Braden Keith, James Sutherland, Anya Pelshaw, Robert Gibbs, YanYan Li, Riley Overend, Spencer Penland, and Reid Carlson contributed to this report.
It’s the beginning of the 2023-24 NCAA season, which means it’s time to make our early picks for who this season’s NCAA champions are going to be. Like last year, many of the SwimSwam writers debated who they think will win each event and listed them in the table below.
Compared to our women’s picks, there’s a little less uniformity. However, at a quick glance that might not look true, because the writers unanimously picked the same swimmer to win in more individual events than the women’s side.
Writers picked Leon Marchand to win the 200 IM/400 IM like he did last year. He’s the NCAA and U.S. Open record holder in both events by a significant margin, so that’s understandable. As is everyone picking Jordan Crooks to win the 50 freestyle, Destin Lasco for the 200 back, and Luke Hobson for the 200 free. All three have hit times in their respective events that make them clear favorites in those events: Crooks broke 18 seconds in the 50 free, Lasco scared Ryan Murphy‘s American record, and Hobson is the latest member of the sub-1:30 club.
Ahmed Hafnaoui is the final unanimous pick in an individual event. All nine writers picked him to win the 1650 freestyle. Hafnaoui had an incredible World Championships after training at Indiana for the last year, winning gold in the 800/1500 free and silver in the 400, making the top 10 all-time list in each.
Last season, Josh Liendo was the only first year–men or women–picked to win an event. But we picked Bella Sims to win three events on the women’s side and on the men’s, we chose Hafnaoui to win the 500/1650 free and Ilya Kharun in the 200 fly.
The relay picks are also much more varied than women’s NCAAs. The only unanimous relay pick was Florida in the 200 free relay and there are two relays where three different schools were picked to win. In the 400 medley relay writers chose Florida, Indiana, and Cal. In the 800 free relay ASU, Indiana, Texas, and Cal all made at least one ballot.
There’s also three individual events with at least swimmers picked to win. Leading the way in that category is the 100 breaststroke with five different swimmers named: Denis Petrashov, Josh Matheny, Liam Bell, Noah Nichols, and Aleksas Savickas. The 100 breast sees only two 2023 ‘A’ finalists return (Petrashov and Bell), so it makes sense that our choices reflect that wide open field.
The 100 backstroke features winners picks of Destin Lasco, Kacper Stokowski, and Brendan Burns. In the 200 fly, Kharun, Burns, and Dare Rose have all been picked to win.
Without further ado, below are the ballots. Like last year, each writer picked a winner for each event, then picked a potential upset, which are compiled below.
In 2023, our SwimSwam picks went 9.5 for 17 (we were split on the 500 free champ). In terms of our potential upsets, 1.5 of our potential upsets were correct. The half point is for Braden, who was right that Aiden Hayes would win an event, but picked him in the 100 fly, not the 200. Interestingly, the 1 is Riley picking Crooks in the 50 free. Looking back and seeing that he was the only one to pick Crooks as the winner shows how much and how quickly Crooks improved last season.
Men’s Pre-Season Picks
SwimSwam’s Top Pick | Highest Placed 2023 Returner | Anya | Braden | James | Robert | YanYan | Sophie | Spencer | Riley | Reid | |
50 Free | Jordan Crooks, Tennessee | Jordan Crooks, Tennessee | Jordan Crooks, Tennessee | Jordan Crooks, Tennessee | Jordan Crooks, Tennessee | Jordan Crooks, Tennessee | Jordan Crooks, Tennessee | Jordan Crooks, Tennessee | Jordan Crooks, Tennessee | Jordan Crooks, Tennessee | Jordan Crooks, Tennessee |
100 Free | Josh Liendo, Florida/Jack Alexy, Cal | Josh Liendo, Florida | Jack Alexy, Cal | Bjorn Seeliger, Cal | Josh Liendo, Florida | Jack Alexy, Cal | Jack Alexy, Cal | Josh Liendo, Florida | Jack Alexy, Cal | Josh Liendo, Florida | Josh Liendo, Florida |
200 Free | Luke Hobson, Texas | Luke Hobson, Texas | Luke Hobson, Texas | Luke Hobson, Texas | Luke Hobson, Texas | Luke Hobson, Texas | Luke Hobson, Texas | Luke Hobson, Texas | Luke Hobson, Texas | Luke Hobson, Texas | Luke Hobson, Texas |
500 Free | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Luke Hobson, Texas | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Luke Hobson, Texas | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Luke Hobson, Texas |
1650 Free | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Ross Dant, NC State | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana | Ahmed Hafnaoui, Indiana |
100 back | Brendan Burns, Indiana | Brendan Burns, Indiana | Destin Lasco, Cal | Brendan Burns, Indiana | Destin Lasco, Cal | Kacper Stokowski, NC State | Destin Lasco, Cal | Kacper Stokowski, NC State | Brendan Burns, Indiana | Brendan Burns, Indiana | Brendan Burns, Indiana |
200 Back | Destin Lasco, Cal | Destin Lasco, Cal | Destin Lasco, Cal | Destin Lasco, Cal | Destin Lasco, Cal | Destin Lasco, Cal | Destin Lasco, Cal | Destin Lasco, Cal | Destin Lasco, Cal | Destin Lasco, Cal | Destin Lasco, Cal |
100 Breast | Josh Matheny, Indiana | Denis Petrashov, Louisville | Josh Matheny, Indiana | Josh Matheny, Indiana | Josh Matheny, Indiana | Denis Petrashov, Louisville | Josh Matheny, Indiana | Liam Bell, Cal | Liam Bell, Cal | Noah Nichols, Virginia | Aleskas Savickas, Florida |
200 Breast | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Josh Matheny, Indiana | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State |
100 Fly | Josh Liendo, Florida | Youssef Ramadan, Virginia Tech | Youssef Ramadan, Virginia Tech | Youssef Ramadan, Virginia Tech | Josh Liendo, Florida | Youssef Ramadan, Virginia Tech | Josh Liendo, Florida | Josh Liendo, Florida | Josh Liendo, Florida | Josh Liendo, Florida | Josh Liendo, Florida |
200 Fly | Ilya Kharun, Arizona State | Aiden Hayes, NC State | Ilya Kharun, Arizona State | Dare Rose, Cal | Ilya Kharun, Arizona State | Ilya Kharun, Arizona State | Ilya Kharun, Arizona State | Brendan Burns, Indiana | Brendan Burns, Indiana | Ilya Kharun, Arizona State | Ilya Kharun, Arizona State |
200 IM | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State |
400 IM | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State | Leon Marchand, Arizona State |
200 Medley Relay
|
Florida | Florida | Arizona State | Florida | Arizona State | Florida | Arizona State | Florida | Arizona State | Florida | |
400 medley Relay
|
Florida | Florida | Indiana | Florida | Florida | Florida | Florida | Cal | Cal | Florida | |
200 Free relay | Florida | Florida | Florida | Florida | Florida | Florida | Florida | Florida | Florida | Florida | |
400 free relay | Cal | Cal | Cal | Florida | Florida | Cal | Florida | Cal | Cal | Florida | |
800 free relay | Arizona State | Arizona State | Indiana | Arizona State
|
Texas | Arizona State | Arizona State | Cal | Arizona State | Texas |
Potential Upset:
Anya: I agree with Sophie and could see Bjorn Seeliger winning the 50 free.
Braden: There are a crazy number of wide-open events this year, but my upset special is Towson senior Brian Benzing in the men’s 100 breast in his last year before doing a victory lap at Indiana.
James: Jonny Kulow stuns the big dogs and wins the 100 free.
YanYan: With how wide-open this 100 breast race is, I can see a surprise winner. Maybe Brian Benzing?
Sophie: Let’s go for some drama: Bjorn Seeliger excels under Josh Huger‘s sprint training and beats Jordan Crooks in the 50 free for his first individual title.
Spencer: I’m going with Cal freshman Aaron Shackell in the 200 free. 1:32.85 is seriously fast for an incoming freshman and I really think we’re going to see Shackell continue to flourish in his first year under Dave Durden.
Riley: Virginia’s Noah Nichols dropped more than half a second in the 100 breast as a junior (50.82), though he ended up adding time at NCAAs and placing 17th in prelims (51.67). However, an improvement of similar magnitude as a senior would put Nichols right in contention for a national title among a wide-open field.
Reid: ASU could win the 200 medley relay; Ilya Kharun could upset in the 100 fly.
Bit weird not even having the current World champion of the 200 back as a potential upset.
I’m surprised no one is picking ASU in the 400 medley. Marchand’s BR is such a huge advantage and now they’ve got a surefire 43 fly leg behind him.
Consider Hubi Kos in both backstrokes races. His problem is his turns in SCY. He is faster than anyone else in the actual stroke. Coach Bowman already has him working on his turn problem.
I was also surprised that nobody picked Kos neither of the Backstro events. Ok, it will be the same upset as for the WC…when everyone took Murphy’s gold medal for 200BK as granted.
Don’t sleep on Jake Newmark in the 500 free. If he continues to take time off like he has every year since high school, he will contend for another Big 10 championship and an NCAA championship, regardless of who the competition is.
Wisco Swim Fan,
Let me introduce you to Indiana Freshman, and Olympic 400 M Free Gold medal winner, Ahmed Hafnaoui. If Jake does keep progressing (a reasonable possibility) he would likely be contending for the final/podium, not likely the championship.
I would love to see Alexy win the 100 free but his turns and underwaters are just not there enough for short course. He is a beast LC because of his swimming but UWs are his weakness, and a 100 has 4 of them.
I don’t think he’s gonna win but…if there’s a place to learn underwaters, Cal would be it.
Re. Underwaters: Also Bob Bowman at ASU. Who taught Leon how to do underwaters. See Michael Commentary at the world championships.
Brendan Burns and IU would also like a word…as would most elite college teams….
Braden and YanYan both saying a mid major kid could win the 100 breast? Someone get Coleman down there to see what Bruno is doing. I’m also going Alexy in the 1Free, Cal knows what they’re doing clearly based on the summer he had. Disappointing no one picked ASU for the 4Medley…
Sophie is also delusional. Seeliger is never winning an individual title, even with huger’s training. He chokes and adds in finals
People are gonna downvote you about Seeliger but you’re right.
Seeliger REALLY needs to pace out his 100 races better. He goes best times when he’s more controlled going out. At night he seems to panic and goes out way too hard.
Didn’t he lead off their 2FRR 2 years ago in 18.2 and his prelim 1 Fr was 40mid, or something like that?
Last year he just seemed a bit off. Two years ago when he went best times, he wasn’t able to do any of them during finals. If he’s at his best during finals, he should be able to compete for titles in both the 50 and 100.
I still find funny how they chose Seeliger as a “Darkhorse” for the 100m freestyle at worlds and them he dropped a 49″ and missed semis by a huge margin. Tbh there are lots of guys to be hyped about other than him
Team Bjorn. If it’s his day, he can absolutely dominate. I hope to see it happen. 🇸🇪
the only thing chokeeliger can dominate is prelims…
As saddening as it is you’re spot on. I’m optimistic in hoping he worked his mental game so he doesn’t choke like he did twice at 2022 NCAA’s. He absolutely has the physical ability to do it
Dare rose in the 200 fly is so out of left field and I love it
Honestly makes sense, he went 1:55 this summer and obviously has a great LC 1 fly.