2025-2026 Swimming

32,198 Views | 190 Replies | Last: 4 hrs ago by OBear073akaSMFan
swimmer19
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Good to see the team have the freedom to relax their morning swims before dropping the hammer at night. It will also be interesting to see how the NCAA team is selected with the new rules being implemented this season.

Lucca Battaglini's 18.7 in the 50 free is a revelation swim, given that this year's sprint group has yet to produce NCAA impact-level results. Luca Gissendaner time trialed a 51.2 100 breast last night, which is in NCAA scoring territory. That gives us 3 scoring breaststrokers (Okadome, Gissendaner, and 2025 scorer Hank Rivers).

For the women, Sydney Griscavage lowered her 50 free PB to a 22.1, solidifying her as a 2-relay swimmer and giving coaches flexibility to move around other athletes (Mia West, Teagan O'Dell etc).
Schroeder71
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I watched the majority of events both days. How come the men's team did not field relay teams for the final event either yesterday or tonight? Most teams have A & B relays, but Cal had none.

The women continue to impress! The Bears swept the top four spots in the 200m freestyle and then used four different swimmers in the final event, the 800m free relay, and still placed first. Wow. GO BEARS!
Polodad
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Please explain the new rules for NCAA's.
swan
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Polodad said:

Please explain the new rules for NCAA's.

https://swimswam.com/ncaa-approves-changes-to-2026-division-i-championships-weeks-after-season-starts/
Schroeder71
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Cal women looked great except for two DQs on the opening & closing relays of the three-day meet. Fortunately, tonight, the Cal B relay ended up as the winner of the 400m free style relay with the 2nd fastest time. Bear's men looked strong, too, but don't have the depth of the women's squad.Their 400m free relay just swam the sixth fastest time in the nation to illustrate my point. GO BEARS!
Polodad
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Thanks.
solobear
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Relays are the best parts of a swim meet, and Cal relays will be good this season also because Bears have so much depth at sprint relays although they won't score very high on individual sprint events. No NC title this year, but JKS is probably enough to cheer up many.

After winter training, hopefully the super-talented freshmen class, both men and women, will be exceptional as they should, and we'll see if the European sprinter Martin Wrede can potentially be Bears' next sprinting star.

The swim results in 2024 & 2025 suggest that the following Bears should get NC invites (at the very least). Almost all of them already have qualifying time.

Alexa McDevitt
Annie Jia
Ava Chavez
Claire Weinstein
Ella Cosgrove
Elle Scott (probably)
Kathryn Hazle
Lilou Ressencourt
Mary-Ambre Moluh
Mia West
Silje Slyngstadli
Teagan O'Dell
Relay: Sydney Griscavage

Casper Puggaard
Evan Petty
Freddy Klein (probably)
Hank Rivers
Humberto Najera
Keaton Jones
Luca Pusateri-Gissendaner
Lucca Battaglini
Nans Mazellier
Nathan Wiffen
Ryan Erisman
Yamato Okadome
Relay: Martin Wrede (Samuel Quarles?)
Diver: Joshua Thai, Geoffrey Vavitsas (Jack Clark?)
RollOnYouAll
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2025-26 NCAA Women's Power Rankings: Post-Invites Edition

As we move into the second semester's dual meets, which restart at scale next week, it's time to evaluate where teams stand and where they're headed mid-season. These rankings were heavily informed, though not dictated by, the mid-season scoring exercise.

#12. USC Trojans -1 (Previous Rank: 12)
#11: Alabama Crimson Tide +5 (Previous Rank: 16)
#10: Florida Gators -- (Previous Rank: 10)
#9.Tennessee Volunteers -3 (Previous Rank: =6)
#8. NC State Wolfpack -3 (Previous Rank: 5)
#7. Louisville Cardinals +1 (Previous Rank: 8)

#6. California Golden Bears -2 (Previous Rank: 4)
Cal famously does not taper for midseasons, and that seems to be the case again this year. Weinstein and O'Dell have been headliners, but Mia West is on fire and is poised to 'A' final in multiple events at NCAAs after not earning an invite last year. M.F.

#5: Indiana Hoosiers +1 (Previous Rank: =6)
Indiana is "only" 7th in our mid-season scoring for NCAA Championships, but that's just 11.5 points behind 5th-place Cal. Given that Alex Shackell will be joining the team for post-season action, and that diving isn't accounted for in these rankings, they could be right on par with Michigan, who currently sits 116 points ahead. Shackell's individual contributions, relay impact, and the addition of diving points should put the Hoosiers right in the thick of things for another top-four finish. S.G.

#4: Michigan Wolverines +4 -- (Previous Rank: 8)
The Michigan women sit 4th in our mid-season scoring of the NCAA Championships with a comfortable 105-point cushion over fifth-place California. Cal doesn't rest much for midseason, so they're likely to close that gap, and Indiana has Alex Shackell plus big diving points not included in the rankings. Nonetheless, a top-six finish at the very least seems imminent for the Wolverines, and if they replicate the momentum from their exceptional midseason performances, top four is certainly attainable. S.G.

#3: Texas Longhorns -- (Previous Rank: 3)
Texas looked great at midseasons with Eva Okaro continuing to make her mark (further supported by a strong performance at SC Euros) and Jillian Cox reminding everyone who the reigning 500 and 1650 NCAA champion is. They were also missing Gemmell in full capacity, which will give them a boost when she returns. They have the depth and a strong diving program to challenge, Stanford and Virginia just seem so strong at this point. M.F.

#2: Stanford Cardinal -- (Previous Rank: 2)
You know that scene in Friends when Joey is eating the beef trifle and is saying good after each ingredient? That's how the Stanford women's team feels right now. Lucy Bell? Good. Caroline Bricker? Good. Torri Huske? GOOD. The Cardinal are deep and performing well. If anyone looks poised to challenge Virginia, it's them. M.F.

#1. Virginia Cavaliers -- (Previous Rank: 1)
Virginia performed well at the CSCAA Dual Meet Challenge. Anna Moesch look good, Aimee Canny looked good, they just seem unstoppable for the moment. A.P.

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Note: Of the 7 writers on the voting panel, 2 ranked Cal at #4, 4 ranked Cal at #6, and 1 ranked Cal at #7,
RollOnYouAll
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2025-26 NCAA Men's Power Rankings: Post-Invites Edition

#10: Florida State Seminoles +5 (Previous Rank: 15)
#9: Tennessee Volunteers +1 (Previous Rank: 10)
#8: Stanford Cardinal (Previous Rank: 8)

#7: California Golden Bears -1 (Previous Rank: 6)
We all know Cal wasn't that focused on mid-season, we all know they're going to get better…but still would have liked to see a little more spark out of them in Minneapolis suited up. I think Indiana's mid-season cemented them ahead of Cal, barring any late roster additions. S.G.

Graduations just seem too much to overcome for Cal. For now, we don't know of any names they add in the spring but if there is a surprise, I will change my vote. A.P.

#6: NC State Wolfpack +1 (Previous Rank: 7)
#5: Florida Gators -1 (Previous Rank: 4)
#4: Georgia Bulldogs +1 (Previous Rank: 5)
#3: Indiana Hoosiers -- (Previous Rank: 3)
#2: Arizona State Sun Devils -- (Previous Rank: 2)
#1: Texas Longhorns -- (Previous Rank: 1)

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RollOnYouAll
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2025 Swammy Awards: Age Group Swimmers of the Year 17-18

It was a clear-cut decision to name Claire Weinstein and Campbell McKean the 2025 Swammy Award winners for U.S. 1718 Age Group Swimmers of the Year. There was little debate, as both qualified for Team USA in multiple events at this past summer's World Championship Trials and returned from Worlds with hardware.


17-18 Girls
Winner: Claire Weinstein, Sandpipers of Nevada (Coach: Ron Aitken)

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swimmer19
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In regards to the men's rankings- of the 7 voters, 5 had Cal at #7, while one each slotted the Bears at #4 and #5.

Braden Keith (on his rationale at ranking Cal #4): They're seeded 7th with no points scored in either the 400 medley relay or 800 free relay. They need to make up about 100 points on Georgia. I think they'll get two thirds of the way there on relays alone.

Data to keep in mind:
-Historically, Cal goes about +95 on seeds. I suspect that might be a little less this year because the roster isn't as good/talented/deep.
-Historically, Georgia goes about -30 on seeds (worse last year).
-Florida has been -65 or so vs. seed the last few years.

I honestly didn't think this would be so controversial. I think Cal, Georgia, and NC State are in a dead heat for 4th place. Whatever your choice is basically giving one team the benefit of the doubt over the other two. I gave the benefit of the doubt to the team that has consistently performed its best at the end of the year better than almost any other program in history.
solobear
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Not sure why calbears' website hasn't posted, but …

A very popular Bear, Nathan Adrian, will be inducted to the International Swimming Hall of Fame on Saturday, May 16, 2026. Adrian is a part of Bears' amazing sprinting tradition. Only seven American men have earned 50 free Olympic medals, and three of them are Bears including Nathan Adrian. The current leading man for U.S. sprinting is also a Bear, Jack Alexy.

That is, when a sprinter moves to the tiny city of Berkeley, his chance to get an Olympic medal at a sprinting event is a lot higher than anywhere else in the world.

Link for the news https://swimswam.com/adrian-kromowidjojo-and-cseh-highlight-swimming-hall-of-fame-class-of-2026/
solobear
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Competing at USA Pro Swim Series - Austin this week against Olympians, Ryan Erisman continued to get personal best times every time he swam. So far he won 200m & 400m free and came in 3rd for 800m & 1500m free at this meet. Weinstein also won 200m free as usual.

Cal freshmen class is beyond exceptional. These races can be watched via the USA swim network app.
Schroeder71
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I just reviewed the men's and women's meet vs USC on 01/16/26. The women's meet was closer than I expected but I noticed that Teagan O'Dell DNP. I hope that she is not out long term. The men were much improved and a grad transfer from Michigan, Eduardo Moraes, captured two events for Cal. The diving program has also improved substantially on both female & male sides. GO BEARS!
OBear073akaSMFan
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If your read the calbear summary of the meet O'dell , Weinstein, and others were competing in another meet.
Schroeder71
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I guess that I missed it. Thank you for the "heads up", OB73! It's hard to keep up on the "news" on the internet.
Schroeder71
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UCLA_Vs._Cal_Dual_Results_1.17.26.pdf

Cal topples UCLA, 179-120 !
swimmer19
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Mia West is the team's cheat code. This season alone, she has posted the following times:

50.7 in the 100 back
47.5 in the 100 free (splitting 46.8 on the 400 free relay)
1:41.7 in the 200 free
51.1 in the 100 fly
1:53.9 in the 200 fly

That gives her 5 NCAA scoring events and the former 3 event times were posted this past weekend coming off the team training trip to the USOTC in Colorado Springs. Given her improvement rate, I expect she will upset some big names at NCAAs.
swan
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swimmer19 said:

Mia West is the team's cheat code. This season alone, she has posted the following times:

50.7 in the 100 back
47.5 in the 100 free (splitting 46.8 on the 400 free relay)
1:41.7 in the 200 free
51.1 in the 100 fly
1:53.9 in the 200 fly

That gives her 5 NCAA scoring events and the former 3 event times were posted this past weekend coming off the team training trip to the USOTC in Colorado Springs. Given her improvement rate, I expect she will upset some big names at NCAAs.

Mia also has a time of 1:54.77 in the 200 IM which is currently #8 in the country.


swan
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swan said:

swimmer19 said:

Mia West is the team's cheat code. This season alone, she has posted the following times:

50.7 in the 100 back
47.5 in the 100 free (splitting 46.8 on the 400 free relay)
1:41.7 in the 200 free
51.1 in the 100 fly
1:53.9 in the 200 fly

That gives her 5 NCAA scoring events and the former 3 event times were posted this past weekend coming off the team training trip to the USOTC in Colorado Springs. Given her improvement rate, I expect she will upset some big names at NCAAs.

Mia also has a time of 1:54.77 in the 200 IM which is currently #8 in the country.

And the 10th fastest time (4:04.91) in the 400 IM. Mia is a stud!

50.78 in the 100 back #10
47.5 in the 100 free #16
1:41.74 in the 200 free #7
51.12 in the 100 fly #12
1:53.9 in the 200 fly #13



OBear073akaSMFan
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Cal men will be swimming at Stanford today at 1pm. Can watch on ACCN live stream (via ESPN).

Tommorw the women will be competing at home vs Stanford at noon, and also on ACcN live.stream. It will be senior day for the women.
mighty bears
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Thanks OBear! I was able to watch the meet because of your post!
HateRed
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And, who won?
coachdeke
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Cal's getting smoked
smh
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HateRed said:

And, who won?

swim, swam, swum, word on the street says it's good for a body, even better than Milk.
sighned, not dead yet # funk trunk
Schroeder71
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I caught the end of the meet, and the Cardinal seemed to dominate the Bears. The result was never in doubt.
OBear073akaSMFan
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mighty bears said:

Thanks OBear! I was able to watch the meet because of your post!


Only saw the first 5 events bit my ears was ringing listening to the announcer.
swimmer19
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Welcome back to Maya Geringer. She returns to the team in a coaching capacity, working with the distance team following a successful collegiate career at Ohio State (class of 2024) before graduate transferring to Cal for the 24-25 season.
Schroeder71
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Cal women had a chance to defeat Stanford on the final 400m free style relay but couldn't do it. Stanford's Olympian anchored their victory.
RollOnYouAll
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#2 Stanford Wins Close Women's Dual Over #6 Cal, 154-145, Ahead of ACC Championships

Saturday afternoon brought the anticipated cross-bay showdown between ACC and Bay Area rivals #2 Stanford and #6 Cal in women's swimming. The Stanford women came away with the victory in a close battle, 154-145.

Stanford senior Lucy Bell's first win came in the 100 breast, where she touched the wall in 57.60 to win over Cal freshman Silje Slyngstadli, who clocked a new Cal school record in 58.21.

Cal freshman Claire Weinstein was busy on the day, as she won the 200 free (1:42.13) and 500 free (4:38.65) in addition to taking third in the 100 free just 0.02 off her best time with a 47.72.

Her time in the 200 represented a new season best, while she's been as quick as 4:34.81 in the 500 back in December at the Minnesota Invite. Her best times in those events remain the 1:41.10 she posted in December 2024 and the 4:29.38 she swam in December 2023 when swimming for the Sandpipers of Nevada.

Fellow Bear freshman Teagan O'Dell swept the backstroke events, winning the 100 in a personal-best 50.51 and the 200 in 1:51.13.

In the 200, she took down her season-best 1:51.83 with 1:51.13, while her personal best is the 1:49.16 she swam at the Winter Junior Championships just over a year ago. O'Dell's former best time of 50.76 in the 100 was recorded at that same meet.

After trailing Stanford sophomore Bailey O'Regan through the first 100, Cal freshman Camille Henveaux (9:41.54) took the lead and won the women's 1000 free over the sophomore (9:43.19), with Cal junior Kathryn Hazle (9:46.84) rounding out the top three. Henveaux's lifetime best is the 9:38.18 she posted at a tri-meet in October. As for Hazle, her personal best of 9:43.55 was registered just two weeks ago at a meet against the Bruins.

Sophomore Mia West, who is having a breakthrough season after taking her freshman year to adjust to collegiate swimming, out-touched Stanford junior Caroline Bricker, the reigning 400 IM NCAA Champion and 200 long course fly national champion, by three-hundredths, 1:53.32 to 1:53.35, to win the 200 fly. She sliced just over half a second off her 1:53.94 best time from the Minnesota Invite in doing so.

The highly versatile Canadian is going to have a plethora of options of events to choose from heading into championship season, having already notched personal bests of 47.51, 1:41.74, and 4:39.75 in the freestyles, 1:54.77 and 4:04.91 in the IMs, 50.78 in the 100 back, and 51.12 in the 100 fly.


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Eric Rhodes pointed out: "So; the Cal swimmers beat the Stanford swimmers, 132 130. It's a good thing for the Cardinal that diving is an integral part of competitive swimming… "

Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein commented: " Cal is missing the elite female freestyle sprinter (50 FR, 100 FR) unlike Stanford University (T. Huske) and the University of Virginia (S. Curtis, C. Curzan, A. Moesch). The missing elite female freestyle sprinter will hold back Cal on the shorter relays. "

Go Bears replied: " Agree… but she (Rylee Erisman)'ll be here in the fall! Next year is the year they launch into serious contention. "

OSKI added: " you are correct …BEARS on the rise"


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Lucy Bell Sets 2 PBs, Wins 3 Races as Stanford Tops California

Stanford's Lucy Bell went a best time of 57.60 seconds to win the 100 breast, her first time breaking 58 seconds. It was enough to hold off the Cal school record set by freshman Silje Slynstadli at 58.21, downing the 2021 mark of 58.45 set by Ema Rajic.

Cal's Violet Williamson's score on 3-meter was the fourth-highest in program history.

Cal started the meet strong. Camille Henveaux won the 1,000 free in 9:41.54. Claire Weinstein followed with a victory in the 200 free in 1:42.13, improving her Spieker Aquatics Complex record. Weinstein won the 500 free in 4:38.65 with Henveaux second, and Weinstein also finished third in the 100 free.

O'Dell won the 100 backstroke in 50.51 seconds, the ninth-fastest time in program history. Her winning result in the 200 back of 1:51.13 was also ninth in program history, where she paced a podium sweep with Moluh and Finley Anderson. O'Dell went 1:53.19 to finish second in the 200 IM, the seventh-best time in Cal history.

Mia West won the 200 fly in 1:53.32, edging Bricker by .03 seconds. That time and her runner-up 47.72 in the 100 free both rank eighth in Cal history.


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swimmer19
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From the SwimSwam article:

"Did a little dive on Mia West - 7 meets this year. PR in every individual race except 100 fr at Minnesota Invite (she scratched finals), and 100 fly here."
RollOnYouAll
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SwimSwam's Top 100 For 2026: Women's #30-21



Welcome to the SwimSwam Top 100 Swimmers of 2026: Women's Edition. This is our outlook on the top 100 swimmers to watch globally in 2026.

#21 Claire Weinstein, United States (2025 Rank: 23) - There are a number of swimmers who hold top-30 times in a variety of events across different strokes, but American Claire Weinstein takes that to another level, finishing 2025 with top-30 times in five different distances of freestyle. After swimming five of the six distances at the 2025 United States Nationals, Weinstein almost qualified to swim the 100 free (as a member of the 400 freestyle relay) and the 1500 free on the same night, but she just missed the 100 qualification, finishing 8th in the 100 free in a personal best 53.72, which was the 25th ranked time in the world last year. She set all personal best times over the meet, winning the 200 (1:54.92) and finishing 2nd in the 400 (4:00.05), 800 (8:19.67) and 1500 (16:01.96). She also initially qualified to swim on the American Open Water team in the 10k before dropping it to focus on the pool. She dropped the 1500 free before Worlds, and scratched the 400 free on the first day of the meet (potentially due to Team USA illness, though this was not confirmed). She still raced the 200 and 800 free, setting a new personal best 1:54.67 to win the bronze medal in the 200 and finishing 17th in the 800 (8:38.70). She finished 2025 with top 10 rankings in the 200 free (3rd), 400 free (5th), 800 free (8th), and 1500 free (10th). A healthy Weinstein at Pan Pacs could find herself in multiple event finals if she continues to progress at the same rate.

RollOnYouAll
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swimmer19 said:

From the SwimSwam article:

"Did a little dive on Mia West - 7 meets this year. PR in every individual race except 100 fr at Minnesota Invite (she scratched finals), and 100 fly here."



Sophomore Shooting Star Mia West Clocks 21st PB This Season With 1:53.32 2Fly Against Stanford



What's better than setting one best time during a competition season? Well, how about setting 21 of them? That's exactly what Cal sophomore Mia West has done this collegiate season.

Since the first dual meet of the season back in October, the Canadian shooting star has clocked lifetime bests during 21 separate races and has lowered her top times in 12 different events.

Over the course of the seven meets that West competed in this season, she posted a new personal best time in almost every single one of her individual races, with the exception of the 50 free at the Triton Invitational, the 100 free at the Minnesota Invite and the 100 fly at the most recent Cal vs. Stanford dual meet, as well as a handful of relay leadoff swims.

West wrapped up the regular season of the 2025-2026 college competition period at the women-only dual meet against Stanford last weekend, posting the latest in this long string of lifetime best performances.

West won the 200 fly in 1:53.32, knocking over half a second off of her previous best time (1:53.94) from the Minnesota Invite in December. Her swim was also fast enough to narrowly edge out Stanford's Caroline Bricker, the 2025 ACC runner-up in this event, by just .03.

West's performance in the 200 fly on Saturday bumped her up the national collegiate rankings as well, marking the 12th-fastest time in the NCAA so far this season.

To compare just how far she has come in this event since last season, West's new best time of 1:53.32 would have been good enough for 5th-place at the 2025 ACC Championships. At last year's conference championship, she qualified 17th for the 'C' final with a personal best time of 1:57.61, only to finish 20th overall.

The 200 fly is hardly the only event in which West has taken dramatic strides over the past few months, with this season turning out to be an incredible breakthrough year for her.

West progressively lowered her best time in the 100 free over the course of the season, culminating in her most recent lifetime best of 47.22 just last weekend against Stanford. Coming into this season, her best time stood at 49.51.

Similarly, West chopped over three seconds off her time in the 200 free, going from 1:45.17 at the 2025 ACC Championships to 1:41.74 at the USC vs. Cal dual meet in January.

The versatile competitor should now have plenty of events to choose from heading into the championship season, as this season also saw West set best times in the 50 free (22.14), 500 free (4:39.75), 100 back (50.78), 100 fly (51.12), 200 IM (1:54.77) and 400 IM (4:04.91).

With just two weeks to go until the 2026 ACC Championships kick off, it will be exciting to see if West can maintain her hot streak during the championship season and continue to turn in top times in her races.
OBear073akaSMFan
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solobear said:

Relays are the best parts of a swim meet, and Cal relays will be good this season also because Bears have so much depth at sprint relays although they won't score very high on individual sprint events. No NC title this year, but JKS is probably enough to cheer up many.

After winter training, hopefully the super-talented freshmen class, both men and women, will be exceptional as they should, and we'll see if the European sprinter Martin Wrede can potentially be Bears' next sprinting star.

The swim results in 2024 & 2025 suggest that the following Bears should get NC invites (at the very least). Almost all of them already have qualifying time.

Alexa McDevitt
Annie Jia
Ava Chavez
Claire Weinstein
Ella Cosgrove
Elle Scott (probably)
Kathryn Hazle
Lilou Ressencourt
Mary-Ambre Moluh
Mia West
Silje Slyngstadli
Teagan O'Dell
Relay: Sydney Griscavage

Casper Puggaard
Evan Petty
Freddy Klein (probably)
Hank Rivers
Humberto Najera
Keaton Jones
Luca Pusateri-Gissendaner
Lucca Battaglini
Nans Mazellier
Nathan Wiffen
Ryan Erisman
Yamato Okadome
Relay: Martin Wrede (Samuel Quarles?)
Diver: Joshua Thai, Geoffrey Vavitsas (Jack Clark?)

Any updates to this list. Divers chances? Is there a limit to the number of swimmers for each school? Not sure with all the changes for the NC meet.
swimmer19
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Women may have a few additions. Camille Henveaux is likely in if she can get close to her best time of 4:40.14 from last year's ACCs (current season best of 4:41.61 is 34th pre-conference). Sydney Griscavage will need to get below 22 in the 50 free to secure an individual swim (currently ranked 45th with best time of 22.13) but remains a key leg on the sprint relays. Any new additions will likely be on the bubble and need a decent drop at ACCs (while pending Big 12 results): 2025 qualifier Finley Anderson (200 back), Arielle Brotman (100 breast)

No big changes for the men, but Puggaard is on the bubble in multiple events (both fly/200 back). Other athletes on the bubble include Eduardo Moraes (500 free), Norvy Clontz (500 free), Zach Tan (100 breast), Sam Quarles (100 fly). Longer shot, but Ian Platts-Mills might qualify in the mile if he can find a few seconds to drop.

Both teams have gone from chasing qualifying times (with Pac-12s being the last conference meet) to nervously sitting and waiting for all meets to finish (with the exception of last chance meets). That definitely changes the coaches' approach to the postseason.
 
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