|
Women's Swimming
Now in the 32nd year of his career as a diving coach, Caiming Xie has helped his protégés win BIG EAST titles, All-America honors and gold medals. A proven winner, Caiming's experience reaches all over the world and he is in his 15th season as head women's and men's diving coach at Notre Dame. During his tenure, he has molded the top two divers ever to compete for the Irish - Heather Mattingly and Meghan Perry-Eaton - who combined for five BIG EAST titles, seven appearances in the NCAA Championships, and eight All-America citations. The duo also holds all six of the Notre Dame diving records, as well as four Rolfs Aquatic Center records. For his efforts, Caiming, the first full-time diving coach in Notre Dame history, has been named his conference's top diving coach on six occasions, claiming the BIG EAST's top honor in 1999, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2009. The last seven seasons have been the most successful in Irish women's diving history, featuring eight BIG EAST titles, five All-America honors and four BIG EAST Championships Most Outstanding Diver awards. Most recently, Caiming coached Natalie Stitt to the 2009 BIG EAST Championships Most Outstanding Diver honor as Stitt swept the 1- and 3-meter events at the league meet. She went on to finish 32nd at the NCAA Championships in both events. Caiming also helped coach a United States squad that claimed six medals at the 2009 World University Games in Belgrade, Serbia. In 2006, Caiming molded two women's divers into all-BIG EAST performers in the 3-meter event as Lucy Hirt was the runner up while her teammate, Tara Hyer, placed third in the same event at the BIG EAST Championships. For his efforts, Caiming captured his fourth BIG EAST Coach of the Year Award. Just two seasons later, Hyer was third off the 3-meter board at the league meet while Natalie Stitt claimed the title in that event and placed third off the 1-meter board. From 2003-05, Perry-Eaton turned in the most impressive two-year stretch ever by an Irish diver, as she was beaten just one time during the regular season before sweeping the springboard events at the 2004 and 2005 BIG EAST Championships en route to being tabbed the meet's top diver. Perry-Eaton was the first Notre Dame diver ever to win a title at the NCAA Zone C Championships in 2004, taking first off the 1-meter board. At the NCAA Championships, she delivered the highest-ever finish for a Notre Dame swimmer or diver, taking third in that event, ending up just 3.30 points behind the national champion to become an All-American. She followed up with a fifth-place finish in 1-meter diving at the 2005 NCAA meet. In 2002-03, Perry-Eaton became the first Notre Dame diver - and first non-University of Miami diver since 1996 - to win a BIG EAST championship, placing first in the 1-meter competition. She also was second on the 3-meter board and was named the BIG EAST's top diver - her first of three consecutive diver-of-the-year awards. Perry-Eaton then qualified for the NCAA Championships, where she placed ninth in the 1-meter event and 20th on the 3-meter board to earn honorable mention All-America honors. Perry-Eaton finished her career holding four of the six Notre Dame diving records: six-dive 1-meter in both dual (322.64) and championship (331.58) action, as well as 11-dive, 3-meter championship competition (586.43) and 10-meter platform championship action (336.60). Additionally, she boasts Rolfs Aquatic Center records in both six-dive 1-meter formats (322.64 dual, 315.25 championship), as well as for dual-meet 3-meter action (333.82). Her score of 309.20 in 1-meter diving in 2003 en route to winning her first BIG EAST title stands as the highest since the switch to a six-dive format in championship meets in 2000-01. Mattingly was the first Irish diver to earn All-America honors, as she was a four-time honorable mention selection before being named an All-American in 3-meter action in 2002 with an eighth-place finish. Mattingly was the first Notre Dame diver to qualify for the NCAA Division I Championships, and she earned bids to the meet in each of her four collegiate campaigns. Mattingly also had a great deal of success in the NCAA zone meet, taking second in 1-meter action in 1999, in addition to third-place results in 3-meter competition in both 1999 and 2002. She still maintains two Notre Dame records: for 10 dives in a championship meet off the 1-meter board (425.40) and for six-dive, 3-meter action (351.15). Her score of 550.55 in winning the 3-meter competition in the 2000 Notre Dame Invitational also is the best in the history of Notre Dame's home facility. Before coming to Notre Dame, Caiming was the head diving coach for three years at Toledo, earning Mid-American Conference diving-coach-of-the-year laurels in each of his last two seasons. Prior to his stint with the Rockets, Caiming was an assistant coach for the 1991-92 season at Pittsburgh. Boasting a wealth of international experience on his résumé, Caiming served as the 1980 Chinese Olympic diving coach. He also was a technical consultant for United States Diving since 1994 and has held clinics and presentations for the United States Diving national team. The Chinese national team coach from 1977-90, Caiming coached Sun Shu-Wei, a gold medalist in the men's platform competition at the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona, Spain, and Zhu Jin-Hong, who finished fourth in the women's platform in Barcelona. Caiming's divers also have earned medals at the Asian Games, World Cup, World University Games, and World Championships. A competitive diver in his own right, Caiming won the springboard competition at the Asian Games in 1974 and earned first place in the platform and second in the springboard competition at the National Games of China in 1975. A 1985 graduate of the Beijing Institute of Physical Education, he also won numerous Chinese diving championships on the national level. Caiming and his wife, Ping Tong, have one son, Tong, who graduated from Notre Dame in 2003 after a successful career as an Irish diver. |
|
|||||||||||||