Pablo
Morales has resurrected the Nebraska
swimming and diving program and added to his illustrious career by guiding the
Huskers to five consecutive winning seasons. Under his leadership, Nebraska has returned to
familiar heights and reached goals Morales hopes to extend as he enters his
eighth season as head coach in 2008-09.
The Huskers
finished the 2007-08 season with a 7-2 dual record, the fourth time in the last
five seasons that he has led Nebraska
to at least a 7-2 mark. Morales owns an impressive .735 winning percentage over
those five seasons.
Before
Morales' arrival, such improvements would have been almost unthinkable after a
short-handed Nebraska
team was winless in 2001-02 (0-3). Three years later, NU raced to an 8-1 dual
record in 2004-05 and became the first Husker swimming and diving team to win
eight consecutive meets in school history. Most importantly, Morales led the
Huskers out of the bottom of the Big 12 with a fourth-place finish in 2004 and
a third-place showing in 2005. Nebraska
has continued to move toward its goal of future dominance. The Huskers have
history on their side after winning five conference titles from 1994 to 1999.
A 1987
graduate of StanfordUniversity, Morales es one of the greatest male
swimmers in U.S.
history, winning an NCAA-record 11 individual titles. He also helped lead the
Cardinal to three consecutive NCAA titles and four Pac-10 titles, while twice
earning Pac-10 Swimmer-of-the-Year honors and garnering six Pac-10 titles
himself.
Morales
remains the all-time leading scorer at the NCAA Championships, amassing 235
points. Morales was also the recipient of the 1987 Al Masters Award, which is
Stanford's highest award for athletic performance, leadership and academic
performance. He was the first male swimmer to win the award, and remains one of
two to have accomplished that feat. Morales holds the Stanford record in the
200-yard butterfly (1:42.60) and held the school record in the 100-yard fly
(46.25) until it was broken in 1998 by Sabir Muhammad (46.18).
While at
Stanford, Morales was awarded the J.E. Sterling Award, which is presented to a
student-athlete based on scholarship, leadership and community service. In
addition, he served as the director of the Stanford Volunteers for Youth
Program. Morales also found time to become a mainstay on the campus newspaper
as the beat writer for the women's basketball team.
A CoSIDA
Academic All-America selection in 1987, Morales earned a law degree from
Cornell in June of 1994, despite taking two years off from law school to train
and compete at the Olympics.
An Olympic
swimmer, Morales won three gold and two silver medals in the 1984 and 1992
Games, serving as a team captain for the 1992 squad. Following the 1992 Games,
in which he returned to the pool after a three-year layoff to capture a gold
medal in the 100-meter butterfly, Morales was named the U.S. Olympic
Committee's Sportsman of the Year. He held the U.S. Open and NCAA record in the
100-yard fly with a time of 46.26, which stood for 13 years before being broken
at the 1999 NCAA Championships.
Among
Morales' greatest swimming accomplishments in the pool is holding the world
record in the 100-meter butterfly with a time of 52.84 from 1986 until 1995.
Morales'
legend in the Olympic Games lives on today, as the Nebraska
coach served on the bid committee for the 2008 U.S.
Olympic swimming trials that took place this past summer in Omaha. Morales had the chance to see the
selection process and serve a role in the decision that gave Nebraska its first Olympic event in state history.
The Swimming
Trials were a resounding success, and Omaha
proved to be a worthy host for the event. The attendance at the Qwest Center
Omaha broke records for the largest swimming meet ever held in the United States.
Nine world and 21 American records were broken in the eight-day meet, and
nearly half of the competitors set personal lifetime bests in ideal swimming
conditions inside the arena.
Before
coming to Nebraska, Morales served as the head
women's swimming coach at San
JoseStateUniversity. He held the reins as head
coach from 1998 until being named coach at Nebraska in July of 2001. Morales
rejuvenated a Spartan program that was near the bottom of the Western Athletic
Conference and was named the 2000 WAC Coach of the Year for his efforts.
While at San JoseState, Morales rebuilt a program and
took the Spartans to the NCAA Championships after a 14-year absence. During his
tenure, Morales produced six academic All-WAC swimmers.
At the 2001
WAC Championships, five Spartans set school records under Morales' supervision,
and three met NCAA qualification times. Seven others swam times that placed
among the top three in school history.
Before his
stint at SJSU, Morales served as an assistant coach at his alma mater,
Stanford, during the 1997-98 season, helping lead the squad to the NCAA team
title.
Morales also
served as a graduate assistant at Cornell while pursuing his law degree. While
at Cornell, Morales prepared and coached daily workouts for swimmers and
assisted in recruiting. Morales has assisted in coaching with the San Jose
Aquatics club group, as well as serving as head coach of the Stanford Masters
Swim Team.
For Morales,
the opportunity to coach at Nebraska
was a welcome challenge.
"As a
coach, taking over the responsibilities at Nebraska represents a great
opportunity to take a program with success and use the resources that only
Nebraska can offer-the support from the athletic department, the University,
the Lincoln area and the state to take the program to a higher level,"
Morales said after he was hired. "Our goal is to take this program to the
elite national level."
A powerful
motivator, Morales hopes to keep his swimmers on the top of their games in and
out of the pool, as Nebraska
has established itself among the nation's best in academic support and
athletics. Over the past three seasons, 78.6 percent of Morales'
student-athletes have been named to the Big 12 Commissioner's Honor Roll each
semester, including a school-record high 25 in the fall of 2007.
"I want
our swimmers to achieve their goals of faster times and lifetime bests,"
Morales said. "I want them to have the best season that they have ever
had, and I also want us to establish a team atmosphere and build an excitement
toward Husker swimming and diving."
Morales
enjoys competing in the Big 12, one of the premier swimming and diving
conferences in the country. In 2007-08, the Huskers had seven home duals,
notching a win in every one of them, including one over Big 12 opponent IowaState.
In addition to conference competition in 2008-09 (hosting Kansas and Missouri),
the Huskers will also host the second annual Husker Invitational, a four-day
tournament running from Nov. 20-23.
"Competing
in the Big 12 is a great opportunity to be a part of a strong conference,"
Morales said. "To say that we are in the Big 12, and that we will compete
against some of the best swimmers and teams in the country is great. It helps
to bring in recruits when they can look and see you will compete against the
nation's best teams."
Former
Stanford Head Coach Skip Kenny, who coached Morales at Stanford and also with
Team USA,
speaks highly of his former pupil.
"He's
one of the most honest people that you will meet," Kenny said. "You
will always get the truth out of him. He's very dedicated to the sport of
swimming and to his athletes."
Kenny also
recognizes Morales' charisma.
"As
soon as the swimmers spend a few days or weeks with him," Kenny said,
"they will see how much he cares about them and the sport of
swimming."
Morales also
gets a vote of confidence that he will be able to turn Nebraska into a national title contender.
"He
brings a high level of experience to build up the team," Kenny said.
"He's been there and done that as far as swimming is concerned. I honestly
believe that he is a better coach than he was a swimmer, and that is saying a
lot since he was one of the best swimmers in the world. He has done things with
kids that I thought I would never see."
Kenny has
confidence in Morales' one-on-one ability to work with student-athletes.
"If
there is a female swimmer out there that wants to be the best in the
world," Kenny said, "I'd send her to swim for Pablo."
Morales'
experience as both an NCAA and international swimmer as well as a club and
collegiate coach can only help him in coaching and recruiting.
"In my
experiences, I have been fortunate to have had a long career as a competitor. I
was able to train with coaches who I think are some of the best in the
world," Morales said. "I have learned from them, and I have learned
from myself. I believe that all of my experiences have prepared mefor coaching. I have a good feel for the
contours of teams that are successful. I know how they practice, train and
compete."
In July of
2002, Morales named Doug Humphrey as his assistant. This season, Humphrey will
enter his 18th year associated with the Husker swimming and diving program.
"Doug
has a great deal of experience at Nebraska,"
Morales said. "He's spent a lot of time here. He knows the University and
the area, and that is obviously a positive from a recruiting standpoint. I
think that he is an excellent coach. He knows how to succeed, and he knows how
to win."
Morales
named former Olympian Natasha Chikina as the head diving coach in June of 2005.
Through three seasons, she has already guided five Husker divers to eight NCAA
Zone appearances.
“She brings
outstanding technical expertise combined with a tremendous coaching demeanor
that will undoubtedly yield fabulous results at the Division I level,” Morales
said. “She is the perfect fit to build on the success of her predecessors here
at Nebraska
and be part of our development into a championship-level program.”
A gifted and
noted public speaker and lecturer, Morales was a contributing author to The
Swim Coaching Bible, published in 2001. In April of 2007, he was chosen as the
U.S. Swimming Diversity Select Camp Head Coach, a four-day camp at the Olympic
Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colo. Aside from in-pool training, Morales
also led motivational and educational sessions and team-building activities to
boys and girls from all over the nation who are part of an ethnically
under-represented population that is less than 20 percent of the current USA
Swimming membership.
Pablo is the
son of Pedro and the late Blanca Morales, who came to the United States from Cuba in 1956. Morales and his wife,
Viviana, have three boys, Sam (10), Benjamin (7) and Eli (5).
Morales was
born in Chicago and grew up in Santa Clara, Calif.,
and enjoys golfing in his spare time.