A Giant Has
Fallen: Doc Counsilman Dies
BLOOMINGTON, Indiana, January 4. JAMES Edward "Doc"
Counsilman, perhaps the greatest coach/scientist/innovator in the sport
of swimming, passed away peacefully in his sleep at 5:30 this morning.
The former Indiana University coach was 83.
James Edward 'Doc' Counsilman
Born: 28th December 1920, Birmingham, Alabama
Died: 4th January, 2004, Bloomington, Indiana
A GIANT HAS FALLEN
By Cecil Colwin
COACH James Edward 'Doc' Counsilman of Indiana University, who passed
away in Bloomington, Indiana, at 5:30 this morning, the 4th January,
2004, after many years of suffering the torments of Parkinson's disease,
was recognized world-wide as one of the great coaches in swimming
history and also as the pre-eminent visionary in the history of
swimming. True, others have made major discoveries, but taking the
science of competitive swimming, from the birth of the sport, to the
time of Counsilman, what 'Doc' contributed was much the better half. His
life's work will leave an indelible mark on the sport.
A list of swimmers who swam for Doc reads like a who's who of swimming
greats: Mark Spitz, Jim Montgomery, Gary Hall, John Kinsella, Mike Troy,
Charles Hickcox, Don McKenzie, Chet Jastremski, Tom Stock, George
Breen, Mike Stamm, Alan Somers, Ted Stickles, Larry Schulhof,
John Murphy, and many others.
Doc's swimmers gloried in hard, intelligent work, and they attached a
stigma to those who didn't pull their weight. Doc was a born master of
group dynamics; he used positive thinking, ritual, ceremony, and
tradition to bond swimmers into tough, enthusiastic, successful teams.
But, above all, Doc was a fine inspirational coach, as sensitive to the
aspirations and emotions of the swimmers as a photographic plate is to
light.
There is insufficient space to list all the fine achievements of
individual Indiana swimmers. There were many all-time 'firsts', the most
notable of all being Mark Spitz's seven gold medals at the 1972 Munich
Olympics, and Jim Montgomery's 100 meter Olympic freestyle win in
Montreal, 1976, when he became the first swimmer in history to crack 50
seconds for the distance.
Coaching Philosophy
Doc's coaching philosophy was influenced in several ways by the late
Ernst Vornbrock who aimed to help swimmers achieve their full academic,
athletic, and social potential. "Maturity in coaching is important;
not only should the coach be aware of one's own basic needs, but also of
those of the team, and when the two coincide, the coach usually has a
very sound philosophy."
Doc warned about getting caught in the trap of seeking to develop
champions only. "You don't have to sacrifice the rest of the team
to develop the exceptional few", he often said. "Develop a
state of mind that concerns itself with everyone on the team. Then you
will have more than your fair share of champions, and fewer champions
will have a distorted idea of their own importance."
Doc readily admits that he learned a great deal from the talented
swimmers he coached. "For example, Mark Spitz taught me a
lot", he says. "Great swimmers usually have an innate sense of
how they function. They seem to know instinctively how hard they need to
work, and when they need to ease off. There's no need for the
slave-driver approach to coaching. By respecting the swimmer's
perceptions about his swimming, and by good communication, a coach can
develop the sensitivity to understand the swimmer's basic needs."
For over 20 years, about 18,000 kids attended Doc's annual swim stroke
clinics. where he taught his assistants the importance of a positive
approach to stroke instruction, and how important it was not to jump in
with criticisms of a young swimmer's stroke, but rather to praise the
good points about it.
The success of Indiana's swimming teams became a tradition in the
Hoosier State, and twice the team was given a dinner by the governor of
Indiana. And, if this were not enough, once a year Marge Counsilman
invited the team home for lasagna.
Doc's "Jelly Bean Day" was another traditional occasion. Once
a season, every swimmer was timed for 800 meters, using his particular
competitive stroke. A pound of jelly beans was awarded to every swimmer
making standard times. This became such a tradition that the stands were
half-filled with spectators, and the results were published in the local
newspaper.
The Scientist-Coach
Before the advent of Counsilman, swimming coaches hadn't taken sports
science seriously. Most scientists weren't good at explaining
themselves; their work was generally thought to be 'too technical', and
of little practical value. Frustrated, they withdrew into esoteric
language, referring to the public as 'laymen,' and developing obscure
terms from which a naive, secret-society feeling of superiority was
derived.
Counsilman, however, wrote simply as well as accurately. He understood
the sport, had an intuitive feel for it, and was immensely creative. He
was a former national champion, a successful coach, and trained in
scientific investigation by the best in the field. He was one of the few
who knew how to ask the right questions.
The word went out that 'Counsilman's stuff really worked.' Coaches
started to read his papers on interval training. They learned how to
control work-rest ratios and develop a swimmer's speed and endurance.
Then, when Counsilman published his work that first explained how the
laws of physics govern stroke mechanics, they read that too, applied it,
and found that their swimmers swam more efficiently.
In short, "Doc" directed his mind to a methodical and
unrelenting analysis of swimming techniques in a manner never before
attempted. The quality that set "Doc" apart was perhaps the
persistence of his curiosity about the world. Throughout his career his
keen, enquiring mind spent hours extracting information from the data
and forming workable concepts.
The result was that his swimming teams improved, and so did the teams of
those coaches around the world who adopted his concepts. They knew that
Counsilman was one of them, a scientist but also a coach, and a great
one at that. He was twice American Olympic Coach (1964 and 1976). The
1964 team won all but two gold medals and over half of all medals; the
1976 team won all but one gold medal and three-fourths of all medals. At
one time or another, his swimmers set world records in every single
men's event, a record unequaled by any other team. When 'Doc' retired in
1990, his teams' win/loss record at Indiana was 286-36-1, and his
swimmers had won seven long course national team championships.
Early Years
James Edward Counsilman was born of German-American parents in
Birmingham, Alabama, on the 28th December, 1920, the younger son of
Joseph and Ottilia Counsilman. He was two years old when his parents
separated, and his mother returned with Jim and his brother, Joe (3
1/2), to her home town of St Louis, Missouri.
The small Counsilman family arrived in St Louis, poor and desperate,
destined to face years of hardship and privation. But Ottilia Counsilman,
a staunch member of the Missouri Lutheran Synod, was a woman of strong
principles, great drive, and indomitable spirit. She faced hardship with
self-sacrifice, and cheerful, perennial optimism, encouraging her two
sons by saying: 'God helps those who help themselves.'
James Counsilman always had an implacable curiosity, and was fascinated
by all kinds of swimming motions in nature. As a boy, he loved to watch
fish slip through water, and he caught snakes and put them in water to
see them swim. The outcome of their interest in animals was that Joe
became a veterinary surgeon, and Jim became the coach/scientist who
uncovered many of the secrets of human swimming.
Becomes A Swimmer
Together with 'Baron', a black Labrador Retriever, the two brothers
spent their boyhood rambling the 1400 acres of nearby Forest Park. One
day, they were wading in the park's fish hatchery when Jim stepped into
a hole and nearly drowned. He decided to teach himself how to swim, and
within a year he won a place on his high school swim team. He also
became a fine high school track and field athlete, covering 440 yards in
54 seconds, and leaping 5'10" in the high jump. He had wanted to be
a diver, but he broke his ankle so decided to focus on swimming. Now
keenly interested in swimming, he read the autobiography of Captain
Matthew Webb, first man to swim the Channel. Webb's feats inspired Jim.
He developed into a fine swimmer and a national champion. He went on to
become one of the great figures in the history of the sport. And, like
Matthew Webb, he accomplished his own 'first' when he became, at 58, the
oldest man to swim the Channel.
Ernst Vornbrock - A Profound Influence
In 1938, at Maplewood, Missouri, Jim Counsilman won his first important
swimming race, and caught the attention of Ernst Vornbrock, the coach at
the St. Louis Downtown YMCA. Vornbrock came into Jim's life at the right
time. His mother had toiled hard and long to support her family, the two
boys had always been trouble-free and dependable, but the influence of a
strong male figure was never more needed. By comparison with his school
friends, Jim was at a disadvantage. Vornbrock saw this, and soon took a
keen interest in the young man, in whom he discerned the character and
talent that leads to success.
Vornbrock became a big influence in Jim Counsilman's life; so much so
that, 30 years later, Jim was to dedicate his epoch-making book,
"The Science of Swimming," to "My coach, the late Ernst
Vornbrock." Vornbrock helped Jim to improve his self-image, and
discover the potential that lay within him. A year before meeting
Vornbrock, Jim had graduated 113th in a class of 116, and was in the
depths of despair. He had shown promise in mathematics, an indication of
conceptual ability, but his teachers overlooked his strong points
instead of using them as positive reinforcement. This failure to
perceive his innate ability, resulted in Jim never thinking of himself
as smart.
But Vornbrock was devoted 'to helping kids improve their self-esteem,
and become better adjusted.' A highly intuitive person, Vornbrock
treated Jim like his own son and taught him to think positively, and to
'always finish what you start'. Vornbrock introduced him to classical
music, and the arts in general, and even allowed him access to his
collection of classical records with the result that Counsilman
developed a life-long appreciation of classical music; Puccini's
operas,"Turandot" and "Madam Butterfly" becoming his
favorites.
The Depression Years Jim Counsilman graduated from high school in
1937 in the middle of the Great Depression. Jim had inherited his
mother's tremendous drive, and he found employment wherever he could get
it; one week he would work as a packer for Singer sewing machines, while
the next week might find him climbing poles and wiring up domestic
telephones for $20 a week. During this time he continued to attend
workouts, walking two miles there and two miles back again, to both
early morning and evening practices.
In 1941, the United States national outdoor championships were held in
Doc's hometown of St.Louis which was fortunate because he couldn't have
afforded the travel to travel elsewhere. Jim finished second in the 200
meters breaststroke event. He swam the distance by alternating between
orthodox breaststroke and the hybrid 'butterfly-breaststroke', a
combination of butterfly arm-action and breaststroke kick.
At the meet, Coach Vornbrock introduced Jim to Mike Peppe, coach of the
Ohio State University. There were no scholarships in those days, but
Mike Peppe took an interest in Jim, and found him a job as an elevator
operator in the Statehouse (State of Ohio governmental building), where
he earned 40 cents an hour, which bought a full meal in those days. In
addition, Peppe arranged for Jim to share a room with the great Hawaian
swimmer Keo Nakama in the University's International House.
Counsilman enrolled in a B. A. course, majoring in forestry, but later
switched to a science degree in physical education. In April, 1942, he
competed in the national short course championships, in Columbus, Ohio,
and won the 220 yards breaststroke event, setting a new National AAU
record in the process.
In June 1942, Coach Hal Minto invited Doc to train with him at Cuyahoga
Falls, Ohio, to prepare for the national long course championships. He
was not to know that the pool was filled with artesian well water , and
that it was 'as cold as ice'. Neither did he know that, at Cuyahoga
Falls, he was to meet Marjorie Scrafford, his future wife and life-long
companion for 60 years.
After winning the national 200 meters title at New London, Connecticut,
in August, 1942, Doc and Marjorie started dating. Then he returned to
Ohio State, only to be called up for military service in early March
1943, a week before the Big 10 Conference Meet. Although Doc wasn't to
compete in the Big 10 for the first time until 1946, when the war was
over, Jim was not about to delay his marriage, and he and 'Marge' were
wed on June 15th 1943. Jim left for Europe on active service in January,
1945.
The U.S. Army Air Corps
Doc signed up in the U.S. Army Air Corps, and scored in the 99th
percentile on the I. Q. tests. Although not talkative about his actual
military service, it is on record that, between January and May,1945,
when the war in Europe ended, Doc flew 32 missions as a B-24 bomber
pilot and was awarded the Air Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster. While bombing
the railroad marshalling yards in Innsbruck, his plane's landing gear
was shot out, and he flew the plane over the Alps to crash land near
Zagreb in Yugoslavia, saving the lives of his crew. For his courage Jim
Counsilman was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross.
First Coaching Experience
Discharged from the Army Air Corps in August 1945, Jim returned to his
studies at Ohio State, and was appointed captain of the
championship-winning swimming team in 1946 and 1947. In 1946, he won the
Big Ten Conference 200 yards breaststroke title, and took second in the
same
event to Charles Keating in the NCAA championships.
In those days swimmers were allowed to coach while still competing, and
Mike Peppe, impressed by Jim's personality and knowledge, asked him to
be his assistant. The former bomber pilot made a strong, mature leader
to whom the swimmers reacted with enthusiasm. And he kept a log, just as
he had done in the Air Corps. He recorded every workout, from the day he
started coaching. Years later, he was to say: "The most valuable
research I ever did was contained in the daily training log of every
workout I set in my career."
In 1946 the Ohio State team, which had a number of great Hawaiian
swimmers on its roster, went to Hawaii for the summer to train under the
legendary coach, Soichi Sakamoto. Sakamoto taught Doc that swimmers
could train much harder than most people thought they could; in fact,
every aspect of the Hawaiian experience made a great impression on him.
Later Doc was to say: "Sakamoto trained the swimmers hard, but he
was a kind, gentle person, and he never screamed or hollered. If you did
something that he didn't like, he would become quiet, but he was not
vengeful or vindictive. Sakamoto never won a place as a coach on a
United States Team.He wasn't a politician, and he was never really
recognized, even when he had the majority of swimmers on the team. At
least, he should have been selected as the distance coach."
Swimming Research
Counsilman graduated from Ohio State in 1947, then went to the
University of Illinois to study for a master's degree under Professor
Thomas Kirk Cureton, regarded as "the father of swimming
research." Cureton's pioneering research made prolific
contributions to understanding physical fitness. He was one of the first
to undertake the physiological measuring of champion swimmers. Cureton
was known for his ability to make students think. He challenged them,
stimulated their curiosity, and their desire to investigate,
saying:"If you end up upsetting tradition, why that's fine".
Doc admired Tom Cureton for his original thinking, and not being afraid
to upset tradition. He respected Cureton's individualism and drive.
Cureton taught him how to apply the laws of physics to human movement;
how not to be afraid to try new methods, and make radical changes. Over
the years, Doc's 's mind ranged far and wide, speculating over unsolved
problems in the new field of competitive swimming.
Doc's main focus in preparing his master's thesis, was on "A
Cinematographic Analysis of the Butterfly-Breaststroke", which
included a comparison between the breaststroke whip and wedge kick
actions. In this study, he pioneered the use of the motion camera as a
scientific instrument for analyzing swimming techniques.
Doc discovered that underwater photography, to be successful, required
plenty of light and clear water, and Jim found the ideal venue at Silver
Springs, Florida, where he obtained the use of a specially made
underwater tank. Among the first subjects in his underwater studies were
such great swimmers as Adolph Kiefer, 1936 Olympic backstroke champion,
Wally Ris, 1948 Olympic 100 meter freestyle champion, Keith Carter,
national butterfly champion, Bowen Stassforth, 1952 Olympic silver
medalist in the 200 m. butterfly, and George Breen, 1500 m.
Olympic bronze medalist, 1956.
Doc's First Olympic Champion
Completing his master's degree, Doc went to the University of Iowa, on
Cureton's advice, and Cureton drove him there to meet C. H. McCloy and
W.W. Tuttle, important names in exercise physiology, a science then only
in its infancy. Years later, Doc would say: "Both these men were
also good biomechanists. They were great pioneers, and I can't say
enough in their praise. In retrospect, much of the material they were
publishing was a bit naive, but, nevertheless, very good for the
time."
While preparing his doctoral dissertation, Doc was assistant coach to
David Armbruster. In 1948, Jim coached Iowa swimmer, Walter Ris, to the
Olympic 100 meters freeestyle title at the London Olympics. Head coach
Armbruster was busy building a boat in his garage; so it was Jim who
coached Ris all that summer. Ris' Olympic victory gave Doc a great deal
of confidence.
Counsilman completed his doctorate in August, 1951. His dissertation
discussed "The Application of Force in Two Types of Crawl
Stroke", and was a continuation of Louis Alley's early work on the
crawl-stroke. Jim stayed one academic year longer at Iowa, then accepted
a post as assistant professor and head swimming coach at The State
University of New York (SUNY) at Cortland.
He taught tests, measurements, statistics and physiology, coached the
swimming team, and junior varsity soccer. The university administration,
anxious to publicize the qualifications of its staff, insisted that
personnel of doctoral status should be addressed as "Doctor".
But Jim's students, somewhat less formally, addressed him as 'Doc.' So
'Doc' he became, and 'Doc' he he has remained- -right through into
swimming history
Cortland was exclusively a teacher's college, and not a
place where one would expect to find Olympic calibre talent. But one day
Doc spotted a freshman with obvious feel for the water. He had also seen
him on the soccer field, and Doc knew that the young man had never swum
competitively, but Counsilman told him that, with hard work, he could
break world records. Three years later, George Breen won a bronze
medal in the Melbourne Olympic Games, and broke three world records in
distance freestyle.
Breen's unorthodox two-beat crossover crawl kick was criticised by
traditionalists who maintained that the 'correct' leg action in crawl
swimming was the six-beat kick. In 1957, Doc was the first to describe
and explain the two-beat crawl, and it became standard for most distance
swimmers.
Doc experimented with weight training. He held a landmark
symposium of weight training experts at Cortland State in 1954 that
helped to dispel the fallacy that weight training made swimmers
'muscle-bound'. The Australians were making big strides with new
training methods, and it was significant that George Breen, a
weight-trained athlete, was one of the few non-Australians to challenge
them.
George Breen confirmed what Doc had learned from Coach Sakamoto in
Hawaii; namely that swimmers are capable of adapting to large amounts of
hard work. At Cortland, Doc soon made his mark. In five years his team
won 35 of 40 meets, and four conference titles. Not only did he coach
his team to win, but he always encouraged his swimmers to reach for
their full potential in all aspects of their lives. Ernst Vornbrock had
taught him well.
Home in Indiana
By the late 1950's, Doc Counsilman's reputation as a coach and
researcher was well established, and, when Coach Robert Royer became ill
and had to retire from his post at Indiana University, Frank McKinney
urged the university to hire Doc. Doc thrived on being in the thick of
competition, and it was natural that he jumped at the chance to enter
the big leagues
Doc came to Bloomington in 1957, and two outstanding swimmers, Frank
McKinney and Frank Brunell, came to swim for Doc at Indiana. Soon others
followed. Don Watson, coach of the outstanding Hinsdale High School, who
had trained under Doc at Iowa, and was a close friend, encouraged
swimmers such as John Kinsella, Scott Cordin, John Murphy, and many
others, to go to Indiana. From Australia came Coach Don Talbot's
outstanding stars, Kevin Berry and Robert Windle, both of Olympic gold
medal fame. The momentum was so great that, at the 1964 Olympic Trials,
at Flushing Meadows, New York, seven of the eight finalists in the 200
meters breaststroke, led by the great Chet Jastremski, came from Doc's
team.
Although barred from competing in the NCAA's from 1961-1963 because of
rule infractions by the university football program, Doc kept morale
high and the team continued to compete at a high level in the Big Ten
and AAU championships. Ted Stickles broke seven world records in the
individual medley event during his career, and, in fact, during those
years, it was calculated that Indiana teams could have defeated the rest
of the world in a head-to-head competition.
Doc Counsilman on "The Scientific Method"
Doc Counsilman had an excellent training in the scientific method. His
advice to students was: "Outline your topic clearly and discipline
yourself to stay within the limits of your subject." Doc realized
it was important not to become a mere recorder of facts; one should try
to penetrate the mystery of their origin.
Doc once said that true understanding in any area of science is always
preceded by a series of responses involving three stages: Stage One:
Curiosity; Stage Two: Confusion; and Stage Three: Comprehension. Doc
added that coaches and scientists are constantly challenged by this
triad of learning. "The process can be stimulating, but it is often
frustrating and annoying because the light at the end of the tunnel
often seems very distant."
Doc said that a study often shows that a certain method is the best,
while another study directly contradicts the first one. "The more
we discuss the questions, and research them, the further we push
ourselves into the second stage, that of confusion. Finally, after
dwelling for some time in this stage, we begin to develop some
understanding and venture into Stage Three, that of comprehension."
Doc's Advice to Today's Coaches
Doc once said: "I doubt that any intelligent scientist/coach
believes he ever enters fully into Stage Three on any subject. As he
starts to comprehend some concept or principle, he becomes aware of new
unanswered questions and the cycle of the triad response begins all over
again. The perceptive scientist has come full circle and enters again
into Stage One as the cycle repeats itself."
Doc believed that we keep progressing by evaluating change objectively.
He warned: "Don't paint yourself into a corner; people write
something and they are scared to walk away from it." Doc had an
anti-doctrinaire nature which precluded him from swallowing systems
whole. He believed that putting methods into neat pigeon holes, to
synthesize them, led to "stagnation and not progress."
Doc's Contributions to Competitive Swimming Doc contributed to
every phase ompetitive swimming. No phase of the sport escaped his
attention and was not significantly improved by his influence. His
ground-breaking research covered a wide field. In the area of exercise
physiology, and conditioning, he published papers on a wide range of
topics: interval training, strength training, isokinetic and biokinetic
exercises, hypoxic training, altitude training, and so on and on.
Underwater Stroke Analysis
Doc's first interest had been in kinesiology, the science dealing with
the Doc's contributions to competitive swimming study of body mechanics
and the prescription of exercises for developing specific muscle groups.
This interest started in high school when he saved up to buy a small
"Argus" camera for ten dollars, and asked a school friend to
photograph him in various phases of the high jump. Little did he know
that this modest start was to grow into a photographic odyssey spanning
more than half a century, in which he was to become the consummate
artist of underwater photography, who also pioneered the use of the
movie camera as a scientific instrument.
Doc once said: "With the wisdom of hindsight, it's hard to believe
that, only forty years ago, coaches didn't know the exact answers to
such questions as to 'where and how should the hands enter the water?',
'should the pull be bent or straight?', 'what should be the path of the
hands in the stroke?', and 'should the stroke be short or long, slow or
fast?'
Doc's early attempts at motion film analysis of swimmers started with
the use of an old aircraft movie camera that, according to Doc, 'looked
as if it had been through both World War I and World War II!' Using
outdated film given to him gratis by the university athletic department
photographer, he could shoot five or six swimmers in slow motion with
each 100 foot roll. The film still cost six dollars per roll to process.
Then he would take the film home to study it. In typical painstaking and
implacable fashion, Doc gradually solved the problems of underwater
photography; light refraction, image distortion, and the use of grids to
measure stroke velocity and acceleration.
Last but not least, the big difficulty was the design of an underwater
camera housing that was both water-proof, and easily manoeuvrable.
Before perfecting an ideal camera housing, Doc wrote off two expensive
movie cameras that were ruined by leakage, and his basement shelves
still carry umpteen experimental housings that failed to meet his needs.
Lest it be thought that Doc had access to only the most expensive
testing instruments, it should be known that he was a master at devising
ingenious makeshift equipment. He followed the precepts of Ivan Pavlov,
the Russian scientist, who said: 'Accustom yourself to the roughest and
simplest scientific tools'. Doc cleverly contrived a unique system of
underwater strobe light photography, and used it to show, for the first
time, the true nature of human swimming propulsion.
He attached a battery-powered flashing light to the mid-fingers of a
swimmer's hands, and had him swim in complete darkness, before flashing
a strobe light to make a single picture that showed where the hand was
at a given point. Because he left the shutter open throughout the entire
swim, he obtained pictures of the flashing light, before and after the
strobe was fired, and thus was able to work out where the hand was at
other points in the stroke cycle. Doc's underwater photography
completely revised the understanding of stroke mechanics. Using this
method, Doc eventually produced the first complete analysis, not only of
stroke mechanics and the forces developed, but also of the actual
propulsive mechanisms used in swimming.
The Bernoulli Effect in Swimming
There was a time in the 1960's and the 1970's, when Swimming World
magazine published at least one 'breakthrough' article by Doc every
year. Readers, and coaches, in particular, developed the habit of
quickly scanning the pages of each new issue, seeking new articles by
Doc. Even his Indiana swimmers were caught up in the anticipation, and
one day they appeared on deck in bright new T-shirts inscribed
"What's up Doc?"
Each new discovery was released to the swimming public in sequence to
aid the process of concept formation. First he showed, by means of
underwater trace-light photography, that swimmers used curved line
sculling patterns, and did not pull in a straight backward line, as
commonly believed. Only in his next paper did he reveal his major
discovery, namely that swimmers propel mainly by means of lift
propulsion (the 'Bernoulli Effect').
Later, he expanded this work to show how good swimmers have acceleration
patterns that are interrelated with lift propulsion.
Mentor to the World Doc published over 100 papers on various
aspects of swimming research. His interest even extended to swimming
pool design, anti-turbulence lanes, and building thousands of the first
specially-designed pace clocks for interval training.
He visited no fewer than 24 countries. A constant stream of coaches,
from over 37 countries, came to Bloomington to interview him, and often
to stay and complete studies under his guidance. Then they went home to
spread the Counsilman gospel.
In 1968, his classic book, "The Science of Swimming", showed
the value of a scientific approach, and was reprinted 22 times. The book
had immediate credibility because its author was also an outstanding
coach at the pinnacle of his career, with a long and illustrious record
of producing world-record holders and Olympic champions.
In 1977, he published another best seller, "Competitive Swimming
Manual".An outstanding feature was the series of underwater action
sequences of Mark Spitz, Gary Hall, Jenny Turrall, Kornelia Ender, and
dozens more of the greatest swimming stars of the 1970's, from the
United States, Australia, and East Germany. This collection remains the
finest photographic record of the stroke mechanics of great swimmers.
"Competitive Swimming Manual" included an important section on
the psychology of coaching. The eminent George Haines paid Doc a fine
compliment when he said that Doc had the ability to bring together
matured star swimmers, from a wide variety of backgrounds, and then
coach them to even greater improvement. Doc aptly fits the great
Australian swimmer, John Devitt's description of a great coach: "A
great coach can take a good swimmer and make him great, and he can also
take a great swimmer and make him greater."
The 'X' Factor
Doc sometimes adopted a folksy way of putting his message across. His
talk at the ASCA World Clinic in Montreal in 1971 on "The 'X'
Factor in Coaching" remains a classic. He spoke about a mythical
coach, 'Frank Zilch' who, hard as he tried to become successful, lacked
the 'X' factor.' Doc explained the 'X' factor as the ability to
recognize the important things in coaching, and to work on them, and to
minimize the unimportant.
"The great coach must have two basic abilities - he must be a good
organizer and a good psychologist," said Doc. "The good
organizer will havethe large team, will attract the good swimmers from
other teams, and develop the Mark Spitzs and Gary Halls of the future.
The good psychologist will be able to handle the parent problems, get
along with the city council, and be able to communicate successfully
with the swimmers - he will have the 'super' teams."
"The good coach today needs only an elementary knowledge of
conditioning physiology and stroke mechanics. He does not need these to
get the job done. However nothing remains static, and in the future
these two areas will become more and more important."
Doc Emulated Matthew Webb No one knows when Doc first started to
nurture the idea of swimming the English Channel, not even Doc himself.
He had joined the masters' swimming movement when it started in the
early 70's, and soon made a mark for himself in its ranks. Marge
Counsilman noticed that he was spending more and more time swimming in
Lake Monroe, near Bloomington. He had decided to swim the English
Channel. Marge didn't think this was a good idea, but try as she did,
she was unable to dissuade him.
Doc engaged the services of Tom Hetzel, a renowned coach of channel
swimmers, and Hetzel recommended that Doc build up to a ten mile swim
twice a month...to begin with. Then, a month before the Channel attempt,
he was to have reached a stage where he could cover an average of 100
miles permonth. During this time, Doc could be seen regularly swimming
up and down Lake Monroe, with one of his students motoring close by in
an escort boat.
Hetzel, a shrewd psychologist, warned Doc: "You need to stop
thinking in minutes and seconds, like a competitive swimmer, but rather
in hours; hours and hours...That's the biggest mental hurdle every
Channel swimmer mustovercome. The Channel swimmer also needs to not let
unexpected events get him ruffled."
When the great moment came on September 17, 1979, he set off at dawn
from Shakespeare Beach, swimming a steady seventy strokes per minute.
Aboard the 26 foot fishing boat accompanying him were Marge, Tom Hetzel,
two television photographers, a "Sports Illustrated" writer,
an "S.I." photographer, the official observer, Ray Scott of
the Channel Swimming Association, and the fishing boat captain, Reg
Brickell, and his two sons.
For hour after hour, except when feeding, he plodded along, arms pulling
and recovering in a steady crawl stroke, and purposely breathing late to
avoid inhaling sea water. Hetzel had warned Doc to expect the
unexpected, and it happened when an under-manned Russian trawler
appeared, coming straight towards him. The captain of the fishing boat
radioed the trawler to warn them that a channel swimmer was in the sea
in front of them. But the trawler was under the control of an automatic
pilot while the crew was below deck taking coffee, and it kept coming
straight at him, almost to the point where it would have been too late
to avoid him. In desperation, the fishing boat radioed to shore, and
only then did the trawler get the message, and take evasive action.
Hetzel had arranged a set of signals with Doc; he had three hats which
he was to change at certain intervals, and when he changed his hat for
the last time, that was to be the signal that Doc had only three more
miles to go. Towards the end of the swim, the worst fear of most Channel
swimmers appeared about to happen when the weather took a sudden turn.
The rolling swell suddenly became a violent chopping sea that threatened
to engulf Doc. The wind whipped up, and it was obvious that Doc was very
tired. It was feared his core temperature could drop so low that his
brain would stop functioning properly, and he would start hallucinating.
At that moment, however, Tom Hetzel changed hats for the last time,
indicating that there were only three more miles to cover. Doc
remembered Ernst Vornbrock and how he had taught him: "the most
important thing in life is to always finish what you start." Doc
started swimming with renewed determination.
Finally, just at sunset, the oldest man to swim the channel found
himself wading ashore. "The tide had caused him to miss the
traditional finishing spot at Cap Gris-Nez, and he landed at Wissant, 13
hours and 7 minutes after leaving the English shore.
The news of Doc's swim spread rapidly around the world. Doc and Marge
flew straight from London to Seattle. When Doc entered the conference
room at the ASCA world coaches' conference to give his talk, over one
thousand colleagues rose spontaneously and gave him the ovation of his
life.
On their way home, when Doc and Marge arrived in Chicago, an Indiana
University plane was waiting, sent specially to bring them home. At
Bloomington airport, before the Mayor and the University president could
reach them to extend their official welcome, their grandson, overcome by
impatience, broke ranks and ran on to the tarmac to greet them. There
was a motorcade parade. Nearly the whole student body and most of the
town's people lined the streets to welcome them and show their joy. In
every respect Doc had finished what he had started.
SwimInfo has learned there will be a special memorial service and
appreciation for Doc Counsilman in April in Indiana, posibly in
conjunction with the USMS Short Course Nationals.
Comments from our readers on Doc Counsilman are welcome.
"Doc" James Counsilman
Personal Data.
Degrees: B.S. (cum laude), Ohio State University, 1947 M.S., University
of
Illinois, 1948 Ph. D., State University of Iowa, 1951
Positions elsewhere and years in each:
Graduate Assistant and Assistant
Swimming Coach University of Illinois, 1947-1948; Instructor, 1948-1952
and
Assistant Professor, 1952 State University of Iowa; Assistant Professor,
1952-1954, Associate Professor, 1954-1957, Professor, 1957 appointment,
State University of New York at Cortland.
Ranks held at Indiana and years in each:
Associate Professor, 1963-1966 Professor, 1966-1990.
Courses taught:
A384 - Swimming Techniques P530 - Advanced Theory of
Training Athletes M130 - Life Saving M335 - Water Safety Instruction
P740 -
Research in Physical Education T790 - Thesis in Health, Physical
Education
& Recreation
Books:
The Science of Swimming Prentice-Hall Inc. 1968 (Twenty-two
printings)
The Complete Book of Swimming Athenaeum Inc, 1977
Competitive Swimming Manual for Swimmers and Coaches, Counsilman Co.,
Inc.
1977 The New
Science of Swimming, Prentice Hall, Inc., 1994 (with Brian E. Counsilman)
Honors and Awards (Over 25. Many deleted for reasons of space)
- National AAU Swimming Award and Outstanding Coach of the Year,
1963.
- College Coach of the Year, 1968, 1969, 1970.
- Founding President of the International Swimming Hall of Fame
(1965- 1969)
- President of the American Swimming Coaches' Association 1965 &
1966, and Member of the Board of Directors , 1963-1972.
- Member of the Board of Directors, Sports International. Conducted
through the Department of State ; all selections of coaches for
foreign assignment were approved by Dr Counsilman through Nicholas
Rodis, Special Assistant to the U. S. President, (1963 - 1968).
- Awarded the FINA Prize Eminence, 1972. (This award was later
withdrawn when it was decided that it should not be granted to a
professional coach.)
- Max Ritter Award, 1980.
- Fellow of the American College of Sports Medicine.
- Consultant, President's Council for Physical Fitness, 1960-1980.
- Member of The President's Council on Physical Fitness (Nixon
administration.)
- Member of the President's Council on Olympic Sports (Ford's
Administration.)
- Member of the National YMCA Aquatic Committee, 1955 - 1967.
- Inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame, 1976.
- Member of the NCAA Rules Committee (1977 - 1981)
- Member of the College Swimming Coaches' Association, 1960 to
present.S
- Member of the American Association of Health, Physical Education
& Recreation. Selected to the Association's Hall of Fame, 1980.
- Chairman, Indiana Cancer Crusade, 1974.
- Honorary Chairman, Mental Health Association, 1980-1981.
- Honorary Chairman, Dental Health week, 1981.
- International Service Award, United States Sports Academy, 1982.
- National Hall of Fame, United States achievement Academy, 1982.
- Member of American Medical Association Sports Medicine Committee.
- Member of U.S. Olympic Committee and Member of USOC Technical
Committee
- Member of the Board of Directors, International Underwater Divers
Society
- Member of the Board of Directors, marathon swimmers Association.
- Member of the American Society of Sports Psychology.
- Member of the National Board of Directors, Boy Scouts of America.
Significant Research:
1948 Pioneered the use of underwater photography in analyzing stroke
mechanics
1949 Developed a protocol for the use of weight training in the
conditioning of competitive swimmers. 1949 Introduced interval training
for competitive swimming, and invented a pace clock, that permitted
application of interval training routines specific to competitive
swimming.
1969 Used underwater photographic analysis to show the curvilinear
pulling patterns of the swimming strokes, as well as the role of lift
(Bernoulli effect) in the propulsion produced by these curved line
sculling motions.
1969 Introduced isokinetic resistance exercies for strength training of
competitive swimmers.
1979 Introduced semi-accommodating or biokinetic resistance training
apparatus for specialized strength training of competitive swimmers.
1981. Used underwater photographic analysis to show the importance of
hand-speed acceleration in swimming.
Major Articles:
Counsilman published some 120 articles over a forty-six year career. The
following are some of his landmark publications:
- "The Role of Sculling Movements in the Arm Pull."(1969)
Swimming World, Vol. X No. 12
- "The Application of Bernoulli's Principle to Human Propulsion
in Water."(1970),
- "Proceedings of the First International Symposium on
Biomechanics in Swimming, Water Polo and Dving."
- "Interval Training Applied to Swimming", (1961),
Swimming World and Junior Swimmer, 2:6, also Athletic Journal,
42,20.l
- "Hand Speed and Acceleration." (1983). ScientificSports,
pp 41-52
- "The X Factor." (1971) American Swimming Coaches'
Association World Clinic Year Book, pp 69-74.
- "Effect of Altitude on Swimming Performance," (1965),
Swimming World and Junior Swimmer, 6, 10-11, 26.
- "Does Weight Training Belong in the Physical Education
Program?" (1954), Journal for AAHPER, Vol. 26.
- "The Use of Goal Sets and Cruise Interval Sets as a Method of
Balancing High Intensity and Endurance Training, and as A Diagnostic
Tool." (1984) American Swimming Coaches' Association World
Clinic year Book, pp 1-9
- "Isokinetics: A New Form of Exercise" (1969), Swimming
World, Vol. X, No. 11.
- "Biokinetics - the Ultimate Exercise." American Swimming
Coaches' Association World Clinic Year Book, pp 29-36 (. 1979)
- "Specificity in Dryland Exercise". (1969). Swimming
World, Vol. X No. 10
- "Three Types of Grab Start for Competitive Swimming."
(1988) Swimming. Human Kinetics Publishers, pp. 81-91.
- "Importance of Speed in Exercise." (1977). Modern
Athlete and Coach, 15 (3), 2-5. American Swimming Coaches'
Association World Clinic Year Book, pp 1-
- "Breaking up Shoulder Problems. Can massaging tendinitis-stricken
shoulders make scar tissue problems disappear?" Swimming
Technique, 22 (4), 14-18.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Parts of this Obituary were extracted by Cecil Colwin from his article,
"The Talent is the Call" which appeared in Swimming
World" 1994 , 2-57,
NEWS!!!!
Taken from Lane9
http://www.swiminfo.com/lane9/
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