Editor’s Note: The end is near for the 2021 water polo season. TWp is looking back on the five biggest story lines of the year. Today we focus on positive developments for the upcoming year. Tomorrow we’ll consider what challenges from the previous year will carry on into 2022. As
TWp Announces Launch of TXWaterpolo
Total Waterpolo, a leader in American water polo coverage for over a decade, is proud to launch TXWaterPolo, a new media brand dedicated to covering the sport in Texas, one of the fastest growing areas for the sport in the US. The soft launch comes as the 47th year of
The Veazeys of Dallas: How A Swim Family Fell for Water Polo
Originally published on Swimming World. Liam Veazey was once considered one of the best young swimmers in the state. A top finisher at Texas Age Group Swimming (TAGS) Championships in 2001 and 2002, by 2010, Liam—despite endless hours in the pool in a futile quest to “drop time”—had hit a
RELEASE: Austin College to Add Men’s and Women’s Water Polo
SHERMAN, Texas – The Austin College athletics department will add two new teams next year, with the addition of men’s and women’s water polo to Kangaroo athletics. The teams will compete as a club in 2017-18, with the intent to become an NCAA varsity program in 2018-19. “After considering a
Varsity Water Polo to Return to Texas
Varsity water polo is returning to Texas. Austin College, located 60 miles north of Downtown Dallas, is hiring a coach for its men’s and women’s teams. Details of when the team will begin play are pending. The school’s athletic program competes at the NCAA Division III level. The college made
Texas' UIL Passes on Prep Water Polo – For Now
High school water polo remains in limbo in the Lone Star state after the UIL quickly passed on a proposal to add the sport to those sanctioned by the organization. The University Interscholastic League oversees sports at Texas’ public high schools. The Dallas Morning News’ Corbett Smith tweeted that the body would
Cal Berkeley men’s coach Kirk Everest arrived in Austin, Texas for the state’s high school water polo championships last Thursday. On Saturday he took a spot in the front row parked next to the parents of Timothy Simenc, one of his key 2015 recruits and a Texas preps star.
Landed in Texas … State High School Championships tomorrow! pic.twitter.com/Ap2mVtWkgk
— Cal Water Polo (@CalWaterPolo) April 30, 2015
The evening’s highlight was to be Simenc and his St. Mark’s of Dallas teammates defending their state crown, though Everest demurred, saying he was just there to “check it all out.” What the Californian was unlikely to anticipate was his presence at a moment in Texas water polo history.
For the first time in the competition’s 40-plus year run a girls team from the Dallas area, Southlake Carroll, won the title beating Clear Springs, 11-8. St. Mark’s followed with an edgy 6-5 victory over a very game group from The Woodlands to repeat as boys’ champions. Two North Texas teams are now state champs – a first.
Dallas water polo has arrived.
Until 2008 when the Lions earned their first crown, Houston-area teams won 20 consecutive boys’ titles and 24 of the last 27. The region’s girls were even more dominant winning 25 straight titles since 1990.

Prior to Houston’s ascendency it was San Antonio schools that ruled, winning seven of nine boys’ championships and seven consecutive girls’ championships until 1990.
The teams from Dallas have shown steady improvement over the past five years as we noted a year ago. It would be provocative and entertaining to assert that North Texas was now poised to dominate the Texas prep scene – and they may. More likely and better for the sport is that power will be more evenly distributed between the two major regions with each sending better quality athletes and teams to the tournament.
And watch out for the West.
Nearly dead and long dormant, the region from which San Antonio formerly sent a decade’s worth of champions is re-emerging. Round Rock High School, just north of Austin, did something no team from the region has done in decades and perhaps ever: beaten or tied a team from Houston. The Dragons boys earned a 5-5 draw against Westside to place 11th in the tournament, the best result ever for an Austin-area team.
No threat yet to any of the three other Regions, all of which boast decades of meaningful experience. But another sign of increasing participation, quality, and variety.
Coach Everest showed up for a title tournament and got a bit of Lone Star State history as a bonus.



























