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USA Swimming Adds 5th Meet to 2022 Futures Championships

USA Swimming has released the official meet packet regarding the 2022 Futures Championships. This summer will mark the 7th edition of Futures and will see some changes to the format.

Region-based sites all over the nation host Futures simultaneously, though results are not officially combined. The competitions will occur between July 27th-30th this summer. In previous years, there were four hosting sites for four designated regions. This year, the Board of Directors has added another site and adjusted the boundary map to accommodate the 5th region.

  • Geneva, OH – Spire Institute
  • Cary, NC – Triangle Aquatic Center
  • Minneapolis, MN – Jean K. Freeman Aquatic Center
  • College Station, TX – Texas A&M University
  • Santa Clara, CA – George F. Haines International Aquatic Center

Since 2016, USA Swimming divided the country into 4 regions – Eastern, Southern, Central, and Western. A name has yet to be given to the recently delineated region. The newly established region subtracts mostly from the previous Western region. The new zone covers the states of Montana, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas – added from the Southern zone. The Southern region no longer includes Texas or West Virginia. Instead, it now has Michigan and Indiana. The Western region shrunk considerably with its number dropping from 13 to 7 states.

Updated USA Swimming Boundary Map

The Futures Championships are designed as an intermediate step between Sectional Championships and Junior National or National Championships, and are open to swimmers of all ages.

Similar to last year, each site is capped at 800 swimmers. As a result of the new region, however, the potential number of participants has increased from 3,200 to 4,000.

The Futures time standards remain the same as they have been since 2019. See below for the full 2022 time standards.

Futures bridges the gap between Sectionals and Junior National Championships and provides developing swimmers with elite competitions to race against other swimmers who are in the same position. There are no time standards that make an athlete “too fast” for these meets, just minimum time standards.

Breakout swimmer Claire Weinstein, who recently qualified for the 2022 World Championships team in the 200-meter freestyle, competed at last year’s Futures meet in Richmond, VA. She now has the fastest time swam by a 15-year-old American in the 200 free.

Other recognizable names who raced at last year’s Futures meets include UVA freshman and 2022 NCAA-title winner Gretchen Walsh, US National Junior Team member Erin Gemmell, and 2022 NCAA champion in the 1650 free Paige McKenna.

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SwammerCoach
2 years ago

Where can you find the bonus cuts? Meet sheet says there are bonus events but I can’t find them listed anywhere.

Last edited 2 years ago by SwammerCoach
Andreas Chatzigiannidis
Reply to  SwammerCoach
2 years ago

There are no designated bonus qualifying times, once a swimmer qualifies for one event they are allowed to swim up to two additional bonus events in any two events of their choice. If they qualify for two events then they get one bonus and if they qualify in three or more events they get no bonus swims.

Here is the wording from the meet book:

“ Any athlete who qualifies for one individual event will be permitted to enter and swim in up to two bonus events;
Any athlete who qualifies for two individual events will be permitted to enter and swim one additional bonus event;
Any athlete who qualifies for more than two individual events,… Read more »

Yurs
2 years ago

Is this meet fina approved?

Luluswam
2 years ago

Michigan and Indiana were already in the Southern division – this isn’t a change.

Last edited 2 years ago by Luluswam
Aaron
Reply to  Luluswam
2 years ago

teams in the upper peninsula of Michigan are closer to Minnesota and Ohio why are they going to NC?

PKWater
2 years ago

Does Geneva Ohio have enough hotels and restaurants to keep hosting this meet?
It is a logistic nightmare for teams to get there and have their swimmers perform at the best of their abilities.

ReneDescartes
Reply to  PKWater
2 years ago

Wasn’t a problem last time we were there.

John
Reply to  Braden Keith
2 years ago

In that case I am going to push our club coach to go to NCSAs in Indy instead.

Reply to  PKWater
2 years ago

Geneva, Ohio? SPIRE has two hotels being built for delivery in 2023. Ground has broken on the closest one. There are also over 700 hotel rooms within a 15 minute drive of SPIRE.

Reply to  Gold Medal Mel Stewart
2 years ago

A Marriot will go here, and a Starbucks:
comment image

Which will become:
comment image

Coach ID
2 years ago

If you’re in the western UP, you’ll have to drive past 2 futures meets to get to Cary

coachofficialmi
Reply to  Braden Keith
2 years ago

There is only one USA team and they already got approval from the MI LSC to join the WI LSC.

Davin
Reply to  Braden Keith
2 years ago

I’m a swimmer from the western UP and I’m two hours away from WAC so I registered unattached in the Wisconsin LSC. I’m glad I did because otherwise I would have to travel really far.

coachofficialmi
Reply to  Coach ID
2 years ago

There is only one USA team in the UP and they are registered as a Wisconsin LSC

Swimswam follower
2 years ago

Erin Gemmell isn’t on USA swimmings World Champs roster.
Hopefully, they will add her if it’s true.

Swimswam follower
Reply to  Swimswam follower
2 years ago

That’s not a slam on her.
I think she should be on the Senior World Championship roster to swim in the preliminary 4×200 and rest up the top 4 200 swimmers

Swimswam follower
Reply to  Swimswam follower
2 years ago

Thanks for clarifying in the caption under her picture.

Sherry Smit
2 years ago

Futures is always so fun to watch. There are so many names that have risen up who went to futures last year. Claire Weinstein for example! It’s always the sneak peak into the unfolding talent.

Umswim
2 years ago

Why would a Michigan swimmer go to North Carolina when Ohio is right next door?

ClubCoach
Reply to  Umswim
2 years ago

As I understand it, swimmers have to swim at the Futures meet designated for the Region in which their LSC is located. There will always be swimmers who have to travel further to their meet when they are on the fringe of a Region. Look at a swimmer in Arkansas having to travel to Minneapolis when College Station is so much closer. Having said that, putting Michigan and Indiana in the Southern Region doesn’t really make a lot of sense to me.

KeithM
Reply to  Umswim
2 years ago

Or from Berkoff country (aka Montana) all the way to College Station Texas rather than Minnesota.

ReneDescartes
Reply to  KeithM
2 years ago

Either way you draw the lines, someone is going to be closer to another meet than their designated one.

eib
Reply to  Braden Keith
2 years ago

It has to do with #s of qualified athletes as well as # of eligible facilities.

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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