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Stanford Leads The Tokyo 2020 Medal Count By NCAA Program

The American collegiate system has long been known for producing and developing some of the top swimming talent in the world and every Olympic Games we see a number of past, present, and future NCAA swimmers reach the podium in the pool. According to the NCAA, roughly 75% of the United States Olympic athletes in Tokyo across all sports have competed or will compete collegiately. In addition to that 75% of the American contingent, NCAA athletes represented more than 100 countries at the Games.

  • Check out a full list of NCAA athletes who competed in Tokyo here.

At Tokyo 2020 over 200 medals were distributed in pool swimming to 124 different swimmers. Of those 124 swimmers, 43 (roughly one-third) have either competed within the NCAA, are currently on an NCAA swimming roster, or have committed to swim for an NCAA school in the coming years. Those 42 swimmers represent 19 different schools and, while the majority represented the USA at the Olympics, come from 5 different countries including Canada, Switzerland, Italy, and Hong Kong.

Tokyo 2020 Olympic Medalists By NCAA School

Athlete School NCAA Status Country Gold Silver Bronze TOTAL
Rhyan White Alabama Current USA 0 1 0 1
Anna Hopkin  Arkansas  Former GBR 1 0 0 1
Annie Lazor* Auburn Former USA 0 1 1 2
Ryan Murphy Cal Former USA 1 1 1 3
Tom Shields Cal Former USA 1 0 0 1
Abbey Weitzeil Cal Former USA 0 1 1 2
Katie Mclaughlin Cal Former USA 0 1 0 1
Andrew Wilson Emory Former USA 1 0 0 1
Caeleb Dressel Florida Former USA 5 0 0 5
Bobby Finke Florida Current USA 2 0 0 2
Kieran Smith Florida Current USA 0 0 1 1
Natalie Hinds Florida Former USA 0 0 1 1
Allison Schmitt Georgia Former USA 0 1 1 2
Hali Flickinger Georgia Former USA 0 0 2 2
Olivia Smoliga Georgia Former USA 0 0 1 1
Jay Litherland Georgia Former USA 0 1 0 1
Chase Kalisz Georgia Former USA 1 0 0 1
Zach Apple* Indiana Former USA 2 0 0 2
Blake Pieroni Indiana Former USA 2 0 0 2
Lilly King Indiana Former USA 0 2 1 3
Brooks Curry LSU Current USA 1 0 0 1
Maggie MacNeil Michigan Current CAN 1 1 1 3
Siobhan Haughey Michigan Former HKG 0 2 0 2
Catie Deloof Michigan Former USA 0 0 1 1
Bowe Becker Minnesota Former USA 1 0 0 1
Noè Ponti NC State Future SUI 0 0 1 1
Federico Burdisso Northwestern Current ITA 0 0 2 2
Hunter Armstrong Ohio State Current USA 1 0 0 1
Simone Manuel Standford Former USA 0 0 1 1
Regan Smith Standford Future USA 0 2 1 3
Katie Ledecky Stanford Former USA 2 2 0 4
Taylor Ruck* Stanford Current CAN 0 1 1 2
Brooke Forde Stanford Current USA 0 1 0 1
Torri Huske Stanford Future USA 0 1 0 1
Erika Brown Tennessee Former USA 0 1 1 2
Lydia Jacoby Texas Future USA 1 1 0 2
Erica Sullivan Texas Future USA 0 1 0 1
Sydney Pickrem Texas A&M Former CAN 0 0 1 1
Santo Condorelli USC Former ITA 0 1 0 1
Emma Weyant Virginia Future USA 0 1 0 1
Kate Douglass Virginia Current USA 0 0 1 1
Paige Madden Virginia Former USA 0 1 0 1
Alex Walsh Virginia Current USA 0 1 0 1
  • Zach Apple swam for Auburn for 3 years but more recently competed for the University of Indiana and is thus listed as a former Indiana swimmer.
  • Annie Lazor competed for Ohio State in her freshman year but raced for Auburn after that for the remainder of her NCAA career and is thus listed as a former Auburn swimmer.
  • While Taylor Ruck raced for Stanford during the 2018-2019 season, she has taken 2 straight redshirt years but is still expected to make a return to the Cardinal and is thus listed as a current swimmer.
  • Note: “current” status refers to an athlete who was a member of the varsity program at the school during the 2020-2021 season and is projected to return for the 2021-2022 season.

Of the 19 schools whose past, present, or future swimmers collected an Olympic medal in Tokyo, the school with the most representatives on the list as well as the most total Olympic medals in Stanford. There were a total of 6 Stanford swimmers at the Olympics this year who came away with hardware in Katie Ledecky, Simone Manuel, Regan Smith, Taylor Ruck, Brooke Forde, and Torri Huske. Of those 6, Manuel and Ledecky are the only 2 who have completed their collegiate career while Ruck and Forde are current members of the team and Regan Smith and Torri Huske are expected to begin repping the Cardinal in Fall 2021.

Should Forde, who just completed her 4th year at Stanford and will be taking advantage of the 5th year offering, Ruck, Smith, and Huske all race for Stanford in 2021-2022, that would place 4 Tokyo 2020 Olympic medalists on 1 NCAA team.

School Totals Medals
Stanford 12
Florida 9
Cal 7
Georgia 7
Indiana 7
Michigan 6
Virginia 3
Texas 3
Tennessee 2
Northwestern 2
Auburn 2
Alabama 1
Emory 1
LSU 1
Minnesota 1
NC State 1
Ohio State* 1
Texas A&M 1
USC 1

While 6 women represented Stanford’s medal haul at the Games, it was 3 men and 1 woman who amassed a total of 9 Olympic medals for Florida. Caeleb Dressel and Natalie Hinds have both completed their collegiate swimming careers, having represented Florida, and won 5 golds and 1 gold, respectively. Dressel won 3 individual gold medals (50 free, 100 free, 100 fly) and 2 relay medals (men’s 4×100 freestyle, men’s 4×100 medley), while Hinds earned gold as a member of the women’s 4×100 freestyle relay. In terms of current Florida swimmers, Bobby Finke picked up 2 individual golds in Tokyo in the men’s 800 and 1500 freestyle while Kieran Smith won bronze in the 400 free.

After Stanford’s 12 medal haul and Florida’s, the University of California, Georgia, and Indiana are all tied with 7 medals from their respective Olympic swimmers. Notably, all 7 of each schools’ medals come from former members of their roster meaning that none of their current or future athletes made the podium. While no current Cal, Georgia, or Indiana swimmers made it onto the podium, Indiana did have 1 swimmer on the roster in Michael Brinegar who is expected to be making a return to Indiana in the fall.

If we want to take a look at Olympic medals per school while only counting current or future members of the team, the list will look a bit different. By only including those swimmers who are expected to compete during the 2021-2022 season or later, Stanford still ranks in the top spot with 7 medals, followed by Michigan with, Texas, and Virginia with 3 each.

Tokyo 2020 Olympic Medals From Current/Future NCAA Students

School Number of Medals
Stanford 7
Florida 3
Michigan 3
Texas 3
Virginia 3
Northwestern 2
LSU 1
NC State 1
Ohio State 1
Alabama 1

Of all current or future NCAA athletes racing at Tokyo 2020, Maggie MacNeil who represents Canada internationally, and Michigan collegiately and Regan Smith who represents the USA internationally, and Stanford collegiately had the highest medal count. Both won 3 medals overall at the Games as MacNeil won individual gold in the 100 butterfly, silver in the 4×100 freestyle, and bronze in the 4×100 medley, and Smith individual silver in the 200 fly, bronze in the 100 back, and silver in the 4×100 medley.

Tokyo 2020 Olympic Medals From Current/Future NCAA Students

Athlete School NCAA Status Country Gold Silver Bronze TOTAL
Rhyan White Alabama Current USA 0 1 0 1
Bobby Finke Florida Current USA 2 0 0 2
Kieran Smith Florida Current USA 0 0 1 1
Brooks Curry LSU Current USA 1 0 0 1
Maggie MacNeil Michigan Current CAN 1 1 1 3
Hunter Armstrong Ohio State Current USA 1 0 0 1
Brooke Forde Stanford Current USA 0 1 0 1
Kate Douglass Virginia Current USA 0 0 1 1
Alex Walsh Virginia Current USA 0 1 0 1
Taylor Ruck Stanford Current CAN 0 1 1 2
Emma Weyant Virginia Future USA 0 1 0 1
Noè Ponti NC State Future SUI 0 0 1 1
Federico Burdisso Northwestern Future ITA 0 0 2 2
Regan Smith Stanford Future USA 0 2 1 3
Torri Huske Stanford Future USA 0 1 0 1
Lydia Jacoby Texas Future USA 1 1 0 2
Erica Sullivan Texas Future USA 0 1 0 1

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DJTrockstoYMCA
3 years ago

Stanferd is all that. Everyone who is anyone should go there.

Mel
3 years ago

Stop it. Just stop it. Stanford again taking credit for swimmers who have never practiced once or represented Stanford (Huske and R Smith). Who knows how many other athletes in other sports they are taking credit for
https://gostanford.com/feature/tokyo2020?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=Commpost-ath_2021-08-09_1A2B4C&utm_campaign=sdother_otherpd_oly__

Daniel
Reply to  Mel
3 years ago

NC State “taking credit” for Noe Ponti:
https://gopack.com/news/2021/7/30/swimming-noe-ponti-wins-100-fly-bronze-at-2020-tokyo-olympics.aspx

UVA doing the same for Weyant:
https://virginiasports.com/news/2021/07/24/weyant-wins-silver-medal-in-400im-at-tokyo-olympics/

Looks like you’re the one that needs to stop it buddy. Make sure to take off that clown mask the next time you comment

Curious George
3 years ago

But UVA?

Joel
3 years ago

In the text it says Natalie Hinds won gold in 4×100 free relay. Ummmmm…..no she didn’t.

Sub13
Reply to  Joel
3 years ago

I was thinking that too. The claim is repeated 3 times that she has a gold from the relay. The US women didn’t win any relays.

Gator
3 years ago

SEC SEC SEC SEC

Andrei
3 years ago

Also add in Andrei Nimakov who will be a freshman at Stanford next year. I don’t think this is about “credit” to a coach/program etc, if anything it’s sometimes a list of talent going to a university and then what will that coaching staff do to help that swimmer get better?

MrClean
Reply to  Andrei
3 years ago

I don’t think he medal?

Andrei
Reply to  MrClean
3 years ago

Sorry, you’re right, missed this was only medalists (Nimakov final’d)

NC Fan
Reply to  Andrei
3 years ago

Andrey Minakov, but correct he did not medal. Close 4th to Ponti. Gonna be some fun NCAA races.

Swimmer
3 years ago

Not sure Stanford should get credit for Smith and Huske who have not even swam there yet.

Walter
Reply to  Swimmer
3 years ago

Same for Texas and Jacoby and Weyant and UVA. This article is about college affiliations, that’s all. Remember, medal counts really are meaningless so don’t get your undies in a twist.

Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
3 years ago

Talk about spin. Regan Smith and Torri Huske have yet to swim a competitive lap for the Stanford Cardinal swimming team. Katie Ledecky is the product of coach Yuri Suguiyama and coach Bruce Gemmell. Any claims by coach Greg Meehan in the development of Katie Ledecky is not only disingenuous but grounds for dismissal. Brooke Forde did not swim in the final of the women’s 4 x 200 meter freestyle relay. Simone Manuel failed to qualify in the final of the women’s 50 meter freestyle.

Furthermore, the Stanford Cardinal swimming team was a debacle at the 2021 U.S. Olympic Team Trials as was the case at the 2021 NCAA Division I Women’s Swimming & Diving Championships.

Daniel
Reply to  Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
3 years ago

Ah so what you’re saying is “I’m a UVA bootlicker”.

Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
Reply to  Daniel
3 years ago

Huh?

I did not mention the University of Virginia in my diatribe.

RMS
Reply to  Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
3 years ago

It’s pretty much assumed by anyone who read your rant.

Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
Reply to  RMS
3 years ago

Riddle me this Batman:

Who was ultimately responsible for the women’s relay exchanges at the Tokyo 2021 Olympics?

Swimfan
Reply to  Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
3 years ago

The women who swam on the relay

Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
Reply to  Swimfan
3 years ago

Just like Greg Meehan, pass the buck.

samulih
Reply to  Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
3 years ago

You really do not know anything about what happened inside that team so you are just having subjective opinions of some human being, nothing more. Pass me the bucket, stupidity makes me sick.

Virginia Beach swim dad
Reply to  Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
3 years ago

If you read the whole article it applies the same rules to all swimmers and programs. (Emma Weyant credited to UVA for example) I for one appreciate the effort and thought it was well done. Should be a great competition at NCAAs this year with Stanford, NC State, Texas, Kentucky, Ohio State and Cal all chasing UVA for the title.

Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
Reply to  Virginia Beach swim dad
3 years ago

Let’s completely discredit club coaches for the success of the athletes. It’s a disservice to the club system.

triadswim
Reply to  Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
3 years ago

Y’all club coaches always look at everything through the lens of “me me me me me me me.” And that’s why y’all are club coaches – because you’re too myopic to realize that swimming ‘fans’ don’t really care about where they’re training now, they care about what their college affiliation is – because that’s what people brag about. “My college swim team has 8 Olympians on it.”

Stop treating this sport like one big advertisement for me me me me and consider something from the perspective of a fan, and maybe we’ll finally have the growth of a real fanbase. But nah you’re right, prolly not.

Tree Hugger
Reply to  Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
3 years ago

I don’t understand the Meehan bashing on this website. Plenty of people sit around and bash him when his athletes perform “poorly” (always a relative metric) but don’t give him credit when they do well. The mental gymnastics are hilarious. Last I checked Katie broke a world record swimming under Greg and Simone has broken multiple American records. He helped Drabot develop into a World Championships medalist in the 200 fly. Those are just a few examples; look at results and see that swimmers get better training with Greg. You all act like he spends his days trying to devise a plan to destroy USA swimming. Yes Katie hasn’t gone best times in all her events and Simone had a… Read more »

Joel Lin
Reply to  Tree Hugger
3 years ago

Sounds like the same argument rolling out hot with *Skip Kenney* and *lots of Olympians over 3+ decades*

The criticism of Meehan, as with Kenney for many years before, is he brings in Olympic talent and the trajectory of those athletes improving at Stanford is inconsistent. That criticism is fair.

Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
Reply to  Joel Lin
3 years ago

A prime example:

https://staging.swimswam.com/re-rank-top-20-girls-ncaa-swimming-recruits-class-of-2018/

Zoe Bartel did not final in any event at the 2021 U.S. Olympic Team Trials. Not to mention Morgan Tankersley and Lucie Nordmann.

Mel
Reply to  Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
3 years ago

In fairness to Stanford, many of these girls have had rough going, except Sullivan who has yet to make it on campus.

Robert Major
Reply to  Joel Lin
3 years ago

Cal man to the end.

SCCOACH
Reply to  Tree Hugger
3 years ago

It’s the same people on here that just post the same BS over and over, don’t give them attention

Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
Reply to  Tree Hugger
3 years ago

Revisionist history at its finest.

Katie Drabot failed to final in the women’s 200 meter butterfly at the 2021 U.S . Olympic Team Trials. SImone Manuel failed to final in the women’s 100 meter freestyle at the 2021 U.S. Olympic Team Trials.

Under coach Greg Meehan, Katie Ledecky has not won the women’s 200 meter freestyle at a major international tournament. Furthermore, Katie Ledecky failed to medal altogether in the women’s 200 meter freestyle at the Toyko 2021 Olympics.

Funny, I thought the pinnacle of swimming competition was the Summer Olympic Games?

Swimfan
Reply to  Tree Hugger
3 years ago

I agree. Stanford was bad this year but it was one year… with a shell of their team and some of the most strict covid protocols. They will be just fine when things get back to normal.

Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
Reply to  Swimfan
3 years ago
Last edited 3 years ago by Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
Swimmer
Reply to  Tree Hugger
3 years ago

Katie was incredibly successful before she ever got to Stanford

Awsi Dooger
Reply to  Tree Hugger
3 years ago

Agreed, the Meehan bashing is ridiculous. Katie Ledecky was always going to peak in Rio. As long as you understood that simple reality you fully understood she would decline in college and shortly thereafter. Meehan would have inherited undeserved praise if Ledecky had enrolled before Rio and therefore posted those 3:56 and 8:04 times while already a student. IMO, it is remarkable that Ledecky remained close to her Rio level for a year or two later. That should not have happened, given the long history of female distance swimming. I credit Meehan. Once 2019 rolled around I knew darn well sickness was not the reason for Ledecky’s world championship results. I took some heat here and elsewhere, but who cares?… Read more »

RMS
Reply to  Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
3 years ago

Someone is really bothered by Stanford women’s swimming. Brooke Forde swam in the prelims so she is very deserving of that silver medal. Simone had a beast anchor leg in the women’s 4×100 free relay.

Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
Reply to  RMS
3 years ago

However, let’s overlook that Paige Madden (1:55.96) outperformed Brooke Forde (1:57.00) in the heats of the women’s 4 x 200 meter freestyle relay. More egg on the face of Greg Meehan.

Last edited 3 years ago by Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
RMS
Reply to  Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
3 years ago

But what about Ledecky? Right.

Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
Reply to  RMS
3 years ago

Katie Ledecky was the product of coach Yuri Suguiyama and coach Bruce Gemmell not coach Greg Meehan.

Robert Major
Reply to  Smith-Jacoby-Huske-Weitzeil
3 years ago

This analysis courtesy of Charlottesville World Network.

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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