United States Air Force World Class Athlete Program Explained

Unit Name:Department of the Air Force World Class Athlete Program
Dates:1996 – present
Allegiance:United States
Command Structure:Department of Defense
Department of the Air Force
Installation and Mission Support Center
Air Force Services Center
Department of the Air Force Fitness and Sports Division
Nickname:WCAP
Commander1:Mr. Dale Filsell
Commander1 Label:World Class Athlete Program Manager
Commander2:Maj Tiffany Lewis
Commander2 Label:Chief, Department of the Air Force Fitness and Sports
Notable Commanders:Lt Col (Sel) Aaron Tissot 2021-2023

The Department of the Air Force World Class Athlete Program (WCAP) is a military program designed to support nationally and internationally ranked athlete Airmen and Guardians and prepare them to qualify for the U.S. Olympic team and compete at the highest level of international competition. Additionally, it provides current Olympians an avenue to serve the United States in a uniformed service capacity between training seasons. The program is falls under the DAF Fitness and Sports Division, Air Force Service Center, headquartered at Joint Base San Antonio, Texas. Program management of WCAP and the Department of the Air Force Shooting Program moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado in the spring of 2022 to better assist athletes and to be closer to the Olympic Training Center and its sister service WCAP Program Managers and Fort Carson, Colorado.[1]

This program enables selected Department of the Air Force military athletes to focus on training and competing in a full-time status in preparation for Olympic competition. The selection process ensures participants are viable Olympic contenders who will serve as Department of the Air Force ambassadors as they compete nationally and internationally.

The name United States Air Force World Class Athlete Program was changed in 2021 to Department of the Air Force World Class Athlete Program when it onboarded its first Space Force service member, fencer, Capt. Leanne “Malibu” Brenner.

Program management operating location, updated recruitment strategy, refined entry standards and branding refresh reflect significant milestones in 2021–2022.

The DAF WCAP is currently governed by Department of the Air Force Instruction 34-114, Fitness, Sports and World Class Athlete Program. Several Department of the Air Force Athlete of the Year award winners were WCAP alumni or program hopefuls.

Air Force WCAP founding

The World Class Athlete Program was first established by the Army as to centrally manage and support athletes under the provisions set in Public Law 84-11 which passed into law in March 1955. PL 84-11 afforded any Armed Forces service members an opportunity to perform at the international level while maintaining a military career.

At a Washington Touchdown Club Awards Banquet, General Ronald Fogleman inquired about the establishment of the WCAP program and asked if the Air Force might have a similar program for Airmen. Less than a year later, in Feb of 1996 the Air Force World Class Athlete Program was established and added to the Department of the Air Force Fitness and Sports portfolio.

Historic highlights

The first official WCAP class was 1996. During its inaugural year, the program supported 19 full-time athletes.

Highest Olympic Finish: Second Lieutenant Weston "Seth" Kelsey (Men's Epee, 4th place) 2012 Summer Olympic Games in London, UK.

Recent WCAP Finish: Airman First Class Kelly Curtis (Women's Skeleton, 21st Place) 2022 Winter Olympic Games in Beijing, China.

2019: Introduction of the United States Space Force WCAP. This program is currently managed by the Air Force WCAP Program Manager.

2022: New branding introduced. This included service specific for Air Force and Space Force Athletes and Olympian WCAP logos.

2023: Length of participation in WACP expanded to 3 years. This allowed more time for athletes to train for trials and Olympic qualifications increasing likelihood of selection to TEAM USA.

Current roster

RankNameSportClass
Majordata-sort-value="Rich, DanielDaniel Rich Shootingdata-sort-value="20242024
Majordata-sort-value="French, Phaelen"Phaelen French Modern Pentathlondata-sort-value="20242024
Captaindata-sort-value="Smith, Jaci"Jaci Smith Track and Field: 10K and Marathondata-sort-value="20242024
Captaindata-sort-value="Brenner, Leanne"Leanne “Malibu” Brenner Fencing: Saberdata-sort-value="20242024
Second Lieutenantdata-sort-value="Fuller, Sam"Sam Fuller Water Polodata-sort-value="20242024
Senior Airmandata-sort-value="Mannozzi, Michael"Michael Mannozzi Track and Field: Racewalkingdata-sort-value="20242024
Senior Airmandata-sort-value="Anderson, Mariah"Mariah Anderson Greco-Roman Wrestlingdata-sort-value="20242024
Senior Airmandata-sort-value="Evans, Tyler"Tyler Evans Modern Pentathlondata-sort-value="20242024
Senior Airmandata-sort-value="Curtis, Kelly"Kelly Curtis Skeletondata-sort-value="20222022, 2026
Airman First Classdata-sort-value="Michalski, Daniel"Daniel Michcalski |15x15px]] Steeplechasedata-sort-value="20242024
Airman First Classdata-sort-value="Jones, Jasmine"Jasmine Jones |15x15px]] Bobsleddata-sort-value="20262026
Airman First Classdata-sort-value="Brown, Mitch"Mitch Brown Greco-Roman Wrestlingdata-sort-value="20242024
Airman Basicdata-sort-value="Taylor, Delbert"Delbert Taylor Boxingdata-sort-value="20242024
Roster

WCAP Olympians

14 WCAP athletes have represented the United States at the Olympics.

1996 Summer Olympics

Eighteen of the 19 athletes in the program qualified for the Olympic Trials.

Olympians

RankNameSportResult
Majordata-sort-value="Roy, William"William Burton Roy Shooting9th in Men's Skeet
First Lieutenantdata-sort-value="DeGraaf, David"David DeGraaf Handball9th of 12; he scored a record 13 goals against Kuwait and a record of 7 blocked shots

Coaching staff

1998 Winter Olympics

Deborah Nordyke was the only WCAP athlete to make Team USA. She joined the Air Force Alaska Air National Guard in 1987.

2000 Summer Olympics

Thirty-six of 38 athletes qualified for Olympic Trials. One alternate for Olympic skeet.

2002 Winter Olympics

All three athletes qualified for the trials.

2004 Summer Olympics

Twenty-three of 28 athletes qualified for Olympic Trials.

Three athletes were selected for the United States national baseball team. They lost in the quarterfinals of the 2004 Americas Olympic Baseball Qualifying Tournament and did not qualify for the Olympics.

Three alternates.

Olympians

2006 Winter Olympics

All four athletes qualified for the trials.

2008 Summer Olympics

Twenty-three of 24 athletes qualified for Olympic Trials.

Three alternates.

Olympians

2010 Winter Olympics

Two athletes qualified for the trials. One was first alternate in Bobsled.

2012 Summer Olympics

Twelve of 14 athletes qualified for Olympic Trials. Zero made the Olympic team.

Olympians

2014 Winter Olympics

One athlete qualified for the trials. He was first alternate in Bobsled.

2016 Summer Olympics

There were 20 WCAP athletes, five competed in the trials and one went to the Olympics.

2018 Winter Olympics

No WCAP athletes qualified for the trials.

2020 Summer Olympics

Due to COVID-19 pandemic caused the 2020 Tokyo games to be delayed.. The Air Force WCAP retained athletes in the program however, no Air Force athletes were able to qualify for the Olympics.

2022 Winter Olympics

There were 6 WCAP athletes, six competed in the trials and one went to the Olympics.

Kelly Curtis was the only WCAP athlete to compete in the Olympics.

2024 Summer Olympics

TBD

2026 Winter Olympics

TBD

Summary

OlympicsRosterTrialsAlternateOlympians
1996 Summer Olympics191813
1998 Winter Olympics1101
2000 Summer Olympics383610
2002 Winter Olympics3300
2004 Summer Olympics282333
2006 Winter Olympics4400
2008 Summer Olympics242304
2010 Winter Olympics2210
2012 Summer Olympics141201
2014 Winter Olympics1110
2016 Summer Olympics20501
2018 Winter Olympics0000
2020 Summer Olympics28000
2022 Winter Olympics6101
2024 Summer Olympics13---
2026 Winter Olympics2---

References

  1. Web site: Military and the Olympics. Powers. Rod. 12 April 2019. the balancecareers. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20200521091538/https://www.thebalancecareers.com/military-and-the-olympics-3356975. 21 May 2020. 21 May 2020.

Sources

External links