We’ve already done a deep dive into our recruiting archives, looking at how the top 20 recruits from the high school class of 2018 did after four NCAA seasons. Now it’s time to look back at a more recent recruit ranking: the current year’s freshmen:
Relevant links:
- Way-Too-Early Sophomore Ranks, Class of 2021 Boys
- Junior Ranks, Class of 2021 Boys
- Senior Re-Ranks, Class of 2021 Boys
Naturally, this analysis has a far smaller sample size than the lookback of how the class of 2018 fared over their entire career, so it’s much more difficult to read too much into these numbers. Still, it’s useful to look at which first-year NCAA swimmers had the best performances relative to their recruiting ranks.
As always, our notes on this data:
- The data included is only individual scoring at NCAAs. That’s not an exact measure of an athlete’s contribution to a program: many of these swimmers (and others not listed) were relay scorers at NCAAs, scored significant points at conference meets and provided great leadership and culture-building for their programs. This data isn’t a perfect analysis of the best recruits – it’s merely a quick look at the data we can compile.
- A college swimming career includes four years of eligibility, and sometimes more. Revisiting scoring after one year is an incomplete analysis of a swimmer’s career – this is not the final word on any of these prospects, and we will revisit this data over the next three seasons to get a more complete evaluation.
The ranks listed below are from our re-rank last summer – they are not current ranks of NCAA athletes. We also do not rank international athletes as recruits, as it’s hard to predict if and when they’ll come to the U.S., and which class with which to include them.
TOP 20 RANKED RECRUITS
HM=Honorable mention
Rank | Name | College Team | Total NCAA Points | 2022 NCAA Points |
1 | Aiden Hayes | NC State | 15 | 15 |
2 | Josh Matheny | Indiana | 0 | 0 |
3 | Jack Aikins | Virginia | 9 | 9 |
4 | Anthony Grimm | Texas | 0 | 0 |
5 | Matt Fallon | Penn | 22.5 | 22.5 |
6 | Jack Alexy | Cal | 0 | 0 |
7 | Arsenio Bustos | NC State | 0 | no invite |
8 | Tim Connery | Texas | 0 | 0 |
9 | David Curtiss | NC State | 2 | 2 |
10 | Luke Hobson | Texas | 18 | 18 |
11 | Luke Barr | Indiana | 0 | no invite |
12 | Sam Hoover | NC State | 0 | 0 |
13 | Matthew Fenlon | Stanford | 0 | no invite |
14 | Henry Bethel | Auburn | 0 | no invite |
15 | Jacques Rathle | Auburn | 0 | 0 |
16 | Ziyad Saleem | Cal | 0 | no invite |
17 | Brady Samuels | Purdue | 0 | 0 (relay-only) |
18 | Trent Frandson | Cal | 0 | no invite |
19 | Nate Stoffle | Auburn | 0 | 0 |
20 | Daniel Matheson | USC* | 0 | 0 |
HM | Max Iida | Virginia | 0 | no invite |
HM | Connor Hunt | Michigan | 0 | no invite |
HM | Tyler Lu | Northwestern | 0 | no invite |
HM | Hayden Zheng | Stanford | 0 | no invite |
HM | Garrett Boone | NC State | 0 | no invite |
HM | Tyler Hulet | Texas A&M | 0 | no invite |
HM | Alex McMahon | Arizona | 0 | no invite |
HM | Mateo Miceli | Alabama | 0 | no invite |
*Matheson has entered the transfer portal.
The hits:
- The top freshman scorer from this class was fifth-ranked Matt Fallon, who followed through with a 2+ second time drop in his best event, the 200 breast, to place third at his first NCAAs. Fallon also got on the board in the 100 breast to score 22.5 points for Penn.
- Top-ranked recruit coming in Aiden Hayes had a very impressive opening campaign with NC State, securing a seventh-place finish in the 100 fly and a 14th-place showing in the 200 fly at NCAAs. It speaks to just how difficult it is for a freshman to score at men’s NCAAs given that Hayes was ranked #1 coming in, dropped time, and still mustered only 15 points. He ended up breaking the 17-18 NAG in both fly events during the postseason, setting the 200 mark at ACCs where he took third.
- The swimmer ranked in the top-20 who really exceeded expectations as a freshman was Luke Hobson, who dropped eight seconds over the course of the season in the 500 free to place third at NCAAs and lower the 17-18 NAG record. Hobson also lowered the NAG record in the 1000 free during the season and also scored in the 200 and 1650 free at nationals. Additionally, he split 1:30.84 as Texas won the 800 free relay and set a new NCAA, U.S. Open and American Record.
- The NCAA point totals don’t do the performances some of these freshmen produced justice, particularly in the relays. Jack Alexy was a critical sprint free relay asset for Cal, Anthony Grimm was 20.6 leading off Texas’ runner-up 200 medley relay, and David Curtiss was 18.74 to win the 50 free individually at ACCs (the fourth-fastest time ever from a freshman).
The misses:
- #2 Josh Matheny underperformed individually at NCAAs, scoring zero points, but did have a big swim in the 400 medley relay (50.93 breast split) as Indiana placed second to Cal. At Big Tens, he established personal best times en route to placing second in the 200 breast and third in the 100 breast.
- Arsenio Bustos was the lone swimmer ranked inside the top 10 who failed to earn an NCAA invite. The versatile Bustos had his top ACC performance come in the 200 IM, where he finished sixth.
- Top-20-ranked Ziyad Saleem and Trent Frandson of Cal were both left off the team’s scoring roster at Pac-12s, though both were at or near their best times. The same went for NC State’s Garrett Boone, who didn’t race at the ACC Championships.
- As a whole, this class performed better than the numbers indicate. Despite none of the Honorable Mentions earning an NCAA invite, the majority saw improvements over the season and scored some points at the conference championships. Arizona’s Alex McMahon was the lone member of the list who didn’t complete the entire season, swimming his last meet for the Wildcats in early November.
UNRANKED RECRUITS
And of course, we’ll include everyone’s favorite part: which unranked recruits earned NCAA invites and scored points this season – both domestic up-and-comers and international pickups.
DOMESTIC
Rank | Name | College Team | Total NCAA Points | 2022 NCAA Points |
BOTR | Gabriel Jett | Cal | 13 | 13 |
Chris O’Grady | USC | 1 | 1 |
- Gabriel Jett was on fire for Cal early in the season, hitting quick times in the 200 and 500 free. And although he missed the top-16 in both events at NCAAs, Jett came through on the final day by going 1:40-point in the 200 fly twice to finish sixth overall.
- Chris O’Grady dropped nearly eight seconds in the 200 breast over the course of the season for USC, going from 1:59.5 to 1:51.6 and a fifth-place finish at Pac-12s. He then earned a second swim at NCAAs.
- Virginia’s Connor Boyle was featured in the Best of the Rest section in the re-rank and had an impressive season despite not scoring individually, highlighted by his contribution on UVA’s American Record-setting 200 free relay.
INTERNATIONAL
Name | College Team | Total NCAA Points | 2022 NCAA Points |
Leon Marchand | Arizona State | 57 | 57 |
Matt Sates | Georgia | 36 | 36 |
Jordan Crooks | Tennessee | 29.5 | 29.5 |
Gal Cohen Groumi | Michigan | 15 | 15 |
Ron Polonsky | Stanford | 14 | 14 |
Murilo Sartori | Louisville | 11 | 11 |
Rafael Miroslaw | Indiana | 11 | 11 |
Mert Kilavuz | Georgia Tech | 6 | 6 |
Alex Quach | Ohio State | 6 | 6 |
Bar Soloveychik | Minnesota | 4 | 4 |
Oskar Lindholm | Florida | 3 | 3 |
Robin Hanson | Cal | 2 | 2 |
- Leon Marchand came even better than advertised for Arizona State, breaking Caeleb Dressel’s U.S. Open Record en route to winning the 200 IM, upsetting defending champ Max McHugh in the 200 breast, and adding a runner-up finish in the 400 IM. That gave the Frenchman 57 individual points, the highest of any swimmer at the meet. He was also incredible on the relays, including a sizzling 18.41 split on the 200 free.
- Matt Sates‘ career at Georgia only lasted half a semester, as he arrived in late January and recently announced he’s returning to South Africa to turn pro. Nonetheless, his time in Athens was short and sweet, as the South African won the NCAA title in the 500 free, placed third in the 200 free, and swam a critical lead-off leg as the Bulldogs finished second in the 800 free relay.
- The biggest surprise among the first-years this season was Tennessee’s Jordan Crooks, as the Cayman Islands native became the fastest freshman ever in the 50 free in 18.53, winning the SEC title. Crooks followed up by tying for third at NCAAs in the event, and added a fifth in the 100 free for 29.5 points.
- Israeli natives Gal Cohen Groumi (Michigan) and Ron Polonsky (Stanford) both had very strong seasons, scoring in two individual events apiece at NCAAs. Polonsky put his versatility on full display, splitting sub-51 on breaststroke on Stanford’s 400 medley relay despite racing the 400 IM over the 100 breast individually.
DIVING
Name | College Team | Total NCAA Points | 2022 NCAA Points |
Tyler Downs | Purdue | 43 | 43 |
Jordan Rzepka | Purdue | 19 | 19 |
Quentin Henninger | Indiana | 16 | 16 |
Shangfei Wang | USC | 6 | 6 |
Jack Ryan | Stanford | 5 | 5 |
Carson Tyler | Indiana | 5 | 5 |
Adam Wesson | Harvard | 1 | 1 |
Joseph Victor | Princeton | 1 | 1 |
- It was no surprise to see U.S. Olympian Tyler Downs lead the freshmen diving class this season, as the Purdue Boilermaker won the platform event, placed fifth on 3-meter and topped the 1-meter consolation final for 43 total points.
- His teammate Jordan Rzepka added 19 points for Purdue, while Indiana’s Quentin Henninger was close behind with 16.
- Given that we’ve historically seen divers score more points in the latter half of their career, having eight first-years score in 2022 indicates this will be a strong class down the line.
Archives: Revisiting Recruit Ranks
Analysis as of: | Spring 2022 | Spring 2021 | Spring 2020 | Spring 2019 | Spring 2018 | Spring 2017 |
Class of 2021 | ||||||
Class of 2020 | After Sophomore Year | |||||
Class of 2019 | After Junior Year | After Sophomore Year | ||||
Class of 2018 | After Senior Year | After Junior Year | After Sophomore Year | |||
Class of 2017 | After Senior Year | After Junior Year | After Sophomore Year | |||
Class of 2016 | After Senior Year | |||||
Class of 2015 | ||||||
Class of 2014 | ||||||
Class of 2013 |
Always knew leaving Gabe off this list would come back to bite you guys in the butt 😅
Kid’s an animal, don’t ever sleep on Gabe.
☘️
Lot of zeroes for the Wuffies there
I’ll say it again: this year’s NCAA was too crowded with redshirts/fifth years. I get the impulse to give an extra year of eligiblity to swimmers who missed an NCAA meet, but that did materially take invites or second swims from some of these guys (who are only going to get 4 seasons).
Other notes:
Auburn’s recruits overrated yet again
Is Andrei Minakov not classified as a freshman?
We’re still trying to get clarity on that from Stanford. They list him as a sophomore, but we would consider him a redshirt freshman by our math, so there must be some piece of information we don’t have.
So far, Stanford has not been responsive to our requests.
Went straight to the source. He’s a redshirt freshman, sophomore academically, and does have 3 years of eligibility left, but isn’t sure yet if he’s going to stay at Stanford after the Paris Olympics.
So he’s one of those fringe cases that is a freshman or a sophomore depending on whether you’re counting “years competed” or “years of competition remaining.”
Thanks! This is why you get the big bucks!
I imagine the 5th years probably put a bit of a damper on the amount of scoring you might typically see out of a (domestic) freshman class
Number 7 Arsenio Bustos who did not get the invite still dropped significant time in his three best races. It’s amazing what it takes to qualify these days. Congrats to an amazing season Arsenio!
🤡