Brett Hawke Replacing Mark Schubert as Head Coach of California’s The Swim Team

Former Auburn University head coach Brett Hawke is replacing Mark Schubert as the director of high performance at The Swim Team (TST) in Lake Forest, California.

Hawke has spent the last year in nearby Irvine as an online coach, working with fellow sprint enthusiast Dave Salo before he left to take the associate head coach job at Arizona State in May. The 49-year-old Australian spent more than a decade at Auburn, helping the Tigers win an NCAA title while head coach Richard Quick was away from the team battling a brain tumor.

Schubert’s TST group is coming off a mixed showing at the U.S. Olympic Trials last month. David Johnston made his first Olympic team courtesy of his runner-up finish in the 1500 free (15:02.42). Michael Brinegar scratched out of the 1500 free before news broke of his four-year doping suspension. There’s also Marwan El-Kamash, a 30-year-old Egyptian, who is competing in the 800 and 1500 free at the Paris Olympics.

Schubert launched TST in 2021 after retiring from nearby Mission Viejo. He took a six-month leave of absence in 2022 to coach in China.

TST’s pro group will likely look very different next month with Hawke taking over for the distance-oriented Schubert. Tryouts for TST’s elite developmental group will take place on Saturday morning, August 17, at El Toro High School. Hawke wrote on his Instagram that a “new pro team drops in Southern Cali September 2nd. Apply within. #la2028”

Hawke won three SEC titles at Auburn, earning conference Coach of the year in 2012. He resigned in 2018 after the Tiger women finished 16th at the NCAA Championships and the men placed 12th. The Auburn men placed top 10 in each of Hawke’s first eight seasons, but they placed 12th at his last two NCAA Championship meets. Their 98.5 points in 2018 were their fewest since 1992, when Auburn finished 15th and scored 85 points.

As a swimmer, Hawke was a two-time Olympian for Australia in 2000 and 2004. His lifetime best in the 50 free (22.07 from the 2004 Olympics) stood as the Oceanic record for four years before Eamon Sullivan blazed a world record of 21.28 in 2008. Hawke swam at Auburn from 1996-2000 and helped the Tigers capture a pair of national crowns.

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Just Keep Swimming
45 minutes ago

Lol

Ole 99
1 hour ago

Hopefully taking this position precedes better meet behavior.

SCCOACH
2 hours ago

That tryout is going to be packed.

By packed I mean everyone who was there is going to pack up their things and tryouts will be empty

Ryan
2 hours ago

Is this normal to have tryouts for an elite team? Can’t remember any club in my area having them except for young age groupers

Admin
Reply to  Ryan
5 seconds ago

If I was running a pro team, I would absolutely run tryouts. We saw some real disasters when certain individuals weren’t a good personality fit at past attempts at big pro teams, so I think some vetting would be keen.

swimswamswum
3 hours ago

Changing their distance specialization to sprint , but keeping their brand of controversial consistent

Mike
Reply to  swimswamswum
20 minutes ago

What has Hawke ever done that was controversial? You may not have liked him as a collegiate head coach but there was nothing controversial about his tenure, he just did not win enough.

Admin
Reply to  Mike
14 minutes ago

He followed me around the Olympic Trials while working as credentialed media calling me a “pussy” over and over again. Is that controversial?

chickenlamp
3 hours ago

This is an….interesting change. Max exodus expected from the current swimmers. MA going to start training under Hawke?

Xman
Reply to  chickenlamp
1 hour ago

Probably

Hank
Reply to  chickenlamp
34 minutes ago

MA just relocated to Orange County so that’s very likely.

Willswim
3 hours ago

TL;DR: They traded in their old 💩 for new 💩

Shane Maximus
Reply to  Willswim
2 hours ago

Not sure your double emoji comment is fair.

Are you talking about their personal qualities? What defines their character? How they treat people?

Or are you talking about their success as coaches?

This Guy
3 hours ago

Michael Andrew going to train with him?

bobthebuilderrocks
Reply to  This Guy
3 hours ago

This could get interesting 0_0

About Riley Overend

Riley is an associate editor interested in the stories taking place outside of the pool just as much as the drama between the lane lines. A 2019 graduate of Boston College, he arrived at SwimSwam in April of 2022 after three years as a sports reporter and sports editor at newspapers …

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