Date: Fri 26-Feb-1999
Date: Fri 26-Feb-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: KIMH
Quick Words:
Jaime-Ryan-Sportsman
Full Text:
Jaime Ryan -- 1998 Sportsman Of The Year
(with photos)
BY KIM J. HARMON
Jaime Ryan was just three years old when Cathy Carney was re-adjusting the
Newtown High School girls' swimming record board to reflect her almost
legendary accomplishments back in 1984 -- ten individual and relay records
earned in a three-month binge unlike any seen before.
Fourteen years later, however, Carney's exploits and accomplishments will have
to exist only in memory. For Jaime, now a senior, has succeeding over the last
four years in eradicating any mention of Cathy Carney while accumulating 12
individual and relay records of her own.
With all those records, and with a bright and promising future at Penn State
looming just six months away, Jaime Ryan was named The Newtown Bee Sportsman
of the Year. A dinner in her honor was held Sunday, February 21, at Ondine's
in New Fairfield with her coach and parents also in attendance.
At The Tender
Age Of Five
Jaime, the daughter of Jim and Karen Ryan, began swimming when she was five
years old up in Essex, Vermont. But for the first three years she only swam
for those few months in season. It wasn't until she was eight that she began
to swim year-round with an age group swim team.
Soon after, the Ryan family moved to Newtown. Jaime joined the Fairfield Area
Swim Team (FAST) and swam there until the ninth grade -- her freshman season
with Newtown High School. Then, like a lot of other swimmers with budding
talent, she quit FAST and gravitated towards the Wilton Wahoos, one of the
strongest youth swimming programs of its kind.
Jaime remembered those days, when she was still busy refining her strokes,
when -- as she said -- her butterfly all of a sudden came together to the
point where she could do 50 yards without being disqualified and when she
broke six minutes in the 500-yard freestyle for the first time.
"Freshmen year, I didn't know what to expect," said Jaime, who has had her
sister, Katie, as a teammate for the last three years. "I was just excited to
be on the team and I just got in the water and swam. I didn't even expect to
make the SWCs or Opens."
Those were not the days to be thinking about the records on the record board,
but Jaime was certainly aware of them.
"I think I noticed the records more as a freshman," she said. "At FAST, I
would be using the kick boards and I would be bored and I'd look up at the
records."
The first record she earned was in the 100-yard breaststroke -- just five
meets into her high school career. That started the domino effect, because
then other records started to fall (over and over again, as Jaime fine-tuned
her times).
Now there are 12.
xx individual and xx relay records
xx school and xx pool records.
"I look at the board now and don't think, wow, because those are not my best
times any more," Jaime said. "It's great to see them, but I don't feel like
those are my accomplishments."
There is, of course, no telling what might have happened in 1998 had a rotator
cuff injury not shortened her season. It is fair to say that Jaime would have
at least re-broken some of her records and most likely set a new 500-yard
freestyle record, becoming the only swimmer in Newtown High School history to
do the event in under five minutes.
But it wasn't to be. When she discovered that nobody iced their shoulder as
much as she did after a hard practice or meet ("I never could differentiate
between regular soreness and pain," she said) she sought advice from doctors
and after a couple wrong turns and inaccurate diagnoses, she finally
discovered that she had a torn rotator cuff.
"I'm very sorry about it," said Jaime. "I feel that I'm not done. I didn't
finish what I started. I hated to go down there and watch the meets. It was
really hard watching."
But it wasn't hard to make the decision to scrap the season.
"I wanted to fix the problem," she said.
In January, Jaime was able to get back in the water. She started slowly and
has worked up to between 1,200 and 2,000 yards a day -- when a typical workout
down in Wilton is between 5,000 and 7,000 yards.
Maybe the hardest part of the process now, said Jaime, is pacing herself.
"Right now, I'm a little bit nervous," she added, "because I'm struggling with
the fact that I can't increase my yardage yet. But I'm pretty confident and
the doctor is happy (with my progress)."
That progress should have her ready for her first collegiate season with the
Nittany Lions of Penn State.
"They aren't too concerned about (the injury)," said Jaime. "They have had
girls who have had the surgery and they know what to expect. (The coach) told
me I should make the travel team, that I already have Big 10 cuts."
But, she frowned, not NCAA cuts.
"During my recruiting trip I saw a dual meet and I expected to be in awe of
the times," Jaime said, "but it wasn't much different than meets with Wilton.
I feel like I'm in control and I won't jump in the water and just flounder. I
didn't want to go to a program where I was at the tail end of the team or the
best on the team. I wanted to start right in the middle."
At Newtown High School, Jaime has always been far from the middle. She is on
the National Honor Society, the Foreign Language Honor Society (Spanish and
Latin -- which she enjoys studying), and has been on the Class Council since
the 10th grade. She has also been involved with Interact and a number of other
clubs and organizations in the past.
Jaime even played freshman basketball, but that seems better left to her
sister (a starting forward with the Lady Nighthawks) and her brother, Tom.
Down In Wilton
With The Wahoos
There are many who believe that swimming may pose one of the toughest tests of
mental endurance -- the miles and miles of driving, the endless practices, the
thousands upon thousands of yards of water covered in an effort to shave a
mere a second or two off a time.
Finding motivation for that can be hard.
"I love being in the water," Jaime said. "I love working hard and racing."
Jaime makes the tough trip to Wilton about six times a week.
"The drive gives me a chance to think about stuff that happened during the
day," she said. "With Wilton and Newtown, it's two different worlds. I love it
there and the attitude that everyone has keeps me motivated. If someone is
really driven, it's the attitude of the coaches and everyone there that makes
it work. You're encouraged and supported and you have a purpose in being
there."
At Wilton, the big meets are the YMCA Nationals, the Senior Nationals, and the
Junior Nationals. Some of the best swimmers in the country get together for
strong competition and lots of exposure.
"The Y Nationals in Ft. Lauderdale is a big deal," said Jaime. "The team goes
down there to win. It's a really tough meet and you want to strive for it.
When I first came on the team, everyone told me, `you have to make this meet.'
They were so excited about."
Last year -- April 14 through 17 -- Jaime went down to Ft. Lauderdale (with
NHS teammates Kari Fisher and Stephanie Nickse) to swim the best meet of her
life. As a team, Wilton finished fourth out of 270 teams nationwide while,
individually, Jaime was fourth in the mile (17:02.68), 12th in the 200-yard
freestyle (1:53.39), and ninth in the 500-yard freestyle (4:58.08).
It was the first -- and so far only -- time she broke five minutes in the 500.
"I was very satisfied," said Jaime, "but my goal was a 4:55. In the morning I
did five minutes in an outside lane. I felt terrible and I was just battling
the water. But I went back to the hotel, got a rubdown, and that night I felt
great. It was just right. It was awesome. "
What could turn out to be more awesome is her impending Division I swimming
career. But with the success of her high school career to build on and the
promise of the future to look forward to, even the word awesome seems much too
tame to use.