You are working on Staging2

Emory Men, Kenyon Women Sit Atop Latest CSCAA Division III Swim & Dive Polls

Courtesy: CSCAA

The College Swimming and Diving Coaches Association of America (CSCAA) released its Division III Swimming & Diving Top 25 Poll today. Emory University takes first on the men side while Kenyon College remains the top women’s team.

Emory men tallied ten of the possible 15 first-place votes and 367 total points, moving them into first.  Denison (360 points) takes the 5 remaining top votes and climbs two positions to second.   Johns Hopkins (342) is third.  Kenyon (341) moves to fourth after holding first last month. Chicago (312) retains their position at fifth on the men’s side.  In all, thirty-one men’s teams received votes.

The women’s top five rankings remain unchanged from the November poll. Kenyon earned 372 points and collected 12 top votes. Emory owns the remaining first-place votes and is second with 360 points.  Denison (348), Johns Hopkins (326) and NYU (318) are third, fourth and fifth, respectively. Twenty-eight women’s teams received votes.

The rankings are voted on by CSCAA-member coaches and select media. The committee ranks the top 25 teams in the nation based on dual meet strength.

The men’s committee chair is Sean Tedesco (USMMA). Regional chairs include: Brad Bowser (Rowan, Northeast South), Paul Bennett (WPI, Northeast North), Brent Summers (Willamette, Midwest South) and Keith Crawford (Rose Hulman, Central).

The women’s committee chair is Jake Taber (Hope). Regional chairs include: Ben Delia (Franklin & Marshall, Northeast South), Brad Burnham (Bowdoin, Northeast North), Jon Duncan (Southwestern, Midwest South) and Justin Zook (St. Kates, Central).

The remaining polls are scheduled for release on January 19, and February 9 and March 4.

Division III Men

Rk Prv Team Points
1 3 Emory 367
2 4 Denison 360
2 2 Johns Hopkins 342
4 1 Kenyon 341
5 5 Chicago 312
6 10 MIT 299
7 6 WashU 278
8 7 NYU 276
9 8 Carnegie Mellon 254
10 12 Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 246
11 17 Tufts 222
12 16 Calvin 194
13 19 TCNJ 192
14 9 Pomona-Pitzer 179
15 11 Franklin & Marshall 165
16 14 Case Western Reserve 162
17 20 Hope 111
18 25 Trinity (TX) 99
19 23 Rowan 92
20 NR UW-Eau Claire 86
21 21 Caltech 75
22 NR UW-Stevens Point 63
23 NR Bowdoin 61
24 13 Williams 40
25 NR Birmingham Southern 27

Also Receiving Votes

SUNY Geneseo (16), Colby (8), Amherst (4), Bates (2), Swarthmore (1), Rose-Hulman (1)

Division III Women

Rk Prv Team Points
1 1 Kenyon 372
2 2 Emory 360
3 3 Denison 348
4 4 Johns Hopkins 326
5 5 NYU 318
6 10 Tufts 293
7 8 Pomona-Pitzer 277
8 9 MIT 271
9 7 Chicago 268
10 11 Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 223
11 19 Bates 217
12 13 WashU 204
13 6 Williams 201
14 15 Carnegie Mellon 192
15 12 Saint Kate’s 166
16 21 Trinity (TX) 143
17 18 Wheaton (MA) 122
18 20 Hope 120
19 17 Case Western Reserve 109
20 16 Swarthmore 84
21 23 Washington & Lee 76
22 25 Bowdoin 68
23 14 Amherst 45
24 NR Mary Washington 33
25 24 Albion 19

Also Receiving Votes

Gettysburg (9), DePauw (6), SUNY Geneseo (5)

Men’s Regional Rankings:

Central: 1. Denison 2. Kenyon 3. Chicago 4. Calvin 5. Case Western 6. Hope 7. UW-Eau Claire 8. UW-Stevens Point 9. Rose-Hulman 10. John Carroll
Northeast-North: 1. MIT 2. New York University 3. Tufts 4. Bowdoin 5. Williams 6. Colby 7. Amherst 8. Bates 9. U.S. Coast Guard Academy 10. RPI
Northeast-South: 1. Carnegie Mellon 2. TCNJ 3. Franklin & Marshall 4. Rowan 5. SUNY-Geneseo 6. Swarthmore 7. RIT 8. Ithaca 9. Gettysburg 10.Rochester
West Midwest: 1. Emory 2. Johns Hopkins 3. Washington University (MA) 4. Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 5. Pomona-Pitzer Colleges 6. Trinity University (TX) 7. California Institute of Technology 8. Birmingham Southern 9. California Lutheran 10. UC-Santa Cruz

Women’s Regional Rankings:

Central: 1. Kenyon 2. Denison 3. Chicago 4. Saint Catherine 5. Hope 6. Case Western 7. Albion 8. DePauw 9. Calvin 10. UW-Eau Clair
Northeast-North: 1.New York University 2. Tufts 3. MIT 4. Bates 5. Williams 6. Wheaton College (MA) 7. Bowdoin 8. Amherst 9. Colby 10. Springfield
Northeast-South: 1. Carnegie Mellon 2. Swarthmore 3. Gettysburg 4. SUNY-Geneseo 5. Franklin & Marshall 6. Ursinus 7. TCNJ 8. Ithaca 9. Rochester 10. Drew
West Midwest: 1. Emory 2. Johns Hopkins 3. Pomona-Pitzer Colleges 4. Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 5. Washington University 6. Trinity University (TX) 7. Washington & Lee 8. Mary Washington 9. UC-Santa Cruz 10. Birmingham Southern

Men’s Poll Committee

  • Justin Anderson, Mary Washington; Erica Belcher, NYU; Paul Bennett, WPI; Brad Bowser, Rowan; Peter Casares, Bates; Jennifer Cournoyer, Norwich; Keith Crawford, Rose Hulman; Paul Dotterweich, SUNY Geneseo; David Dow, TCNJ; Rob Harrington, Wooster; Gwynn Harrison, Bridgewater; Sarah James, Southwestern; Michael Kroll, Buffalo State; Pat Smith, Westminster; Brent Summers, Willamette; Sean Tedesco, U.S. Merchant Marine Academy; Jason Weber, Chicago; Seth Weidmann, Carthage; Braden Keith, SwimSwam; David Rieder, Swimming World.

Women’s Poll Committee

  • Greg Brown, Gettysburg; Brad Burnham, Bowdoin; Jay Daniels, Kalamazoo; Ben Delia, Franklin & Marshall; Jon Duncan, Southwestern; Paul Flinchbauch, Berry; John Geissinger, Hamilton; Katie McArdle, Dickinson; Chris Mhyre, Puget Sound; Shannon O’Brien, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; Anne Ryder, Wisconsin-Eau Claire; Meg Sisson French, MIT; Jake Taber, Hope; Mike Tubb, Susquehanna; Jason Weber, Chicago; Toby Wilcox, Birmingham Southern; Justin Zook, St. Kate’s; Braden Keith, SwimSwam; David Rieder, Swimming World.

About The CSCAA

Founded in 1922, the College Swimming and Diving Coaches Association of America (CSCAA) – the first organization of college coaches in America -is a professional organization of college swimming and diving coaches dedicated to serving and providing leadership for the advancement of the sport of swimming & diving at the collegiate level.

19
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

19 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Phil McDade
2 years ago

Blugolds over Point hehhehheh

Say's Phoebe
2 years ago

I took an hour to take a rough look at the the DIII database as of yesterday (December 9th):

Blocking into A, B, and C finals (I put C so that SwimSwam fans can see that there are lots of opportunities to move up):

Kenyon has 12 A, 12 B, and 13 C.
This is 17 swimmers for Kenyon. Notably Fitch has 4 A’s (so scratch down one A), Fitzgerald has 2 A’s and 2 B’s (so scratch down one B) and Hargrove has 1 A and 3 C’s (so scratch down 1 C).

Denison has 18 A, 10 B, and 10 C.
This is 17 swimmers for Denison. Picozzi has 4 A’s, and Kurlich has 3 A’s… Read more »

swimswamswum
Reply to  Say's Phoebe
2 years ago

While this is an interesting stat I have a hard time seeing the relevance when so many D3 teams don’t do a midseason taper meet like these four teams.

Say's Phoebe
Reply to  swimswamswum
2 years ago

I invite you to take a good, in depth, look at the database. These are the top 4 teams and (barring illness or a rash of injuries) no one else is going to come close to them.

NYU, Wash U, Chicago, MIT … they all put up great times at the end of November and the beginning of December.

I’m not saying that Williams won’t put swimmers in finals, they almost certainly will. I’ve roughed out the database so that people can see what the top four teams look like compared to each other at this point in the season.

Say's Phoebe
Reply to  Say's Phoebe
2 years ago

This is for the men’s meet.

The next tier for men is Wash U, NYU, Chicago, MIT, and perhaps Williams. Williams hasn’t really raced yet this season (you all know that), and with the pandemic and missed seasons we don’t have any info yet.

Wash U 7 A, 7 B, 4 C
NYU 6 A, 2 B, 8 C
Chicago. 5 A, 1 B, 7 C
MIT 3 A, 3 B, 8 C

I invite someone to rough out the women’s meet. I think there is a lot of separation between the top 3 and everyone else.

THEO
Reply to  Say's Phoebe
2 years ago

Women’s is Kenyon v Denison v Emory. Haven’t done the math but that much is clear. Though I will say Tufts is a dark horse to totally make top 3. Their times after training for ****only a month*** were crazy good

THEO
Reply to  Say's Phoebe
2 years ago

Awesome research! 100% those are the clear top 4 barring a huge surprise. Emory having 30 swimmers in there is crazy but not even helpful lol. But that level of depth is still valuable because some of those guys could surprise at conference in feb and they’ll have pick of the litter. I think it’s JHU vs Emory, with Emory as the narrow favorite.

Goblin Walk
Reply to  Say's Phoebe
2 years ago

Stop wasting time doing all this, you still haven’t attacked in the Clan War

swimma boy
2 years ago

emory for the win

THEO
2 years ago

These polls are silly… Williams at 24th?? Bah! They just don’t taper until February along w basically all Nescac teams.

but I appreciate any d3 coverage we can find. Many records could be broken this year and it’ll be a great team race. I’m so glad D3 isn’t just Kenyon winning every year anymore. Much to be excited about and I’m happy for all these swimmers to have the big meet this year after such a long hiatus (KNOCK ON WOOD)

THEO
2 years ago

I think JHU can win the men’s meet. But the 4-way battle is looking really good. (Disclaimer: I know nothing about diving)

D3 Inquirer
Reply to  THEO
2 years ago

Why would you think this? Hopkins hasn’t gotten top 3 in over a decade and in 2019 they were over 100 points away from 3rd, nevertheless 1st. Kenyon, Denison, and Emory have established a top 3 that is very hard to even break into to. And you’re saying Hopkins is going to win? I don’t see it.

Say's Phoebe
Reply to  D3 Inquirer
2 years ago

To me, JHU doesn’t looks strong as Denison and Emory on the relays. But where JHU looks really strong is swimmers 7 through 12 on their roster.

Kenyon’s first 6 is something like Fitch, Brooks, Dobric, Kosian, Pruett, Fitzgerald, maybe Weekes.

Denison’s first 6 is something like Ike, Picozzi, Verstandig, Kurlich, Housekeeper, maybe Gately, Daly, or Landis. Relays are great.

Emory’s first 6 is something like Goudie, Lafave, Soh, Pema, Hamilton, Meyer. Relays are great.

Hopkins’ first 6 is something like Chen, Davenport, Rua, Vitek, Wu, Corbitt. That leaves swimmers like Roddy (4:25.2/15:16), Wachenfeld (1:45.9 2BK, 1:50.3 2IM), Limberg (55.0/1:59.9 BR), Ji (2:00.8 2BR, 3:55.5 4IM), Castagno (2:00.5 2BR, 3:57.4 4IM), Stride (1:59.2 2 BR), Surprenant, Hughes, and Seymour… Read more »

J. Byrd
Reply to  Say's Phoebe
2 years ago

Why do you know so much about D3 swimming?

Say's Phoebe
Reply to  J. Byrd
2 years ago

Why? I’m interested in swimming, but I am particularly interested in DIII men’s, ACC men’s and women’s, and Olympic men’s and women’s swimming.

I have some proficiency with slicing and dicing the database, and I am interested enough in DIII to take the time to look at the database.

THEO
Reply to  D3 Inquirer
2 years ago

I think this because I have looked realllly closely at the data from this fall, and JHU has an incredible team, better and deeper than Kenyon and Denison, though maybe not Emory. JHU could conceivably land 4-6 guys in the A final of the 200 breast.

Say's Phoebe
Reply to  THEO
2 years ago

Breaking the database down a little farther:

Hopkins has 20 swims in the top 8 at this point in the season. Six swimmers have 12 swims in the top 4 (Roddy, Wachenfeld, Chen, Wu, Vitek and Rua.) Rua has 2 swims 5-8, and Corbitt, Stride, Limberg, Davenport, Seymour and Ji have 1 apiece.

Compare with Kenyon: 12 swims in the top 8.
3 swimmers (Fitch, Kosian, and Fitzgerald) with 7 swims in the top 4, but four of them are Fitch, so effectively 6 for the team. Fitzgerald, Dobric, Pruett and Tong combine for 6 swims 5-8.

Things move around a lot, but I think that the swimmers ranked in the top four so far are much… Read more »

Ice Golem
Reply to  Say's Phoebe
2 years ago

We do not care

ACC
2 years ago

Looks like the meets will both be very competitive come March! Excited to follow the meet.

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, …

Read More »