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2016 Swammy Awards: NCAA Male Swimmer of the Year

To see all of our 2016 Swammy Awards presented by TYR, click here

2016 NCAA MALE SWIMMER OF THE YEAR: RYAN MURPHY

Ryan Murphy (Photo: Tim Binning)

Backstroke stud Ryan Murphy had some jaw dropping performances as a Cal junior in 2016. At the NCAA Championships, he swam to his 3rd-straight sweep of the backstroke events to help the Bears to their 2nd place team finish. Murphy broke his first NCAA and American Records of the meet with a 43.51 backstroke split on the 400 medley relay, making him the first man to ever clear the 44-second mark. He then went on to lower those marks even further with a 43.49 to win the individual 100 back. In the 200 back, Murphy dominated the race, swimming to new NCAA and American Records of 1:35.73 to win by almost 3 seconds.

The Swammy Award for NCAA Male Swimmer of the Year was hard to call. At NCAAs, Murphy was named co-swimmer of the meet with former Bolles teammates Joseph Schooling, and Caeleb Dressel, as they each won 2 individual NCAA titles and set NCAA Records in both. Since all 3 swimmers were 2016 Olympians, we looked at their Rio performances to break the tie. Of the 3 swimmers, Murphy was the only one to set a World Record and win multiple individual golds in Rio.

In Rio, the Americans looked to Murphy and his USA teammates David Plummer and Jacob Pebley to defend Team USA’s Olympic backstroke streak. Murphy came home with Olympic gold medals from both individual backstrokes, as well as a gold from the 400 medley relay. With his 400 medley relay leadoff, Murphy broke backstroke legend Aaron Piersol’s former World Record, giving Team USA the early lead with his 51.85 split.

HONORABLE MENTIONS

In no particular order

Caeleb Dressel (Photo: Tim Binning)

  • Caeleb Dressel, Florida- Dressel, a sophomore for the 3rd place Florida Gators, threw down insane times in the sprint freestyles in 2016. He first dropped a sizzling 18.39 to break the NCAA and American Records in the 50 free at the SEC Championships, but quickly raised the bar again to win the event with an 18.20 at NCAAs. He also set the American Record in the 100 free at SECs, rocking a 41.07 to take down Nathan Adrian‘s former record. Once again, he smashed the record at NCAAs, this time surpassing Vlad Morozov‘s former NCAA Record with a 40.46. In addition to his victories, he also took 2nd in the 100 fly behind only Schooling. In Rio, Dressel was an individual finalist in the 100 free and a gold medalist as a part of Team USA’s 400 free relay.
  • Joseph Schooling, Texas- At the 2016 NCAA Championships, Schooling, a sophomore for the NCAA champion Texas Longhorns, repeated as champion in the 100 fly and 200 fly. In the 100 fly, he nearly cleared the 44-second barrier, setting a new NCAA Record with his 44.01 for gold. He battled with teammate Jack Conger in the 200 fly, touching just ahead with a blazing 1:37.97 to pick up another individual title in NCAA Record time. In Rio, 21-year-old Schooling became the first Singaporean athlete to ever win an Olympic gold in any sport. He did so by crushing a 100 fly field that included butterfly stars Michael Phelps, Chad Le Clos, and Laszlo Cseh. Schooling’s winning time of 50.39 is the fastest swim ever done in textile.

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Dawgpaddle
7 years ago

18.20 and 40.46 earn Dressel and honorable mention, hard to imagine! But I agree with MurphDawg being the Swimmer of the Year. If Caeleb will get off his butt and go 17.97 and 39.89 flat start in 2017 I will probably vote for him! Although what if MurphDawg goes 42.98 and 1:33.87!!! Oh what a conundrum!!!!!

Joe
7 years ago

Tough choice – I think I would choose Dressel because the 50 and 100 times seemed more out of this world to me, though a 43.4 100 back is also just crazy.

Again fun to think of what the Bolles relay of those two, Schooling, and Condorelli would do. Probably a 2:59 400 medley and a 2:45 400 free.

Reply to  Joe
7 years ago

It was really hard to choose. Especially because Dressel’s 18.20 is just ridiculous. But like you said, so is the 43.4 100 back. I hope they all swim so fast that the decision is just as hard next year though.

Kaez
7 years ago

No Townley Haas as an honorable mention? I mean he did a pretty spectacular 200

Lauren Neidigh
Reply to  Kaez
7 years ago

His 200 free was incredible, but in this case the 3 candidates we considered were Murphy, Schooling, and Dressel because they each broke 2 records. It was tough to narrow down and select a winner.

iLikePsych
Reply to  Kaez
7 years ago

I agree that Haas and Licon should have both been honorable mention since they also won two events and broke the ‘fastest time ever’ in 1 event (vs. 2 for the other 3)

Lane four
7 years ago

Seriously, this was a tough one. THREE PHENOMENAL SWIMMERS – Murphy, Schooling and Dressel. Can’t wait for next year.

AvidSwimFan
7 years ago

Well deserved! Totally agree with the winner and the honorable mentions.

Uberfan
7 years ago

Murphys are more impressive to me because no one has ever gone below 44 and 1:36. Not to mention an insane 1:40 IM

Pvdh
7 years ago

Really between Dressel and Murphy due to their 3rd event success. Murphy a the edge due to his ridiculous time drops (not to say dressel didn’t have crazy records either, but Murphys were unimaginable)

bobo gigi
7 years ago

Amazing to think that all 3 have swum in the same high school team.

dave
Reply to  bobo gigi
7 years ago

; )

Swammy
Reply to  bobo gigi
7 years ago

You may have meant club team. Dressel did not swim for Bolles High School

Lauren Neidigh
Reply to  Swammy
7 years ago

Hey guys. That’s correct. What I meant was that they were teammates while in high school, but I didn’t word it the right way. I’ll fix it.

bobo gigi
Reply to  Swammy
7 years ago

Error from my part. Yes. They have swum in the same club. Forgot that Dressel didn’t swim for Bolles in high school.

pinodee
Reply to  bobo gigi
7 years ago

Correct me if I’m wrong but I thought Dressel swam club with Bolles but went to school and swam for Clay HS

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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