2024 NCAA Zone Diving Preview & Qualification Procedure

by Riley Overend 4

March 09th, 2024 College, Diving, News

With NCAA swimming invites locking in this week on the women’s side, and the men’s to follow next week, the final piece of the puzzle before the championships begin is the diving invites.

Unlike the swimmers, divers don’t qualify for NCAAs by virtue of their performances throughout the season, but rather, they compete at their respective Zone Diving Championship in order to earn a spot (though they do have to qualify for them during the season).

The invite process is a complex one on the diving side, so we’ll run through it below, along with dates and locations for each of the NCAA’s five diving zones.

NCAA ZONE QUALIFYING PROCEDURE

There are five zone meets spread across the country that allows divers to qualify for the NCAA Championships. The top five female and top four male divers from each event at their respective zone championship automatically qualify for NCAAs, and then each zone earns an additional number of qualifying spots in each event based on how that zone performed at last season’s NCAAs.

For example, Zone D had six divers finish in the top 16 on 1-meter at the 2023 NCAA Women’s Championships. Therefore, the top 11 divers (5+6) in that event at Zone D will qualify for NCAAs.

There’s also a distinction between eligibility and reimbursement spots. The highest-priority divers qualify for NCAA reimbursement to cover their travel expenses for NCAAs. More divers earn NCAA eligibility but have to travel to the meet with their school footing the bill. While that could technically cause a school to decline to send an eligible diver, it hasn’t been a major factor in the past, so in the interest of keeping things simple, we’ll mainly just track divers with qualifying eligibility.

Check out the qualifying spots for each zone and each event below:

WOMEN

1M 3M PLATFORM
Zone A 5 5 5
Zone B 10 8 7
Zone C 7 11 11
Zone D 11 9 9
Zone E 8 8 9

MEN

1M 3M PLATFORM
Zone A 6 5 4
Zone B 7 7 10
Zone C 7 10 8
Zone D 10 9 7
Zone E 6 5 7

Any diver who finishes within one of those eligibility spots will qualify for the NCAA Championships. They can also enter additional diving events at nationals provided they finished in the top 12 in their zone in that given event (similar to an NCAA ‘B’ cut in swimming).

For the reimbursement spots, each zone receives a minimum of four spots for both men and women, with those guaranteed filling 20/41 slots allocated for women and 20/35 slots allocated for men, respectively.

There’s then a priority placement grid to determine who gets the remaining 21 spots for women and 15 for men.

For a full breakdown of the qualifying rules and the reimbursement spots at the NCAA’s pre-championship manual here.

ZONE CHAMPIONSHIP MEETS

The Zone meets will get underway on Sunday, March 10 and run through Saturday, March 16. Find the meet info for each Zone, along with a list of qualifiers, below.

Zone A

  • March 11-13, 2024
  • DeNunzio Pool — Princeton, New Jersey
  • Host: Princeton University
  • Qualifiers

Zone B

  • March 10-13, 2024
  • Gabrielsen Natatorium — Athens, Georgia
  • Host: University of Georgia
  • Qualifiers

Zone C

  • March 14-16, 2024
  • Ralph Wright Natatorium — Louisville, Kentucky
  • Host: University of Louisville
  • Qualifiers

Zone D

  • March 11-13, 2024
  • Campus Recreation & Wellness Center Natatorium – Houston, Texas
  • Host: University of Houston
  • Qualifiers

Zone E

  • March 11-13, 2024
  • Wall Aquatic Center — Flagstaff, Arizona
  • Host: Northern Arizona University
  • Qualifiers

NCAA Diving Points By Team in 2023

Women

  1. Arizona – 52
  2. Texas – 49
  3. UNC – 47
  4. USC – 44
  5. Minnesota – 40
  6. Indiana – 35
  7. Purdue – 32
  8. LSU – 31
  9. Miami (FL) – 30
  10. South Carolina – 25
  11. Louisville – 22
  12. Kentucky – 17
  13. Texas A&M – 9
  14. Ohio St. – 7
  15. Florida St. – 7
  16. Florida – 5
  17. Nevada – 5
  18. FIU – 3
  19. UCLA – 2
  20. Utah – 2
  21. Northwestern – 1

Men

  1. Indiana – 104
  2. Ohio State – 71.5
  3. Texas – 44
  4. Tennessee – 32
  5. Texas A&M – 32
  6. USC – 31
  7. Miami – 27
  8. UNC – 24
  9. Stanford – 22
  10. LSU – 19
  11. South Carolina – 15
  12. Florida – 14.5
  13. Columbia – 12
  14. Virginia Tech – 6
  15. Auburn – 6
  16. Cal – 3
  17. Arizona – 1
  18. Pittsburgh – 1

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Nonrevhoofan
1 month ago

Purdue Women also scored 32 points last year.

Nonrevhoofan
1 month ago

Zone A – Women’s 1m (5): Daphne Wils (PSU), Elizabeth Kaye (UVA), Marialis Kwak (BUF), Holly Prasanto (RUT), Nina Janmyr (HARV)
Zone A – Men’s 3m (5): Cameron Cash (PITT), Dylan Reed (PITT), Aidan Wang (PRIN), Luca Fassi (PRIN), Andrew Bell (MASS)
Zone B – Women’s 1m (10): Aranza Vazquez (UNC), Camyla Monroy (FLA), Samantha Vear (FSU), Margo O’Meara (DUKE), Alicia Mora (FAU), Meghan Wenzel (UGA), Carina Lumia (FLA), Paige Burrell (FIU), Lynae Shorter (TENN), Ashlynn Sullivan (AUB)
Zone B – Women’s 3m (8): Aranza Vazquez (UNC), Samantha Vear (FSU), Camyla Monroy (FLA), Margo O’Meara (DUKE), Aliyah Watson (DUKE), Bayleigh Cranford (NCSU), Lynae Shorter (TENN), Paige Burrell (FIU)
Zone B – Men’s 1m (7): Peyton Donald… Read more »

B1G Fan
1 month ago

Indiana women missing from list of last year’s points recipients.

Jimbo
Reply to  B1G Fan
1 month ago

35 for Indiana. After Minnesota and before Purdue.

Interestingly, on the women’s side, 6 A-finalists on 1m did not return, and 5 on 3 meter did not return. Wide open.

About Riley Overend

Riley is an associate editor interested in the stories taking place outside of the pool just as much as the drama between the lane lines. A 2019 graduate of Boston College, he arrived at SwimSwam in April of 2022 after three years as a sports reporter and sports editor at newspapers …

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