Swimcloud
Lucas Draper

Lucas Draper

Diving Coach

Jessica Padilla

Jessica Padilla

Assistant Coach

Jessica Padilla joined as an assistant for the Oberlin College swimming and diving team at the beginning of the 2018-19 season. Before Oberlin, Padilla was an assistant coach at Elyria Catholic High School. On the Panthers staff she worked with the head coach to developed training regimens and monitored practices and swim meets. Prior to coaching, she was a pool manager at the Lorain country Metroparks and Greater Cleveland YMCA. As a pool manager she supervised/trained lifeguards, directed swim lessons, managed in-services to ensure lifeguards’ skills and that the facility operated efficiently according to standards. She was a competitive swimmer through high school and continued to swim in college on the club team at Ohio State University. Padilla currently works full time for the Cleveland Clinic as a Research Engineer.
Alex de la Pena

Alex de la Pena

Head Swimming and Diving Coach

Alex de la Peña is entering his sixth season as Oberlin’s head swimming & diving coach and aquatics director in 2023-24 after being named as the program’s leader on September 24, 2018. The men’s team finished in 6th out of 9 teams at the 2023 NCAC Championships, scoring 200 more points than at the '22 meet. The Yeomen also took 2nd out of 11 teams at the annual Oberlin Midseason Invite in November 2022. During the finals, the men's 200 medley relay set a new school record time of 1:32.80 while finishing in the top-three. The women’s team earned a fifth-place finish out of 8 teams at the 2023 NCAC Championships, improving their score by 132 points from the 2022 meet. The Yeowomen also captured 1st out of 12 teams at the annual Oberlin Midseason Invite in November 2022. In his five years at the helm, Oberlin swimmers have set ten school records, 71 top-10 program times, and increased the point total each year at the NCAC Championships. Under de la Peña's tutelage the men's and women's teams earned the most points in program history at the 2023 NCAC Championship. Since the 2018-2019 season, there have been 12 A Final performances at the conference championships - nine of which came from this past year. Isaac Viviano (100 and 200 Breast), Erik Fendorf (50 Free and 100 Fly), Myles Felt (100 and 200 Back), Miguel Siwady (1650 Free), Ava Peyton (100 Back and 100 IM) all earned A Final cuts. de la Peña also helped Michael Lin '19 break a pair of school records in the 100 & 200 Breaststroke, while guiding Miguel Siwady '26 to an NCAA B Cut in the 1650 Freestlye. Prior to Oberlin, de la Peña served as head women's swimming coach and director of aquatics at Pfeiffer University (NC) where he guided the Falcons to a fourth-place team finish at the conference championship meet in 2018. Eight individuals also earned all-conference honors. Before going to Pfeiffer, de la Peña worked at the Cleveland Sports Institute in a variety of roles including coaching swimming and strength & conditioning while serving as aquatics coordinator. He's also held Division I assistant coaching positions at UNC Wilmington and Brown University from 2013-2016. de la Peña's first collegiate head coaching position was at Monmouth College (IL) from 2011-13. During his tenure, the Fighting Scot swimmers produced 23 All-Midwest Conference selections, one Midwest Conference champion, 19 school records and 88 top-ten times in program history. He began his collegiate coaching career at Oberlin from 2009-11 when he helped guide swimmers to 11 school records and 81 top-ten times. Additionally, three athletes achieved NCAA "B" cut times including one national qualifier. A native of Northeast Ohio, de la Peña swam collegiately at Baldwin Wallace University and was a two-year team captain while being a part of several team records and top-ten times in program history. After graduating from BW with a bachelor's degree in sport management and business administration, he went on to earn a master's degree in educational administration at St. Lawrence University (NY) while working as a graduate assistant coach.