Bremerton/Silverdale breaks into USA Swimming’s top swim cities list

We may not be the biggest community in Western Washington considering who our next door neighbors are — I’m looking at you Seattle and Tacoma — but we did something else those two cities didn’t do this week.

The Bremerton/Silverdale area made the Top 20 of USA Swimming/SpeedoUSA’s Top Swim Cities on Wednesda50SwimCitiesInfographicTOP.gify.

Bremerton/Silverdale is ranked 17th overall for all cities with a population of 150,000-249,999. (Check out the graphic on the left. That’s us in the corner!! OK, OK, maybe it’s Seattle but I like to think it’s Bremerton).

“It’s amazing,” said Olympic Aquatic Club coach Patrick Hamilton, “it’s good to get recognized.”

The top city in the smaller category is Columbia, Missouri. It was ranked first based on its high percentage of USA Swimming members, top USA Swimming athletes and large number of fitness swimmers.

Hamilton said Kitsap has a strong swimming community — from parents to officials to volunteers — who make the meets work year round.

“I know our team, Olympic Aquatic Club, we host five meets a year which is a lot of work,” he said, adding volunteer parents typically spend 40-50 hours during the three day meets.

“It’s just a wholesome sport and the community has embraced it,” he said.

The top swim cities showcase what’s great about the sport of swimming, said Matt Farrell, chief marketing officer of USA Swimming in a news release.

“We want to invite people of all ages across the country to join the sport of swimming and we hope this list inspires more kids and families to get involved,” he said.

Bremerton YMCA head coach Marilyn Grindrod said swimming is beneficial no matter if you compete at an elite level or recreationally.

“It’s a sport for life,” she said.

Bremerton-Silverdale club teams include Bremerton Family YMCA, Haselwood Family YMCA Silverdale and Olympic Aquatic Club. Kitsap’s club teams also include Poulsbo Piranhas, Puget Sound Swim Club, Bainbridge Island Swim Team, Bangor Swim Team, and reaching a little further out on the peninsula, Port Angeles and Port Townsend swim teams.

We just missed the cut off for populations with 244,000 or greater, which would have placed Bremerton/Silverdale 13th in the larger category, the Top 50. Seattle is ranked No. 21 in the larger category, with Anchorage, Alaska, coming in at No. 19.Unknown

No other Pacific Northwest cities made the list.

Ann Arbor, Michigan, was once again ranked No. 1 for the second year in the larger category, followed by Durham, North Carolina; Austin, Texas; Madison, Wisconsin; Raleigh-Cary, North Carolina; Fort Collins, Colorado; Washington, D.C.; and Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, Connecticut.

Ann Arbor repeated as best swim city, due in part to having the largest percentage of top USA Swimming athletes per population — more than 60 Olympians have come from the University of Michigan’s swim program and area club teams, said USA Swimming. San Jose-Santa Clara is at No. 2.

Each city is ranked based on an aggregate score in categories including the percentage of active swimmers and swim clubs, the number of accessible pools (Bremerton/Silverdale has three) and volume of top-level swimmers from the area. It also took into account the number of USA Swimming members, number of U.S. Masters (adult) swimmers, and the number of USA Swimming clubs.

California, with five cities in the top 17, and Colorado (four in the top 16) were the highest-ranking states. Cities in the top 50 had populations of 250,000 or more.

It’s pretty cool that Bremerton/Silverdale can lay claim to not only national champions, but also high school state champions, age-group champions, masters champions, and, of course, three Olympians in Bremerton’s Tara and Dana Kirk (2004 Olympics) and Nathan Adrian (2008, 2012). If we’re timages-1o include Bainbridge Island, then Emily Silver (2012) makes it four from Kitsap.

“We’ve had some amazing athletes moving up the chain,” Grindrod said. “When those kids were learning to swim they had a passion. They were smart and their parents knew something special about them.”

Speaking of Adrian, the San Francisco-Oakland area moved up to No. 3, which is where he resides and trains with California’s post-grad group that includes fellow Olympic champions Aimagesnthony Ervin and Natalie Coughlin. It’s also home to 10 percent of the country’s U.S. Masters swimmers, more than any other city.