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Princeton Men Tab W&M’s Matt Crispino as New Head Coach

Matt Crispino will be departing the College of William & Mary, after twelve seasons as the head coach at his alma mater, and heading to New Jersey, where he’ll take over the Princeton’s men’s team, the Tigers announced today.

Crispino will be replacing longtime Princeton head coach Rob Orr, who retired last month after spending 40 years associated with Princeton swimming.

Princeton had a long string of success under Orr, although the program has gone through a rough spell over the past few years, including the program’s suspension in the second half of the 2016-2017 season. Still, the Tigers have managed to finish 2nd at the Ivy League championships the past two years.

At W&M, Crispino turned the Tribe into the strongest combined program in the Colonial Athletic Association. The men’s team has won five straight conference championships, while the women have won two titles in that same span. Crispino has been named CAA Coach of the Year six times for the men and one time for the women.

Full Release

Courtesy of Princeton Athletics

Matt Crispino has a resume that is loaded with team and individual championships and a commitment to the educational and leadership values that athletics provides. That combination has given him the opportunity to fill the very large flip-flops left on the deck at DeNunzio Pool.

Crispino, who built William & Mary swimming and diving into a Colonial Athletic Association powerhouse while serving as a driving force in the campus community and having his athletes earn overwhelming success in the classroom, has been hired as the head men’s swimming and diving coach at Princeton University, Ford Family Director of Athletics Mollie Marcoux Samaan has announced. Crispino replaces Rob Orr, who retired after 40 years with the Tigers.

“I would like to thank Mollie Marcoux Samaan and the entire search committee for their faith in me and belief in my vision,” Crispino says. “I’m thrilled to be joining the Princeton swimming and diving community. Princeton University is without equal when it comes to the pursuit of a world-class undergraduate education and high-level athletic pursuit. The values of the University and the athletic department align well with my own, and the men’s swimming and diving program is poised for unprecedented success. My family and I look forward to getting to Princeton and getting started. Go Tigers!”

The successes that Crispino’s Tribe teams have had have been staggering.

Under his leadership of both programs, William & Mary has won the last five CAA men’s championships while adding women’s championships in 2016 and 2017. All 19 men’s program records have been broken within the last eight years, and Tribe men’s swimmers have set and then broken 119 individual or relay records on his watch.

There have been 76 CAA men’s and 40 CAA women’s individual or team champions in his tenure. He has coached 96 percent of William & Mary’s top-10 performances and 2,351 lifetime best performances.

He has been the CAA Coach of the Year seven times (six for the men, one for the women) while coaching three CAA Swimmers of the Year, nine CAA Rookies of the Year, seven league championship Most Outstanding Performers and 10 Olympic Trials qualifiers.

Adding to that in-pool success are 26 CSCAA Scholar All-Americas, two CoSIDA Academic All-District honorees, eight CAA Swimming and Diving Scholar Athletes of the Year (two of whom won the CAA award for all sports) and five Phi Beta Kappa inductees.

He is also the founding member of the William & Mary Hazing Prevention Coalition and the organizer of a fund drive that has raised nearly $15,000 per year for cancer research through an open water swim event. Most recently, he was a recipient of W&M’s Plumeri Award for outstanding achievements in teaching, research and service to the William & Mary community, making him the first member of the athletic department to be so honored.

“We are thrilled to welcome Coach Crispino and his family to the Princeton Athletics and the Princeton University Swimming and Diving family. His tremendous accolades and accomplishments speak for themselves, but we were most impressed with his commitment to the holistic development of each individual student-athlete and his commitment to continuous growth in and out of the pool. His values are fully aligned with our department’s values and we look forward to him building upon the tremendous legacy left by Coach Orr over the past four decades,” said Marcoux Samaan.

Crispino is a 2002 William & Mary graduate with a degree in government. He was the team MVP and co-captain his senior year, and he was part of the school record for the 800 freestyle that stood for 10 years. He was also a CAA Scholar-Athlete himself and the W&M President’s Award winner.

He began his coaching career while earning a master’s degree in physical education with a concentration in sport management at Florida State and then moved on to serve as an assistant coach at Army West Point and Colgate before becoming the Director of Swimming at his alma mater in 2007.

Rob Orr is a legend, one of the best coaches to ever walk a pool deck,” he says. “We will always honor the past and the influence he had on countless young men over the years. I plan to build upon Rob’s four-decade legacy by helping the program to new heights. Lastly, I want to thank everyone who made my tenure at William & Mary so special. Coaching at my alma mater for 12 years was truly an honor. I’m proud of what our student-athletes accomplished academically and athletically, and I believe the program is positioned for long-term prosperity. I look forward to supporting W&M in the future while pursuing excellence at Princeton.”

Crispino’s wife Liz is a former Tribe swimmer and CAA 100 and 200 butterfly champion. They are the proud parents of Lydia (age 7), Audrey (age 1) and Caroline, who passed away in 2015 at the age of five months.

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Tribe Swim Parent
5 years ago

Princeton will not be disappointed in Matt, they got a great coach! He’s an upstanding guy and motivating coach who sets the athletic and academic bar high for the kids, and they rise to the expectations. With the great assistant coaches at W&M, the swim team will continue to be a mid-major and CAA powerhouse, but Matt will certainly be missed!

googoodoll
5 years ago

A great opportunity for Matt to beat Rob Orr’s record 49 years!

Jane
Reply to  googoodoll
5 years ago

Actually only 40 years 🐅 🏊‍♂️

David Carli
5 years ago

i find this very strange.and wonder if he and Tony Shaver are friends.Shaver was canned after 17 successful years as Tribe bball coach by new AD.Pretty definitive statement by Matt that they are good friends to me.Thanks Matt and good luck.

Geralt of Trivia
Reply to  David Carli
5 years ago

I don’t know if they are friends, but I can say definitively that Matt has always been an admirer of Tony Shaver’s mustache.

COACH CWICK
5 years ago

Surprise, Surprise!! We thought for sure the long time assistant coach would be elevated. He has been doing all the recruiting and most of the coaching for the last two years. Makes one wonder.

Surprise, surprise I use WE when talking
Reply to  COACH CWICK
5 years ago

He has been doing most of the coaching for the last two years? And what source has given you that information? This is an ignorant comment from someone who only reads the statistics and has no on-deck knowledge of what is actually going on. Crispino is a great outside hire, go tigers.

Delaware
5 years ago

Here come the Seahawks lol

Not Delaware
Reply to  Delaware
5 years ago

Yeah that’s not happening

Snarky
5 years ago

I really like seeing these “unknown” coaches picking up big jobs. Its much more difficult to develop talent in small communities and programs than it is developed or renowned programs. It shows that these coaches know how to develop talent and work with what they have. Great hires.

Glenn Neufeld
5 years ago

Awesome hire. Great coach. Better person. I’m so excited for Matt. He’s going to do awesome there.

Elmo
5 years ago

UNC Stanford Alabama Princeton all hired 35-40 yr old (+/- I didn’t bother doing exact math) white males. No other good candidates? And so did UVA Auburn Wisconsin. That’s a problem IMO.

googoodoll
Reply to  Elmo
5 years ago

Stanford did not hire a 35-40 yo white male. BTW your comment smacks of age, gender and racial prejudice.

@JakeShell
Reply to  Elmo
5 years ago

Maybe they were the best coaches? Most qualified? W&M is an academic powerhouse – look what Matt did there with little funding. This is the right hire for Princeton. They got a great coach, great person, and one with the academic pedigree to match. Also, FWIW, he was hired by a woman, and at a place where they preach AND practice diversity. That says quite a bit about the confidence they have in Matt. Give it a rest, this rhetoric is tiring.

Klorn8d
Reply to  @JakeShell
5 years ago

Said it on the unc article too but Wisconsin hired Yuri who is Asian. But I do kind of agree with the sentiment

Anonymous
Reply to  Klorn8d
5 years ago

Perhaps it starts on the teams. Our club team is a large variety of not white. My eldest went to college … a sea of white. The contrast is stark.

Patrick
Reply to  Elmo
5 years ago

If you feel it’s a problem, why not suggest a few qualified candidates that other schools with openings might consider? That seems like it might be more productive.

Tea rex
Reply to  Elmo
5 years ago

If you look at elite ncaa coaches, most are white and male. More should be done to diversify the coaching ranks, but the population as a whole is not too diverse.

Apso
Reply to  Tea rex
5 years ago

The NCAA has a female coach retention (and hiring, and promotion) problem.

H2ocoach13
Reply to  Elmo
5 years ago

Best coaches for the job chosen from those who applied. That’s not “a problem”, that’s a free market system demonstrated in the realm of competitive collegiate athletics. It’s not political, it’s just swimming. Enough!

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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