2018-2019 WOMEN'S NCAA POWER RANKINGS: FIRST EDITION
(Also receiving votes: Florida)
#20: NORTHWESTERN WILDCATS (2018 NCAA FINISH: 22ND)
#19: MISSOURI TIGERS (2018 NCAA FINISH: 15TH)
#18: ARIZONA WILDCATS (2018 NCAA FINISH: 20TH)
#17: WISCONSIN BADGERS (2018 NCAA FINISH: 17TH)
#16: OHIO STATE BUCKEYES (2018 NCAA FINISH: 13TH)
#15: AUBURN TIGERS (2018 NCAA FINISH: 16TH)
#14: NC STATE WOLFPACK (2018 NCAA FINISH: 18TH)
#13: KENTUCKY WILDCATS (2018 NCAA FINISH: 14TH)
#12: GEORGIA BULLDOGS (2018 NCAA FINISH: 11TH)
It's tough to rank this group, which is powered by a highly-talented but unproven (at the NCAA level at least) freshman class. Is former #1 overall recruit Eva Merrell healthy? Just how many star freshman flyers will this program have? There's a high ceiling, but a lot to prove for this group early on. -JA
#11: USC TROJANS (2018 NCAA FINISH: 12TH)
We're not going to know exactly what USC has until January, with top prospect Erica Sullivan sitting out the fall semester and a few other key pickups transitioning to short course yards. Transfer Courtney Caldwell could be a massive get, if she's recovered after an injury-riddled season with NC State. -JA
#10: MINNESOTA GOLDEN GOPHERS (2018 NCAA FINISH: 10TH)
#9: VIRGINIA CAVALIERS (2018 NCAA FINISH: 9TH)
Sure, the Wahoos graduated a lot of points and key relay legs from Caitlin Cooper and Jen Marrkand. But at what point do we start trusting coach Todd Desorbo more than the questions his team faces? UVA overperformed expectations by a country mile last season, and another top 10 finish in 2019 would only add to the growing buzz in Charlottesville. My head says I ranked Virginia where the numbers say they should be (12th). My gut says that's too low, and I might be changing tunes in a hurry by our next rankings. -JA
#8: TENNESSEE VOLUNTEERS (2018 NCAA FINISH: 7TH)
#7: INDIANA HOOSIERS (2018 NCAA FINISH: 8TH)
#6: TEXAS A&M AGGIES (2018 NCAA FINISH: 3RD)
A&M graduated a lot, but they've already proven they're a reliable program that creates NCAA scorers and doesn't rely too heavily on a few top swimmers. They get the benefit of the doubt despite not returning a ton of points. -JA
#5: LOUISVILLE CARDINALS (2018 NCAA FINISH: 5TH)
Louisville was scheduled to return all 20 relay legs, before rising junior Rachel Bradford-Feldman was missing from the 2018-2019 roster. Mallory Comerford is one of 3 serious candidates for NCAA Swimmer of the Year (Ella Eastin, Taylor Ruck) -BK
#4: TEXAS LONGHORNS (2018 NCAA FINISH: 6TH)
The Longhorns have steadily built up a deep roster and their sprint-heavy freshman class is a boost individually and for relays. -KO
A small recruiting class, but one that could have incredible relay impact with the best 50 freestyler (Grace Ariola, 22.17) and best 100 freestyler (Julia Cook, 47.82) in the entire recruiting class. -JA
#3: MICHIGAN WOLVERINES (2018 NCAA FINISH: 4TH)
Our consensus #3 team, Michigan returns a very strong core and supplements with an internationally-accomplished freshman class. The Wolverines are well-rounded enough to have five great relays despite graduating key pieces. And Siobhan Haughey is next-level good. -JA
#2: CALIFORNIA GOLDEN BEARS (2018 NCAA FINISH: 2ND)
After Stanford's Simone Manuel and Katie Ledecky turned pro early, Cal had an avenue to a 2019 team title. Kathleen Baker doing the same later in the summer made that road much tougher. -BK
Prospects look a lot different with Baker out of the mix, but Cal still has plenty of talent. Abbey Weitzeil could be the best sprinter and relay hero in the NCAA. Katie McLaughlin has been getting better and better since her 2016 neck injury. -JA
#1: STANFORD CARDINAL (2018 NCAA FINISH: 1ST)
That graduating class (Manuel, Ledecky, Hu, Howe, Engel, Cook) should be downright roster-crushing. But for Stanford, it just means the best recruiting classes of the last several years have more opportunities to shine. 48.2/1:44.7/4:36.6 sophomore Lauren Pitzer has barely gotten any NCAA relay swims. 3:59 IMer/4:37 freestyler Brooke Forde was basically an afterthought on this roster as a freshman. Last year, Stanford was leaving 48-lows off their 400 free relay, 22-lows off their 200 free relay and a 1:40 off their 800 free relay while still winning all three. This is the best roster in swimming right now, and while there are a lot more question marks than a year ago, it's impossible to pick anywhere else at the moment. -JA











