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Meet Chow

Mrs. Coach | Profile
September 8, 2008

Let’s face it: Bon Appetit magazine is never going to devote an issue to the food found at swim meets. But that doesn’t stop anyone from eating at swim meets, least of all Mrs. Coach. However she has noticed that the further down the totem pole you go in meet size, the better the food gets. It’s almost like an incentive to never get a legal breaststroke.

Your national and international-level meets are probably the worst when it comes to what’s available at the concession stands. You’ve got your bloated, boiled hot dogs, your overly salty nacho chips with melted processed cheese products, and maybe some bland, microwaved, palm-sized pizza. Big whoops. The coaches on the deck getting Dixie cups filled with cut fruit, veggies and ranch dip are doing way better than the folks up in the stands. And there’s only so many stale bagels that a person can eat in one weekend.

Of course, there were the Australian Olympic Swim Trials when the Coach family was living Down Under in 2004. On the walkway overlooking the competition pool in Sydney, a lineup of tents had been erected and two of them were serving beer and wine. Beer and wine at a swim meet. You could stop right there and declare the Aussies the winners in the Meet Refreshments competition, but you’d still have to factor in their hot dogs.

Mrs. Coach will probably understate this, but the Aussies’ hot dogs were the saddest, most indigestible excuse for food she has ever tried to consume in her life. She’s not even sure there were any meat products in there, and if there were, she doesn’t want to know what part of what animal they were. No, the Aussie hot dogs completely negated any good will achieved by the chardonnay and Victoria Bitter. Not that Mrs. Coach didn’t give the chardonnay a fighting chance, but all the vineyards and breweries in Australia put together couldn’t erase the sense memory of those corpulent tubes of tastebud death.

But there is one place where the swim meet food is going to be good, sometimes even inspired. And that’s on a July weeknight at a dual meet in a 25-yard pool where at least half the 8 & Under age group is going to be disqualified for inventing a new stroke. And the reason you will find the best food in the swim world at these meets can be summed up in one word: crockpots.

Whether it’s Pete O’Halloran’s Pulled Pork, Lori Hepplewhite's Tostados or Jenn Zuweski’s grandmother’s Baked Beans, when you’ve got crockpots bubbling away at a swim meet, life is worth living. It doesn’t matter if little Hortense finished the butterfly with her face and now needs extensive amounts of reconstructive orthodontia. Or if Elgar invented a new stroke – the flutterfly – which got the relay disqualified and lost the meet for the team. Chow down on a couple of Marcy Schittzlebaum’s Sloppy Joes and all is right with the world.

Unless of course you have a fascistic local-government regime – like the one in Mrs. Coach’s hometown – where the health department has banned home-cooked food at events on city-owned property because they claim the risk of "food-borne illness" is too great. To which Mrs. Coach says: "Dear Food Police, No self-respecting home cook is ever going to serve up a crockpot full of E. coli at a summer-league swim meet, because if they did, it doesn’t matter how fast their kid swims, they would have to move to another state, change their names and enroll their kid in ballroom dancing, that’s how humiliated they would be. So, nope, not gonna happen. Give us back our crockpots. Sincerely, Mrs. Coach"



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Emilie Sullivan posted September 24 at 9:57am.
I see to recall eating some nasty slop at a Holiday Inn in Oberlin, OH ;)
ahelee posted September 9 at 12:03am.
I used to coach and swim in Davis, California.
Aquadarts is the age-group team.

There is a team of parents who are "foodies" as well as the head age-group coach.
When the Davis Aquadarts host swim meets, their coaches hospitality rocks! The parents get into competition over who can impress the coaches with their lunches and snacks.
Coach Brad Winsor is the one... ask him about Meet Chow in Davis!
Diane posted September 8 at 4:32pm.
THIS IS DEAD ON RIGHT and that is what makes it so funny....

Food poisoning the whole team is out of the question... exile is the remedy... UGH.
Brian Fahey posted September 8 at 2:34pm.
I also remember a meet where the coaches were served Prime Rib with a baked potato on the side. So at least there's one meet when the food wasn't bad.
J. David Gatz posted September 8 at 10:13am.
I recall there being a meet where the coaches were so lucky as be served Buca di Beppo
Mrs. Coach posted September 8 at 9:32am.
You're just proving my point, Brian -- that fascistic local government is no basis for a system of food distribution.

And cupcakes, yummmmm!
Brian Fahey posted September 8 at 8:39am.
You're forgetting all the food the swimmers get. We know how bad C-Stand food is, so we're forced by our survival instinct to bring our own.
Peej posted September 8 at 8:04am.
I remember a few years back I was at at a coaches' meeting where we were trying to brainstorm different ways to have our lsc meets better attended. People were throwing out ideas on meet format, more money on awards, etc. I suggested something that didn't get much notice, but fits with this topic.

I made sure my team NEVER missed a certain meet that was known for awesome food for the coaches in the hospitality room. This meet was about 40 minutes further than we usually traveled but it alwasy made our calendar. Word to the wise: feed us fat coaches with some good grub and you will have more entries than you know what to do with
Richard Hawes posted September 8 at 8:01am.
Nothing like a Sloppy Joe right before the 100 free.
The Screaming Viking! posted September 8 at 7:32am.
We had a summer league meet on July 4th weekend. We did not have enough toilets. People were parking in no parking zones and blocking emergency vehicles from entering when they were called. It was 120 degrees in the facility. We totally screwed up the awards and scoring... but nobody cared because the pulled pork was just that good.
Jeff Gustavson posted September 8 at 12:22am.
You forgot the best food of all at an outdoor summer league dual meet - at least it was common when I was a kid - the cupcakes that the mothers would bring to the meet that the kids could eat after it was over. I remember eating three or four after every meet in the warm to hot summer evenings in Pennsylvania. But, I agree, most of the food available at swim meets (of the long variety) is horrible.
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