Courtesy: Kenyon Athletics
GAMBIER, Ohio — The Kenyon College swimming and diving programs added to their staff to start the 2024-25 season as Jason Glorius was named as Kenyon’s Diving Coach and Aquatics Director.
“I’ve admired Kenyon’s success in the pool for quite some time now,” said Glorius. “I felt like this is the place I need to be the moment I stepped foot on campus. The people I’ve met so far are amazing and I can feel how much Kenyon means to them. I’m looking forward to immersing myself in the community and coaching outstanding student-athletes to thrive in life and win championships.”
Glorius, an Ohio native, made his way to Gambier after three years in Oxford, Ohio, as the head diving coach at Miami University (OH), his alma mater. The RedHawks were his second straight stint at an NCAA Division I institution after over four years as the head diving coach at the University of Virginia.
While coaching at Miami, Glorius made an immediate impact and was recognized as the Mid-American Conference (MAC) Men’s Diving Coach of the Year for his efforts. The RedHawks hauled in one MAC Diver of the Year award and two MAC Freshman of the Year awards under Glorius’s tutelage, and the program won three straight MAC Championships from 2021-23. At Virginia, Glorius was part of even more success as the Cavaliers won Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) crowns in 2015, 2015, 2016, and 2018 while also securing top-five finishes in the NCAA standings in 2015 and 2016.
With the Owls, Glorius will be returning to the NCAA division and conference where he began his collegiate coaching career. Prior to his stint at Virginia, Glorius spent four years at nearby Denison University, serving as the Big Red’s head diving coach from 2009-2013. Glorius was part of a swimming and diving program that won North Coast Athletic Conference (NCAC) Championships from 2010-2013, and he was named as an NCAC Diving Coach of the Year on both the men’s and women’s sides multiple times over that stint. With the Big Red, Glorius coached seven NCAC Divers of the Year, 14 NCAC champions, nine NCAA qualifiers, two national runner-ups, and one national champion. In 2013, Glorius was recognized as NCAA Men’s Diving Coach of the Year.
Women’s diving hasn’t been very strong under him at Miami. Hmmm…
Hmmm … wonder if the swim coach played any role in that???
While you’re both right, what you hadn’t mentioned is that after Covid they made that position part-time with very, very little pay. Hard to recruit and hard to stay motivated when you and your work aren’t valued.
What a Glorious hire
Good hire. I heard it came down to him and Jeffrey Fabulous.