Empowering Swimmers. Inspiring Excellence.

A Nationally Ranked YMCA Swim Team Committed to Character, Competition, and Community.

Welcome to GSCY STORM Swimming

We are the storm

Every day, our coaches, parents, and volunteers dedicate their time, expertise, and shared passion for the water to help develop enthusiastic, dedicated swimmers who are capable of responding to the demands of a highly competitive program. Our nationally-ranked team has a rich legacy of success regionally and nationally, having achieved Olympic Trials and Junior National Teams. GSCY STORM Swimming is a Silver Medal program recognized by USA Swimming as one of the top-200 teams in the nation. Our YMCA SC/LC National Champion and NJYMCA State Champion swim team has 500+ swimmers who practice and compete at our aquatics facilities at Bridgewater YMCA, Hillsborough YMCA, Somerset Hills YMCA, and Somerville YMCA.


Swimmers' ages range from 7-18 years and the team competes year-round in YMCA and USA-sanctioned meets. Swimmers are placed in practice groups based on age and ability. ASCA and USA Swimming certified professional swim coaches lead GSCY STORM Swimming, backed by our trained, dedicated coaching staff who work all of our young athletes to help improve their skillset in the water and promote a healthy and active lifestyle.



The primary season runs from September through March and swimmers have the opportunity to compete on a dual meet team and in championship meets. The summer long course season runs from April through July. Clinics are offered between seasons.

INTERESTED IN JOINING STORM?

Latest News

By Thomas Conner August 9, 2023
How to Evaluate a Swim Race at a Non-Focus Meet
By Thomas Conner August 9, 2023
How to Evaluate a Swim Race at a Non-Focus Meet
By Thomas Conner August 9, 2023
Coming off the short course season and starting Long Course is a perfect time to take a deep breath and ask yourself as a swimmer “OK. How am I doing? What have I done? Where am I going?” Swimming can be just as mentally taxing as physically, so a healthy conversation and reflection on your achievements or disappointments the previous season is a great way to clear your head. We can’t do anything about the previous season’s results. What can we do to exceed our accomplishments from the short course season or avoid a repeat of the feelings of disappointment? The first thing to remember about a disappointing season is that everything in life can be a stepping stone or a cliff. That extends beyond the confines of a swimming pool. Failure or disappointment is not unique to swimming, and there will never be a single moment in your life where failure marks the end if you do not let it. Taking tangible lessons from the season, August to March, can help shape these tough lessons into a positive outlook moving forward. An untimely injury or illness, a break in focus and consistency in practice due to outside stress, or performance anxiety can all lead to or compound this. Did we work on our swimming weaknesses, be it technique or training , as much as our strengths? Could we be more open to making changes in our eating or sleeping habits to help our practices? Could we improve our time management so that school stress doesn’t affect us in the pool? Any number of changes can help lead a swimmer to a successful season. Identifying what may have held us back before is a great first step. Sometimes it can be more difficult to reset the goals after a great season that ended on a high note. It could be a new time standard achieved, a State or Southern Premier title, or any long sought goal in your favorite event. The question now is how can we sustain this momentum and replicate the success? Again, making note of what improvements we made to our training or habits may help identify not only what made this season so great, but show what other areas may need to be improved to supplement our improvements. Thinking about new stepping stone goals to go along with our new long term goal can help sustain that feeling that we are still succeeding, and that our next goal isn’t so much a mountain as it is a molehill.