Georgetown Swimming DC: Hoyas Dominate Mid-Atlantic
Georgetown's varsity and Masters swimming programs are reshaping D.C.'s aquatic scene, setting regional records and building toward national contention this season.
Georgetown's varsity and Masters swimming programs are reshaping D.C.'s aquatic scene, setting regional records and building toward national contention this season.

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Georgetown's swimming program is making waves across the Potomac region this summer, building on a breakthrough season that has positioned the Hoyas as serious contenders for national collegiate recognition. The varsity team, which trains primarily at the Yates Field House aquatic center near the main campus in Northwest D.C., has logged impressive times across freestyle, butterfly, and relay events that rival programs in the Ivy League and ACC conferences.
What's particularly noteworthy is how the Georgetown swimming community—encompassing both varsity athletes and the thriving Georgetown Masters swimming club—has energized the broader D.C. aquatic scene. The Masters program, which serves competitive swimmers aged 18 and up, has grown to over 180 active members, many of them drawn from the professional workforce in the District and nearby Maryland suburbs. Monthly membership dues average $95 to $125, making it accessible to young professionals working along the K Street corridor and beyond.
The varsity squad's success this year stems partly from new coaching infrastructure and a $2.3 million facility upgrade completed last fall that improved lane configurations and timing systems. Coach recruitment has also been strategic, with the program bringing in specialists from programs in the Northeast and Midwest.
Local swimmers are noticing the difference. The Bethesda and Arlington communities, traditional feeders to competitive club programs, have seen several rising junior athletes opt to stay closer to home and train with Georgetown rather than commute to regional powerhouses. This shift reflects the program's growing reputation and competitive caliber.
Georgetown's club also hosts open water swimming clinics along the Potomac during summer months, capitalizing on D.C.'s unique geography. Sessions depart from various points along the waterfront—from near Georgetown Waterfront Park to the Canal Road area—allowing swimmers to experience the Potomac's current dynamics safely while preparing for potential triathlon pursuits.
The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) rankings released in March placed Georgetown's women's team in the upper tier of regional contenders, a position the program had not occupied in nearly a decade. With nationals scheduled for late March 2027 in Indianapolis, the squad is already in preparation mode, maintaining training schedules through the summer months.
For D.C. sports fans accustomed to focusing on basketball and football, Georgetown's aquatic ascent offers a compelling counterpoint: a program building excellence through disciplined training, community investment, and the kind of steady institutional commitment that defines sustainable athletic success in a competitive landscape.
This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
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