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Stanford Women, Cal Men Qualify One Diver Each On Day 1 of Zone Es

Though we’re not DiveDove, we do dabble in diving coverage, and as diving can have a major impact on the NCAA Swimming & Diving Championships, we cover NCAA Zone Diving – mainly through the lens of how national diving qualifiers could impact the team points battles later this month.

2018 NCAA ZONE DIVING

  • Zones A, B, D, E: Monday, March 5 – Wednesday, March 7
  • Zone C: Thursday, March 8 – Saturday, March 10
  • Host schools:
    • Zone A: Rutgers University
    • Zone B: University of Tennessee
    • Zone C: Ohio State University
    • Zone D: University of Minnesota
    • Zone E: Northern Arizona University
  • NCAA selection primer

In the hunt for NCAA titles, the Stanford women and Cal men added one diver apiece to their NCAA rosters after day 1 of NCAA Zone E competition.

Zone E results

Stanford’s women got Kassidy Cook into the big show with a 4th-place finish on 1-meter. Perhaps their toughest competition for the NCAA crown is Cal, which also got a diver in. Phoebe Lamay was 8th for the Golden Bears.

Nevada’s Sharae Zheng won the event, with her teammate Zoe Lei also making NCAAs. USC’s Dashiell Enos won the men’s 3-meter, and his team put two into NCAAs as well with Henry Fusaro third.

The Cal men were able to qualify Connor Callahan. They’ll be in a tight battle with Texas for the men’s title; Texas qualified two divers tonight and NC State qualified one in other NCAA Zones.

Here’s a look at the current qualifying chart:

QUALIFYING CHART

Athletes in bold have earned NCAA reimbursement.

Priority Finisher Women Men
1 3-meter Champ Dashiell Enos, USC
2 1-meter Champ Sharae Zheng, NEV
3 Platform Champ
4 3-meter 2nd Tarek Abdelghany, STAN
5 1-meter 2nd Eloise Belanger, UCLA
6 Platform 2nd
7 3-meter 3rd Henry Fusaro, USC
8 1-meter 3rd Frida Kaellgren, ASU
9 Platform 3rd
10 3-meter 4th Youssef Selim, ASU
11 1-meter 4th Kassidy Cook, STAN
12 Platform 4th
13 3-meter 5th Theodore Miclau, STAN
14 1-meter 5th Zoe Lei, NEV
15 Platform 5th
16 3-meter 6th Johan Sandell, HAWAII
17 1-meter 6th Delaney Schnell, ARIZ
18 Platform 6th
19 3-meter 7th Connor Callahan, CAL
20 1-meter 7th Ashley McCool, ASU
21 Platform 7th
22 3-meter 8th
23 1-meter 8th Phoebe Lamay, CAL
24 Platform 8th
25 3-meter 9th
26 1-meter 9th Karla Contreras, WYO

NCAA Diving QUALIFYING PROCEDURES

There are five zone meets spread across the country that allow divers to qualify for the NCAA Championships. Based on performances at the previous NCAAs each zone earns a set number of qualifying spots.

Take a look at the qualifying spots for each zone and each event:

WOMEN

WOMEN ELIGIBILITY
1m 3m Platform
Zone A 6 6 5
Zone B 7 7 9
Zone C 8 10 10
Zone D 11 9 9
Zone E 9 9 8

MEN

MEN ELIGIBILITY
1m 3m Platform
Zone A 6 5 5
Zone B 6 6 7
Zone C 10 10 11
Zone D 9 8 6
Zone E 5 7 7

A priority chart determines who gets the reimbursement spots. The first priority spot is taken by the winner of each event beginning with the 3-meter champ, followed by the 1-meter champ and then the platform champ. If an athlete wins two events, they will still only take up one slot which means the NCAA will keep adding rows to this chart until the zone meet reimbursement quota is met.

According to the rules set in 2015 that allowed more divers into the meet, any diver who lands in the qualifying spots for their zone earns a spot to compete in the NCAA Championships. If the diver earns eligibility in one event, they can automatically compete in any of the other two events at NCAAs as long as they finished in the top 12 in their zone in that event.

The NCAA made a distinction between “eligible” and “reimbursed” athletes. Divers qualifying outside of the reimbursement spots will not have their travel, lodging, or meet expenses covered by the NCAA.  Instead the individual school must decide if they’re willing to pay the bill themselves to give that diver an opportunity to participate in the NCAA Championships.

REIMBURSEMENT
Women Men
Zone A 4 4
Zone B 6 7
Zone C 10 10
Zone D 12 9
Zone E 9 5

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Swim Fan
6 years ago

Let’s Go Devils…??☀️?

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 …

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