The Stanford women, in the most dominant NCAA Women’s Swimming & Diving Championship performance in over a decade, won 50% of the individual event titles at the 2018 championships last month, taking 8 out of 16 wins. When filtered to just swimming, they won 61% of the individual event titles.
By measure of total wins, their 13 (they swept the relays) tied for the most in NCAA history. Florida did the same in 1982 and 1988, and the Stanford women also won 13 titles in 1993. That Florida run operated under different rules, where athletes were able to swim more than 3 individual events; the indomitable Tracy Caulkins won 5 individual titles in 1982, for example, including one of only 2 NCAA titles ever awarded in the 100 IM (she also won the other one in 1983).
Those 13 titles grew Stanford’s all-time event-win total to 173, which is almost double Florida for the most all-time. Only 2 teams (Florida at 90, and Georgia at 78) are within 100 event wins of Stanford’s total, and nobody is closer than 83.
The win also gave Stanford an even 10 team titles, the most in history:
Rank | Team | Titles | Most Recent Title |
1 | Stanford | 10 | 2018 |
2 | Texas | 7 | 1991 |
2 | Georgia | 7 | 2016 |
4 | Auburn | 5 | 2007 |
5 | Cal | 4 | 2015 |
6 | Florida | 2 | 2010 |
7 | Arizona | 1 | 2008 |
8 | USC | 1 | 1997 |
The two teams that moved the furthest up the rankings were Arkansas and Northwestern. Arkansas freshman Brooke Schultz won the 3-meter diving event, the school’s 2nd event title, matching Robin Ford’s 1985 title in the same event. Northwestern junior Olivia Rosendahl won her 2nd-straight platform title, giving Northwestern 2 all-time titles.
Indiana moved into the top 10 all-time with 2 more titles from Lilly King, who now has 6 of the Hoosiers’ all-time titles.
Beyond Stanford,
The updated all-time team tally, including change in teams’ rank:
Rank | School | New Total | 2018 titles | Change in Rank |
1 | Stanford | 173 | 13 | |
2 | Florida | 90 | ||
3 | Georgia | 78 | ||
4 | Texas | 71 | ||
5 | Cal | 70 | 1 | |
6 | Arizona | 49 | ||
7 | USC | 43 | 1 | |
8 | Auburn | 32 | ||
9 | SMU | 29 | ||
10 | Indiana | 12 | 2 | 1 |
11 | North Carolina | 11 | -1 | |
12 | Michigan | 10 | -1 | |
12 | Texas A&M | 10 | -1 | |
14 | Minnesota | 9 | ||
15 | Houston | 7 | ||
15 | Tennessee | 7 | ||
17 | Virginia | 6 | ||
18 | Nevada | 5 | ||
18 | Ohio State | 5 | ||
18 | Louisville | 5 | 1 | 2 |
21 | Clemson | 4 | -1 | |
21 | Columbia | 4 | -1 | |
21 | Hawaii | 4 | -1 | |
21 | LSU | 4 | -1 | |
21 | Miami (FL) | 4 | 1 | -1 |
26 | Arizona St. | 3 | ||
26 | BYU | 3 | ||
26 | Kkansas | 3 | ||
29 | Alabama | 2 | ||
29 | IUPUI | 2 | ||
29 | Kentucky | 2 | ||
29 | Michigan St. | 2 | ||
29 | Villanova | 2 | ||
29 | Arkansas | 2 | 1 | 5 |
29 | Northwestern | 2 | 1 | 5 |
36 | Cincinnati | 1 | -2 | |
36 | Colorado St. | 1 | -2 | |
36 | Duke | 1 | -2 | |
36 | Furman | 1 | -2 | |
36 | Nebraska | 1 | -2 | |
36 | North Carolina St. | 1 | -2 | |
36 | Notre Dame | 1 | -2 | |
36 | Oregon St. | 1 | -2 | |
36 | Purdue | 1 | -2 | |
36 | South Carolina | 1 | -2 | |
36 | Southern Illinois | 1 | -2 | |
36 | UCLA | 1 | -2 | |
36 | Wisconsin | 1 | -2 |
I’m confused by the 1 in the Nebraska row for 2018.
Stanford would be top 10 even if you only counted their titles from **this year**