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BRIDGEPORT, Pa. — The Collegiate Water Polo Association (CWPA) looks back at the outstanding athletes, referees and coaches who made Hall of Fame caliber marks on the league.

A Fall 2014 inductee to the league’s Hall of Fame, former United States Naval Academy head coach Mike Schofield retired in 2013 after leading the Midshipmen to nine Collegiate Water Polo Association (CWPA)/Eastern Championships during his 29-year tenure on the Navy bench as the squad competed in 13 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Tournaments. Twenty-one Navy athletes earned 31 All-America honors under Schofield, and Navy was represented on the All-America team in each of the last 14 years of his career.

Schofield is the school’s all-time wins leader thanks to compiling an astonishing 631 wins in 28+ years in charge of the Navy water polo program. In 2011, he surpassed baseball’s Joe Duff, who had 595 career wins, in a 16-3 win over Salem International Universty in the CWPA Southern Division Tournament. He then recorded his 600th career win with a 12-10 victory over Brown University in the CWPA Championship semifinals, propelling the Midshipmen into their seventh straight league title game appearance.

The Mids dominated the East, compiling a remarkable 149-29 (.837) record against East Coast teams in the last eight years of Schofield’s career.

In 2012, Schofield guided the Midshipmen to a 23-6 record and a CWPA Southern Division regular-season championship. The Midshipmen bolted out to a 20-2 record in 2012, one of its best starts in school history, and scored a whopping 467 goals, an average of 16.1 goals per game.

In 2011, Navy compiled a 24-7 record and won the CWPA Southern Division tournament title for the 13th time in 19 appearances.

Four years ago, Navy recorded a 25-7 record and won the CWPA Southern Division title with a 7-1 mark. It was the 29th straight year that Navy had won at least 19 games and the Mids reached the CWPA Championship Finals for the sixth straight year. Schofield was named the CWPA Eastern Coach of the Year for a remarkable seventh time in his career.

Navy posted a 22-9 record five years ago, once again winning the CWPA Southern Division Tournament title and owning an 11-match winning streak late in the year, while advancing to the CWPA Championship title game for the fifth straight year.

The 2008 season was supposed to be a rebuilding year for the Mids. However, all Navy did was win its third straight CWPA Championship title, its fifth title since 2000, while finishing with a 20-11 record. Navy became the first program to win three straight CWPA titles twice, accomplishing the feat from 1986-88 as well as 2006-08.

The 2007 team compiled a 30-6 record, setting a school record for wins in a season. The Mids won their eighth CWPA title and finished third at the NCAA Championship, also a program best. Navy went 19-1 for the second straight year against Eastern teams and boasted a school-record 19-game winning streak heading into the NCAA Tournament.

Schofield had a long line of All-America athletes under his guidance with 31 selections.  From 1999-to-2012, at least one Navy player was named to the All-America team.

The Mids also succeeded in the classroom under their longtime head coach with 57 Association of Collegiate Water Polo Coaches (ACWPC) All-Academic citations since the 2001 season. In addition, five Navy players ince 2001 have earned College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) Academic All-America honors, including Eric Gardiner who earned a prestigious NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship, was named first-team CoSIDA All-America selection (at-large team) and was a Marshall Scholarship recipient in 2008.

Schofield is well recognized in the water polo community, having also coached on the international level, guiding the U.S. Water Polo Team at the 1997 World University Games to a fifth-place finish. He also served as an assistant for the 1992 National Team and as an assistant for the U.S. Water Polo Team that won gold medals at the World University Games in both 1991 and 1993.

Schofield also directed the Naval Academy Aquatic Club, which produced some of the top young water polo players and swimmers in the country, many of whom continued their careers at the Naval Academy.

A 1979 graduate of the University of Pittsburgh, where he was the captain of the water polo team and received Most Valuable Player recognition, Schofield was part of the Panthers’ only NCAA Championship appearance in 1976 as the team defeated Bucknell University for the then Mid-Atlantic League crown.  He arrived in Annapolis in 1982 and assisted in resurrecting a water polo program that had been dormant for 32 years. He took over the head coaching duties in 1985, and his teams enjoyed 23 20-plus win seasons, playing to an overall record of 586-230 during his tenure. A seven-time (1986, 1990, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2010) Eastern Championship Coach of the Tournament selection, he added National Coach of the Year accolades to his resume in 2004 and was inducted into the United States Water Polo Hall of Fame in March of 2004.

The longtime coach has not left the pool deck, however, as he works as an official calling games on the collegiate level.  For his performance, the legendary coach – who served as CWPA President during the period of rapid growth in both the collegiate club and varsity ranks which brought about women’s varsity water polo in the NCAA – rates among the leading officials in the league with assignments to the CWPA, Northeast Water Polo Conference (NWPC) and Mid-Atlantic Water Polo Conference (MAWPC) Championships on his list of achievements as a referee.

 

Collegiate Water Polo Hall of Fame Inductees Ed Reed (Brown Universtiy – 2003); George Gross (Yale University – 2005); Mike Schofield (United States Naval Academy – 2014); Paul Barren (Official – 2004); Carrie Basye-Becker (Slippery Rock University – 2011); Tom Popp (United States Naval Academy – 2008); Mark Gensheimer (Bucknell University – 2012).

Mike Schofield gets wet after winning 2007 CWPA Championship at Harvard University

Mike Schofield and then assistant coach Carl Salyer

Mike Schofield and some of the past Navy Midshipmen during his Hall of Fame induction ceremony

Collegiate Water Polo Association