2024

Fred Bartlett

  • USMS Pool All American Honors – 1 Relay

  • USMS Long Distance All American Honors – 2 Relay

  • USMS Top Ten Achievements – 22 Relay

USMS Profile

I grew up in a military family, which meant moving at least every two years. This also meant never putting down roots, nor ever swimming on any swim teams growing up. Both my mother and father were in the Navy and first met at an outdoor officers’ pool, which meant that after I and my three siblings were born we were always in the water in some form or fashion. 

At an early age my father had us up on his shoulders, as he was on a saucer while my mother drove the boat we owned and then later we learned to saucer, then ski, then slalom ski.  Everywhere we went while crisscrossing the country to new posts, we swam, mostly in open water lakes and rivers.

In 1968 we moved from Meridian, Mississippi to North Kingstown, Rhode Island. At some point my father, who was back and forth from Vietnam tours, introduced us to NEM legend Dan Rogacki. At the time, Rogacki was in the Navy and had formed a kids' swim team named the Navy Junior Swim Team. For my brother, my sisters and me, this was our first introduction to a formal swim team – sans goggles, lane lines, pull buoys, and paddles. But we did have kick boards, which I hate to this day! Both my brother and I became lifeguards at the outdoor officers’ pool at Quonset Point, Rhode Island in our high school years before the base closed in 1974.

I attended the University of Rhode Island, where I tried out for the men`s swimming/water polo teams, under now retired Coach Mick Weskott. I lasted one semester before discovering I was not talented enough to be there and focused on ice hockey, golf, racquetball, and running instead.

Fast forward, after years of golfing and running after graduating from URI, a new sport arose called triathlon, which seemed to fit me to a T, since I wasn’t top notch in any one sport, but I could do many sports at a high level. Since triathlon involved swimming first, and with my growing up swimming open water, it became a passion of mine. With triathlon a growing sport, I occasionally dropped in to fellow honoree Stuart (the human dolphin) Cromarty`s masters sessions at URI to augment my one-lone wolf training.

Once Stuart left URI, there was no masters swim program in the South County Rhode Island area. So, somewhere along the way, South County Y allowed me to start a Masters team there. We started with three lanes, which quickly grew to all five lanes, three times a week. This group has been ongoing and growing for at least 28 years. 

Along the way, the team, now called the SCY WAVES, (yes, we have our own shirts, pink caps, and secret handshake) has grown to 60 USMS members, swimming in back-to-back sessions, three times a week. SCY WAVES are encouraged and trained up to swim the USMS Virtual 1-Hour Swim along with one or two 2 championship swims in New England each year.

Starting with one or two triathlon friends, open water swimming at Narragansett Town Beach (NTB) became a regular practice, which has also grown. Today, anywhere from 20 to more than 100 swimmers attend those workouts regularly in the summer months. 

Early years of swimming at NTB, Barber Pond, and other open water locations like Roger Wheeler Beach, was strictly by word of mouth or routine. But as the numbers grew, we established a swimming hotline to designate both time and place of the swims that would occur. In time, the phone tree became an email listserv, which eventually had 700 + emails subscribed. That has since evolved into a web site, swimtrirunman.org, where swimmers can find out about upcoming open water swims and other events.

I have participated in the Save the Bay Swim for more than 25 years and have coached the Leukemia/Lymphoma team in training for 7 years. I’ve been a part of the Laguna Mar Swim Camps run by Bob and Barb Crowder for six years, coaching Masters swimmers at the camp. I am still coaching triathletes and giving adult swim lessons.

Paula Yankauskas

  • USMS Long Distance All American – 1 Relay

  • USMS Top Ten Achievements – 1 Individual, 1 Relay

  • USMS Certified Coach – Levels 1 & 2

USMS Profile

Paula Yankauskas grew up in central Connecticut and always loved the water. The summer she turned 11, the City of New Britain opened five outdoor municipal pools – four 25-meter pools, and one 50-meter pool – spread out over different city neighborhoods. In the East End of New Britain, the home pool for those residents was Chesley Pool, and it was there that Paula spent nearly all daylight summer hours for the next five years. 

When she turned 16, Paula was eligible to work for New Britain Parks & Recreation; at Chesley, there was only an opening for a locker attendant. Paula worked it for a short time; when the lifeguard Captain of Stanley Pool (the 50-meter facility) asked if she’d consider joining their lifeguard roster; all loyalty to the “neighborhood” vanished, and she took the job at the rival pool Stanley, taking on coaching the swim team as well as teaching swimming (WSI – babies to adults) in addition to lifeguard duties. A small claim to fame was that she guarded there for a Masters Meet on July 27, 1972 in which Larry “Buster” Crabbe (of Flash Gordon and Tarzan fame) swam.

Paula is now a Vermont swimmer – she came to Vermont for college in the fall of 1972. Attending UVM for undergraduate work, she was on the swim team for seven semesters. She also worked as a lifeguard for faculty and open swims in the Forbush Natatorium, and put in one year toward a Master’s degree in physics. 

In 1977 Paula and her sister Valerie decided to swim across Lake Champlain and succeeded in crossing a 9-mile expanse in August. They tackled the swim because they felt they were good swimmers and thought they could do it. This was the summer before Paula started veterinary school; she graduated from the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine in Philadelphia in 1981.

Paula founded Lamoille Valley Veterinary Services (LVVS) in 1985 as a mixed animal practice. Over the years it has evolved into a seven-doctor, full-service facility for small animals – mostly cats and dogs. Paula’s current clinical focus is on the behavioral and emotional health of dogs and cats. 

Central to Paula’s life are 3 things: LVVS, family, and swimming, and not necessarily in that order (the attention devoted to each varies daily). LVVS and family took over for the 20 years between education and the 2001 opening of The Swimming Hole in Stowe, but once she had a pool to stretch out in, she was set to return to swimming and has not looked back since. To top it all off, the Green River Reservoir State Park is in Paula’s hometown of Hyde Park, Vermont. This “quiet” body of water (no power boats) is so ideally suited for open water swimming. 

A mature endurance athlete, Paula has, at times, held titles for age. She was formerly the oldest person on record to have swum the length of Lake Memphremagog, a 25-mile swim she completed in September 2014, at 60 years of age. Currently, she is the third oldest (average age) swimmer to complete the Triple Crown of open water swimming, which includes solo swims across the English Channel, which she completed in 2016 at age 62; the 20 Bridges Swim Around Manhattan in 2017 at 63; and the Catalina Channel in 2018 at 64. When she swam the English Channel, Paula was the oldest American female to have done so. 

In 2023, Paula reclaimed the title for the oldest person to have swum the length of Memphremagog, at 69, closing out and bookending the decade of her 60s with that swim. She does think the age thing gets a little “old” at times but is thrilled to motivate people to swim into their senior years, or even to get started then.

A grandmother, and practicing veterinarian, Paula has completed some of the toughest and most grueling Marathon swims in the world. In addition to completing the Triple Crown of Open Water Swimming, Paula has completed:

  • The SCAR Lake Arizona swim series multiple times. This series features four marathon swims totaling 41 miles over four days.  

  • Swim the Suck in Tennessee multiple times, a 10K race down the Tennessee River.

  • The 25-mile length of Lake Memphremagog twice.

  • The Three-Rivers Marathon Swim in Pittsburgh, a 30K urban swim. 

  • The 8-mile Boston Light Swim.

  • Multiple distances at the annual Kingdom Swim and Swim the Kingdom events in Newport, Vermont many times over.

  • Cork Distance Week in Ireland many times.

  • An officially recognized Ice Mile (a 1-mile swim in water that’s 41 degrees Fahrenheit or colder without any heat-retaining gear or assistance. She was the 98th person to achieve this grueling feat.  

Loving the water and swimming as a result is a lifelong, long-life experience, Paula says. And, as wonderful as pools are, the open water is a calling; for Paula there are many miles to swim before she sleeps.

David Vail

  • USMS Pool All American Honors – 4 Relay

  • USMS Top Ten Achievements – 84 Individual, 39 Relay

USMS Profile

As a kid I snorkeled for scallops in Long Island’s Peconic Bay. But I got a late start in competitive swimming as a sophomore at Shaker Heights High in Cleveland. Senior year, I made the Ohio state finals in the 200-yard individual medley. 

At Princeton, I was a journeyman backstroker, freestyler, and water polo player. Three highlights of those younger years were: 

  • Swimming on a 400-yard freestyle relay that set a Princeton record while losing to Olympian Steve Clark and his Yale crew.

  • Serving as assistant to legendary Yale coach Phil Moriarty and his great mid-60s teams, while in grad school. 

  • Coaching Uganda’s Makerere University swim team to third place in the Pan-African Games when I was a Rockefeller Foundation economist.

My Masters swimming also started late. At Bowdoin College, I served as faculty advisor to the water polo club and later Charlie Butt’s swim teams. But other activities – kayaking, cross-country skiing, and road racing – held my attention until stress fractures brought me back to the pool at age 50. I learned about innovations like goggles and pull buoys and lots more about stroke mechanics, body alignment, and race psychology. 

Although I took pride in winning at least one event at every New England championship I entered, New England records and national Top 10 rankings only became routine after I had shoulder surgery at 65 and talented competitors began to fall by the wayside. Since 2013, my training and competition have had ups and downs as I’ve coped with two cancers and some heavy-duty meds. At age 81, I think of myself foremost as a lucky survivor.

I’ve managed seven second-place national rankings in backstroke and freestyle but never made All-American because a few superstars my age just won’t quit. I’ve swum on four All-American relays with fellow Maine Masters members and have managed to win four golds, eight silvers and a bronze medal at the National Senior Games. In 1998, on a research sabbatical in Sweden, I trained with Stockholm’s Lidingö IFK club and swam in the Swedish short course championships, winning four individual events and contributing to two victorious relays.

Masters swimming is much more than racing: I’ve enjoyed being our Bowdoin workout group’s USMS contact person, collaborating with Bowdoin coach Brad Burnham to organize our fall meet, and hoisting a pint with MESC mates.

Dick Hutchings

  • USMS Pool All American Honors – 9 Individual, 1 Relay

  • USMS Top Ten Achievements -75 Individual, 16 Relay

USMS Profile

Freshman year at Worcester North High School, I met a classmate who swam with coach Leo Majcher at the Main South YMCA. I went to a few practices but my swimming career was short-lived. I don’t know if it was swimming with kids who had been on the team for six or seven years or if coach Majcher just didn’t see the promise in my dogpaddle.

At 41, I started swimming laps at the Worcester YWCA where I found out about Masters swimming. I entered my first meet at Swim Center 1 in Granby, Connecticut. Never having gone off the blocks before, I lost my goggles on my first start. In the spirit of Masters Swimming, Fred Dalby realized I needed help and introduced himself. He helped me tighten my goggles and gave me some suggestions to improve my starts.

After moving to Hubbardston, I started swimming laps at the MWCC pool and soon, at age 70, I joined Greenwood Masters with coach Dave Phillips. Under his direction and that of his successor, David Graham, my times improved each year in the 70 to 74 age group.

A memorable swim took place at the 2022 Summer Nationals in Richmond, VA. Not usually doing well in 50s, I finished 1st by 8 hundredths of a second and that converted to about four inches. Coach had told us to finish on our side.

It has been really important to see the reorganization of Mount Wachusett Masters. With their enthusiasm, their ability as swimmers, and their early success, the team has a bright future.

Tracy Grilli

  • USMS Pool Records – Relay – 5 Lifetime

  • USMS Long Distance Records – Relay – 2 Lifetime, 1 Currently Held

  • USMS Long Distance All Star – 2000

  • USMS Pool All American Honors – 4 Individual, 8 Relay

  • USMS Long Distance All American Honors – 5 Individual

  • USMS Top Ten Achievements – 354 Individual, 222 Relay

USMS Profile

Tracy Grilli was born in Attleboro, Massachusetts, in April 1957, just in time for the grand opening of Bearcroft Swim and Tennis Club where her family were charter members. Her mom brought Tracy and her siblings (Kim and Mike) to the club pretty much every day during the summer. Tracy passed her pool test at age two-and-a-half, and she swam in her first meet at age 6. “Many years later, someone created an ‘Orphans of Bearcroft Swim Club’ Facebook page which really bring back the memories,” she says.

Tracy continued to swim during the summers at Bearcroft and with the Seekonk Dolphins under coach Ellis Mayers during the winter until she was 16. “I was an OK swimmer, nothing to brag about,” she says. “But my high school sports and activities became a priority and that was it for swimming.”

Tracy graduated from Norton High School in 1975 and she attended Slippery Rock State College in Pennsylvania to study physical education. “I tried out for the cheerleading squad,” but didn’t make the team. “I was too big.” She also tried out for the volleyball team and made it to the last cut. Still searching for something to keep her occupied, she went out for the swim team. “I figured I was 500 miles away from home and needed to do something, so I joined the swim team. Again, I was just an OK swimmer.”

After graduation, Tracy got a job as the physical director at the Malden YMCA, “and that’s where I found out about Masters swimming! I also met David there, and the two of us joined NEM. Well, actually I was too young to join,” – the minimum age to join Masters at the time was 25 – “but I was allowed to compete at meets and was listed in the results as a ‘sub-Master.’ We just absolutely loved everything about NEM – the people, the fun, the meets, the parties, the camaraderie.”

Tracy and David married in 1981, and subsequently had two children; Victoria was born in 1982 and Luke in 1985. They moved to Londonderry in 1986. Tracy got a job at the Nashua YWCA where she worked for 10 years. Throughout all of these years since college, there were very few pool workouts between meets, and relying on her fitness and stamina from teaching fitness and aerobics classes. 

Sometime in her mid 30’s the “light bulb went on” and Tracy realized if she wanted to swim faster in meets, she needed to work out in the pool. She started swimming with the Granite State Penguins at the Nashua Boys and Girls club and at age 40, for the first time, she broke 1 minute in the 100 free. At the age 50, she broke 20 minutes in the 1650 and SCM 1500. At age 60, she had the fastest time in the world in the LCM 1500 in the 60-64 age group. Finally, she’d become a good swimmer

She says “For many years it was all about swimming my best times. Now it isn’t and I’ve adjusted my philosophy too. If I’m not going to swim fast, I’m going to have fun! No matter what it’s my best time of the day”.

Tracy is grateful she can participate in this sport, and the swimming friends she’s met since competing in her first meet in 1981 are just the absolute BEST.

Stuart (Stu) Cromarty

  • USMS Pool All American Honors – 12 Individual, 12 Relay 

  • USMS Long Distance All American Honors - 2 Individual

  • USMS Top Ten Achievements – 195 Individual, 71 Relay

USMS Profile

My swimming began at an early age in South Africa. My mother taught young kids how to swim in our backyard, and by age 2, I was already diving for coins in the deep end. I started competitive swimming late (around 12) and my first formal coach, Brian Wood, was the high school swim coach and English teacher. In my sophomore year of HS, I represented my state and eventually captained the state team my senior year. I represented South Africa in an international meet in Taiwan in 1981 and then represented my country in international lifesaving competition in Greece, Austria, Germany and the United States in 1982 and 1983. 

In 1984, I crossed the Atlantic on a full swimming scholarship to Boston University and captained the team in 1986 – the first foreign-born student-athlete to serve in that capacity at BU. I graduated with a BSc. in Biology and then went onto to receive my M.Sc. and Ph.D. at the University of Rhode Island. It was during this time that I was introduced to Masters swimming by Frank McQuiggan and Peter Solomon, who was coaching the URI Masters and RAM Club team at the time. When Peter Solomon left to coach at Middlebury, I took over the Masters Swim Program (1989-95) and kept it going for 7 years! I also helped coach the URI Age Group Team (1992-95) with Bob and Barb Crowder, who at the time were NEM members. 

During my post-doctoral years, I continued swimming masters; I swam in Atlanta, Ga. with the Pace Academy Masters Team (1995-97) while I did research at Georgia State and the Cambridge Masters (1997-2000) when I was Harvard Medical School. In 2000, I started my faculty career at Assumption University where I currently reside as a Professor of Biological Sciences. This was during my most active Masters Swimming, and I was inducted into the Rhode Island Swimming Hall of Fame in 2005. Then in 2009 the University asked me to start a NCAA D2 swimming program and suddenly my competitive Masters Swimming was paused while I built a college program from scratch–I did however manage to continue open water swims during the summers.

Building a college program took a huge percentage of my time but was very rewarding. I was most proud of the fact that even in the first year I never had a losing record as a head coach at Assumption. With a career 80-24 record in dual meets–we boasted an impressive 32-3 record at home (we never lost a home meet from 2011 to 2019). The team progressed each season from seventh in his first season to capturing three consecutive Northeast-10 Conference Championships in 2013-14, 2014-15, and 2015-2016. The team was runner-up the next two seasons and then in my final year of coaching (2018-2019) we finished first in the conference. During this time, I recruited and coached 125 student athletes and for 24 semesters in a row, we received the CSCAA Scholar All-American Team Award. I have been honored to attend 25+ weddings of my former athletes and still counting.

I was excited to get back into Masters Swimming in 2020 after not competing in pool competitions for 12 years. I missed the racing but more importantly I missed the camaraderie. One thing about swimming is that the friends you make last a lifetime. You may not see them for 5 or even 10 years but one day when you see their name on the heat sheets at a masters meet; you track them down and it is as if time has stopped, and all the great memories come back. 

Along the way during my early Masters days, I met and swam with many wonderful people, most notably, Peter Solomon, Frank McQuiggan, Jenny Mooney, Jacki Hirsty, Matt Gilson, Jason Eaddy, Mike Powers, Tom Manfredi, Fred Bartlett, Homer Lane, Doug Sayles, Tracy Grilli, Liz Welch to name just a few. I currently swim with Sarah Sutton, Chuck Barnes and EJ Testa.

Aagje Caron

  • USMS Pool All American Honors – 7 Individual

  • USMS Top Ten Achievements – 279 Individual, 54 Relay

USMS Profile

I was born in Rotterdam in the Netherlands. After the war, my family moved to a small town in Meppel in the province of Drente also in the Netherlands. My father had started a leather making business and his company expanded to that town.

I learned to swim in the 4th grade, which was mandatory for everyone to receive a diploma in swimming and water safety. We were taught the breaststroke first. After receiving my swimming diploma, I continued to swim with friends in the pool and area lakes. 

While commuting by train to college in another city, I happened to see a sign about a swim meet. I signed up, swam the 100 breaststroke and 100 backstroke and found that I liked competition. I did not belong to a swim team, but I continued to compete in a few more meets. After college I went into nursing and swam whenever I could. 

My family is still in the Netherlands. At the age of 23 I came to the United States, curious about the country. I met my husband Chet on a blind date. We moved from Virginia to Alexandria, New Hampshire, and after many years of not swimming, I was able to rekindle my passion. After a couple of months, I was asked if I wanted to compete, and I said yes. It was a great experience – I enjoyed the camaraderie and the competition and swimming keeps me mentally and physically fit.

Over the years I have competed in many national and world competitions. I enjoy meeting people from all over the world and learning about their cultures. I have also competed in horse shows (jumping) and triathlons. In addition, I care for my horse, take hikes with my dog, Janna, go mountain biking, and enjoy oil painting.

Karen Bierwert

  • USMS Pool All American Honors – 6 Individual

  • USMS Top Ten Achievements – 240 Individual, 14 Relay

  • USMS Certified Coach – Levels 1, 2 & 3

  • USMS Adult Learn to Swim Instructor

USMS Profile

Like many things in my life, I sort of stumbled upon competitive swimming. We spent our summer days (all day) at the pool. When I was 9, the pool director started a swim team. I was rather reluctant to try it; but with a little encouragement, I did. Our “training” was to do twice our age in laps sometime during the week. This is a far cry from what I try to do today.

After that first summer in Western Mass, we moved to St. Louis County for five years. There was a strong AAU program in Missouri. So from 9 to 13, I competed in St. Louis County before returning to Massachusetts.

From 14 to 17, I swam both on high school and YMCA teams with my mother as coach. The girls’ high school team won Western Mass in 1968. I was the 200-yard freestyle Champion in 1969. There were no state meets in those days. This ended my early competitive years, for my college had no swim team. However, I was still drawn to water: I rowed and did synchronized swimming in college.

I started Masters in 1983 in the NEM era of Jim Edwards and Tom Lyndon. I have swum almost continuously since then (minus a decade in the ’90s when I played a lot of tennis).  My swimming strengths seem to lie in longer events, but I like variety and each stroke has been my “favorite” at one time or another. 

I love swimming and the challenge of setting goals and striving to achieve them. The swimming community is so welcoming and supportive.  At meets, I have met people I have swum with as a kid, people I've coached, and people who have swum for my brother, who was the coach at Smith College and is now one of my several Masters coaches. 

Highlights of my Masters swimming career include making Top 10 times in both USMS and FINA. I set the top FINA time in the 400-meter IM SCM 2017. I’ve also set some New England records, but times are only part of this experience. Attending my first Nationals meet at Industry Hills, swimming in the Olympic Trials pool in Omaha, and swimming at Worlds in Montréal are also stand out moments. 

But, it’s not just the big meets that are special. As Jim Edwards once said, meets – mini-meets, regional meets, all meets – are just socials with some swimming thrown in. Making new friends and sharing time with likeminded people is the essence of Masters swimming.

I taught for 30 years, primarily math and science at the middle school level. I also conducted math education workshops on the school, district, and national levels. In addition, for about 25 years, I taught swimming from tiny tots to adults and coached YMCA, USS, and high school swimming. Since retiring from teaching, I’ve tutored high school math, been a family caregiver, and have been active in city issues. I play the hammered dulcimer and volunteer as a performer for a local historical ssociety. Rounding out my swimming are paddle board, pickleball, and running. Finally, I love both geology and travel, so I combine these in trips from Iceland to Australia.

Masters Swimming is so much more than swimming. I am glad to have participated in it for so many years. It’s an honor to be recognized and to be part of this induction class 2024.

Little known fun facts:

  • I was on the cover of Swim magazine’s February/March 1985 issue with a photo from a meet at Brown University 1984.

  • For one year, I swam in the pool where Bill Yorzyk, the 1956 Olympic champion in the 200-metter butterfly swam when he was in town. The pool was 40 feet long and only 2 or 3 lanes wide with a low ceiling and minimal deck space. It wasn’t’ much, but if it was good enough for Bill, it was good enough for us.

  • I have a loose-leaf notebook with all my swims, splits, and meet locations since 1983.