Official Psych Sheets Released For 2025 Men's NCAA Championships

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By James Sutherland on SwimSwam

2025 Men's NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships

  • March 26-29, 2025
  • Weyerhaeuser King County Aquatics Center, Federal Way, Washington
  • Short Course Yards (25 yards)
  • Psych Sheets

The official psych sheets for the 2025 Men’s NCAA Championships have been published after the pre-selection entries were released on Tuesday.

The selection psych sheets give us the official cutline, eligible relays and a list of alternates after we made our projections yesterday.

The Men’s NCAA Championships will run from March 26-29 in Federal Way, Washington at the Weyerhaeuser King County Aquatic Center.

YOU CAN SEE ALL THE RELEVANT DOCUMENTS HERE:

SwimSwam’s projected cutline was six spots into row 29, and that proved to be the case with one caveat. UNLV’s Daniel Nicusan was projected to be second alternate for the meet, but due to his tie for 29th in the 100 breast, he’s an official qualifier.

A total of 235 male swimmers qualify for the NCAA Championships—see the full selection process here.

QUALIFIED SWIMMERS BY TEAM

Eight teams have qualified double-digit swimmers for the meet, with Cal and Texas leading the way with 18 apiece, the maximum roster size for teams including divers (divers count as half a roster spot).

UNC qualifying nine swimmers for NCAAs is the most in program history dating back to at least 1996.

Top 10 Schools – Qualified Swimmers

RankTeam
Qualified Swimmers
T-1Cal18
T-1Texas18
T-3Florida15
T-3Indiana15
5NC State13
6Stanford12
7Arizona State11
8Tennessee10
9UNC9
10Ohio State8

ALTERNATES LIST

The official first alternate for the time being is LSU’s Stepan Goncharov, who lost the second tiebreaker with SIU’s Alex Santiago in the battle for the last spot into the championships.

However, with Texas having 18 qualified swimmers, they’ll scratch at least one of them, and possibly two, to make room for either two or four divers divers. The Longhorns have qualified four divers for NCAAs with one day of the Zone Diving Championships remaining (Cal had not qualified any divers heading into the last day).

If Texas scratches two swimmers in favor of their divers, Goncharov and Virginia Tech’s Luis Dominguez Calonge will get bumped up into the meet.

RankSwimmerTeamEvent (Time)Percent Rank
1Stepan GoncharovLSU100 free (41.95)0.985244
2Luis Dominguez CalongeVirginia Tech200 free (1:32.37)0.987282
3Sam CampbellOhio State1650 free (14:49.25)0.98639
4Chase MuellerNC State500 free (4:14.16)0.985956
5Gustavo SaldoLouisville200 fly (1:41.65)0.984008
6Gavin WightIndiana100 back (45.30)0.981565
7Marton NagyBrown200 IM (1:42.69)0.980744
8Peter BretzmannFlorida200 breast (1:53.08)0.978039
9Watson NguyenPenn100 breast (51.61)0.988436
10Chris NagyKentucky1650 free (14:49.30)0.986333

CUTLINE PROGRESSION

The cutline time for each event was the fastest it’s ever been this year, including a staggering six-second drop in the 1650 free, half-second-plus drops in the 200 back and 200 fly, and a 1.32-second improvement in the 400 IM.

EVENT (SCY)2020 INVITE TIME2021 INVITE TIME2022 INVITE TIME2023 INVITE TIME2024 Invite Time2025 Invite Time
50 free19.3219.4619.2819.2119.1319.02
100 free42.5742.8842.3442.3242.1941.95
200 free1:34.071:34.041:33.081:32.851:32.931:32.27
500 free4:16.494:16.754:14.964:14.364:14.904:14.13
1650 free14:57.0715:01.3314:55.2114:53.5414:54.9214:48.80
100 back46.2246.3745.8745.745.5645.26
200 back1:41.491:41.811:40.921:40.621:40.621:40.13
100 breast52.4652.452.251.951.8951.58
200 breast1:54.031:54.281:53.231:52.941:53.121:52.89
100 fly45.9746.2945.5745.5745.3745.12
200 fly1:43.181:43.471:42.421:42.571:42.101:41.45
200 IM1:43.791:44.151:43.361:43.141:43.051:42.65
400 IM3:44.363:45.673:43.503:42.993:42.933:41.61

PERCENTAGE IMPROVEMENT FROM 2024

EVENT (SCY)2024 Invite Time2025 Invite Time
% Improvement
50 free19.1319.020.58%
100 free42.1941.950.57%
200 free1:32.931:32.270.71%
500 free4:14.904:14.130.30%
1650 free14:54.9214:48.800.68%
100 back45.5645.260.66%
200 back1:40.621:40.130.49%
100 breast51.8951.580.60%
200 breast1:53.121:52.890.20%
100 fly45.3745.120.55%
200 fly1:42.101:41.450.64%
200 IM1:43.051:42.650.39%
400 IM3:42.933:41.610.59%

TOP SEEDS IN EACH EVENT

  • 200 Medley Relay – Tennessee, 1:20.22
  • 800 Free Relay – Florida, 6:02.50
  • 500 Free – Rex Maurer, Texas, 4:04.45
  • 200 IM – Julian Smith, Florida, 1:39.38
  • 50 Free – Jordan Crooks, Tennessee, 17.85
  • 200 Free Relay – Tennessee, 1:12.80
  • 400 IM – Rex Maurer, Texas, 3:34.19
  • 100 Fly – Josh Liendo, Florida, 43.23
  • 200 Free – Luke Hobson, Texas, 1:29.34
  • 100 Breast – Julian SmithFlorida, 49.51
  • 100 Back – Jonny Marshall, Florida, 43.73
  • 400 Medley Relay – Florida, 2:55.66
  • 1650 Free – David Johnston, Texas, 14:26.00
  • 200 Back – Hubert Kos, Texas, 1:35.72
  • 100 Free – Jordan Crooks, Tennessee, 40.26
  • 200 Breast – Matt Fallon, Penn, 1:48.85
  • 200 Fly – Luca Urlando, Georgia, 1:37.17
  • 400 Free Relay – Tennessee, 2:42.41

FULL QUALIFYING PROCESS – INDIVIDUALS

The NCAA invites the same number of overall swimmers every year. 270 men and 322 women make the meet annually. Depending on how many of those 270/322 athletes qualify in multiple events, the numbers can range some as to how many entries in each event get invited.

The simple part: "A" qualifiers get in automatically. Hit an "A" cut, and you're set. Then the NCAA fills in the remaining spots with the next-fastest "B" cuts.

Here's a step-by-step process for how the NCAA selects the 270 men and 322 women for each year's invite list:

1. 35 of the men's spots and 41 of the women's spots are set aside for divers, who qualify for the meet at zone competitions closer the NCAA Championships. That leaves 235 men's spots and 281 for the women.

2. Every "A" cut put up this season is added.

3. The next fastest swimmers in each event are added until every event has the same number of entries. For example, if the 50 free were to have the most "A" cuts of any event with 10, then every other event would get swimmers with the top 10 fastest times in.

4. Finally, one entry is added to each event to keep the entries per event even. This process is repeated until all of the swimming spots (235 for men, 281 for women) are filled. Keep in mind that as more rows are added, swimmers will start to double and triple up. The #1 seed in the 200 back might be the #15 seed in the 100 back – as the 15th row of swimmers is added to each event, he'll be added to the 100 back list, but won't take up another one of the 281 invite spots, as he already has his official invite.

5. The final row of swimmers added won't come out exactly even. In the final row, the swimmers with entry times closest to the NCAA "A" cut will get added first, and when the 235th man or 281st woman is added, the process stops. So the 100 fly could have 38 men and the 200 fly 39 men – that would mean the 39th 200 flyer was closer to the NCAA "A" than the 39th 100 flyer and therefore won the 'tie-breaker' for the final spot.

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