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Noah Hensley Transferring From FSU to NC State

The rich get richer: Noah Hensley has announced that he will be transferring from Florida State to NC State. Hensley competed for FSU during the 2015-2016 season as a freshman where he joined his older brother, Cole Hensley (who has since graduated), as a member of the men’s swimming program. Hensley is a native of Winter Park, Florida, and will be venturing north to Raleigh, North Carolina to NC State beginning this spring. Hensley will be eligible to compete for the Wolfpack in January 2018, and he will be a junior (having lost one year of eligibility after his in-conference transfer).

Hensley is a great pick-up for NC State, which has been on a recruiting tear. It recently announced that it has already filled its Class of 2021 roster with 7 commits. In addition, the Wolfpack has recently gained another big transfer in freestyler/breaststroker Jacob Molacek, who will also join the team as a junior.

Hensley is a welcomed addition to the Wolfpack because he can swim three of the four strokes competitively, and has been successful at both sprint and middle distances. While at FSU, his time drops came in backstroke and butterfly. At the 2016 ACC Championships Hensley led off the 200 Medley Relay that scored 5th (he split 21.76 in the 50 back). Individually, at that same meet, he got 6th in the 100 back, 24th in the 100 fly and 24th in the 200 back. His best times and the years in which he swam them are outlined below:

Event (SCY) Time Year
100 Back* 46.95 2015
200 Back* 1:46.22 2015
100 Fly* 47.98 2016
200 Fly 1:49.64 2015
50 Free 20.59 2014
100 Free 45.58 2014
200 Free 1:38.69 2015
500 Free 4:33.09 2014

* = times achieved during his freshman year at FSU

During the 2015-2016 season, his 100 back would have ranked 3rd, his 200 back would have ranked 4th, and his 100 and 200 fly would have ranked 5th on NC State’s team.

 

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Is it just me....
8 years ago

Coach Dudd….really? When is the 8th grade dance?

protoceratops
8 years ago

It’s a year from when classes start. Think it is very fair. Schools are there for an education and if you are good at sports, then you get some of your schooling paid for, definitely fair. If you are only going to the school for the sport, then why bother with school at all. Just go pro. Athlete signed to a commitment to the school and there are a lot of people and companies that are footing the bill for you to be at school. Same thing happens with high school swim as well, when schools are changed. Wishing him the best in his junior year.

Confused soul
8 years ago

Smart move, I have little faith in his former institution’s coaching staff to get the job done at the ACC level, much less the NCAA level

swamfan
8 years ago

The amount of verbals NC State has received this early is almost comical at this point. Congrats to a great program!

Low Gap
8 years ago

Great kid goi g to a great program. Congrats Noah.

OG Swimmer
Reply to  Low Gap
8 years ago

Yes, super kid. The hardest worker on the team. Perfect person to build a new program around. But, Coach Dudd screwed that up.

baker2033
Reply to  OG Swimmer
8 years ago

Find it interesting the transition of Studd to FSU. Seems that at least 4-5 swimmers have left the program after the firing of Bradley. Would like to know if the men didn’t like the new assistants coming in. I know Studd had success with FGCU women, but maybe he’s leaving it up to the assistants and some of the guys said, ‘no way’.

Fairness
Reply to  baker2033
8 years ago

I think he is going for quantity in swimmers NOT quality!

Sandwich
8 years ago

Wow! Wow! Big gains. Holy smokes. Hope he swims fast. Wow!

coacherik
8 years ago

January 18, that’s a year and a half not a year, can’t compete in the fall? That’s harsh.

NONA
Reply to  coacherik
8 years ago

I feel like there should be a waiver on sitting out a year for athletes on teams where the head coach has changed.

baker2033
Reply to  NONA
8 years ago

This discussion continues to come up – BUT – this is why it’s important that collegiate athletes understand the school is offering the monetary incentive to represent the school, not the coach. When it comes to “in conference” transfers, student athletes are out for a year of eligibility, but if he had chosen a Division II or III school, or even a school in another conference, there’s a chance he could have been able to come back this year. It’s important they choose the SCHOOL over the COACH (like in Hensley’s case). Nothing is guaranteed when it comes to the coaching carousel.

Fairness
Reply to  baker2033
8 years ago

Most of the athletics go to a specific school because of a coach! How they fit in with other team members, attitude and most of all training partners in the water. Florida State has let the entire swim team down in my book, especially the swimmers who were close to Olympic Trial cuts or who had Olympic Trial cuts. These swimmers lost their head coach before Trials. The Coach was fired at the WORSE time possible !!!! This played a tow emotionally and physically on the elite swimmers. Then to have all the assistant coaches fired after Olympic Trials. The swimmers were left without coaches and workouts for a good while. This was also unfair to the assistant coaches, since… Read more »

Stinky winky
Reply to  baker2033
8 years ago

The schools never agree to a 4 year scholarship it is year to year only. If they don’t commit to 4 why should the athlete?

Porkchop2244
Reply to  NONA
8 years ago

It’s amazing there is not. So ridiculous and unfair to athletes. Suprises there haven’t been law suits

swamfan
Reply to  NONA
8 years ago

Agreed. What is the reason for the rule in the first place? Is it just a way to give coaches more control over the athletes since it serves as a way to deter athletes from transferring? There are many reasons why students choose to transfer- sometimes they are not even related to athletics. The rule seems overly punitive.

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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