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Redshirt Rewind: The 2020 NCAA Gap Years & Where They Go From Here

In Olympic anticipation, the 2020 NCAA season was loaded with top talent taking gap years. But Olympic postponement will throw a wrench into the plans of those swimmers.

First, we’ll quickly revisit the major names who sat out the NCAA season. Technically, these athletes could fall into a number of categories. “Redshirt” is a term used to describe an athlete who is enrolled at a school but does not compete for that school, thus saving a year of eligibility. The term has expanded, though, and now is used generally to describe an athlete taking a year off from college competition and not using a year of eligibility. Some of these athletes would consider it a “gap year,” rather than a redshirt, especially if they returned to their previous club to train. Prospective freshmen can defer their enrollment, effectively taking a “redshirt” year before they start their NCAA eligibility – but NCAA rules still require that they enroll within a year of graduating high school.

For simplicity’s sake, we’re going to broadly refer to all of these athletes as redshirts, using that as more of the umbrella term it’s typically used as.

2020 NCAA Redshirt List

Years listed are the grade the athlete would have been in the 2019-2020 season.

Women:

Name Team Country Year
Faith Knelson Arizona Canada
freshman, deferred enrollment
Ida Hulkko Florida State Finland sophomore
Taylor Ruck Stanford Canada sophomore
Mabel Zavaros Florida Canada sophomore
Mackenzie Padington Minnesota/NC State Canada junior
Sarah Bacon Minnesota USA senior
Kristen Hayden Minnesota USA senior
Federica Greco Rutgers Italy senior

Men:

Name Team Country Year
Jarod Arroyo Arizona State Puerto Rico
freshman, deferred enrollment
Ruslan Gaziev Ohio State Canada sophomore
Michael Brinegar Indiana USA sophomore
David Schlicht Arizona Australia sophomore
Trey Freeman Florida USA sophomore
Giovanni Izzo NC State Italy junior
Andrew Capobianco Indiana USA junior
Grant House Arizona State USA junior
Dean Farris Harvard USA senior
Javier Acevedo Georgia Canada senior
Mario Koenigsperger USC New Zealand senior
Brandon Loschiavo Purdue USA senior
Raphael Marcoux Harvard Canada senior
True Sweester Stanford USA senior

We should also note one more redshirt-related name who is actually a holdover from 2018: open water swimmer Erica Sullivan deferred her enrollment two years for Tokyo 2020, and will probably wind up with less than four years of NCAA eligibility regardless of what she decides to do next year.

2021 Options

Assuming the 2020 Olympics happen sometime between January and August of 2021 (as implied by the most recent postponement news), this bunch will run into the same issue next year – how to split focus between NCAA competition in short course yards and Olympic qualifying and competing in long course meters.

As far as we can tell, they’ll have three main options, assuming the NCAA doesn’t make any exceptions to its eligibility rules based on coronavirus cancellations:

  • Apply for a waiver to have their five-year NCAA eligibility window extended. In this case, the student-athlete would sit out the 2020-2021 season and hope to finish out their collegiate eligibility after effectively back-to-back redshirt seasons.*
  • Compete in the NCAA next season
  • Skip one of their four years of eligibility to take a second gap year for the 2021 version of the Olympics

*The NCAA’s Division I handbook does provide for waivers to extend its five-year rule, which requires a two-thirds majority vote from an NCAA committee.

Forecasting the Field

Though we tend to see the four-year college window as an athletic feature, we have to put aside our swimming fandom long enough to remember the academic side. Many of these decisions will be driven by where an athlete is in their educational program. A would-be senior with job prospects in their field may not want to delay a career by two years just to get one more NCAA season in under the wire. On the other hand, some may be willing to stretch out their academic program or add another undergraduate degree while using up their final year(s) of collegiate eligibility in athletics.

For those who continued training at their respective universities, the decision is mainly about their focus, both in training and whether they’ll continue their studies or take a light courseload to ready for the Olympics. At least a few of these athletes, though, changed their training bases.

  • Dean Farris left Harvard to train at Texas. There’s an argument to be made that Farris in particular could be better off staying at Texas and perhaps turning pro, where his short course prowess could make him a force in the ISL. But finishing a Harvard degree is a draw of its own.
  • Taylor Ruck had left Stanford to train in Toronto, though her training group there was sent home due to the coronavirus outbreak, and she’s now apparently training in Arizona. Her decision could be impacted by whether Canada or Stanford is able to return to normalcy first, as that would allow her to resume training.
  • Mackenzie Padington also returned to Canada, but announced her intent to transfer from Minnesota to NC State after her gap year.
  • Michael Brinegar spent most of the gap training with Mission Viejo in California.

A few athletes have some other factors to consider:

  • Mario Koenigsperger left USC but planned to return for his senior year. Now, the coach who recruited him and trained him the past three years, Dave Salo, is retiring from the college ranks to focus on training his pro group. So even if Koenigsperger returns to USC, he may have reason to turn pro and stay with a familiar coach, rather than finish his college eligibility. (Sullivan would be in the same boat here, as she was recruited when Salo was head coach).
  • Florida’s Trey Freeman was a late redshirt after undergoing knee surgery – it appears he was still attending school and training in Gainesville, so it would be fair to expect him back in the college ranks next year.

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Jackie
4 years ago

It will be interesting to see if any of these swimmers decide to go pro instead of back to there respected universities

ACC swim fan
4 years ago

David Herbert of Virginia Tech redshirted this year after injuring his elbow at ACCs in 2019. Posted a 19.7 at that meet. Senior year to come

JohnnyBravo
4 years ago

Josh Brown of Princeton as well redshirted this year

Sophie
4 years ago

Although in regard to Sullivan, yes Salo did recruit her, but she likely would have been training with Catherine Vogt (who I think is now Catherine Kase) regardless given that Kase coaches the “long-sprint” group as Salo calls it.

Swammer
Reply to  Sophie
4 years ago

Catherine ain’t gonna be there.

Speed Racer
Reply to  Swammer
4 years ago

Fact

Swammer
4 years ago

Bigger question is Regan Smith, unless that gets its own article.

Carlos
Reply to  Swammer
4 years ago

She’ll either defer enrollment and keep her current training consistent or go to Stanford and get more longcourse in. I honestly think she should stay at home.

Gator
Reply to  Swammer
4 years ago

That’s an even easier question now- go pro and become a millionaire- school can wait and unfortunately lose NCAA swimming Eligibility

ecb
Reply to  Swammer
4 years ago

curious about carson foster too

YaYeeter
4 years ago

Dean Farris should get his degree at Harvard

SAMUEL HUNTINGTON
Reply to  YaYeeter
4 years ago

I like that plan. Finish in early May and then hurry to Austin for about a month of LCM training to get ready for Trials.

DBSWIMS
Reply to  YaYeeter
4 years ago

As much of a God at swimming he is, finishing his Harvard degree is the wiser choice.

Nswim
Reply to  YaYeeter
4 years ago

Harvard has an LCM pool as does MIT only about 15 minutes away. He could get decent training at Harvard if he stays, even if he limits his SCY focus and stays LCM. The Harvard degree will open doors for him, most swimmers have to have other careers after retirement, even Jenny Thompson, who was an Olympic legend.

Bo Swims
Reply to  YaYeeter
4 years ago

Distance learning or enroll at UT as a visiting student and transfer classes to Harvard. Finish remaining courses at Harvard Fall 2021

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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