You are working on Staging2

2017-2018 Will Be Simone Manuel’s Last NCAA Season

Olympic and World champion sprinter Simone Manuel will not continue her collegiate career after this year’s NCAA Championships. Manuel participated in Stanford’s senior day activities this weekend in their final home meet at the Avery Aquatic Center of the 2017-2018 season.

Manuel is technically a senior this year, but took an Olympic redshirt in her sophomore year, which could allow her one more year of NCAA eligibility if she wanted it. But Stanford head coach Greg Meehan has confirmed to SwimSwam that this season will be Manuel final year of collegiate swimming.

Correction: a previous version of this article read that Meehan said that Manuel is turning pro. Meehan only confirmed that this would be her final season of collegiate eligibility.

Manuel’s professional plans have been a hot topic of discussion among swimming fans. She’s the defending Olympic and World champ in the 100 meter free, having beaten recent world record-breakers Cate Campbell in Rio in 2016 and Sarah Sjostrom in Budapest in 2017. That Rio win made Manuel the first ever black woman to win an individual Olympic gold medal in swimming.

After missing most of this college season with an injury, Manuel is back in the water and favored to win the 50 free and 100 free at the NCAA Championships next month. She’s the American record-holder in the 100 and the defending champ in both events. She’s also part of a loaded Stanford team that is heavily favored to repeat as national champions.

While Stanford is good enough to remain among the top programs in the NCAA even without Stanford, Manuel turning pro does add to a big graduating group of major NCAA scorers. This offseason, Stanford will say goodbye to American record-holder Ally Howe, All-American Janet Hu, Olympic diver Kassidy Cook and NCAA champion diver Gracia Leydon Mahoney along with Manuel.

In This Story

53
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

53 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
NRS
6 years ago

Simone’s win in the 100 free at last year’s world was great to watch. I can’t wait to see what she does as a pro!

CONFUSED YET CHLORINATED
6 years ago

Ironic that a bunch of what is likely older white men are commenting on what a young black woman should do – and one who is also likely to be more talented than the Commenting Collective…

Laci
Reply to  CONFUSED YET CHLORINATED
6 years ago

Seems like you have some kind of bias agains older white men. Anyone should feel free to comment about anyone, or are you saying that only black female top swimmers with roughly Manuel’s age should be allowed to comment their opinions regarding Simone Manuel? 🙂

CONFUSED YET CHLORINATED
Reply to  Laci
6 years ago

No bias whatsoever. One, if the not irony then it’s jealousy combined with incredulity that someone wouldn’t give up one’s amateur status for money. Two, you’re the only one intimating that one has to be exactly like a person to comment. My comment was merely an observation…

completelyconquered
Reply to  CONFUSED YET CHLORINATED
6 years ago

Didn’t you just assume that everyone commenting is an old white man?

Txswimdad
6 years ago

Is she graduating this summer? If so it is a little silly to think that she would come back just to swim another year of college. I know this is often done in other sports (football) during a grad school year but doesn’t make any sense to me in this situation where she has nothing left to prove at the college level .

Notaswimmer
6 years ago

Hello…if the “correction” added after the 1st paragraph is accurate, you may want to change the article’s headline!

Honest observer
6 years ago

Simone Manuel may be “the first ever black woman to win an individual gold medal in Olympic swimming,” but back in 1976, Edith Brigitha, a black Dutchwoman (she was born in Curacao), won bronze in the 100 meter freestyle behind two East Germans, so…….

Ervin
Reply to  Honest observer
6 years ago

….so a bronze is not gold and a Dutchwoman is not an African American

Honest observer
Reply to  Ervin
6 years ago

The article didn’t say “African American,” it said “black.” And that bronze should have been gold.

Ervin
Reply to  Honest observer
6 years ago

I know, i said that cause theres a difference. And did Edith win bronze or gold? Which is it?

ALEXANDER POP-OFF
Reply to  Ervin
6 years ago

Ervin, you know exactly what Honest Observer is saying. And it doesn’t take away from Manuel’s achievement to recognise Brigitha.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  Ervin
6 years ago

exactly well corrected – some guys here can’t read properly …..lol

sven
6 years ago

Hopefully there is less venom over this move than when Missy went pro. Yeesh.

Dudeman
Reply to  sven
6 years ago

Missy horribly mistimed her transition, she should have gone pro after london because 2012 and 2013 were arguably the best years of her career, instead she went through 2 years of college, turned pro and proceeded to struggle with injuries and her mental state resulting in very poor performances (for her).

Simone is very much in her prime and is finishing school in a couple months, she performed for her team all four years and can move on to the next stage of her career. It is a much more logical decision for Manuel to take this path.

rjcid
6 years ago

Aaaw yeah!!! Leggo Simoooone!

James
6 years ago

Clearly the build up to Tokyo is about to start heating up. Big corporations want to start partnering with athletes that will land them a good deal of exposure, and Manuel is poised for an even bigger breakout on the International stage.

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

Read More »