You are working on Staging1

USA Water Polo To Launch National League In 2015

The following is a press release courtesy of USA Water Polo:

Huntington Beach Calif. – November 24, 2014 — A new challenge has arrived for the best of the best in domestic men’s water polo. In early 2015 USA Water Polo will launch the inaugural National League, an endeavor designed to provide high level competition opportunities for the top men’s water polo players in the United States, with a focus on developing talent for the USA Water Polo Men’s National Team. Four weekends of competition will begin on January 10 and 11 in Southern California and conclude with a championship event on April 11 and 12 in Northern California. The National League, which is in compliance with both the USOC and NCAA, will feature between five and six teams all coached by National Team coaches. Approximately 50 athletes will be invited to participate in the National League and will be dispersed among the competing teams through a draft format. USA Water Polo member clubs, the Olympic Club and New York Athletic Club will also compete in the National League with rosters of their choosing.

“The inaugural Men’s National League will provide a forum of competition for our potential men’s national team athletes to continue their development and training leading up to our 2015 Olympic qualifying event, the Pan American Games in Toronto,” said John Abdou, USA Water Polo High Performance Director.

“We see this as the starting point of building a league in America where we not only develop our talent, but showcase the great game of water polo. The future of the league is limitless but we must start with what is most needed, and that is a development ground for our top athletes,” added Dejan Udovicic, USA Water Polo Men’s Senior National Team Head Coach.

In addition to the January 10 and 11 competition, the National League will also hold matches on February 7 and 8 in Northern California, and March 7 and 8 in Southern California, leading up to the National League Championship April 11 and 12 in Northern California.

The National League will use round robin play and a point system for standings (4 points win, 3 points shootout win, 2 points shootout loss, 1 point for loss, 0 for forfeit). Teams will compete against each other on Saturday and Sunday of each competition weekend prior to April. In the National League Championship scheduled for April teams will be seeded first to last and play out a championship bracket tournament.

Those athletes not invited will have an opportunity to attend an open tryout in mid-December at a date and location to be announced. More information on the open tryout will be available soon.

About USA Water Polo
USA Water Polo, Inc. is the national governing body for water polo in America, overseeing our United States Olympic program as well as 20 different championship events annually, such as Junior Olympics and Masters National Championships. With more than 40,000 members, USAWP is also the sanctioning authority for more than 500 Member Clubs and more than 400 tournaments nationwide. USAWP is committed to the development of the sport throughout the US. It fosters grass-roots expansion of the sport, providing a national system of affiliated clubs, certified coaches and officials.

Official USA Water Polo Sponsors & Suppliers
Active Media, American Pistachios, Bare Fruit Snacks, Big Fish Payroll Services, Bridge Athletic, Colorado Time Systems, Deckside Pool Services, Justin’s, Katin USA, KT Tape, Liberty Mutual Insurance, Malibu Wellness, Mikasa, Nestlé Nesquik, Ospraie Management, PowerBar, S & R Sport, Sea Air Federal Credit Union, Special Event Contractors, TicketPrinting.com, TYR, United, Water Marque, & ZOLL AED.

1
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

1 Comment
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Vicky
9 years ago

Water Polo needs Sea World style tank pools so people can truly appreciate all of the under water awesomeness that happens during a game.

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

Read More »