Hall of Fame
Elaina Hogle was a four-year swimming letterwinner (2006-10) who was the GLIAC Swimmer of the Year her last three seasons.
A 28-time All-American (absolute maximum is 28), Hogle earned First Team All-America honors 16 times.
She won two GLIAC titles (200 Individual Medley and 200 butterfly) as a freshman setting a GLIAC record in the 200 fly. Hogle also placed second in the 400 IM.
At the 2007 NCAA Championships, she led the squad with seven All-America awards. Hogle earned First Team All-America recognition in the 200 fly (seventh), while garnering six Honorable Mention All-America accolades (200 IM and 400 IM individually; along with 400 Free, 800 Free, 200 Medley and 400 Medley relays).
She successfully defended her conference title in the 200 IM as a sophomore, while also winning the 400 IM and placing third in the 100 breaststroke to earn her first GLIAC Swimmer of the Year award. Hogle swam the breaststroke portion of the first-place 200 medley relay, which set a school record, and the first-place 400 medley relay.
The following month at the NCAA Championships, Hogle again garnered seven All-America accolades, including two First Team honors. She finished third and eclipsed her own WSU record in the 200 fly and bested her previous school record in the 200 IM, finishing 12th. Hogle came in 13th in the 400 IM and contributed to three school record-setting relays. She was on the 200 medley relay which finished seventh after setting a WSU record in the prelims (1:47.35), then swam the second 200 in the ninth-place 800 free relay and the breaststroke on the 10th-place 400 medley relay. Hogle participated on the 10th-place 400 free relay.
Hogle claimed five GLIAC titles in 2009 winning the 400 IM and 200 fly, along with the 800 free, 400 free and 400 medley relays with all three relays breaking the GLIAC record.
At the 2009 NCAA Championships, she totaled seven First Team All-America honors. Hogle finished third in the 200 fly and fourth in the 400 IM after breaking her own school record in both events in the prelims. She placed sixth in the 200 free and broke her own WSU record in the 200 IM, finishing eighth.
Hogle joined three school-record setting relays:Â 400 medley, 800 free and 400 free with a school-record 100-free time of 51.58.
She won five GLIAC titles in 2010 increasing her career total to 16. As a senior, Hogle won the 200 IM and the 200 fly for the third time each and the 400 IM for the third consecutive year as well as the 400 medley and 800 free relays.
Hogle recorded six First Team All-America honors as a senior finishing second in the 200 fly, third in the 400 IM and fifth in the 200 IM (2:04.19). She swam on the 400 medley relay (3:42.91), which finished .64 seconds behind Drury as both schools came in under the national record. She anchored the second-place 800 free relay and competed in the fourth-place 400 free relay (3:27.82). Hogle earned Honorable Mention All-America recognition with an 11th-place finish in the 200 breast.
She earned a bachelors degree in social work in 2012 and a master's in social work in 2014. Hogle maintained honor roll status all three semesters of the advanced standing program.