You are working on Staging2

All The Links You Need For the 2019 Men’s NCAA Championships

2019 MEN’S NCAA SWIMMING & DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS

Event previews, Pick ‘Em Contest, psych sheets, live results – we’ve got all the links you need to follow the 2019 men’s NCAA Championships here.

EVENT SCHEDULE:

  • Wednesday
    • 800 Freestyle Relay
  • Thursday
    • 200-yard Freestyle Relay
    • 500-yard Freestyle
    • 200-yard Individual Medley
    • 50-yard Freestyle
    • One-meter Diving
    • 400-yard Medley Relay
  • Friday
    • 400-yard Individual Medley
    • 100-yard Butterfly
    • 200-yard Freestyle
    • 100-yard Breaststroke
    • 100-yard Backstroke
    • Three-meter Diving
    • 200-yard Medley Relay
  • Saturday
    • 1,650-yard Freestyle
    • 200-yard Backstroke
    • 100-yard Freestyle
    • 200-yard Breaststroke
    • 200-yard Butterfly
    • Platform Diving
    • 400-yard Freestyle Relay

FINAL EDITION TEAM POWER RANKINGS HERE

PICK ‘EM CONTEST Here

Swimming fans can still enter our official Pick ‘Em contest until 4 p.m. on the Wednesday of the meet. If you haven’t done so already, click here to enter. By using the new Google Forms format, you CAN go in and edit your responses up until 4 p.m. on Wednesday. You can also use this “edit responses” ability to go in and print or save your answers.

EVENT-BY-EVENT PREVIEWS:

You can follow these links to each of our specific event-by-event previews for Men’s NCAAs, including our top eight picks in each race. We’ve listed our predicted winners below.

DAY EVENT WINNER
Wednesday 800 Free Relay Texas
Thursday 200 Free Relay Cal
500 Free Townley Haas, Texas
200 IM Andreas Vazaios, NC State
50 Free
400 Medley Relay Indiana
Friday 400 IM Abrahm DeVine, Stanford
100 Fly Vini Lanza, Indiana
200 Free Townley Haas, Texas
100 Breast Ian Finnerty, Indiana
100 Back
200 Medley Relay NC State
Saturday 1650 Free
200 Back John Shebat, Texas
100 Free Justin Ress, NC State
200 Breast
200 Fly
400 Free Relay
Diving Connor/Zeng/Dinsmore

17
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

17 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
JDL
5 years ago

Live results link is for the women’s meet, not mens

Jalen Stimes
5 years ago

The live results are the women’s results from the week before.

CT Swim Fan
Reply to  Jalen Stimes
5 years ago

please post the link on how to fix it.

JSWIM
5 years ago

The Live Results is showing the Women from last week…

Paul
Reply to  JSWIM
5 years ago

Probably because the meet isn’t live yet

jvog88
5 years ago

Ahhh yeah, it feels like Christmas in March!! 😀

Anonymous
Reply to  jvog88
5 years ago

Basketball isn’t the only sport with March Madness. Swim is crazy in March – college, age groupers and seniors kids.

Reply to  Anonymous
5 years ago

the REAL march madness

Woke Stasi
5 years ago

Why the did the women’s NCAA meet last week at Texas have prelims start at 9am CT and finals at 5pm CT, while this week’s men’s meet in the very same facility has prelims starting at 10am CT and finals at 6pm CT? Last week’s earlier start times would seem to be a minor disadvantage for the West Coast teams in terms of acclimation —although Stanford and Cal did finish first and second.

wethorn
Reply to  Woke Stasi
5 years ago

Because a 9 am start time is uncivilized and men won’t stand for that.

IU Swammer
Reply to  Woke Stasi
5 years ago

ESPN sets the time for finals.

eagleswim
Reply to  Woke Stasi
5 years ago

thankfully it means I can watch from home instead of staying late to watch a college swim meet from my desk at work haha I got some weird looks last week. “you’re staying WHY??”

FormerLonghorn
5 years ago

Is there any live video coverage and where can it be found?

Wilson Beckman
5 years ago

you forgot one more link

Go Hoosiers

https://youtu.be/g9HkwNaySKk

Club Coach
5 years ago

Quick correction under Event Schedule, Friday the 200IM should be 400IM

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 »