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NCAA Approves Video Reviews For 15-Meter Violations

The NCAA has approved optional video review for 15-meter violations, per a press release this week.

The NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel approved the rule change, according to a press release Wednesday. The rule will go into effect for the upcoming 2019-2020 NCAA season for both men’s and women’s swimming.

The rule change doesn’t necessarily mean video review will be a part of all (or even any) NCAA competitions this season. The rule merely makes video review optional. It’ll be up to “meet committees” to decide when video reviews will or won’t be conducted.

The press release does lay out some specifics of how video review will be implemented:

  • All video reviews will be conducted “before qualifiers/results are announced.” That would appear to mean video review would happen while results remain unofficial during a meet.
  • Only the meet referee and a non-partisan (not affiliated with any specific particpating school) conference or NCAA meet committee representative will be allowed to see the video. Coaches and athletes are not allowed to see the video.
  • Coaches cannot “challenge” calls to bring up video review.

The release also runs through a few more rule changes approved by the Playing Rules Oversight Panel:

  • Timing malfunctions: the panel changed how times are calculated when the primary timing mechanism fails. The release says the new method is “more in line with USA Swimming and international swimming rules.”
    • If 2 of the 3 valid button or watch times agree, that time is accepted.
    • If the three button or watch times are all different, the middle (intermediate) time will be the time taken.
    • If there are only 2 valid button or watch times, they are averaged, dropping any thousandths digits without rounding.
    • If there is only one valid button or watch time, that time is accepted, unless that time “conflicts with other information.”
  • Diving ties: when divers tie for 8th place in non-NCAA and NCAA championship meets, the meet should take 9 divers to the championship final.
  • Number of officials: dual, double-dual and triangular/quadrangular meets require at least two officials. Championship and invite meets require at least 4 officials. (This rule takes effect this year in Division I, but not until 2020-2021 for Divisions II and III).
  • Optional lap counters: lap counters have been made optional and “can be placed at the end or on either side of the pool.” The release does not specify this rule to only distance events.

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Well Hello There
5 years ago

IU holding their breath and waiting for the approval on video review for double dolphins off of pull-outs…. someday it’ll happen

Daboss
5 years ago

Darn nice of the NCAA

jvog88
5 years ago

Go back and take away Auburn’s 2008 NCAA medley relay victory, please (re Alexei Puninski’s first 25 on the fly leg). So blatant – the mark might have been between his hip and knee when he surfaced.

Daboss
Reply to  jvog88
5 years ago

Absolutely it was a travesty…the judge was standing at the 15 m and looked at it…the fans ALL gushed a loud OOOOHHHHHHH! BUT the guy stood there frozen indignantly. Sad for swimming.

Guy
Reply to  Daboss
5 years ago

Is there a link to race footage

DMacNCheez
Reply to  Guy
5 years ago
jvog88
Reply to  jvog88
5 years ago

Thanks for posting the video, DMACNCHEEZ. Downvoters (Auburn alums?) – go ahead and watch, please 🙂

I’ll admit I was wrong…in that the mark is actually more at his ankles when he surfaces 😉

Swammer
5 years ago

Optional lap counters for all events?

Quack
Reply to  Swammer
5 years ago

Yea sometimes you can lose count in a 50.

Ervin
Reply to  Swammer
5 years ago

I’ve always needed one for the 50 free…i cant keep track sometimes

Usausausa
Reply to  Swammer
5 years ago

I would love to see a sprinter use one for the 200. On the starting end of the pool.

PAC SWIM FAN
Reply to  Usausausa
5 years ago

Brook, while not a sprinter, could have used that this season her 4×200 anchor

Ervin
5 years ago

ooooooh giiirrrrrl…dq’s for all!

Ervin
Reply to  Ervin
5 years ago

“Only the meet referee and a non-partisan (not affiliated with any specific particpating school) conference or NCAA meet committee representative will be allowed to see the video”

So these non-partisan ppl can just arbitrarily decide to review? Or does a dq need to be called by an official first?

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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