On Thursday, the NCAA announced 5 new rules changes, 4 of which will have major, sweeping impact across the competitive landscape. We will break-down each of those changes further in separate articles.
The 100 Yard Dash for Sprint Supremacy
Text from the NCAA announcement (the full rule language has not yet been released).
The panel also approved a rule allowing conferences to add the 100-yard individual medley to championship competition. It is not required.
The event will follow the 1,650-yard freestyle competition on the final day of the meet. The race is commonly held as the last event of international meets.
The 100 IM – a favorite race among summer leaguers, but one that rarely gets any respect at any level beyond that. The 100 IM has the potential to be one of the most intriguing races in swimming. No swimmer can be good enough at any one stroke to give them an advantage in a 100 IM without being good at all four strokes, or at least a monster underwater.
A 100 IM would pit some of the best swimmers from different disciplines of the NCAA against each other in what would truly be a battle of wills as much as anything else. Tom Shields vs. Vlad Morozov vs. Miguel Ortiz vs. David Nolan in a collegiate 100 IM that meant something would rank high on my personal list of ‘races I would spend my own money to watch.’ Those four all overlapped in their primes, too – that race could have happened in real life.
The 100 meter IM is an event raced internationally, at World Cup meets and at short course World Championship meets. It has no long course equivalent, because you can’t swim a 100 meter IM in a 50 meter pool without making mid-pool exchanges, which puts it even at an inferior state among non-Olympic events.
And yet, there’s so much intrigue to it, because a swimmer must be just ADD enough to handle the quick switches between strokes and still go hard.
The 100 IM is not yet approved for NCAA National Championship competition, but it is approved for conference championship meets, and this could be a stepping stone to a bigger stage in the future. Conferences will not be required to use the 100 IM, so there’s no guarantees that the race will ever happen. If it does, it will genuinely be paradigm-shifting in swimming.
In modern NCAA swimming, there is a huge (and growing) pool of swimmers whose two best events are the 100 fly and the 100 backstroke, who are then sent out to hunt for a 3rd event that is not necessarily a primary. Often times, that race is a 200 yard race (either the 200 IM, the 200 back, or the 200 fly) that requires a different level of training that’s not necessarily conducive to the athlete’s two best events.
What the addition of the 100 IM would allow is for those athletes to still swim an event that’s squarely within their zone of competency; training for a 25 breaststroke, for example, would not be as significant of a change to a swimmer’s regimen as training for an extra 100 yards worth of butterfly, for example.
The long-term result could be an improvement in overall American abilities to sprint; however, it could also cause an overall long-term detriment to the 200 yard stroke races.
On a more obvious level, the biggest drawback is that it would further extend what is the longest session of a championship meet as-is.
{erhaps as a result of not having the event in NCAA competition, the Americans have been sub-par internationally. They’ve won 4 of the 9 World Championships ever offered men in the event (including three-straight by Ryan Lochte), but only one minor medal (a bronze by Lochte in 2014). They’ve also won just 1 of 9 on the women’s side (Ariana Kukors in 2010), and only 2 medals of any color ever).
Our guess is that in year one, this new event will be adopted by smaller conference interested in publicity and attracting more swimmers to their programs, and will eventually be adopted by the larger, generally more conservative, conferences. We’re sure Michigan head coach Mike Bottom will be fighting hard to get it added to the Big Ten schedule sooner rather than later, though.
The 100 IM would come immediately after the 1650 free on the last day of a meet. In the most commonly-used three, four, and five-day meet formats (though there are other established options), below is what that would look like:
3-Day Championship with platform diving, no 1000 free
DAY 3 FINALS
15. 1,650-yard [1,500 m] freestyle—Last heat of time finals
16. 100-yard IM
17. 200-yard [200 m] backstroke
18. 100-yard [100 m] freestyle
19. 200-yard [200 m] breaststroke
20. 200-yard [200 m] butterfly
21. Platform diving—Finals*
22. 400-yard [400 m] freestyle relay
4-day championship with platform diving
DAY 4 FINALS
30. 1,650-yard [1,500 m] freestyle (M)—Last heat of time finals
31. 1,650-yard [1,500 m] freestyle (W)—Last heat of time finals
32. 100-yard IM (M)
33. 100-yard IM (W)
34. 100-yard [100 m] freestyle (M)
35. 100-yard [100 m] freestyle (W)
36. 200-yard [200 m] backstroke (M)
37. 200-yard [200 m] backstroke (W)
38. 200-yard [200 m] breaststroke (M)
39. 200-yard [200 m] breaststroke (W)
40. Three-meter diving (W)—Finals*
41. 400-yard [400 m] freestyle relay (M)
42. 400-yard [400 m] freestyle relay (W)
5-day championship (currently used primarily by SEC)
DAY 5 FINALS
32. 1,650-yard (1,500m) freestyle (M) – Last heat of time finals
33. 1,650-yard (1,500m) freestyle (W) – Last heat of time finals
34. 100-yard IM (M)
35. 100-yard IM (W)
36. 200-yard backstroke (M)
37. 200-yard backstroke (W)
38. 100-yard freestyle (M)
39. 100-yard freestyle (W)
40. 200-yard breaststroke (M)
41. 200-yard breaststroke (W)
42. Platform diving (M)–Finals
43. 400-yard freestyle relay (M)
44. 400-yard freestyle relay (W)
Will USA Swimming add the 100 IM for the older age groups ?????
I wish they would add the 50s of the strokes back in. Especially now that they are swimming 50s more often at international events.
LOL, Ridiculous event. And why on earth put it before the 100 freestyle, as there will be many swimmers that would want to do both?
ryan murphy swimming 100im at end of a practice, 2 yrs ago!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vrDTONqeV2E
Why didn’t the NCAA go all-out and put this in their respective championships? Why the need for the small step before that inevitable move? Either go all the way or don’t.
Good, now my “I <3 100 IM" tattoo across my chest might not get so many snickers from people.
It means caeleb dressel just got another event
WHAT DOES THE NCAA’S ADDITION OF THE 100 IM MEAN?
It means that I am even less likely to care about swims in the little bathtub known as scy.