With the two of them working together well, Kubik coached a total of 34 seasons with Eddie Reese as Head Coach and won 12 NCAA National team championships. In Reese and Kubik's second year together, they led Texas to an NCAA runner-up finish at the 1980 NCAA Championships and gave Texas its first NCAA men's swimming team championship in 1981. The 1981 team featuring
Scott Spann,
Kris Kirchner, backstroker Clay Britt, and butterflier William Paulus remained at the top of their conference in 1981 and had the rare honor of leading the nation in college competition. After Kubik returned to Texas after a stint with age-group coaching in the mid-80's, Kubik and Reese had four consecutive
NCAA National Championships from 1988 to 1991, and won their sixth National Championship in 1996. They won consecutive titles from 2000 to 2002, won again in 2010, and took titles from 2015 to 2016. Benefitting from the press coverage and publicity brought to the university in 1989, their third NCAA championship while coaching together, Kubik received a 9% bonus in pay as did Reese. During Kubik's tenure, Texas swimming had 26 NCAA finishes in the top-three and 32 NCAA showings in the top-five. Texas had a total of 54 NCAA individual titles and 42 NCAA relay titles during Kubik's tenure, and had 32 Olympians who captured a total of 36 gold, 16 silver and eight bronze medals. The team of Kubik and Reese took conference team titles in 33 of its 34 seasons working together.
International coaching Kubik served as coach for several international teams. He was Asst. Coach for the U.S. team at the
2007 Pan American Games and served as a special assistant for the Coaching Staff of
USA Swimming at the
Beijing Olympics in 2008. He was the
Team USA Asst. Coach at the
FINA World Championships in 2009 and the 2015
World University Games. In 2011, Kubik was inducted into University of Texas's Athletics Men's Hall of Honor. In a more exclusive honor, Kubik was more recently chosen as one of the 100 Greatest Swimming and Diving Coaches of the Century in 2021 by the College Swimming and Diving Coaches Association of America (CSCAA). ==References==