The University of Georgia is the only school in the NCAA with all ten relays already qualified for the NCAA Championships.
The Bulldogs have hit qualifying or provisional standards in all five women’s relays and all five men’s relays as of December 15. The only other programs to qualify all five relays already are the NC State women, Texas women, and Texas A&M men.
As with all of our college coverage today, these lists come with the caveat that the ACC, SEC and Big 12 have competed more often than the Big Ten and Pac-12 conferences amid coronavirus pandemic restrictions, and we’d expect those two conferences to add a larger number of qualifiers later on in the season.
Qualifying Procedure
Here’s the most simplified version for NCAA relay qualifying:
Teams that hit a “qualifying standard” (sometimes colloquially referred to as an “A” cut) automatically qualify for NCAAs in that relay. That school can then enter any other relays at NCAAs as long as it has a “provisional standard,” or “B” cut.
There are some wrinkles involving individual qualifiers, but since those lists are still very much in flux, we’ll look at the teams with qualifying and provisional relay standards already this year:
Teams Already Qualified
Women
Qualifying Standards
200 free relay
- NC State: 1:27.00
- Virginia: 1:27.37
400 free relay
- Virginia: 3:11.43
- NC State: 3:14.34
- Tennessee: 3:14.35
800 free relay
- none
200 medley relay
- Virginia: 1:34.35
- NC State: 1:34.86
- Texas: 1:35.78
- Missouri: 1:36.00
400 medley relay
- Texas: 3:26.86
- Virginia: 3:29.16
- NC State: 3:29.46
- Georgia: 3:31.56
Full Qualifying List
WOMEN | |||||
200 free relay | 400 free relay | 800 free relay | 200 medley relay |
400 medley relay
|
|
QS | NC State | Virginia | Virginia | Texas | |
Virginia | NC State | NC State | Virginia | ||
Tennessee | Texas | NC State | |||
Missouri | Georgia | ||||
PS | Missouri | Georgia | NC State | Georgia | Tennessee |
Texas | Texas | Texas | |||
Georgia | Georgia | ||||
Tennessee |
Alabama (400 free relay, 800 free relay) has two provisional standards and would join the list in both of those relays if the team can hit a qualifying standard in any relay.
Kentucky (800 free relay) and UNC (400 free relay) also have provisional standards this year and could swim those relays if they can hit a qualifying standard at some point.
Men
Qualifying Standards
200 free relay
- Georgia: 1:16.35
- Texas A&M: 1:16.48
- Texas: 1:16.99
- Florida: 1:17.01
400 free relay
- Georgia: 2:49.27
- Virginia: 2:49.84
- Alabama: 2:50.42
- Missouri: 2:50.70
800 free relay
- Texas: 6:07.34
- NC State: 6:14.44
- Georgia: 6:16.42
200 medley relay
- Texas: 1:23.58
- Georgia: 1:23.60
- Georgia Tech: 1:23.89
- Texas A&M: 1:24.21
400 medley relay
- Texas: 3:04.64
- Georgia Tech: 3:05.89
Full Qualifying List
MEN | |||||
200 free relay | 400 free relay | 800 free relay | 200 medley relay |
400 medley relay
|
|
QS | Georgia | Georgia | Texas | Texas | Texas |
Texas A&M | Virginia | NC State | Georgia | Georgia Tech | |
Texas | Alabama | Georgia | Georgia Tech | ||
Florida | Missouri | Texas A&M | |||
PS | Alabama | Florida | Georgia Tech | Missouri | Texas A&M |
Missouri | Texas A&M | Texas A&M | Alabama | Missouri | |
Virginia | NC State | Florida | Virginia | Georgia | |
Georgia Tech |
UNC (200 medley relay) and Tennessee (400 medley relay) have provisional standards and would be able to swim those relays if they can hit a qualifying standard at some point.
Need to create an 11th relay event.
Mixed 400 Medley Relay.
Texas vs. Georgia.
Way to Go Dawgs!
Can a Wolfpack take down a Longhorn?
We’ve seen that movie already…. called “Fourth Place”
Not with only one relay with an A cut
In the next couple years, yes.
Man, I hope Texas can get the 400 Free Relay qualified…….
Should be able to do it in the next dual meet!
Because relays often involve swimmers contributing in events that aren’t their specialty, it’s hard to keep track of how fast certain teams might be. In addition to the (amazing!) event previews SwimSwam does in March, it would be cool to read a mid season article that examines relay lineups, who’s looking strong, and where there are difficult decisions that might need to be sorted out. Just food for thought, it’s fun to speculate about who the top contending teams will use and how fast they might be if the stars align at NCAAs.
uga is a bunch of beast. hell yea
Especially since UGA has historically been weaker in the relays. Congrats to them