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Defending NAIA Women’s Swimming & Diving Champs SCAD Cancel 2020-2021 Season

The Savannah College of Art & Design, or SCAD, has canceled all of its winter season intercollegiate athletics, after having previously canceled the fall sports season due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

This means that the school’s powerhouse swimming & diving program won’t participate in the 2020-2021 NAIA season. The information, distributed to artist-athletes on Monday, also says that practices will be canceled until the spring.

The school has campuses in both Savannah and Atlanta, Georgia, and both campuses have athletics programs. The swimming & diving team is based out of the Savannah campus.

The school has already gone to a mostly-virtual class lineup for the fall quarter, which runs until November 19.

One of SCAD’s major challenges is that the campus is intertwined across the city of Savannah, which makes it difficult to contain students as compared to a more isolated campus.

SCAD has become one of the top programs in the NAIA. Last season, the SCAD women won the NAIA National Championship by 143.5 points over Keiser University. The SCAD men were 2nd, 62 points behind Keiser. For the SCAD women, that was a third-consecutive NAIA title and its fourth in five seasons.

That program is led by Bill Pilczuk. Pilczuk was a 3-time NCAA All-American at Auburn and the 1998 World Champion in the 50 free, among many other accolades. He placed 3rd in the 50 free at the 1996 US Olympic Trials and 4th at the 2000 US Olympic Trials, narrowly missing the Olympic Team both years.

Like about half of the states in the country, and the country as a whole, Georgia has begun to see a slow increase in the number of new coronavirus cases after bottoming-out in late September. While the numbers are still only about a third of where they were at their peak in July, the state’s 7-day average of 1,314 new daily cases is a slight increase from earlier this month.

Chatham County, where Savannah is located, has fared better than most of the state overall and continues to see a general decline in the number of new coronavirus cases.

The NAIA, meanwhile, is moving forward with both its fall and winter seasons, though it has given fall sports a flexible option to play in the spring. The 2021 NAIA National Championship meet is scheduled for March 3-6 at the Allan Jones Aquatic Center in Knoxville, Tennessee.

Other winter season sports at SCAD impacted by the decision include men’s and women’s bowling, equestrian (a non-NAIA sport), and the League of Legends E-Sports season.

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Mac
4 years ago

Ouch. I truly feel for the athletes.

Anonymous
4 years ago

Incredibly unfortunate for a fantastic team. SCAD swims at the Chatham County Aquatic Center, as the name states, it is a county run pool, which took the pandemic time to complete a large number of renovations to the pool and facility. They are opening slowly and with an abundance of caution with very minimal swimmers in the pool for a limited time. As a defending National Champion, I don’t see how they could have been where they needed to be with the limitations set on them by both the pool and the athletic department/director.

SwimFani
4 years ago

Sad for these student-athletes and their coaches. Hopefully Savannah College of Art & Design will have to close it’s doors for lack of funding. Then the administrators who make these bone head decisions can start serving fries, cheeseburgers and coke at fast food restaurants.

swimgeek
Reply to  SwimFani
4 years ago

Wut?

Oh my
4 years ago

If like you see who is moving ahead

collegeswammer
4 years ago

Sorry for not being relevant, but any idea when the college team rankings will be coming out? I feel like most duel meets are starting next week.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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