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NCAA Programs With The Most Athletes On The 2023 US World Championships Team

The US World Trials finished up this past Saturday night in Indianapolis. On Saturday night, the official US Worlds roster was named.

A total of 52 athletes will represent Team USA in the pool and open water. 22 women qualified for pool events with the addition of one open water swimmer. On the men’s side, there are 26 men in the pool and three in open water.

At the 2020 Olympics, Georgia led the way with seven swimmers on the roster for Tokyo. Last year, Florida led the way with six athletes heading to 2022 Worlds in Budapest.

This year, Texas leads the way with seven total athletes. Notably, they come in the form of alum, current athletes, as well as future commits. Texas is home to Erin Gemmell, Jillian Cox, and Lydia Jacoby on the women’s side. On the men’s side, Carson Foster, Luke Hobson, Drew Kibler, and David Johnston have competed for Texas.

Sitting behind Texas is Virginia which has been home to Gretchen Walsh, Alex Walsh, Kate Douglass, Maxine Parker, Leah Smith, and Matt King. Cal and Florida have both been home to five athletes each that will be on the roster this summer.

Interestingly, a total of four athletes on the roster for this summer’s Worlds have not committed to a school yet.  That list includes Alex Shackell, Claire Weinstein, Katie Grimes, and Thomas Heilman.

Note: The tally below consists of former, current, and future athletes at their respective university. Some of the athletes tallied have not stepped foot on campus yet but have already committed to the school in some form. In addition, some swimmers may have not competed for a full four years at the school, but for the sake of this tally, their most recent school was considered. 

School, Number of Athletes from that School

Texas 7
Virginia 6
Cal 5
Florida 5
Uncommitted 4
Stanford 4
Indiana 4
NC State 4
Georgia 3
Arizona State 2
Ohio State 2
Texas A&M 2
Tennessee 1
Penn 1
Alabama 1
Notre Dame 1
Total Athletes 52

Athletes and College

Uncommitted Athletes are denoted with a “-‘ under college

ATHLETE COLLEGE
Regan Smith Stanford
Kate Douglass Virginia
Abbey Weitzeil Cal
Gretchen Walsh Virginia
Olivia Smoliga Georgia
Katie Ledecky Stanford
Claire Weinstein
Bella Sims Florida
Erin Gemmell Texas
Lilly King Indiana
Katie Grimes
Torri Huske Stanford
Lindsay Looney Arizona State
Jillian Cox Texas
Rhyan White Alabama
Alex Walsh Virginia
Lydia Jacoby Texas
Katharine Berkoff NC State
Alex Shackell
Leah Smith Virginia
Maxine Parker Virginia
Anna Peplowski Indiana
Mariah Denigan Indiana
Carson Foster Texas
Jack Alexy Cal
Chris Guiliano Notre Dame
Matt King Virginia
Destin Lasco Cal
Bobby Finke Florida
Luke Hobson Texas
Kieran Smith Florida
Drew Kibler Texas
Jake Mitchell Florida
Matt Fallon Penn
Ryan Murphy Cal
Dare Rose Cal
David Johnston Texas
Nic Fink Georgia
Hunter Armstrong Ohio State
Ryan Held NC State
Thomas Heilman
Charlie Clark Ohio State
Josh Matheny Indiana
Chase Kalisz Georgia
Shaine Casas Texas A&M
Ross Dant NC State
Baylor Nelson Texas A&M
Justin Ress NC State
Henry McFadden Stanford
Brennan Gravley Florida
Dylan Gravley Arizona State
Joey Tepper Tennessee

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MIKE IN DALLAS
1 year ago

The most important take away from this article is that the collegiate system of swimming in the USA is broad, deep, and committed to both men’s and women’s teams succeeding! That is a testament to how well our entire national swimming structure works in this country! Bravo!

Stuffed Up Sam
1 year ago

#HOOKEM

Bill J.
1 year ago

Shaine Casas’ success all to Texas not Texas a&m…?

Savvy Swimmer
1 year ago

Interring to see if the swimmers going to Junior Worlds that are committed would change this at all.

Markster
1 year ago

ASU and Florida should credit for the performances of Regan Smith and Katie Ledecky respectively. Swimmers just go to Stanford to get that precious prestigious degree they offer.

Horninco
Reply to  Markster
1 year ago

They were both WR holders before switching training bases as pros

I root for Shaine Casas as he trains at UT, but he absolutely should count as an Aggie swimmer when marking the colleges they “represent”.

PhillyMark
Reply to  Horninco
1 year ago

They were both WR holders b4 starting college

MCH
Reply to  PhillyMark
1 year ago

and regressed while at their 1st landing point.

Horninco
Reply to  PhillyMark
1 year ago

Right, but the article wasn’t about which high schools the world team came from

DMSWIM
Reply to  Markster
1 year ago

That’s not the point of this article. That article would be called “Current Training Groups of the 2023 World Champs Team Members.”
There are plenty of other athletes on this list that are in the same category that you didn’t call out. Leah Smith hasn’t been at Virginia in many years, but she’s listed with them because that’s where she went to college. Same with Nic Fink and Chase Kalisz and Georgia.

Last edited 1 year ago by DMSWIM
Swimmin in the South
Reply to  Markster
1 year ago

Agreed, which is why this article/list seems pointless. Maybe in the case of these 2 their great degrees gave them the smarts to know where to go train.

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  Braden Keith
1 year ago

What gets lost in the shuffle is which club coach is the responsible for the development of the athlete.

Katie Ledecky is the product of Yuri Suguiyama’s coaching.

https://youtu.be/W8CnERV-CpE

Greg Meehan receives zero credit for the development of Katie Ledecky. None whatsoever!

Bo Swims
Reply to  Braden Keith
1 year ago

Should this again after Fukuoka, tally NCAA affiliations for top 16 individual & top 8 relays

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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