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SwimSwam Pulse: 60% Oppose NCAA Scoring Down To 24th

SwimSwam Pulse is a recurring feature tracking and analyzing the results of our periodic A3 Performance Polls. You can cast your vote in our newest poll on the SwimSwam homepage, about halfway down the page on the right side, or you can find the poll embedded at the bottom of this post.

Our most recent poll asked SwimSwam readers if the NCAA should move its scoring format down to 24th place to mirror most of the major Division I conferences:

RESULTS

Question: Should the NCAA score down to 24th place for each event?

  • No – 59.8%
  • Yes – 40.2%

Just under 60% of voters opposed the idea of the NCAA widening its scoring margin and scoring down to 24th place.

We floated the idea earlier in the month as nothing more than a discussion point. It was posited somewhat in response to some unique conference outcomes – depth-based teams being rewarded with runaway conference wins, while more top-heavy teams remained the bigger NCAA threats. (The Indiana women beating Michigan in the Big Ten was a key example). That phenomenon has brought about some interesting discussion among fans as to whether such a win should be considered an upset – we projected Indiana as legitimate candidates for the Big Ten title, even though they’ve never come close to Michigan in our overall power rankings – or whether conference standing should affect our own power rankings, which we focus more on NCAA Championships viability.

In a way, swimming has several different competition venues that value vastly different things. Dual meets force a team to be well-rounded – an event with no strong swimmers will bleed points, while a loaded event is capped at only 3 scoring swimmers per team, and a max of 16 points. That leads to the often odd outcomes in the CSCAA’s regular “dual meet” poll rankings, which ranks out dual meet strength but often flies in the face of true NCAA viability.

Then there’s the conference level, where the Big Ten, ACC and SEC now score down to 24th place along with the Pac-12 women. The Pac-12 men and Big 12 men and women continue to score down to 16th. The broadened scoring format values depth much more, and with no entry caps or floors for any specific event, a team can benefit from having 5 good 100 freestylers even if they have no milers.

At the NCAA level, the very top-end talent are the only ones who can put points on the board. Scoring at NCAAs has become ridiculously fast. Scoring down to 24th wouldn’t necessarily change that, but would open up opportunities for more teams to put up points, and perhaps for teams to reap more points from their top-end depth: the elite swimmers who aren’t quite national-level studs, but who are fast enough to earn NCAA invites and swim well on the big stage.

One complication is that, on the men’s side, only about 30 swimmers are invited to NCAAs per event. More will enter with B cuts, but scoring down to 24th even further exacerbates the trend in men’s swimming: that merely making the NCAA invite list is the most difficult part, while scoring isn’t as huge a step (time-wise) as just being invited.

 

Below, vote in our new A3 Performance Pollwhich asks voters their predictions for women’s NCAAs:

Who will win 2019 Women's NCAAs?

View Results

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A3 Performance is an independently-owned, performance swimwear company built on a passion for swimming, athletes, and athletic performance. We encourage swimmers to swim better and faster at all ages and levels, from beginners to Olympians.  Driven by a genuine leader and devoted staff that are passionate about swimming and service, A3 Performance strives to inspire and enrich the sport of swimming with innovative and impactful products that motivate swimmers to be their very best – an A3 Performer.

The A3 Performance Poll is courtesy of A3 Performance, a SwimSwam partner

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Michael Keeler
5 years ago

Ok, here is my big problem with scoring to 24. Let’s look an example of a scoring breakdown: in 16th place scoring, team A wins an event, they score 20, team B has a 16th place finish in 3 events, they score 3 points. Now in 24 place scoring, team A wins an event, they get 32 points, Team B places 16th in 3 events, they score 33 points! Do we really want to do that? Everyone always talks about the 17th thru 24th place deserving some points. It is not about just scoring the 17th thru 24th place, it it how much it devalues the top 8.

friuti
Reply to  Michael Keeler
5 years ago

It would much more value overall team depth than having a handful of studs, which has its pros and cons to be fair. Who should be the winner, the team that can consistently place 2-3 swimmers in 9th-24th place, or the team that has 3 guys who each win 3 events and relays and maybe a couple other scorers? To me it’s truly a matter of opinion about what makes a better swim team. I’d think being able to produce/develop a larger number of solid swimmers should be held above being able to develop/recruit 2 or 3 studs.

Rafael
5 years ago

For curiosity
If top 24 did score, that would affect Texas Cal and Indiana final results? Change the positions? (Considering the 17th to 24rd place receiving points based on prelims time)

ACC
Reply to  Rafael
5 years ago

I scored out the men’s meet (with top times for relays, swimming only), and Cal, Indiana, and Texas are still 1-2-3 in that order.
Points for top 16: Cal 406, Indiana 355, Texas 280, NC State 256, Florida 243
Points for top 24: Cal 795, Indiana 662, Texas 632, Florida 560, NC State 538

B1G Fan
Reply to  ACC
5 years ago

What does the diving points do? You could use points from the Zone qualifiers which should be fairly standardized.

Dangus
5 years ago

should only score top 8

Fly100
5 years ago

Bring back the good old top 6 and bottom 6 ! 13th and you are watching !

googoodoll
Reply to  Fly100
5 years ago

Love it AND drop the number of athletes per school down to 10-12 maximum with divers counting as a whole person. This would distribute athletes and make a much more competitive meet. We would also find some great coaches!

Close Reader
5 years ago

The major advantage of scoring to 24, and therefore increasing the number of teams that pick up a point, would be to increase the value a swimming & diving team would bring to their department, and either slow or hopefully reverse the trend of cutting teams. Unless you score points, your team isn’t officially credited with an NCAA appearance, and gets no Director’s Cup points (which measures overall department success based on NCAA appearances and success). We should not be in the business of making it more difficult for coaches to sell their teams to their own administrations, and instead, should be finding ways to help. This would do that. What’s an easier sell? “We took five kids and two… Read more »

SwimGeek
Reply to  Close Reader
5 years ago

Great point. Never thought of that. If it will help keep swim teams alive, I’m all for for this change.

Human Ambition
Reply to  Close Reader
5 years ago

I totally agree! Bringing home points are a killer reas on for deeper scoring.

Jim C
Reply to  Close Reader
5 years ago

What if you kept the basic scoring system the same, but added a point for a morning swim fast enough to make any of the finals?

2 Cents
Reply to  Close Reader
5 years ago

I am in favor of the scoring to 24. This is not my #1 reason why, but it is probably the best reason to expand the scoring. Every conference does it (Pac10 men and BigXII have obvious reasons not to since they can barely fill up a console heat in some events) so why not do it at NCAAs?

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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