Public Radio for the Central Kenai Peninsula
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Carhartts and Xtratufs Ball — get tickets here!

Seward's Lydia Jacoby poised for spot on Olympic team

Courtesy of Lydia Jacoby

Lydia Jacoby is about to become the second Alaskan to compete in the summer Olympics.

The 17-year-old Seward swimmer placed second in the 100 meter breaststroke yesterday at the Olympic Trials in Omaha, N.E. She broke the national age-group record and her personal record, two days in a row.

Jacoby’s Olympic qualification isn’t official yet. That all gets finalized later this week. 

But by all accounts, she has a spot on the U.S. women’s team. She finished with a time of 1:05:28, falling only behind Lilly King, the reigning Olympic champion.

“The bigger the meet, the better she does. And that’s held true, all the way up to last night," said Solomon D’Amico. He's been coaching Jacoby in Seward for several years and is now in Omaha for the trials.

“It’s pretty special," he said. "You walk into the venue, especially when it’s finals and semi-finals, and you can just feel it, you know?”

The mood has been celebratory over 3,000 miles away, too. Jacoby’s cheerleaders back home in Alaska have been following her every stroke.

Sarah Spanos, of Seward, has been keeping other Sewardites updated about Jacoby’s races on Facebook. 

“Just as a bleacher mom, I’m just fighting back the tears every time I watch her swim," Spanos said. Her sons grew up swimming with Jacoby in Seward, with the Seward Tsunami Swim Club.

A few years back, the swim club raised enough money to get Olympian swimmer Jessica Hardy to Seward. Jacoby wears the pink goggles Hardy gave to her in her meets.

The Seward swim community is small. Spanos said there’s also a sense of community across the Kenai Peninsula and Alaska. 

“Homer. Kenai, Soldotna. It’s really really a tight-knit group," Spanos said. "And I think that’s what makes it special, that even though she is just from Seward, Alaska, there are a ton of people that are cheering her on.”

Jacoby and her Seward teammates swim in a 25-meter pool ― half the size of an Olympic pool. D’Amico knows of just one Olympic-sized swimming pool in Alaska, in Anchorage. But it’s divided in half most of the year.

While juggling her junior year at Seward High School, Jacoby’s been swimming in Anchorage. That’s where Cliff Murray, coach of the Northern Lights Swim Club, has been working with her. 

He said she’s always been a strong swimmer. But she’s also a delight to work with.

“She’s just always the most gregarious, fun and kind person," Murray said. "I honestly think that she’s going to be great for Team U.S.A. because she’s going to be like that with the team.”

Murray said it means a lot for kids to see one of their own make it to the big leagues. He thinks that’s especially impactful in professional sports, which he says can be very image-driven.

“It shows those kids that you can be a really sweet, kind person and still achieve greatness in a sport," Murray said. "You don’t have to be cocky superstar or anything like that. You can be kind and sweet and still just be a rockstar.”

The 2021 Olympics and Olympic Trials were both pushed back amid the pandemic. The Olympics are now scheduled for this July in Tokyo, Japan.

Until then, Jacoby and other members of the U.S. women’s team will be training, at a camp this summer and then in Tokyo.

Jacoby’s fans will be following from home. Murray said the swim club plans on having a watch party for the Olympics. 

“I think I might just cancel everything on the day that she’s supposed to be swimming and make it all about getting to experience that with her while she’s doing it," Murray said.

He thinks she has a legitimate shot at a medal.

Jacoby swims once more later this week, the women’s 200-meter breaststroke. It’s not her stronger event — she’s ranked 15 out of 54 swimmers.

Sabine Poux is a producer and reporter for the Brave Little State podcast of Vermont Public. She was formerly news director and evening news host at KDLL in Kenai.

Originally from New York, Sabine has lived and reported in Argentina and Vermont and Kenai.
Related Content