2020 NCAA DIVISION I WOMEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS
- Wednesday, March 18 – Saturday, March 21, 2020
- Ramsey Center, University of Georgia, Athens, GA
- Prelims 10 AM / Finals 6 PM (U.S. Eastern Time)
- Defending champs: Stanford (3x) – results
- Championship Central
- Live stream:
- Prelims (free): Thursday / Friday / Saturday
- Finals (ESPN3)
- Psych Sheets
- Live results
Missouri’s Haley Hynes, the 6th fastest 100 backstroker in the country this year, will not be competing at the 2020 NCAA Championships. This comes after Hynes scratched the event at the SEC Championships last month and was absent for the rest of the meet following that scratch. She would have been the 5th seed for NCAAs this season, as Michigan’s Maggie MacNeil, the 3rd fastest woman in the 100 back this season, chose not to swim the event.
Hynes swam the 50 free, 200 medley relay, and 200 free relay at SECs before scratching the remainder of the meet. SwimSwam reached out to Missouri for comment. It’s been confirmed that Hynes has retired from swimming for undisclosed medial reasons.
Hynes, a senior, swam lifetime bests in the 50 free (22.04), 50 back (23.50), 100 back (50.70), 200 breast (2:17.27), and 100 fly (52.87) this season. Coming into the postseason, she was the fastest woman in the SEC in the 100 back. Her 50.70 at the Mizzou Invitational in November marked her first swim under 51.
She scored in the B final of the 100 back at NCAAs in both 2018 and 2019. She earned 5 honorable mention All-American accolades for her roles on the Missouri NCAA relays throughout her career. She was an individual finalist in the 50 free (7th) and 100 back (5th) at the 2019 SEC Championships.
Kinda crazy that anyone would speculate on this, in a critical and personal way. No one knows (with the possible exception of teammates and coaches) why she retired – undisclosed medical reasons could mean anything. I just see it as a bummer, or maybe not. Maybe it’s for the best.
Terrifying end to a fabulous swimmer. My worry radar is super high for this one.
Sometimes you fall out of love with what you’re doing and reach a point where it isn’t fun anymore. Regardless the reason, it’s okay to stop doing something even when you’re in the lime light. Wishing her the best. Also not saying that’s the reason, but it could be.
An entire season of having to slide into a tech suit would wear anyone out.
This comment made me laugh my drink out my nose😂
Something is obviously wrong. I hope all is well and everything turns out ok
Looks like she retired right after her 50 free at SECs. Frustrated with the outcome? Maybe she hyperextended her arm on the finish too?
You don’t retire because of that
Swimming has a way of weeding out those who are mentally weak.
I agree, but it usually happens looooong before they are a senior in college and still going lifetime bests. She had the stuff to become an elite NCAA swimmer. I hope she is okay.
Completely uncalled for comment and you should be ashamed. How can you infer “undisclosed medical reasons” to mean “mentally weak”?