It’s that time of the year again. SwimSwam will be previewing the top 12 men’s and women’s teams (and then some) from the 2024 NCAA Championships. Follow along with the College Swimming Preview Channel. (Also, a big shout out to Anya Pelshaw for helping making the maps)
Well, it’s not quite yet that time, but with September right around the corner and NCAA D I programs already in the swing of things, consider this a preamble to our college previews.
The Moves
Not since the formation of the Big 12 Athletic Conference back in 1996 has there been so much movement in the NCAA Swimming & Diving world, and perhaps the changes announced over the past three years trump that.
Texas, along with Oklahoma (which doesn’t sponsor swimming), announced back in 2021 their intentions to leave the Big 12 and join the SEC. The move would see Texas join one of the premier swimming conferences and leave a massive hole in the Big 12, as the Texas Men were undefeated at Conference Championships and the Women had won 20 times from 1996 to 2021.
A year later, in June of 2022 PAC-12 programs USC and UCLA (women’s swimming) both announced their jump to the Big Ten, a move that set off tizzy of moves and spelt the death knell of the PAC-12 as a power conference.
Oregon and Washington, which don’t support swimming, joined their southern rivals in the Big Ten. Arizona and Arizona State jumped into the void left by Texas and Oklahoma in the Big 12, as did Colorado and Utah. California, Stanford, Oregon State, and Washington State were the only programs remaining by the summer of 2023. However, Cal and Stanford were gobbled up by the ACC, which was the only conference to not yet add new programs. Yet, it was not an easy process for Cal and Stanford (as well as SMU) as all three schools will have to deal with decreased media rights revenue for the coming nine years.
When the dust settled, 10 of the 12 PAC-12 programs had flown the coop by August of 2023, leaving just Oregon State and Washington State, which a few months later announced their move to the West Coast Conference as an affiliate member, with WSU set to swim in Mountain West Conference.
Where it Stands
With the demise of the PAC-12, there are now just four Power Conferences, and for swimming, this means vast changes to programs, especially as some West Coast teams will have to travel cross-country for meets.
The Changes
Old Conference | New Conference | W. NCAA Finish | M. NCAA Finish | |
Arizona | PAC-12 | Big 12 | – | 28th |
Arizona State | PAC-12 | Big 12 | 24th | 1st |
California | PAC-12 | ACC | 11th | 2nd |
SMU | AAC | ACC | – | 18th |
Stanford | PAC-12 | ACC | 5th | 8th |
Texas | Big 12 | SEC | 2nd | 7th |
UCLA | PAC-12 | Big Ten | 22nd | N/A |
USC | PAC-12 | Big Ten | 8th | 22nd |
Utah | PAC-12 | Big 12 | 25th | 36th |
Washington State | PAC-12 | Mountain West | 40th | N/A |
Select Storylines
With the dissolution of the PAC-12, conference meetings, which were once a mixed bag of taper and not so, have certainly changed and with every conference adding teams from a P5 conference.
- Texas, which used to be able to rest its men at conference, will now face off against much stronger competition in the SEC, including 2024 #3 place finisher Florida and #6 place finisher Tennesse. The Women, runner-ups at NCAA, join a very strong SEC that includes NCAA 3rd and 4th place finishers Florida and Tennesse.
- ASU, which won back PAC-12 titles on the men’s side against tough competition Cal, now finds itself likely atop the Big 12, with little competition to threaten their streak of conference titles.
- The Big 10 adds the 8th place NCAA Women’s team, USC, which finished just 6 points behind Indiana at the NCAA Championships and just one place ahead of Ohio State, albeit by 38 points.
- The ACC sees powerhouse Cal threaten NC State’s run of three straight conference titles on the men’s side, and both the Cal and Stanford women could make things a little less comfortable for the Virginia Women.
ACC Membership in 2024-25
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* – sponsors women’s swimming (15 schools) | † – sponsors men’s swimming (14 schools) |
Big Ten Membership in 2024-25
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Big 12 Membership in 2024-25
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SEC Membership in 2024-25
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Anyone think it’s weird that NCAAs are at Federal Way, WA this year with the death of the PAC-12
Yeah. but it’s a great pool.
Last NCAAs in Federal Way didn’t sell super well if I recall. But it’s a huge facility with seating on two sides. After a few meets in recent years where the public was almost locked out of the meet, the big seating capacity is a plus.
Greensboro, NC will be the place to be come February 2025!
The NCAA needs to take over every sport other than football and basketball and assign teams to geographically based regions for the equivalent of regular-season and conference championships.
It’s not as bad in swimming as it is in other sports like volleyball and baseball/softball with constant cross-country travel, but the status quo is detrimental to both academic and athletic performance.
Look at the dual meet schedules – notwithstanding conference, most teams are only doing 2-4 dual meets, and only traveling for 1-2, then going to a fall invitational or two, conference champs and for the top teams, NCAAs (and maybe a World cup/i ternational meet for the top tier).
With Texas now swimming In the SEC it’s going to be quite interesting at conference time And see how they approach the whole thing with Bowman leading the program.
ACC should be renamed PACC for both coasts.
Or just keep the same acronym and call it the All Coasts Conference (ACC)
or A for American 🦅🦅🦅
If anyone is curious about the full conference maps and not just the Swimming landscape (which was quite nice to have broken out like it was instead of trying to blank out conference schools that don’t have programs) this site has them all, and more like specific tournaments. https://sportleaguemaps.com/ncaa/
Another storyline will be how the PAC 12 teams adjust to a new taper schedule with a longer period between conference and NCAAs
Left off Oklahoma from the sec map.
They don’t have a swim team.
OU can’t afford a swim team.
What are the actual costs of running a division 1 men’s and women’s team? I am not a head coach of a swim team so I have never seen the actual figures, but Oklahoma already has facilities (albeit poor ones) that they could train at. Are we looking at 6 or 7 figures per year here?
Ouch!
Just like he didn’t put both Mississippi schools on SEC map, no swim teams.