Olympic Water Polo Coach's Cause of Death Revealed After Hotel Staff Found Him in Locked Room
Andrew McGinty was found deceased in his hotel room in Manchester, England, on Dec. 18
Andrew McGinty Credit: English Schools' Swimming Association Facebook NEED TO KNOW Key Takeaways Andrew McGinty was a coach for England and Great Britain's water polo teams, having worked in the sport for over a decade His death prompted tributes from organizations highlighting his contributions to school and national water polo programs McGinty’s body was discovered in a Manchester hotel room after staff forced entry when he failed to check out An Olympic water polo coach is believed to have taken his own life, a coroner in England has shared. Andrew McGinty was found deceased at the Village Hotel in Bury, Manchester on Dec. 18, according to Manchester Evening News and Birmingham Live .
The 34-year-old, who served as coach for the England and Great Britain water polo squads, checked into the hotel two days before he was found. Staff discovered his body after he failed to check out, per the outlets. After forcing their way into the room, which was chained from the inside, workers found McGinty lying on the bed.
Village Hotel Bury Credit: Google Maps On Monday, April 20, a coroner revealed at Rochdale Coroner's Court that McGinty died of “suffocation/asphyxiation. ” PEOPLE reached out to Rochdale Coroner's Court and Village Hotel for comment, but they did not immediately respond. Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage?
Sign up for PEOPLE's free True Crime newsletter for breaking crime news, ongoing trial coverage and details of intriguing unsolved cases. In a statement, Senior Coroner Joanne Kearsley said, “The circumstances of his death indicate he had deliberately ended his life. ” Following McGinty’s death, many organizations paid tribute to the late coach.