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SwimSwam Pulse: IU Winner Picks Spiked 6x During NCAA Championships

SwimSwam Pulse is a recurring feature tracking and analyzing the results of our periodic A3 Performance Polls. You can cast your vote in our newest poll on the SwimSwam homepage, about halfway down the page on the right side, or you can find the poll embedded at the bottom of this post.

Our most recent poll was a daily double – we asked SwimSwam readers to predict the winners of men’s NCAAs twice at different points in the week to see how opinions shifted as the meet went on:

RESULTS

Question: Who will win men’s NCAAs?

From Tuesday through Thursday finals:

  • Texas – 47.0%
  • Cal – 30.4%
  • NC State – 8.7%
  • Florida – 8.1%
  • Indiana – 4.7%
  • Other – 1.1%

Question: Who will men’s NCAAs? (Round 2)

From Thursday night through Friday finals:

  • Indiana – 31.3%
  • Texas – 20.6%
  • Cal – 18.1%
  • Florida – 15.6%
  • NC State – 13.1%
  • Other – 1.3%

The results of our two polls show what many of us felt during last week’s event – belief in IU as a legit title contender suddenly surging as swims continued to pile in.

Indiana was ranked surprisingly high by both scoring mechanisms we tried out pre-meet, but despite projected finishes of 2nd and 3rd, there were still more doubters than believers in our comments section. Even in our own Power Rankings, we had IU as a consensus #5 pick among our four rankers.

In defense of fans (and of us!) much of that doubt was defensible. Indiana had previously lost points to psych sheet scoring, and even with a big diving boost coming it was hard to project IU’s top-heavy but thin lineup beating the juggernauts in the top 4.

However, after two days of racing, Indiana had broken a national record (Blake Pieroni‘s 1:29.63 200 free), won an NCAA relay (the 400 medley), finished second in another (800 free relay), had the fastest 100 breast and 100 free splits in the medley relay field, put swimmers into two of three individual A finals and gone 1st-3rd in 1-meter diving. Leading the meet by 4, IU suddenly looked like a real threat to even the staunchest doubter, and they surged from just 5th place in our pre-meet poll to leading all teams by double-digit percentage points.

Texas looked like the heavy favorites coming in, at least per our poll. But their 47% was sliced down to less than half of that after a day and a half of racing. The Longhorns struggled early, and John Shebat‘s prelims struggles on the 400 medley relay looked an especially damaging miss for the Longhorns. Shebat eventually came back to get second in both backstrokes, which was essential for Texas’s narrow win.

A few die-hards picked outside of the top 5 teams in both polls. Interestingly enough, each of those “other” votes was a unique voter between the two polls, meaning that ~1% wasn’t just the same die-hard Harvard/Dean Farris fan.

 

Below, vote in our new A3 Performance Pollwhich asks voters to select the most impressive barrier-breaking swim of men’s NCAAs:

What was the most impressive swim of men's NCAAs?

View Results

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ABOUT A3 PERFORMANCE

A3 Performance is an independently-owned, performance swimwear company built on a passion for swimming, athletes, and athletic performance. We encourage swimmers to swim better and faster at all ages and levels, from beginners to Olympians.  Driven by a genuine leader and devoted staff that are passionate about swimming and service, A3 Performance strives to inspire and enrich the sport of swimming with innovative and impactful products that motivate swimmers to be their very best – an A3 Performer.

The A3 Performance Poll is courtesy of A3 Performance, a SwimSwam partner

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2Fat4Speed
6 years ago

Those same people are Yankees, Lakers, Cowboys, and Duke fans.

eagleswim
Reply to  2Fat4Speed
6 years ago

no, the question wasn’t “who are you rooting for?”

The question was “who do you think will win?”

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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