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What Swimmers Think Diving vs. What Divers Think Swimming

by Claire Forrest

If swimming were a family, the sport of diving is the black sheep. Diving is the illusive and enigmatic second cousin to swimming that you know you’re related to, but you’re not quite sure how. And if you’re a swimmer you’ll probably never fully understand diving. Case in point, here are some common questions every swimmer has about the sport of diving:

What swimmers think during diving…

  1. Do they get dizzy doing all those flips?
  2. Oh, no. He’s going to hit his head. Oh. Oh, thank goodness. He’s fine. My blood pressure can’t handle this.
  3. Are they supposed to make splashes or no?
  4. If I fell asleep right now, would anyone notice? Would the divers get mad?
  5. What are those numbers before each dive that sound like a GPA?
  6. Can I clap yet? Do I have to wait to clap until she surfaces from a dive?
  7. How is diving even scored?
  8. That is going to be scored a ten. Without a doubt.
  9. How was that a five?
  10. Oh, man. I wish I could sit in the hot tub between events. Why can’t swimmers do that?
  11. Is it bad that I think divers smacking is a bit entertaining? Just a teeny tiny bit?
  12. Can I clap for someone who just smacked?
  13. Diving takes forever. How are we only on round three?
  14. I could totally be a diver.
  15. What even is a triple axel?
  16. Oh, wait, THAT’s a triple axel?! No way, I could never do that. I can barely dive off the blocks correctly most days. I’ll stick to swimming.
  17. How can I have been a swimmer for so long and still have no idea how diving works?

Since we swimmers have to endure countless misunderstandings about our own sport, I decided to get the inside scoop so we can all be a little bit more knowledgeable and supportive of our divers:

First, that degree of difficulty (the GPA sounding number) is the numerical value of the dive, a.k.a., how difficult it is to complete. The lower the degree of difficulty, the easier the dive, and vice versa. The lowest degree of difficulty is 1.1, generally a front tuck off the one-meter board.

In terms of scoring, the aim is to be able to complete dives with a higher degree of difficulty, because the points you gain on a dive, zero through ten, are multiplied by the degree of difficulty. Simply, you’re going to get more points on a harder dive than you would on an easier one, even if you scored the same on both, because of that multiplication. If there are more than three judges, the middle three scores are what counts. Essentially, the highest and lowest scores are dropped, and the median is kept, which helps even out the fact that some judges just tend to score lower or higher than others.

And the smacking thing? Definitely clap. Yeah, my source told me, it sucks and it’s embarrassing to smack, but it feels worse to exit the pool to silence. Think what it would feel like if no one cheered for you just because you had a bad race. That’s no fun!

Now, I wanted to flip the script. It turns out that swimming is just as mysterious to divers.

What do divers think during swimming?

  1. Don’t they get bored going back and forth, back in forth, over and over again?
  2. If I have to explain what a shammy is one more time, I swear…
  3. Yes, divers sit in the hot tub. Their event lasts for hours and they don’t have a warm down pool. In fact, divers tend to be jealous of swimmers because we get to stay in the water. Do you think we can manage a trade?
  4. Yes, please clap after dives! Loudly!
  5. Really?! You’re sleeping during diving? Here I am awake and cheering through all the heats of your mile.
  6. What stroke would I compete in if I were a swimmer?
  7. Why do swimmers get to make so many splashes? Divers get points off for the splashes they make!
  8. The 3-meter is definitely the best perch from which to watch swim meets.
  9. Yes, swimmer, that bruise on my leg is from diving. Yes, it hurt a lot.
  10. Maybe I could be a swimmer.
  11. Dang, that 50 free was FAST! No, I’ll stick to diving.
  12. How can I have been a diver for so long and still not understand swimming?

Perhaps swimmers and divers are more alike than we realize…

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diving was fun to watch
8 years ago

From a d3 swimmer who never saw diving in person before college.

1. Why are they landing on their feet? On Tv divers don’t land on their feet.
2. I can’t touch my toes, how do they flip hugging strait legs?
3. Wait they dive off this thing (3m)? I almost did a back splat diving off the 1m, I’d hurt myself big time.
4. Hey diver friend I saw a girl warming up this cool looking dive in at championships in a session you weren’t at, you should learn it. (She ended up teaching that dive to herself that summer and it was one of her best scoring dives.)
5. I’m glad the swimmer’s… Read more »

dive mom
8 years ago

Duh – a triple axel is in Figure Skating…not Diving…..( this article must have been written by a swimmer! 🙂 )

Mike Lewis
8 years ago

Love it. I am so grateful that my two high school swim coaches, Rick Chambers, Chrysler, High, New Castle, IN, and Richard Brunoehler, Perry Meridian High, Indianapolis, were also my diving coaches and both men made no distinction between swimmers and divers. We were all one in the same team together. We were all at the same team meetings, we cheered and supported each other and we valued the points toward the TEAM victory.Not surprisingly, Perry Meridian High produced tons of great divers, many going on to full ride college scholarships, myself included, and one even going to Olympic Trials and on the national team a few times, Russell Bertram. But our coaches taught us team work and how to… Read more »

Greg Fox
8 years ago

I see a lot of divers who swim Butterfly, it’s our gymnnast shoulders maybe. I think it’s funny that most elite divers are rotten swimmers, can barely make it to the side of the well some of them. Awesome article, made me think about swimmers even.

Swim n dive coach
8 years ago

Well, there’s no triple axel. The lowest degree of difficulty is 1.2 for forward dive tuck on 1 meter. And always clap, but cheer loudly for smacks and ripped entries (aka dives that look perfect).

Mutual Respect
8 years ago

What swimmers think… Divers are CRAZY!
What divers think… Swimmers are CRAZY!

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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