable Mention
In no particular order.
- Mel Marshall – Marshall is Lead Coach at National Center in Loughborough and continues to guide Adam Peaty to swimming gold. At the Tokyo Olympics, he became the first British swimmer to defend an Olympic title: he won the 100 breaststroke and claimed Team Great Britain’s first gold of Tokyo. He won a second gold in the mixed 4×100 relay as well. At the LEN Long Course European Championships earlier this year, Peaty won four gold medals. Earlier in December, Marshall was honored by the BSCA with a Coaching Award of Excellence.
- Steven Tigg – Tigg leads the International Swimming League’s London Roar and helped guide them to a third-place finish in the finals. He is also Head Performance Swim Coach at the University of Stirling. This year, he guided Aimee Willmott to her third Olympic games and coached Duncan Scott to several Olympic medals. Scott claimed silver in the 200 freestyle, gold in the 4×200 freestyle relay, silver in the 200 IM, and silver in the 4×100 freestyle relay. He became the first British athlete to win four medals in a single Olympic Games. Tigg was also honored by the BSCA with a Coaching Award of Excellence.
- Ian Hulme – Hulme is Head Coach at Loughborough University. This year, he coached Sweden’s Louise Hansson and France’s Marie Wattel to the Tokyo Olympics. Both were finalists in the women’s 100-meter butterfly: Hansson finished fifth and Wattel was sixth. Hansson also broke out at the 2021 FINA Short Course World Championships where she won a staggering seven medals. Most notably, she won gold and set a new World Record in the 4×50-meter medley relay. She also won and set a new European Record in the 4×100-meter medley relay. Hansson also placed first in the women’s 100-meter backstroke and set a new Swedish record in that.
Previous Winners
- 2018 – Steven Tigg
- 2019 – Mel Marshall
- 2020 – Dave McNulty
Read the full story on SwimSwam: 2021 Swammy Awards: British Coach of the Year, Dave McNulty
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