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Four-peat! UVA Women Win their 4th Consecutive NCAA Division I Championship

2024 WOMEN’S NCAA SWIMMING AND DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS

COMPLETE RESULTS (PDF)

In spite of losing one of the greatest college swimmers in history Kate Douglass, the Virginia women were still about as good as last year’s team en route to their 4th-consecutive NCAA Team Championship. The Cavaliers scored 527.5 points, 14 fewer than last season.

They did that on the strength of the Walsh sisters, including the younger Gretchen who had one of the great NCAA Championship meets ever with 3 individual wins and 3 all-time Records. That included a staggering 47.42 in the 100 fly when only five women have even been 48, and a 44.83 in the 100 free when only four women have even been 45.

But they also showed some new facets – like a breakout meet for transfer Jasmine Nocentini, who became a star at this meet by winning the 100 breaststroke in 56.09, and swimming some of the best sprint free times ever. Her 50 free time of 21.10 for 3rd place makes her the 7th-best performer ever in that event, and she also placed 4th in the 100 free in 47.00. She was a good swimmer, an All-American, before transferring to Virginia, but at this meet she became a bona fide star.

Nocentini swam two years at Florida International before transferring to Northwestern for the 2022-23 season. She ended her senior season at Northwestern early with a shoulder injury at a point when she was the top-ranked swimmer in the Big Ten in the 50 free and 100 breast. Her best 100 breast time coming into the 2023-24 season was 58.23; she won the 100 breast in Athens with 56.06, the 2nd-fastest performance in history.

Virginia also turned into a diving school, with Lizzy Kaye becoming the school’s first diving All-American ever when she finished 10th on 3-meter, then becoming the school’s first First Team All-American when she finished 8th on 3-meter. If Virginia can springboard themselves into a 30-point yearly diving program, the rest of the NCAA is in huge trouble.

There were a couple of key points in this meet where the Cavaliers aptly counterpunched areas that should have been dominant strengths for the Longhorns. Kaye was one of them. The other was in the 200 fly, where Virginia got two in the A-Final even with Alex Walsh opting to swim the 200 breast instead. Freshman Tess Howley, who hadn’t been a best time since 2021, finished 4th, while Abby Harter finished 6th – both moving way up from their 16th (Harter) and 17th (Howley) seeds.

Texas still won diving (77-18) and the 200 fly (56-28), but Virginia’s resilience in those events kept the Longhorns from the avalanches that they could have had.

Roster

Virginia sent a maximum roster of 18 athletes to NCAAs:

Athlete Individual Points
Izzy Bradley, SO
Aimee Canny, SO 22
Cavan Gormsen, FR 14
Abby Harter, SR 13
Tess Howley, FR 15
Lizzy Kaye, JR 18
Anna Keating, SR 11
Sophia Knapp, SO
Ella Nelson, 5Y 41
Jasmine Nocentini, SR 51
Carly Novelline, SO
Maxine Parker, SR 12.5
Maggie Schalow, FR
Zoe Skirboll, SO
Reilly Tiltmann, JR 12
Alex Walsh, SR 60
Gretchen Walsh, JR 60
Emma Weber, SO 8

Special shoutout to Ella Bathurst, who qualified for NCAAs but was dropped to make room for Kaye.

Four-Peat

With the women, Virginia matches Cal as the 5th-most NCAA Division I Women’s Swimming & Diving titles in history. They also move into rare territory as only the third women’s program in D1 history to four-peat, joining Stanford, who five-peated from 1992 through 1996, and Texas, who five-peated from 1984 through 1988.

On the men’s side, only Texas (1988-1991, 2015-2018), Michigan (1937-1941), USC (1963-1966, 1974-1977), Auburn (2003-2007), and Indiana (1968-1973) have done it. noting that all but the Texas and Auburn streaks happened before the NCAA hosted its first women’s championship in 1982.

Coaches With NCAA D1 Women’s Titles, All-Time

  Coach Titles Won School(s)
1 Richard Quick 12 Texas/Auburn
2 Jack Bauerle 7 Georgia
3 David Marsh/Dorsey Tierney-Walker 5 Auburn
4 Todd Desorbo 4 Virginia
4 Teri McKeever 4 Cal
6 Mark Schubert 3 Texas/USC
6 Greg Meehan 3 Stanford
8 Randy Reese 1 Florida
8 George Haines 1 Stanford
8 Gregg Troy 1 Florida
8 Frank Busch 1 Arizona

Dorsey Tierney-Walker and David Marsh were officially recognized as co-head coaches for Auburn’s 2006 and 2007 NCAA titles.

Virginia Four-Peat, Margins

Credit to Texas, who after a rocky start to the meet had really good days 3 & 4 to make this the closest championship of Virginia’s run.

  • 2021 – 137 points (NC State)
  • 2022 – 145.5 points (Texas)
  • 2023 – 137 points (Texas)
  • 2024 – 86.5 points (Texas)

All-Time Team Champions

Team Number Years won
Stanford 11 1983, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1998, 2017, 2018, 2019
Texas 7 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1990, 1991
Georgia 7 1999, 2000, 2001, 2005, 2013, 2014, 2016
Auburn 5 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007
Virginia 4 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024
California 4 2009, 2011, 2012, 2015
Florida 2 1982, 2010
USC 1 1997
Arizona 1 2008

2024 NCAA Event Champions

Final Team Scores

1. Virginia 527.5
2. Texas 441
3. Florida 364
4. Tennessee 277
5. Stanford 250
6. Louisville 212
7. Indiana 206
8. Southern California 200
9. Ohio St 162
9. NC State 162
11. California 153
12. Michigan 147.5
13. Georgia 116
14. Texas A&M 104
15. Wisconsin 95
16. Duke 80
17. UNC 77
18. Purdue 57
19. Auburn 54
20. Minnesota 47
21. LSU 44
22. UCLA 36
23. Alabama 25
24. Arizona St 23
25. Utah 22
26. Virginia Tech 18
27. Northwestern 17
28. SIU 16
29. Penn 15
30. Nebraska 11
31. South Carolina 9
32. Notre Dame 6
32. Kansas 6
32. Miami (Ohio) 6
32. Rutgers 6
36. Akron 5
36. Arkansas 5
38. Florida St 4
38. Cincinnati 4
40. Houston 3
40. Washington St. 3
40. Miami (Fl) 3

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Old Swimmer
7 months ago

Virginia will be the NCAA champion for many more years. Can’t see any other team touching them

Elmer
7 months ago

How soon before the Virginia coaching staff is poached? Blaire Bachmann-Anderson is good enough to be a head coach somewhere,as are some of the other coaches there. She should be at UGA.

SwimMom
7 months ago

What happened to ASU? Bad tapers?

Swammer
Reply to  Braden Keith
7 months ago

Maybe the coaches should focus more on coaching rather than lifting weights and training non swimmers in their down time

Kono
Reply to  Braden Keith
7 months ago

“Ton of Swimmers” haha

SwimMom
Reply to  Braden Keith
7 months ago

No, ASU should have focused on their individual swimmers who had a shot at scoring. You don’t sacrifice these individuals because you think your team won’t do anything at NCAAs. Stupid!!!

Mediocre Swammer
7 months ago

Didn’t Richard Quick coach Stanford?

CavaDore
Reply to  Mediocre Swammer
7 months ago

He actually coached at Auburn (men and women), then Texas (women), then Stanford (women), then back to a brief stint coaching Auburn again (men and women).

Greg
Reply to  CavaDore
7 months ago

Plus SMU women prior to Auburn. 1974-76.

Blue Jay
7 months ago

Miss me yet? Augie Busch overheard mumbling

Swammer
7 months ago

But he cant coach men

richteller
Reply to  Swammer
7 months ago

watch

Swammer
Reply to  richteller
7 months ago

We’ve been watching the last four years….

Bad Man
Reply to  Swammer
7 months ago

Man goes and lead his team to 4 straight nattys and demolish the NCAA record book and all you can come in and do is criticize him? Clown.

PVK
Reply to  Swammer
7 months ago

Someone screenshot this comment so we have it 4 years from now

Swammer
Reply to  PVK
7 months ago

Please do. The fifth year rule is the only thing that has kept Virginia at the top.

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  Swammer
7 months ago

Oh, so salty!

Facts
7 months ago

Best dynasty in the modern college swimming era?

Swammer
Reply to  Facts
7 months ago

The Texas Men’s team has entered the comment section

96Swim
7 months ago

Virginia got a ton of points from seniors/5th years. 5 peat will be tough.

JeahBrah
Reply to  96Swim
7 months ago

Nah they get Curzan, Leah Hayes, and 3 other top 10 recruits. Their biggest challenger Texas loses multiple seniors, and the up and comer Florida loses Ivey

5 peat incoming
Reply to  JeahBrah
7 months ago

Hot take, Douglass pulls a “Regan”, declares she’s going “un-pro”.
Alex sticks around for one more.

Relays: Walsh, Walsh, Douglass, Curzan

💣

Vaswammer
Reply to  96Swim
7 months ago

Yeah, it must suck to have the best recruiting class coming in, plus Curzan and one or two of the fourth years who return for a fifth. They’re sunk.

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  Vaswammer
7 months ago

Aside from Leah Hayes, the 2024 girls high school recruiting class has regressed during the 2023-2024 season. Look up the aforementioned performances on swimcloud. Another reason for Alex Walsh to return for a fifth year.

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  96Swim
7 months ago

That is the reason why Alex Walsh needs to come back. Not even Claire Curzan can make up for the individual points from Ella Nelson (41), Abby Harter (13), Maxine Parker (12.5), Anna Keating (11).

Swammer
Reply to  96Swim
7 months ago

Can’t wait for this 5th year stuff to go away

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  Swammer
7 months ago

There is always the vaunted medical redshirt.

richteller
Reply to  96Swim
7 months ago

You will soon find out more. Nocentini is back, maybe Parker, and Curzan for 3 years. Add 5 of the top 20 next fall, including the best sprinter and the impossibly versatile IMer Leah Hayes, and the pieces are in place. And I think that The Queen might very well take another year for various reasons. WIth Kate in the pool, Todd will have a de facto pro group to focus on LCM but with plenty of time and capability to have some rubber ducky tub talent to dominate. Best of both worlds. At a pretty cool place to be and lots of fun.

Awsi Dooger
Reply to  richteller
7 months ago

I’m surprised Nocentini is eligible to return. She enrolled at FIU during 2019 so she’s already had 5 years to swim 4, unless she gets a waiver after being injured last year at Northwestern.

She has repeatedly sad she wanted to see what she could do with one year at Virginia. But if eligible it certainly makes sense for her to return. She was a 17 year old freshman so her 6th year would be same age as a typical 5th year.

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  Awsi Dooger
7 months ago

Didn’t Jasmine Nocentini take a medical redshirt?

LM01
Reply to  96Swim
7 months ago

Regan Smith will prolly transfer to UVa next year. Arizona State scored hardly anything and Stanford’s performance didn’t look appealing enough to return to.

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  LM01
7 months ago

2024 TYR Pro Swim Series – Westmont, IL

Regan Smith
W 100 BK – 57.64
W 200 BK – 2:03.99
W 200 FL – 2:04.80

To abandon Bob Bowman would be one of the dumbest ideas I have recently read.

Claire Curzan Fan
Reply to  LM01
7 months ago

Conductor, can I get one ticket to Wrong City?

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  Claire Curzan Fan
7 months ago

Bob Bowman has Regan Smith back on the right track as quite evident at the 2024 TYR Pro Swim Series – Westmont, IL event. No thanks to Greg Meehan.

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  96Swim
7 months ago

A few seniors may stick around for another year:

Nocentini, Jasmine
Parker, Maxine
Walsh, Alex

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  96Swim
7 months ago

The University of Texas got a ton of points from seniors/5th years:

Bray
Cooper
Elendt
Pash – 5th year
Sticklen

Not to mention contributions on relays.

It works both ways.

Weinstein-Smith-Ledecky-Sims
Reply to  96Swim
7 months ago

Based on the times posted at the 2023 Speedo Winter Junior Championships (West), Leah Hayes would have placed 6th in the W 200 IM (13 points) and 6th in the W 400 IM (13 points) at the 2024 NCAA Division I Women’s Swimming & Diving Championships. Thus, Leah Hayes essentially replaces Ella Nelson’s contributions in the women’s individual medley events (25 points).

Further development/improvement from sophomores Canny (freestyle events) and Weber (breaststroke events) will be necessitated to offset the losses of Harter (13 points) and Keating (11 points). Furthermore, if Canny matched her seed time in the W 500 FR, that would have accrued 13 additional points.

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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