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Nation's Capital Swim Club

Washington Metropolitan Area swim club From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nation's Capital Swim Club
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The Nation's Capital Swim Club (NCAP) is an elite, multi-site competitive swim club based in the Washington metropolitan area. Founded in 1978 as the Curl-Burke Swim Club, it was rebranded to NCAP in September 2012.[1] The club is a member of USA Swimming and has been consistently ranked as one of the top swimming clubs in the United States. It is also the Largest Swim Club in the United States by Membership. NCAP is one of the most popular and prestigious swim clubs. It has consistently ranked very high in the USA Swimming Club Excellence program since its inception in 2002, and the club has also produced a vast number of Olympic and Paralympic athletes.[2][3][4]

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History

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Founding as Curl-Burke Swim Club

The Nation's Capital Swim Club (NCAP) was founded in 1978 as the Curl-Burke Swim Club in Burke, Virginia.[5] Co-founded by coaches Rick Curl and Pete Morgan, the club quickly grew into a prominent organization within the Potomac Valley Swimming LSC and on the national stage. During its early years, Curl-Burke developed a reputation for producing high-caliber athletes. Swimmers such as Mike Barrowman, a 1992 Olympic gold medalist and world record-holder in the 200-meter breaststroke, and Tom Dolan, a two-time Olympic gold medalist in the 400-meter individual medley (1996, 2000), trained with the club and brought it national recognition.[6]

Rebranding and Expansion

In September 2012, the club announced a major rebranding, changing its name from the Curl-Burke Swim Club to the Nation's Capital Swim Club. The change was made due to the Rick Curl Controversy and to better reflect the club's expanding footprint, which included numerous training sites across Washington, D.C., Maryland, and Northern Virginia. Under the leadership of CEO Tom Ugast, the restructuring consolidated several area programs into a unified organization, creating the largest swim club in the United States by membership, with over 3,000 Members.[7] This larger, integrated structure allowed for more extensive resource sharing and a streamlined developmental pipeline for its athletes.[8][9]

Rick Curl Controversy

In 2013, USA Swimming permanently banned club co-founder Rick Curl from the sport following allegations of a past sexual relationship with one of his swimmers, Kelley Davies, in the 1980s. The allegations were detailed in an ABC News 20/20 report and a story by The Orange County Register. At the time the ban was issued, Curl had not been an active coach with the newly formed NCAP for several years. The club released a statement acknowledging the situation and affirming its commitment to athlete protection policies. This Controversy was one of the main reasons why the club was rebranded from the Curl-Burke Swim Club to the Nation's Capital Swim Club.[10][11][12]

Era of National Prominence

Following its rebranding, NCAP established itself as the preeminent swimming club in the United States, consistently earning the #1 ranking in USA Swimming's Club Excellence Program for multiple consecutive years.[13][14][15] This period of sustained success was built on a combination of deep talent pools, elite coaching, and the historic performances of its top athletes.

The era was spearheaded by the rise of Olympic champion Katie Ledecky. Training under NCAP coach Yuri Suguiyama, Ledecky captured her first Olympic gold medal at the 2012 London Games in the 800-meter freestyle as a 15-year-old.[16] After the London Olympics, she began training with NCAP coach Bruce Gemmell and launched an unprecedented run of dominance in international swimming. Throughout this period, Ledecky set 14 world records in the 400, 800, and 1500-meter freestyle events and won five medals (four gold, one silver) at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics, establishing herself as the most dominant female swimmer in the world.[17][18]

While Ledecky was the club's most visible star, NCAP's success was marked by its considerable depth. The club's elite group consistently produced a large number of U.S. National Team members and other Olympians. This included Andrew Gemmell, a 2012 Olympian in the 1500-meter freestyle, and Jack Conger, who won a gold medal at the 2016 Olympics as part of the 4x200-meter freestyle relay.[19][20] The consistent high-level performance across a wide range of athletes, from age-group swimmers to Olympians, solidified NCAP's reputation as a national powerhouse and the top-ranked club in the nation throughout the mid-2010s.[13]


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Programs and Structure

NCAP operates a multi-site program, with dozens of training locations grouped into geographic regions, such as "NCAP-West" (Maryland) and "NCAP-South" (Virginia). This structure allows the club to serve a large number of swimmers, from novice age-groupers to post-graduate professionals. The program follows a tiered model, with swimmers progressing through different groups based on age, skill level, and commitment. The top training groups bring together the club's most elite athletes to train for national and international competitions, including the Olympic Games and the World Aquatic Championships.[21][22]

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USA Swimming Club Excellence Program

NCAP has been a dominant Gold Medal Club in USA Swimming's Club Excellence Program, which recognizes the nation's highest-performing clubs based on athlete performance. The club's top ranking for seven consecutive years (2015-2021) is the longest streak in the program's history. The club also holds the most Gold Medal recognitions all time at 22. Currently, NCAP was the #5-ranked club in the country, as a Gold Medal Club in the 2024-2025 USA Swimming Club Excellence Results.[23]

Notable swimmers

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NCAP has produced a number of world-class swimmers who have competed at the highest levels of the sport, including the Olympic Games and the World Aquatic Championships.[24]

U.S. Olympic Swimmers

Wikitable of U.S. Olympic Swimmers

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Notable International, Paralympic, and Multi-Sport Athletes

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References

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