Martin Zielinski: Longtime Record Holder Now Chief of Trauma And Acute Care Surgery At Baylor

by SwimSwam Contributors 16

April 16th, 2025 Lifestyle

Courtesy of Patrick Mader.

Patrick is a writer for mnathletes.com, a website dedicated to featuring Minnesota athletes in a wide range of sports. See the website here.

As emotionally draining and physically taxing it is to balance a rigorous academic schedule and elite athletic career in a demanding sport like swimming can be, Martin Zielinski has managed to accomplish the tasks. A state champion and All-American, Martin has recently accepted a position at Baylor as Chief of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery following a near two-decade stint at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.

The Zielinski family moved to Apple Valley, Minnesota, from Pennsylvania when Martin—born in 1977—was six years old. A nearby lake caused his mother safety concerns for Martin and his sister, Katheryn, resulting in the start of Red Cross swimming lessons. Martin admits he enjoyed swimming because he was good at it.

Later the family moved to Bloomington and Martin valued the tutoring of a succession of coaches: John Thomas, Jim Anderson, and especially Dave Anderson, an assistant swim coach at the University of Minnesota (U of M). “Martin was an incredibly driven, successful competitor,” Anderson notes. “However, it was his humor and wit that made training sessions enjoyable and entertaining. He quickly adopted underwater kicking. He was a natural. Without much training at all using underwater kicking, he won the USA Junior meet in his specialty, the butterfly.”

In 9th grade, Martin qualified for state and in 1994, his junior year, the Bloomington Jefferson boys’ swim team claimed the state championship with Martin capturing the 100-yard butterfly title. As a senior, Martin again won the 100-yard butterfly title with a high school national-best time of 48.20 seconds, a state high school record for 26 years until it was broken in 2021 by Chris Morris of St. Cloud Tech. In addition, Martin swam to victory in the 100-yard backstroke with a time of 50.35 seconds.

Piqued by athletic scholarships to national swimming powers USC and Auburn, Martin decided to accept an offer to the U of M. “It was the best fit for me at the time,” Martin explains. “The academic reputation of the medical school and the state-of-the-art Aquatic Center were appealing.”

Another enticing factor was coach Anderson. “When his archrival [Tom Malchow, a 1996 and 2000 Olympian, winning silver and gold medals respectively] committed to Michigan, it was imperative to Martin as a Gopher. He filled an important role as the Gophers’ butterflier during his career.” Martin was disappointed when Anderson departed the program by the time he enrolled.

As a freshman in 1996, Martin earned recognition as an All-American honorable mention. He also earned an invitation to the Olympic Trials, placing 25th in the 100-meter butterfly. “It was the penultimate experience for an eighteen-year-old,” Martin says of the Trials. Showing steady progress, Martin won the Big Ten 100-yard butterfly championship in 1997, breaking the conference record by 0.4 seconds in a time of 47.0 seconds. He then proceeded to place 4th in the event at the NCAA National Swimming Championships. By the end of his collegiate career in 1999, Martin was a seven-time Big Ten champion, a 10-time (including relays) NCAA Division I All-American, and a 2-time Academic All-American.

A personal highlight for Martin was winning the Phillips 66 National Swimming Championship in the 100-meter butterfly in April 1998, qualifying him for the Goodwill Games. “I went out fast, and after doing the turn, I realized I was ahead of some great swimmers!” While the competition did not go well for Martin at the Nassau County Aquatic Center in New York, he was delighted to have the opportunity to meet Olympic figure skater Michelle Kwan and famed New Yorker George Steinbrenner.

Having qualified for the 2000 Olympic Trials, Martin faced a choice on whether to continue rigorous training for another year. Instead, he opted to concentrate on his goal of being a medical doctor. “It would have necessitated a pause in academics, and I was not willing to do it,” Martin says of his decision. Following medical school, Martin accepted an internship at Mayo Clinic in Rochester in 2003. Specializing in trauma and acute care surgery, Martin also served at Mayo until this year (2022) when he accepted a position at Baylor in Houston, Texas.

The year 2003 proved to be a busy one for Martin: he graduated from medical school, purchased a home, and married Rochester native Dr. Elizabeth Lorenz, a transplant nephrologist he met in medical school. The couple has three children.

As with many athletes, Martin gives back to his sport: he finds serving as a Team USA Swimming medical provider for entire trips “very rewarding and a fun experience.”

Coach Dave Anderson sums up Martin’s career, saying, “He could work like a sled dog. He was funny and driven.” And the rigorous academic schedule he completed, and his elite athletic career prove it.

You can find this article on mnathletes.com here.

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David C Salo
24 days ago

What a great story to share with swimmers and their families. I am sure he will attest to the value his swimming experience prepared him for the rigors of medical training and then prepared for such an impactful position.
These stories need to be shared with every college athletic director in the country.

ZThomas
25 days ago

Swimming World magazine wrote about him when he was 9. I’ve been walking around with that for 39 years.

This Guy
25 days ago

Keep these stories coming!

Former Big10
25 days ago

That era of MN swimming was something else… Shapely, Martin, Dragsten… Apple Valley and Minnetonka had some absolutely legendary teams/records.

Former Big10
Reply to  Former Big10
25 days ago

Scott Gagner… there are a few more I’m missing, but it was a fun time.

AZswummer
26 days ago

Love this piece about a fellow MN swimmer! I remember Martin even as a 9-10 yr old was a special talent. Doesn’t surprise me at all that he has gone onto a successful career outside the pool.

Seth
26 days ago

I remember seeing Martins 100 fly record when I swam at state.
I thought that would be tough to break.
It’s amazing that Martin has an amazing life outside of swimming too! Truly inspiring.

Guy
26 days ago

It would be great if you posted more of these kinds of articles, but I understand that would mean people would have to reach out to SwimSwam which they may be reluctant to do. It doesn’t even have to be related to medicine. Engineering, business, law etc. where are they now stories would be cool

25Back
Reply to  Guy
26 days ago

The Tobe Obochi update where he was working at Google was pretty cool too. Also, I think Larsen Jensen is a super successful VC or something like that.

Polarbear / D3er
Reply to  25Back
26 days ago

Larsen is a mutual VC connection with some business school classmates of mine. He has done well in that area.

Togger
Reply to  Polarbear / D3er
25 days ago

I did a deal he was involved with, he’s really good and possibly the most impressive CV I’ve seen. Olympian, SEAL, Stanford MBA, VC founder. Not effing around.

Shogun
26 days ago

Great article!