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Emory Women, Kenyon Men Lead D3 Swimulator Rankings

With the end of the major mid season invites, pretty much every team in the country has had a meet that they’ve taken seriously. This means that we can finally start to get some useful information by comparing team’s times so far. The easiest way to do this is with our Swimulator. The Swimulator takes everyone’s top times so far this season and scores out a national meet respecting individual event limits and reasonable event choices (swimmers can’t do two events in a row). No diving is included.

Women

9 Time defending champions Emory appear poised to stretch their winning streak to 10. They hold a 556 to 494 advantage over last year’s runner up, Kenyon. At this point last year Kenyon held a 634.5-519 advantage in the Swimulator scores and Emory ended up winning nationals by 103 points.

As always this time of the year, Williams is extremely low ranked. This is because NESCAC teams start their season much later than the rest of D3, so they haven’t had many opportunities to put up fast times yet. Williams are currently ranked with only 1 point. Last year they had 13 at this point in the season and they ended up 3rd at nationals with just over 400 points.

One new arrival in the rankings is St Kate’s. Their only scorer at nationals since 1992 was a diver in 2017 who has since graduated. Now they are ranked 7th with 144 projected points. St Kate’s brought in an incredibly strong recruiting class this year. Their freshmen carried them to 6th place rankings in the 400 and 800 free relays and 88 individual points, all from freshmen. It will be interesting to see if they can maintain their placing at the end of the year.

Men

Defending champions Denison trail conference rivals Kenyon 538.5-518 in the current Swimulator ranking. Kenyon should be happy with their top ranking, but temper that enthusiasm because of how things shook out last year. At this point last season Kenyon had 509.5 points in the Swimulator rankings and ultimately only scored 322 points at nationals (3rd place). They were passed by Emory who also look very similar to their totals from last year. At this point last season Emory had 381 points. This year they have 384. They scored 369.5 at nationals. If Emory repeat that and Kenyon fall off again, their main challenger for 2nd looks like Johns Hopkins.

Hopkins are well ahead of their pace from last season with 429.5 points, last year they had 362.5 at this point. They also fell off a bit at the end of the year with 287 points at nationals.

Similarly to the women’s rankings, late starting Williams, 10th at nationals last year, don’t appear in the current rankings. They will likely move up once they start doing more meets.

One team to keep an eye on the rest of the way is Carnegie Mellon. They have 149 points in the current projections good for 9th. Last year at this time they were projected to score 59 points. They ended up scoring 0 at nationals. So while they’re ahead of last year’s pace, history says they’re likely to drop off. With all of their projected points from freshmen and sophomores, perhaps this year will be different.

Closing Thoughts

The Emory women and Denison men look on pace to defend their titles. The Emory women have 6 swimmers ranked to score 30 or more points and are top 3 on every relay. The Denison men are incredibly deep as they currently have 17 men ranked in scoring range. However, if Kenyon can avoid the drop off they saw last year, they are possibly in a position to challenge for either title.

If you are interested to see the full event by event projections check out the full Swimulator page here (women, men). The event projections are below the points. Just scroll down. Below the event projections are individual swimmer point totals sorted by team.

I’ll be doing write ups on division 2 and some conference rankings in the coming days, but if you want to see those rankings before those articles are written, feel free to run the simulation you are interested in yourself.

One final thought: this type of ranking isn’t intended as an exact prediction of what will happen at the end of the season. It’s intended as a starting point when thinking about what will happen at the end of the year. This is a baseline. If your expectation is that a team will do better or worse, look at their swimmer’s current rankings and think about which swimmers are likely to move up or down between now and the end of the season.

Swimulator Projected Women’s Points

Swimulator projections do not include diving

Team Current Swimulator Projection Swimulator Projection at This Point Last Year Swimulator End of Season Last Year
1 Emory 556 519 590.5
2 Kenyon 494 634.5 478.5
3 Denison 439.5 401 370
4 NYU 331 156 84
5 Johns Hopkins 267 244.5 242
6 MIT 175 196 112
7 St. Kate’s 144 0 0
8 Wash U. MO 130 136 152
9 Chicago 112 158.5 43
10 Claremont MS 77.5 38 25
11 Tufts 76 25 5
12 Calvin 68 113.5 83
13 Pomona-Pitzer 66 74.5 112.5
14 Trinity U. 58 57 14
15 UWEC 56 0 0
15 Case Western 56 64 2
17 W&L 55 68.5 27.5
18 Wooster 32 0 0
18 Franklin 32 34 34
20 Wheaton MA 30 0 40
20 SUNY Geneseo 30 2 5
20 Wheaton IL 30 10 0
23 CMU 24 112 29.5
24 Mary Washington 22 4 0
24 Simmons 22 13 16
26 John Carroll 20 0 3
26 Rowan 20 3 0
28 BSC 19 0 34
29 St. Thomas 14 15 17
30 Rhodes 13 8 0
30 Drew 13 16 0
32 Wittenberg 12 0 0
32 Albion 12 0 0
34 Bowdoin 10 0 7
35 NAZ 9 0 0
36 Amherst 7 0 81
36 Wellesley 7 0 0
38 Centre College 6 12 0
39 YCP 5 0 16
40 Scranton 4 0 0
41 UW-L 3 0 0
41 Puget Sound 3 0 7
41 Pacific Lutheran 3 4 0
44 Occidental 1 0 0
44 Williams 1 13 363
44 Hope College 1 22 11

Swimulator Projected Men’s Points

Swimulator projections do not include diving

Team Current Swimulator Projection Swimulator Projection at This Point Last Year Swimulator End of Season Last Year
1 Kenyon 538.5 509.5 308
2 Denison 518 543.5 551
3 Johns Hopkins 429 362.5 267
4 Emory 384 381 358.5
5 Wash U. MO 272.5 216.5 162
6 Chicago 248 201.5 100
7 MIT 246 307 238
8 Calvin 162 98 41
9 CMU 149 59 0
10 Tufts 100 44 169.5
11 Pomona-Pitzer 77 62 214
12 NYU 70 239 168
13 UW-L 53 9 21
14 Stevens 52 1 0
15 F&M 42 9.5 0
16 Worcester Poly 39 24 24.5
17 Rowan 31 20 17.5
18 Mary Washington 26 14 1
19 UW-Stevens Point 20 136 129
20 Rhodes 14 1 0
20 BSC 14 41 21
22 Saint Vincent 12 13 13.5
23 Whitworth 10 6 27
24 UWEC 9 0 30
25 Carthage 8 12 2
26 Gustavus 7 0 23
27 Widener 5 0 6.5
28 Wooster 4.5 0 0
28 Claremont MS 4.5 38 6
30 SUNY Geneseo 4 2 10
30 Wabash 4 0 0
30 Trinity U. 4 4 0
30 Wheaton IL 4 15.5 4
34 W&L 2 0 49.5
34 DePauw 2 40 47

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Swimmer
5 years ago

Kenyon men about to be choke artists again!!!

Ephfan
5 years ago

Williams women came second at NCAAs last year.. and yet they’re last on your list?!

Tim Byerly
5 years ago

Dension women beat Emory 2479-1704 last weekend at the Denison Invite. Swimulator may need some adjustments Go Big Red!

Andrew Mering
Reply to  Tim Byerly
5 years ago

If you look at the event by event rankings, almost every time by Emory and Denison is from the Denison Invite, but Emory scores more points. So why is that? At an invite style meet with fewer teams than nationals, the swimmers at the back half of Denison’s roster who score decent points can neutralize much of Emory’s top end advantage. At nationals this is much harder to to. Elite top end rules. Swimmers at the bottom half of B finals only make a marginal difference in the score.

Consider the following example. At the Denison Invite, Emory’s 3rd 100 free swimmer Lucy Daro went a 50.99. This scored her 30 points. Denison’s 2nd 100 free swimmer Maddie Hopkins went… Read more »

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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