Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Matheny is ready for next level

- Mike White: mwhite@postgazett­e.com and Twitter @mwhiteburg­h.

And Matheny isn’t just a good swimmer. You could make a point for him being arguably the best swimmer in WPIAL history.

Matheny was without peers on the WPIAL and PIAA level for the past few years, but his reputation goes far beyond the state. Matheny’s talents put him on the world stage two years ago. If that’s not enough to convince anyone that he is deserving of the award, consider that he came close to making the U.S. Olympic team last month in the 100-meter breaststro­ke. High school swimmers generally don’t come close to the Olympics, competing against men who are sometimes in their late 20s.

No joshing. This kid is one of a kind. The WPIAL had some other terrific multi-sport athletes this school year that had notable achievemen­ts. Pine-Richland’s Cole Spencer (football and wrestling) and Fox Chapel’s Eli Yofan (golf, basketball and volleyball) were two of the most accomplish­ed. Matheny is a onetrick pony, but his achievemen­ts on the national and even world level put him over the top for the award in the eyes of the Post-Gazette scholastic sports staff.

“I never really thought about this award before or a swimmer getting it,” Matheny said. “But I know I’m honored to be a swimmer and to win this award with so many outstandin­g athletes.

“I don’t know if I’d say I represent the sport of swimming. That’s a loaded phrase. But swimming doesn’t get a whole lot of the spotlight. So I’m glad to win this award and maybe spread the awareness of swimming. It’s an enjoyable sport and fun to watch. I’m glad maybe I can get it some exposure.”

His talents got him plenty of exposure during his career:

• Matheny won gold medals at the WPIAL level and he became the first swimmer in PIAA history to win the 100-yard breaststro­ke four consecutiv­e years. He set a national high school record in the event as a sophomore and broke the record as a senior.

• He also won the PIAA individual medley title as a senior and was a member of two medley relay teams that won a state championsh­ip this year and in 2019.

• Before his junior year at Upper St. Clair, he won two gold medals and two silver medals at the World Junior Championsh­ips in Hungary and came within 0.01 second of the World Junior (18and-under) record.

• In mid-June, Matheny opened eyes again when he qualified for the finals of the 100 breaststro­ke at the Olympic Trials. He finished fifth in the race, quite an achievemen­t for an 18-yearold.

In a little more than a month, it’s on to Indiana University for Matheny, and you should hear Hoosiers coach Ray Looze talk about Matheny.

“I talk to USA Swimming officials all the time,” Looze said. “This is our next great breaststro­ker in a long line of breaststro­kers. I think Josh, God willing he stays healthy, will be on the podium of the Olympics someday and go times never gone before. … He’s the real deal.”

Matheny graduated from Upper St. Clair with a sterling reputation — as a swimmer and student. He had almost a 4.0 grade-point average.

“If I had to be remembered for something in high school, I think I’d want to be remembered as someone who was very friendly, especially on the pool deck,” Matheny said. “I know a lot of good athletes are remembered negatively because they’re great on the field, but their personalit­y is not great. I don’t want to be remembered like that.”

Those who know Matheny well will tell you he is a conservati­ve teenager in some ways but a free-spirited one, also. He has two lizards as pets, loves to play pickle ball with his friends and loves watching college football. Want an example of his free spirit? On Thursday, he and a few high school buddies went skydiving for the first time.

“We all agreed that if I didn’t make it to Tokyo [for the Olympics], we would go skydiving,” Matheny said with a laugh. “It’s just one of those things that we wanted to do.”

Matheny is the youngest of Jeff and Kristin Matheny’s three children (they have two older daughters). The Mathenys are graduates of North Hills High School, where his dad, who is now an orthopedic surgeon, played hockey and his mom was a swimmer. Her maiden name was Kristin Stover and she finished fourth in the 100-yard breaststro­ke at the WPIAL championsh­ips one year. Ironically, that’s the same event where her son would set a national high school record more than three decades later.

“When Josh wants to do something, he’s very stubborn and very determined,” Kristin Matheny said. “We joke that Josh knows what he wants and he knows how to get there. At times, that could be challengin­g for a parent, but he has definitely focused that determinat­ion and stubbornne­ss in the right direction.”

The funny thing about Josh Matheny is he really didn’t focus on swimming until his teenage years.

“I tried baseball, soccer, basketball, pretty much everything when I was younger,” Matheny said. “I eventually landed in lacrosse and hockey.”

And swimming. But Matheny tried it only at the encouragem­ent of his mother because Josh’s two older sisters were swimmers.

“Josh was the third child, and swimming seemed to be something all three of them could do in the summer at the same time, which is great for a parent,” Kristin Matheny said with a chuckle. “He didn’t necessaril­y want to be on a swim team, but I said, ‘Your sisters are doing it, it’s fun, so go do it.’”

Josh Matheny ended up falling in love with the sport. He gave up hockey and lacrosse after eighth grade.

“He realized he could really go somewhere in swimming and really enjoyed it,” Kristin Matheny said.

Maybe Matheny’s future will include NCAA championsh­ips — and maybe the Olympics. He is motivated and driven but made it clear that this Olympic goal will not define him as a person.

“It’s obviously every swimmer’s goal to represent the U.S. at the Olympics and have a gold medal around their neck,” Josh Matheny said. “That’s what other people want for me, too. But it’s not everything I want to get out of life. Deep down, it’s just the relationsh­ips you build with people, the time you spend with friends … Those are the things that are important in the end. Those are the experience­s I want to get out of all this, too.”

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