Free reign
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Mike Sciacca
To hear Huntington Beach High co-head coach Gary Yeo tell it, Bryce
Elser is a throwback to Oiler swimmers of yesteryear.
Yeo should know.
A member of the class of 1976, Yeo swam at Huntington in the
mid-1970s, a time, he said, when several of the school’s swim records
were set -- many of which still stand.
For the past four years, Elser, the third of three brothers to
have standout careers at Huntington, has powered his way through the
pool, entering the 2004 season as the county’s top returning 200-yard
freestyler.
Nothing the 6-foot-3 18-year-old senior has done in the water thus
far this season has altered that opinion.
He’s made his way into the school’s record books by swimming the
200-yard freestyle in a record one minute, 41.99 seconds, and admits
to having designs on becoming the record-holder in the 50- and
100-yard freestyle and the 100-yard butterfly before his high school
career ends in May.
“He’s an incredible swimmer with a great work ethic,” said Yeo,
co-head coach of the Oilers swim program along with Cory Tague, who
formerly coached at Edison. “He is very committed to the sport and
has his head in the game the whole time.
“Not only is Bryce an exceptional athlete, but he’s also an
incredibly nice kid who is very responsible and a very good student.
An athlete like this comes around only once in a while.”
Elser is following in the same vein as his older brothers, John
and Matt, both of whom made their mark in the Oilers aquatics
programs.
The three also work as Huntington Beach city lifeguards.
“I grew up in the water,” Bryce Elser said. “We all started
swimming with the Pacific Sands Cabana Club team during the summers.
That’s how we were introduced to the sport of swimming.”
Elser has been swimming for 11 years with the Golden West Swim
Club, practicing both early mornings and late afternoons at the
Golden West College pool.
His wake-up call during the week is 4:30 a.m., and he estimates
that he’s in the pool practicing up to 16 hours per week.
“He has exceptional time management,” Yeo said.
His once-longer hair, “fried and greenish,” he said, from hours of
swimming, has been cut short.
At Huntington, he swims just about everything, he said, and the
races he swims vary “from meet to meet.”
Usually, though, he swims one free event and the 100-yard
butterfly -- both his areas of expertise.
One race, though, Elser said that he may have “grown out of it” --
the 200-yard freestyle.
“At my last meet, it was the only event I didn’t improve my time
in,” he said, adding that he might not swim the event during
Tuesday’s Sunset League meet at Esperanza.
Elser finished third in the CIF-Southern Section Division I
200-yard freestyle competition as he set the school record last year
and also qualified in the 100-yard butterfly, which he finished in
fifth-place.
He’s already swam to qualifying times for this year’s CIF meet on
May 14, the fourth time in as many years that he’s qualified for the
big event at Belmont Plaza Pool in Long Beach.
“I hope to win CIF in at least one event,” said Elser, who hasn’t
decided which college to attend, but is looking to swim at a Division
I school. “That would be a great way to cap my high school swimming
career.”
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