2021 NCAA WOMEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS
- When: Wednesday, March 17 – Saturday, March 20, 2021
- Where: Greensboro Aquatic Center / Greensboro, NC (Eastern Time Zone)
- Prelims 10 AM / Finals 6 PM (Local Time)
- Short course yards (SCY) format
- Defending champion: Stanford (3x) – 2019 results
- Streaming: ESPN3
- Championship Central
- Psych Sheets
- Live Results – Swimming
- Live Results – Diving
- Day 2 Prelims Heat Sheet
Virginia looked great last night, taking a commanding victory in the 800 free relay, the program’s first NCAA relay title ever. This morning, they could clinch top spots in all three individual events for finals: Paige Madden in the 500 free, Alex Walsh in the 200 IM and Kate Douglass in the 50 free.
Stanford’s Brooke Forde looks to be the main challenger for Madden in the 500 and Michigan’s Maggie MacNeil a major threat in the 50 to Douglass, while Walsh is the top seed in the 200 IM by over a full second.
With three events running this morning, it’s time to start paying close attention to ups/downs, as the team race will pan out during tonight’s finals session, which consists of two relays in addition to the below three individual events.
500 FREE PRELIMS
- NCAA Record: Katie Ledecky (Stanford), 4:24.06 – 2017
- American Record: Katie Ledecky (Stanford), 4:24.06 – 2017
- U.S. Open Record: Katie Ledecky (Stanford), 4:24.06 – 2017
- Meet Record: Katie Ledecky (Stanford), 4:24.06 – 2017
- 2019 Champion: Brooke Forde (Stanford), 4:31.34
- 2020 Top Performer: Emma Nordin (Arizona State), 4:33.74
Top 8
- Paige Madden (Virginia) – 4:35.07
- Brooke Forde (Stanford) – 4:37.49
- Evie Pfeifer (Texas) – 4:38.18
- Sierra Schmidt (Michigan) – 4:40.00
- Kate Moore (NC State) – 4:40.13
- Ayla Spitz (Cal) – 4:40.15
- Sally Tafuto (Ohio State) – 4:40.70
- Courtney Harnish (Georgia) – 4:40.72
This was an incredibly pedestrian prelim, with swimmers making it into the A-final without breaking 4:40. In 2019, it took a 4:39.1 to make the B-final.
Virginia’s Paige Madden cruised ahead of the field in the final heat, hitting the top time of the morning by a longshot with a 4:35.07. She finished ahead of Stanford’s Brooke Forde, who will take the #2 time going into the A-final tonight. Cal sophomore Ayla Spitz was third in the heat at 4:40.15 to sneak into the A-final.
Texas’s Evie Pfeifer made it happen in heat five of seven, the first woman to break 4:40 today with a 4:38.18 ahead of Kate Moore (NC State), who was 4:40.13.
In heat six, Courtney Harnish of Georgia and Kristen Stege of Tennessee battled it out, with Ohio State’s Sally Tafuto and Virginia Tech’s Reka Gyorgy right behind. Tafuto pulled out the win, though, upsetting the field with a 4:40.70, as Harnish was second in 4:40.72 and Stege third in 4:41.40.
Out of heat one, Michigan senior Sierra Schmidt dropped seven seconds from seed to win in 4:40.00. That’s still almost three seconds off of her lifetime best from 2020 Big Tens, but it’s a sign the Michigan women might be sharper after they had an untimely COVID-related training pause a few weeks before Big Tens. In 2019, she was 16th in prelims with a 4:39.1, and she’s now going to get an A-final swim.
Schmidt was the 56th seed out of 56 swimmers in the 500 free.
200 IM PRELIMS
- NCAA Record: Ella Eastin (Stanford), 1:50.67 — 2018
- American Record: Ella Eastin (Stanford), 1:50.67 — 2018
- US Open Record: Ella Eastin (Stanford), 1:50.67 — 2018
- Meet Record: Ella Eastin (Stanford), 1:50.67 — 2018
- 2019 Champion: Beata Nelson (Wisconsin), 1:50.79
- 2020 Top Performer: Kate Douglass (Virginia), 1:51.36
Top 8
- Alex Walsh (Virginia) – 1:54.62
- Alicia Wilson (Cal) – 1:54.97
- Ella Nelson (Virginia) – 1:55.00
- Zoie Hartman (Georgia) – 1:55.03
- Kelly Pash (Texas) – 1:55.55
- Phoebe Bacon (Wisconsin) – 1:55.58
- Julia Poole (NC State) – 1:55.70
- Kristen Romano (Ohio State) – 1:56.12
The last heat went to Virginia’s Alex Walsh, who posted a 1:54.62 to easily take it, the only swimmers in the final heat under 1:56. OSU’s Kristen Romano was 1:56.12 in that heat to get into the A-final at eighth.
Cal’s Alicia Wilson won heat eight in 1:54.97, just ahead of Texas’s Kelly Pash at 1:55.55 and Wisconsin’s Phoebe Bacon at 1:55.58.
In heat seven, Georgia’s Zoie Hartman and Virginia’s Ella Nelson battled to the wall, as Nelson took the win at the wall. She clocked a 1:55.00 ahead of Hartman’s 1:55.03. Louisville’s Abby Hay touched third in 1:56.53 after leading at the mid-point.
In heat five, Ioanna Sacha had an upset win, the Houston standout clocking a 1:56.79 for her first time under 1:57. Another big early heat swim came out of heat two, as Akron standout Sarah Watson crushed a 1:56.85. That’s her first time under 1:57. Those two mid-major stars led the prelims until heat six, and they both got into the B-final, two of just four women in the top 16 to drop from seed.
50 FREE PRELIMS
- NCAA Record: Abbey Weitzeil (Cal), 20.90 – 2019
- American Record: Abbey Weitzeil (Cal), 20.90 – 2019
- U.S. Open Record: Abbey Weitzeil (Cal), 20.90 – 2019
- Meet Record: Abbey Weitzeil (Cal), 21.02 – 2019
- 2019 Champion: Abbey Weitzeil (Cal), 21.02
- 2020 Top Performer: Abbey Weitzeil (Cal), 20.90
Top 8
- Kate Douglass (Virginia) – 21.21
- Kylee Alons (NC State) – 21.50
- Maggie MacNeil (Michigan) – 21.58
- Sarah Thompson (Mizzou) – 21.61
- Kalia Antoniou (Alabama) – 21.73
- Grace Countie (UNC) – 21.92
- Katharine Berkoff (NC State) – 21.98
- Maddie Smith (Northwestern) – 22.03
The final heat was all Kate Douglass, the Virginia sophomore dominating with a 21.21. With all the heats completed, she’s the top seed by almost three-tenths for tonight’s final. Her time this morning is a best by two-tenths, and she takes down Simone Manuel’s pool record in the process.
Kylee Alons of NC State swam big in heat seven, going 21.50 to take down Michigan’s Maggie MacNeil (21.58).
In heat six, Mizzou’s Sarah Thompson dominated, going 21.61 for the first sub-22 of the morning, with NC State’s Katharine Berkoff also going under 22 for second (21.98).
Kalia Antoniou of Alabama, Grace Countie of UNC and Katharine Berkoff of NC State were all under 22 seconds, too, as Countie broke 22 for the first time this season. UNC had a bunch of positive COVID-19 tests which significantly cut down their roster for ACCs, but Countie was one of their ACC swimmers nonetheless.
Meanwhile, at her first NCAAs as an individual swimmer, Northwestern’s Maddie Smith makes the A-final with a 22.03.
Interesting stat: A finalists by conference: ACC 38%; Big 10 25%; SEC 16.7%; PAC-12 12.5%; Big 12 8.3%
Video of prelims? Video of Kate Douglass’ race?
you are so negative “sleepy prelim session” or a “incredibly pedestrian prelim”. No doubt none of you understand:
A. How hard it is to match or beat your seed at NCAA’s in a regular year, B. what has gone into this season just to be able to race.
Be positive and support these athletes for qualifying for whatever final they made. A year ago we didn’t get to do this at all.
I don’t feel like anyone here is minimizing the effort of any of the swimmers. We understand both A and B. I believe the comments on SwimSwam should be taken as observations not judgments.
When the A-final cut-off is over a second slower than the B-final cut-off from the last NCAAs, we are going to point that out. Nobody is blaming the individual swimmers for not going fast, and of course, swimmers add time at NCAAs; it’s the extent to which people are adding across the board that is noteworthy.
Just because we can have the meet this year, to me, doesn’t mean that we cannot point out the numbers. I also don’t think we were all expecting the fastest meet ever; these are observations, not slandering the athletes for going off of their times.
We can be supportive of the swimmers, happy the meet is happening AND compare the times to what they… Read more »
Slow water in Greensboro
But fortunately not long forgotten, thank goodness. The memories kick back in quickly.
Crazy stat to put today’s 500s into perspective: In 2017, Ledecky took out her 1650 in 4:32.10 (for the first 500)
50 Free results not showing up on the meet results page yet. (https://swimmeetresults.tech/NCAA-Division-I-Women-2021/)
Anyone else having this problem?
They just got posted. I will now proceed to de-angrify my blood.
I’ve noticed that the results for the last event of a session (both prelims or finals) often take a long time to publish while other results are posted within minutes or seconds of the event’s finish. Is there a technical reason for this? Meet procedure thing? Someone went off to the concession stand instead of clicking “Publish”? I would like to understand.
Agree . Happens a lot
A Better refresh. I can’t remember the details. It happens to people often.
Yep, shift-refresh. Grab the results from the server not the cache.
It’s just something I noticed. I don’t know if the scorer/whoever publishes the results know much I hang on their every word.
So far so good for Texas. Top 6 will be fast – too much quallity there not to be. But, how is that Texas has no a single entry in 50 free? Texas needed few points there.
Texas had Sticklen Emma, she swum few hundreds off her seed time and did not make top 16
Why isn’t Grace Ariola swimming this year? She’d be the team’s top 50 freestyler