Featured Camp: Michigan Swim Camp

Michigan Swim Camp

The Michigan Swim Camp offers four sessions and is open to any and all entrants.  Enrollment is limited to 195 campers per session.  A staff of 60 and three instructional sessions per day ensure the individual attention necessary for significant improvement.

Supervision is handled by the staff of the Michigan Swim Camps and the staff at Conference Management Services.  The dorm staff and hall counselors are responsible from 8:30 pm until 8:00 am.  The staff has primary responsibility during the day. They escort the swimmers to and from the dorm for each of the three sessions (9-11 am, 2-4 pm, and 6:30-8:30 pm).  They maintain a minimum ratio of 1:20. Our staff eats all of their meals in the cafeteria with the swimmers. The University of Michigan Public Safety Department has an officer on site to handle any serious incidents in the dorm.

Coaches Mike Bottom, Dr. Josh White, Rick Bishop, Sam Wensman, Nikki Kett, Kurt Kirner, and Roger Karns are directly involved in coaching and teaching campers.  All campers are HD filmed and receive a written stroke analysis.  An optional custom 4 view underwater video and/or Kisler start and turn analysis is available for an additional fee.  World-class staff provides leadership and mentoring that encourage each swimmer to strive for excellence in and out of the pool.  Camps are held at Canham Natatorium on the campus of the University of Michigan.

Michigan Swim Camp Dates:

Four sessions open to any and all entrants

  • June 9-13
  • June 16-20
  • July 28 – August 1
  • August 4-8

Michigan Swim Camp Costs:

  • $860/week overnight camp fee includes: instruction, swim cap, T-shirt, color photo, instructional printed materials, “goody bag”, and room and board
  • $690/week day camp fee includes: all of the above (less room and board) and between-session supervision.

Contact Michigan Swim Camp Staff:

8160 Valley View Drive

Ypsilanti, MI  48197

Phone:  734-845-8596

E-mail:  umswim1@gmail.com

Web:  www.michiganswimcamp.com or www.camps.mgoblue.com


The Technique Track is designed for individual and group instruction in fundamental and advanced stroke skills, starts, and turn techniques.  A daily optional training workout is available in addition to the three instructional/practice sessions daily.  Yardage in this one hour workout varies from 3,000-3,600 yards depending upon ability.

This track is a skill acquisition curriculum which begins with basic body balance and progresses to swimming with maximum efficiency (i.e. fewest number of strokes per length).  This is the foundation for all fast swimming.  Starts, turns, functional dryland training, nutrition education, team building, True Colors assessment, Mindset education, and mental training are part of this comprehensive curriculum.  Swimmers are filmed daily and their HD video is viewed and critiqued in written form.  Swimmers are encouraged to use their phone cameras to video their strokes and the coach’s assessment.

This track is designed for:  the younger swimmer (12 & under) in need of better technical skills; the older swimmer who is relatively new to the sport; high school swimmers who do not train year-round; and the skilled swimmer who needs a week of technical fine tuning without the added stress of intensive workouts.

The use of a front mount snorkel is strongly recommended.

The Intensive Training Track challenges swimmer to embrace the importance of team,to look at technique in new ways, and to learn how to work smarter as well as harder in practices.  Athletes will leave this camp with a new understanding of the sport and a desire to make themselves and those around them better.

This track is designed for swimmers 12 and older who have high aspirations in competitive swimming.  Swimmers will be divided into training groups based upon the workout focus and the ability level of the swimmer.  The daily schedule involves two in-water training workouts and one dryland workout and instructional sessions.  Threshold, VO2max, lactate tolerance, and maximal speed training are part of the in-water training program.  The evening session will be out of the water training with and emphasis on core strength, body awareness, and overall fitness.

Daily above water and underwater video review sessions will provide the backbone for each workout.  In addition each swimmer is videoed and receives a written stroke critique upon completion of the camp.

This track requires that swimmers arrive in shape and training at full capacity (e.g. ~40,000 yds/week) as daily volume averages between 8,000 and 10,000 yards.

A competent level of skill in all four strokes is required.  It is important not to “push” younger swimmers into this track.  We need to provide the best group cohesion, training volumes, and injury prevention.

Recommended equipment:  hand paddles; pull buoy; fins; kickboard; and front mount snorkel.

COACHING STAFF

HEAD COACH MIKE BOTTOM

Michigan Swimming Head Coach Mike BottomHonors & Accomplishments

  • Led Michigan to one NCAA title (men: 2013), nine Big Ten titles (men: 2009, 2011-16; women: 2016-17) and 10 top-10 NCAA finishes (men: 2009-15, 2018; women: 2016, 2018)
  • Six-time Big Ten Coach of the Year (Men: 2011-15; Women: 2018) and 2013 CSCAA Swimming Coach of the Year
  • Has coached eight national champions (seven individual, one relay), 114 Big Ten individual or relay champions and 48 CSCAA All-Americans
  • Coached at the last six Olympics; served as assistant coach for Team USA at the 2016 Games in Rio

Coaching Experience

  • University of Michigan — Head Coach, Men’s and Women’s Swimming and Diving (2013-Present)
  • University of Michigan — Head Coach, Men’s Swimming and Diving (2008-12)
  • University of California-Berkeley — Co-Head Coach, Men’s Swimming and Diving (1997-2008)
  • University of Southern California — Assistant Coach, Men’s and Women’s Swimming and Diving (1994-97)
  • Auburn University — Assistant Coach, Men’s and Women’s Swimming and Diving (1991-94)
  • Olympics (1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012, 2016)
  • World University Games (USA, Head Coach: 2013, 2015)
  • FINA World Championships (USA, Assistant Coach: 2009, 2013; Yemen, Head Coach: 2017)

Education

  • B.S., Psychology, University of Southern California (1978)
  • M.S., Counseling Psychology, Auburn University (1993)
  • Completed course work for Ph.D. in sport psychology

At Michigan
Bottom is in his 10th year at Michigan, the last six coming as the head coach of both the men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams.

In his ten years at the helm of the men’s team, Bottom is 83-5-1 in dual meets (52-3 in the Big Ten) with one NCAA title (2013), seven Big Ten titles (2009, 2011-16) and eight top-10 finishes at the NCAA Championships and four consecutive top-five finishes from 2012-15. He is a five-time Big Ten Men’s Swimming Coach of the Year (2011-15) and was named CSCAA Swimming Coach of the Year in 2013. During his tenure, Bottom has coached the men’s swimmers to a total of eight national titles (seven individual, one relay), and has produced 96 Big Ten individual or relay titles and 39 CSCAA All-Americans. In Bottom’s tenure, a Michigan swimmer has been named Big Ten Swimmer of the Year seven times: Tyler Clary (2009-10), Dan Madwed (2012), Connor Jaeger (2013-14), Dylan Bosch (2015) and Felix Auböck (2017).

In six years overseeing the women’s team, Bottom has completely transformed the culture, rebuilding the program from the ground up. The Wolverines had one of their best seasons in history in 2018, going undefeated in dual meets (10-0), winning their third consecutive Big Ten title by 235.5 points and finishing fourth at the NCAA Championships, the program’s highest finish in 22 years. Following the season, Bottom was named 2017-18 Big Ten Women’s Swimming and Diving Coach of the Year. Under Bottom, the women’s team is 43-13 in dual meets (31-6 in the Big Ten). They made steady progress in the national ranks, going from 36th in 2013 (Bottom’s first year) to 10th in 2016. All 18 short course (yards) swimming records have gone down since Bottom took over, including 12 in 2018. In his six years with the women’s team, Bottom has coached nine CSCAA All-Americans (individual) and 18 Big Ten individual or relay champions.

The men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams have also excelled in the classroom under Bottom’s watch. For the 2017-18 academic year, 49 student-athletes (75 percent of the roster) earned the U-M Athletic Academic Achievement Award, an honor that requires a GPA of 3.0 or higher. Of those 49, 32 were Academic All-Big Ten, four more than in 2016-17. In ten years, Bottom has coached five Academic All-Americans (PJ Ransford in 2016 and 2017, Justin Glanda and Richard Funk in 2015, Courtney Beidler in 2014, Connor Jaeger in both 2013 and 2014) and four Big Ten Medal of Honor recipients (PJ Ransford in 2018, Justin Glanda in 2015, John Wojciechowski in 2014, Dan Madwed in 2012).

International Experience

Bottom has over two decades of international coaching experience and has coached athletes at the last six Olympics, including a stint as assistant coach for Team USA at the 2016 Games in Rio. Several current and former student-athletes achieved their Olympic dreams under Bottom’s guidance at Michigan, including medalists Tyler Clary (2012; USA), Connor Jaeger (2012, 2016; USA) and Charlie Houchin (2012; USA), while also supervising Dylan Bosch (2016; South Africa), Anders Lie Nielsen (2012, 2016; Denmark) and brothers Miguel and Bruno Ortiz (2016; Spain). Among Bottom’s non-Michigan Olympics include 10-time Olympic medalist Gary Hall Jr. (USA), a 10-time Olympic medalist; Duje Draganja (Croatia), the silver medalist in the 50-meter freestyle in 2004; and Anthony Ervin (USA), a gold medalist in the 50-meter freestyle in both 2000 and 2016. In the three Olympics from 1996-2004, nine of the 18 medals awarded in the 50- and 100-meter freestyles were won by Bottom’s swimmers.

In addition to his Olympic résumé, Bottom has twice served as head men’s swimming coach at the World University Games (2013, 2015). He’s also been an assistant coach at two FINA World Championships (2009, 2013) and coached Mokhtar Al-Yamani (Yemen) at the 2017 FINA World Championships.

Prior To Michigan

Bottom spent 10 seasons (1997-2007) at California, serving as co-head coach of the men’s team alongside Thornton. Prior to moving to Cal, he spent four years as the Southern California men’s and women’s assistant coach (1994-97), helping the women’s team to its first NCAA championship in 1997. Bottom began his collegiate coaching career as an assistant with the Auburn men’s and women’s squads, coaching with David Marsh for four seasons (1991-94). Outside the collegiate ranks, Bottom spent nearly a decade with The Race Club in Tavernier, Fla., serving as head coach of the World Team, its elite level training group.

Following the 1980 Olympic boycott, Bottom spent 10 years in the business world, including positions with Pacific Bell in San Ramon, Calif., as a systems analyst (1984-90), and with Utah International, Inc., in San Francisco as an internal controls analyst (1982-84).

Since 1987, Bottom has directed BottomLine Aquatics, a start-up company dedicated to promoting health and growth in individuals of all ages. Initiatives range from after-school care programs for children ages 4-11, fundraisers, and instructional classes for beginners to elite level swimmers.

Swimming Career

Bottom swam collegiately at the University of Southern California (1975-77) where he won an NCAA title as part of the 400-yard medley relay team in 1976. He was a five-time All-American and four-time USA National Team member. Bottom earned a spot on the 1980 U.S. Olympic Team that did not compete due to a boycott.

Personal

Bottom is a charter member of the American College Counseling Association, a member of the American Counseling Association, the American Swim Coaches Association and College Swim Coaches Association of America. He is also certified by the National Board of Certified Counselors.

Bottom and his wife, Lauralyn, have three daughters: Dublyn, Macaiah and Breana.


Michigan Swimming Coach Mike Hilde

MIKE HILDE

Title: Diving Coach

Mike Hilde wrapped his fourth year as diving coach at the University of Michigan. He oversees both men’s and women’s divers. With an emphasis on platform diving and dryland training, the program has made significant strides in Hilde’s tenure.

Under Hilde, the women’s team has sent at least two divers to the NCAA Championships in three consecutive years, including a pair of freshmen (Nikki Canale, Christy Cutshaw) in 2018. Under Hilde, Michigan’s women’s divers have earned nine qualifying spots to the NCAA Championships, matching the total from previous 20 years prior to his arrival (1995-2014). On the men’s side, Hilde coached Ross Todd to NCAA Championships berths on three-meter and platform, becoming the first Michigan men’s diver to reach NCAAs in 14 years.

Hilde has had the most success with platform divers, as Christy Cutshaw (10th in 2018), Kristen Hayden (11th in 2017) and Carey Chen (8th in 2015) have all scored at the NCAA Championships. In 2017, Hilde coached Allie Murphy (three-meter) and Hayden to CSCAA All-America Honorable Mentions, marking the first time since 1994 that the women’s program has had two different divers score points at the same NCAA Championships. Chen was the program’s first NCAA Championships finalist in any of the three diving events in 19 years.

Hilde came to Ann Arbor after three years with the Mission Viejo Nadadores in Mission Viejo, Calif., where he was the National/International Team Director and an assistant coach. In Sept. 2014, he served on USA Diving’s coaching staff for the 2014 FINA World Junior Championships, held in Penza, Russia.

He sports 14 years of experience as both an athlete and coach. With the Mission Viejo Nadadores, Hilde designed training programs and provided technical instruction and guidance to Junior Olympic and Senior-level athletes. Last August, he was named National/International Team Director, serving as Communications Director for the Junior Olympic and Senior programs, while also serving as the team’s correspondent to USA Diving. He also formed training schedules and planned travel for national and international competitions. Since 2012, Hilde has additionally served on the Committee of Competitive Excellence within USA Diving.

He coached his divers to three top-four finishes at the J.O. National Championships (2011-13) and a top-five finish at the 2013 USA Diving Senior National Diving Championships. In addition, Hilde’s divers took first as a team at both the 2013 Age Group National Championships and 2013 Junior Olympic Games. Prior to his appointment in Mission Viejo, Hilde was head diving coach for one season at the University of San Diego (2010-11).

He was an accomplished collegiate diver at the University of Southern California (2004-07), where he was a four-time NCAA Championships qualifier. In his 12 career diving events at the NCAA Championships, Hilde scored in nine of them, including an NCAA All-America honor in 2006 on the three-meter springboard. Prior to USC, Hilde dove for the Mission Viejo Nadadores, where he was mentored by Olympians Hongping Li and Janet Ely. There, he was a five-time J.O. U.S. National champion, six-time U.S. West National champion and qualified for the 2004 U.S. Olympic Trials (three-meter).

He graduated from USC in 2007 with a bachelor’s degree in public policy, management and planning.


Michigan Swimming Associate Head Coach Dr. Josh White

DR. JOSH WHITE

Title: Associate Head Coach

Dr. Josh White concluded his 10th season on the Michigan coaching staff, serving the last six years as associate head coach for the men’s program. The previous four years (2009-12), White was the assistant head coach for the men’s team.

White has kept the strong tradition of distance swimming at Michigan alive. In his ten years, his distance swimmers have won 22 Big Ten individual titles across the distance freestyle events (200, 500, 1,650), with another eight coming on the 800-yard freestyle relay. The distance program was instrumental in helping Michigan win its national championship in 2013, as its swimmers held four of the top nine spots in the 1,650-yard freestyle and five of the top 16 spots in the 500-yard freestyle at the NCAA Championships. One month earlier at the 2013 Big Ten Championships, Michigan placed 1-2-3-4 in the 1,650-yard freestyle, 1-3-4-6-9 in the 500-yard freestyle and 1-2-3-4-6 in the 200-yard freestyle. Additionally, White tutored the 800-yard freestyle relay team of Connor Jaeger, Anders Lie Nielsen, Justin Glanda and Michael Wynalda to a then-NCAA record at the 2014 Big Ten Championships.

Michigan had the nation’s top distance program during the 2017-18 season. The Wolverines went 1-2-3 in the 500-yard freestyle, 400-yard IM and 1,650-yard freestyle at the 2018 Big Ten Championships and had three swimmers (Felix Auböck, PJ Ransford, Ricardo Vargas) make the podium in the 1,650-yard freestyle at the NCAA Championships. That year, Auböck was national runner-up in both the 500- and 1,650-yard freestyles, while Vargas was named Big Ten Freshman of the Year. In 2017, Auböck recorded the second-fastest mile time in history at the NCAA Championships (14:22.88) and was named both Big Ten Swimmer of the Year and Big Ten Freshman of the Year. Ransford, a back-to-back NCAA Elite 90 Award winner, was named to the U.S. National Team in back-to-back years (2016-17, 2017-18) under White’s guidance.

Beyond the NCAA, Michigan distance swimmers have achieved great international success, led by Jaeger, a two-time U.S. Olympian and 2016 silver medalist in the 1,500-meter freestyle. White coached four of the top nine milers at the 2012 US Olympic Trials and three of the top 11 in 2016. After his appearance at the 2012 Olympics in London, Jaeger vaulted to the top of the American distance swimming scene, winning three NCAA titles, five medals in international meets and setting American records in both the 1,500-meter freestyle and 1,650-yard freestyle before retiring after the 2016 Olympics.

At the 2012 Olympic Games, White served as the head swimming coach for Barbados, coaching former University of Florida standout Bradley Ally in the 100-meter backstroke, and the 200- and 400-meter individual medleys.

Athletes coached by Dr. White have also had great success in Open Water competition. He was the head open water coach for the United States at the 2011 and 2013 World University Games, and was named an assistant coach for Team USA at the 2012 FINA Short Course World Championships. The biggest beneficiary of White’s coaching is Sean Ryan, a multi-time U.S. National Team selection who qualified for the 2016 Olympics in Rio in the 10K race. Emily Brunemann, the 2008 NCAA champion in the 1,650-yard freestyle, was coached by White in 2009 when she won the 10K at the US National Championships and in 2010 when she placed third at the Pan-Pacific Championships. White also put Cameron Stitt on Team USA’s roster for the 2015 World University Games.

Prior to his arrival in Ann Arbor, White was head coach of the men’s and women’s swimming teams at Division-III Pomona-Pitzer (Claremont, Calif.) from 2006-08.

In 2006, White attained his Ph.D. in human performance from Indiana University, studying in the Counsilman Center for the Science of Swimming. His graduate research focused on the power generated during swimming and swimming power training.

While pursuing his Ph.D. at IU, White spent three years as a volunteer assistant coach with the Hoosier men’s swimming team. Additionally, White coached at Bloomington South (Ind.) High School and has club team experience with The Indiana Swim Team and Bloomington Swim Club.


Michigan Swimming Associate Head Coach Rick Bishop

RICK BISHOP

Title: Associate Head Coach

Rick Bishop concluded his sixth year as associate head coach, primarily working with the women’s swimming and diving team. In his tenure, Bishop has been instrumental in helping restore the women’s program to a national powerhouse with three consecutive Big Ten championships and a fourth-place finish at the NCAA Championships in 2018.

With Bishop’s guidance, the women’s program jumped from 36th in 2013 to 10th in 2016, and peaked with a fourth-place finish in 2018, the program’s highest in 22 years. The Wolverines won their third consecutive Big Ten title by 235.5 points — the largest margin of victory by any Big Ten team in seven years — for the program’s firs three-peat in 20 years. Bishop’s swimmers also have completely re-written the record board, as all 19 school records (in short course yards) have been broken, including 12 in 2018.

Bishop served as an assistant coach for USA Swimming at the 2016 Swimming World Championships (25m) in Canada and at the 2017 World University Games in Taiwan. Several swimmers under his guidance have represented their countries internationally, including 2017-18 U.S. National Team members Ali DeLoof, Sierra Schmidt and Miranda Tucker; Siobhán Haughey and Claudia Lau (Hong Kong; 2016 Olympics); Clara Smiddy and G Ryan (USA; 2015 Pan American Games); Marni Oldershaw (Canada; 2013 World University Games); Samantha Yeo (Singapore; 2017 World University Games, 2015 FINA World Championships) and Jamie Yeung (Hong Kong; 2017 World University Games).

Prior to coming to Michigan, Bishop spent the last four years with USA Swimming. Bishop’s role with USA Swimming had expanded every year since his arrival in Colorado Springs in 2008, including serving as a sport performance consultant for the Club Development arm of USA Swimming for two years before moving on to the national team in 2010. There, Bishop was performance support manager for one year (2010-11), managing the national team performance staff at the 2010 Short Course World Championships in Dubai. Most recently, Bishop was Manager of Coach Services and Education (2011-2012), where he was responsible for choosing the 2013 World University Games team.

Over his 20-plus years as coach, Bishop has garnered significant international experience. He spent two years on the Brazilian National Team coaching staff, first serving as an assistant coach at the 1995 World Championships in Rio de Janeiro and 1995 Pan-American Games in Mar del Plata, Argentina, before heading up the Brazilian Olympic Team at the 1996 Summer Games in Atlanta. He also served as an assistant coach for Jamaica at the 1998 Pan-American Games in Winnipeg, and was the head coach for the Netherlands Antilles at the 2007 World Championships in Melbourne, Australia.

Bishop began his coaching career by serving a three-year stint as an assistant men’s swimming coach at Harvard (1988-91) before moving to the University of Memphis Tiger Swimming (MTS) Club (1992-96), where he coached six swimmers to the Top 50 of the world rankings between 1994 and 1995.

In 1998, Bishop moved to Jacksonville, Fla., where he began a four-year stint as an assistant coach for The Bolles School, a private college preparatory day and boarding school. He assisted with high school national championship and state championship teams, coached high school All-Americans and U.S. Nationals finalists, and was co-Director of The Bolles School Summer Swim Camps. He went on to serve as head coach and aquatics director at the Baylor School in Chattanooga, Tenn., beginning in 2002, and also served as program director for the Baylor Swim Club, the school’s club team. In 2004, Bishop guided Baylor to a first-place finish (combined team) at the Tennessee State High School Championships, and coached 20 men’s and women’s All-Americans from 2003-04.

Bishop returned to The Bolles School in 2006 as head coach of the high school team and aquatics director of the club team, the Bolles Sharks. In his first year, both his boys and girls teams won the Florida High School 1A State Championship. The next year, in 2007, Bishop guided Bolles to a second-place finish at the 2007 USA Swimming Spring Championships (combined team), with Bishop guiding four Olympic Trials qualifiers and five swimmers ranked in the Top 105 in the world rankings.

Bishop attended the University of Massachusetts (1988), receiving his B.S. in exercise science, with a concentration in exercise physiology. At UMass, Bishop was team captain on the first team championship in the program’s history (1987).

Bishop and his wife, Pamela, have three sons – Liam, Aidan, and Kilian.


Michigan Swimming Assistant Coach Nikki Kett

NIKKI KETT

Title: Assistant Coach

Nikki Kett is in her first year as an assistant coach for the University of Michigan swimming and diving program. She was announced to the staff on June 26, 2018, after spending three years in the same capacity at Penn.

At Penn, Kett primarily worked with the women’s sprinters, while also serving as recruiting coordinator. This past year, she coached Virginia Burns to her fourth consecutive Ivy League title in the 500-yard freestyle and Quinn Scannell to an Ivy League record in the 200-yard backstroke. On the men’s side, she helped tutor Mark Andrew to a sweep in the 200- and 400-yard IMs, earning qualification for the NCAA Championships. In 2016, Kett’s first season at Penn, Chris Swanson became the school’s first national champion in the 1,650-yard freestyle.

Prior to her stint at Penn, Kett was an assistant coach at Johns Hopkins University for three years. During her time in Baltimore, JHU had three top-five team finishes on the women’s side and three top-eight team finishes on the men’s side. The program broke 47 school records and two NCAA D-III records, while she helped coach 59 All-Americans and 15 national champions (eight relay, seven individual). Additionally, Kett was named Women’s Assistant Coach of the Year at the 2013 College Swimming and Diving Awards.

Kett was a four-year letterwinner and 11-time All-American at Kenyon College, graduating with a degree in biology. As a senior, she finished third in the 200-yard breaststroke and fourth in the 100-yard breaststroke at the 2012 NCAA D-III Championships.

She has a master’s degree in kinesiology with a concentration in exercise and sports psychology from A.T. Still University in Mesa, Arizona. Additionally, Kett will graduate from Penn in August 2018 with a master’s degree in organizational dynamics, with her capstone project creating connected, high-performing teams.


Michigan Swimming Assistant Coach Sam Wensman

SAM WENSMAN

Title: Assistant Coach

Sam Wensman wrapped his second season as assistant coach for the University of Michigan men’s and women’s swimming and diving programs. Prior to 2016-17, Wensman spent three years (2014-16) as the volunteer assistant coach and two years (2012-13) as a program assistant. He also coached professional swimmers with Club Wolverine Elite leading into the 2012 and 2016 Olympics.

During the 2017-18 season, Wensman worked closely with the breaststroke group and helped several members of the team’s sophomore class reach the NCAA Championships. Jacob Montague, Jeremy Babinet, Charlie Swanson and Tommy Cope all finaled in the 200-yard breaststroke at the Big Ten Championships and qualified individually for the NCAA Championships; Cope set a school record and made the podium in the 200-yard breaststroke, while Montague and Babinet each scored points in the consolation final of the 100-yard breaststroke.

Wensman also has international coaching experience. In July 2017, he coached Felix Auböck at the FINA World Championships in Budapest, guiding the Austrian to finals berths in the 400- and 800-meter freestyles.

Wensman, a native of Durham, N.H., was a four-year letterwinner for the Wolverines, swimming from 2008-11 and specializing in the breaststroke. During his tenure, Wensman helped Michigan win three Big Ten titles (2008-09, 2011) and finish among the top 10 at the NCAA Championships all four years.

Wensman graduated from Michigan in 2011 with a degree in sport management.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

Welcome to our community. We invite you to join our discussion. Our community guidelines are simple: be respectful and constructive, keep on topic, and support your fellow commenters. Commenting signifies that you agree to our Terms of Use

1 Comment
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Jera Collinge
5 years ago

Natasza Kozaczynski-Krajcovic

1
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x