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2021 SC Worlds Times Can Be Used For NCAA Championship Qualification

2021 FINA SHORT COURSE WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS

  • Thursday, December 16th – Tuesday, December 21st
  • Etihad Arena, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
  • SCM (25m)
  • Prize Money
  • Meet Site
  • Entries

At this month’s 2021 FINA Short Course World Championships in Abu Dhabi, we should see times that qualify athletes for the 2022 NCAA Championships after conversion.

In the Division I 2021-2022 Qualifying Standards released earlier this year, as in previous years, the NCAA included a “Conversions” section that detailed the steps needed to convert times from 25-meters to 25-yards. The procedure is as follows:

  1. Convert the achieved 25-meter time into seconds
  2. Multiply the transformed time in seconds by the appropriate conversion factor (see below), out to five decimal places
  3. Drop, without rounding, all units smaller than a hundredth of a second
  4. Transform the resulting value into minutes and seconds to obtain the converted 25-yard time

The Short Course Conversion Factors, which are the same conversion standards from last season, are shown here:

Event Factor
400 meters to 500 yards 1.153
800 meters to 1,000 yards 1.153
1,500 meters to 1,650 yards 1.013
All other events 0.906

So, for example, to achieve a Men’s “A” cut in the 200-yard butterfly, a time of 1:40.44, an athlete would need to swim a 1:50.87 in the meter equivalent. Find the conversions laid out below:

  1. Convert the achieved 25-meter time into seconds
    1. 1:50.87 → 110.87 seconds
  2. Multiply the transformed time in seconds by the appropriate conversion factor, out to five decimal places
    1. 110.87 * .906 = 100.44822 seconds
  3. Drop, without rounding, all units smaller than a hundredth of a second
    1. 100.44822 → 100.44
  4. Transform the resulting value into minutes and seconds to obtain the converted 25-yard time
    1. 100.44 → 1:40.44

Swimmers are seeded based on their converted time – among the prominent examples is Mallory Comerford, whose time at the 2018 Short Course World Championships, when converted, made her the top seed at the 2019 NCAA Championships.

We will see some of the same swimmers competing in the Short Course World Championships at the upcoming Division I NCAA Championships in Atlanta, Georgia. There are many swimmers competing in Abu Dhabi who also competed in the 2021 Division I NCAA Championships this past March in Greensboro, North Carolina.

In the women’s field, Virginia Cavalier Kate Douglass will represent Team USA and compete in the 200 IM. This past March, she won gold in the 50-yard freestyle and two silvers in the 100-yard freestyle and 100-yard butterfly. Fellow Team USA member Katharine Berkoff, who claimed first in the 100-yard backstroke at the NCAA Championships, will compete in the 100-meter equivalent later this December.

Tennessee’s Mona McSharry will be representing her home country Ireland in the 100-meter IM as well as the 50-, 100- and 200-meter breaststroke. At this past NCAA Championships, she swam to a fourth-place finish in the 100-yard breaststroke and third-place in the 200-yard breaststroke.

Maggie MacNeil will represent Canada in the 50- and 100-meter backstroke, as well as the 50- and 100-meter butterfly; the Michigan Wolverine claimed second in the 50-yard freestyle and first in the 100-yard freestyle and 100-yard butterfly, all three of which were close races against Virginia’s Kate Douglass.

On the men’s side, for Team USA, Trenton Julian will compete in the 200-meter butterfly, having claimed second for Cal in the 200-yard equivalent this past March. Texas’ Carson Foster will compete in the 200- and 400-meter IM, having finished 4th in the 200-yard IM and 2nd in the 400-yard IM at the 2021 NCAA Championships. He will be joined in the IM events by Florida Gator Kieran Smith, who will also swim the 200- and 400-meter freestyle events.

Virginia Tech can boast two international swimmers in Abu Dhabi who also swam well in Greensboro: Antani Ivanov will represent Bulgaria in all three butterfly events, and Youssef Ramadan will represent Egypt in the 100-meter freestyle and butterfly. Both swimmers made a splash this past March, helping guide Virginia Tech to an 11th place finish.

While it’s safe to assume that most swimmers competing at SC Worlds (and attaining these lofty standards) won’t have a problem getting inside the NCAA cutline in a few months time, it’s still something extra to keep an eye on in the coming days in Abu Dhabi.

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Qqq
2 years ago

Also in the not to be that guy category – Ramadan, not Ramada 🙂

ZoomZune
2 years ago

How many instances have there been where a swimmer qualified with SCM conversion but not in SCY?

Scotty P
2 years ago

I am usually super critical of the NCAA but…..well played guys. Well played.

Mark Usher
2 years ago

LOL. Converted SC Worlds times can be used for NCAA cuts, but actual world records can’t be used to qualify for SC Worlds.

Kelsey
Reply to  Mark Usher
2 years ago

Absolute travesty Coleman Stewart and Kelsi Dahlia can’t compete

Steve Nolan
2 years ago

Why would they outsource the converting of SCM times? It’s not THAT hard to convert an entire table and just post that instead of all the steps.

DrSwimPhil
2 years ago

Why are the D1 conversion factors different than the D2 rates? For D2, it’s 0.896 for most events, 1.143 for the 400/500 and 800/1000 conversions, and 1.006 for 1500/1650…

2021-22D2MSW_QualStandards.pdf (ncaaorg.s3.amazonaws.com)
2021-22D2WSW_QualStandards.pdf (ncaaorg.s3.amazonaws.com)

Ghost
2 years ago

I am not worried that any of these swimmers will need to use these times to qualify. They probably all are qualified already. Half in HS and half are post grads so doesn’t affect them. With the slim field, let’s see if they can all medal individually.

BadShoulder
2 years ago

Such a reasonable and well-implemented rule! I’m sure something similar was in place for short course worlds qualification…

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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