In 1932, when the Exhibition Pool at
Payne Whitney Gymnasium first opened, it was the best any college could boast.
The new pool was 25 yards long, had six lanes, and was surrounded by 2,187
seats soaring steeply upward, always filled with hooting fans. “The great roar
of the crowd seems to push straight down into the water,” Sports Illustrated
said in 1969. “This, plainly, is good if you’re a Yale man, unsettling if
you’re not.”
With the “Ex Pool” as its home, the men’s team dominated its
competion. They competed in 201 dual meets without a loss from 1945 to 1961,
mostly during the tenure of swim coach Robert Kiphuth.
But the pool’s heyday has long since passed. Take a swim today,
says former women’s team captain Lisa O’Dell Rapuano ’88, and all you notice
are the waves—which slow the swimmers down. Contemporary pools are designed to
reduce such turbulence.
The pool no longer qualifies as a venue for major competitions:
the NCAA championship, Ivy League championship, and others require pools to
have at least eight 50-meter lanes. “For competitive purposes, the Ex Pool
probably became obsolete 20 or 30 years ago,” says Steve Clark ’65, a swimmer
who won three Olympic gold medals during his time at Yale.
Rapuano and Clark are part of a group pushing for a modern
swimming facility. And after decades of talk about possible upgrades, it’s
starting to look like Yale could actually build a new pool. “The alumni, the
development office, the university—all of that appears to be in the alignment
that makes for a successful project,” says athletic director Tom Beckett.
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A committee is beginning to work out the details of what the pool
could look like, where it might go, and how much it will cost. In the past,
there was talk of building a new pool near the Yale Bowl or renovating the Ex
Pool. Now, both the alumni and the administration are interested in building
next to Payne Whitney.
“The obvious place for this new pool is at the opposite end of
the gymnasium from the Lanman Center,” says Vice President Bruce Alexander ’65,
who oversees campus development. Yale recently bought the last parcel needed to
complete the site.
The alumni group is advocating a “best in the East” facility,
with ten lanes and as many as three diving towers. Building a first-class pool
has “at least a hundred nuances,” Clark says. Getting those right will be
instrumental to getting financial support for a project that may cost 30 to 40
million dollars.
And the project will depend on alumni support, as Yale is not
directly funding new construction right now. “This is a project that everyone
agrees is a good project for the university,” says Alexander, “but it’s also a
project that needs to be gift-funded.”
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