2025 Men’s NCAA Diving Preview (Including Score Projection)

by Noah Duperre 15

March 24th, 2025 College, Diving, News

2025 Men’s NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships

The most reliable and best way to predict how teams are going to place at any NCAA swimming and diving competition is to score out the psych sheets. However, this method excludes a very important piece of the puzzle: diving.

All divers must earn their way to the Division I NCAA Championships by way of the Zone Championships. Because there are no pre-qualified divers, everyone must qualify by placing high enough over their two consecutive competition lists at the meet. Using these qualifying scores throughout the nation, we can put together an unofficial diving ‘psych sheet’ of sorts. This list, combined with the swimming psych sheets, gives us a broader and more complete view of how the team race will likely pan out.

A quick disclaimer is needed here as a reminder that diving is a subjective sport, unlike swimming. Divers at different meets can’t be definitely ranked over some at other meets like swimmers could with differing times. It’s important to note that with five different Zone Championships happening concurrently around the nation, not all of these athletes were scored by the same panel of judges. These rankings, while not definitive, are an overall fairly accurate representation of the scoring contenders for this weekend’s Championships.

MEN’S 1 METER

1 Yutong Wang Minnesota 770.15
2 Quinn Henninger Indiana 752.30
3 Andrew Bell Mass Amherst 747.25
4 Nick Harris Texas 743.40
5 Moritz Wesemann USC 736.80
6 Carson Tyler Indiana 736.00
7 Luke Sitz SMU 735.90
8 Jack Ryan Stanford 724.35
9 Max Flory Miami 720.15
10 Max Fowler Georgia Tech 705.15
11 Allen Bottego Texas A&M 704.05
12 Jordan Rzepka Purdue 701.40
13 Max Weinrich Indiana 700.25
14 Conor Gesing Florida 699.30
15 Zach Welsh Purdue 698.10
16 Cameron Cash Pitt 697.85

MEN’S 3 METER

1 Carson Tyler Indiana 927.35
2 Max Flory Miami 860.90
3 Jack Ryan Stanford 856.55
4 Moritz Wesemann USC 812.80
5 Max Weinrich Indiana 790.45
6 Luke Sitz SMU 788.80
7 Max Fowler Georgia Tech 788.50
8 Quinn Henninger Indiana 787.05
9 Shangfei Wang USC 782.55
10 Laurent Gosselin-Paradis USC 775.60
11 Andrew Bell Mass Amherst 773.90
12 Allen Bottego Texas A&M 764.45
13 Rocky Ramsland Virginia Tech 763.15
14 Aidan Wang Princeton 762.65
15 Hunter Hollenbeck Stanford 758.70
16 Jordan Rzepka Purdue 758.60

MEN’S PLATFORM

1 Jordan Rzepka Purdue 899.35
2 Jaxon Bowshire Texas A&M 875.20
3 Carson Paul LSU 834.40
4 Max Weinrich Indiana 814.60
5 Misha Andriyuk Stanford 813.90
6 Jesus Gonzalez Florida 813.45
7 Carson Tyler Indiana 804.00
8 Tyler Wills Purdue 793.75
9 Rhett Hensley Texas A&M 788.80
10 Quinn Henninger Indiana 780.30
11 Max Flory Miami 779.30
12 Whit Andrus Auburn 775.85
13 Laurent Gosselin-Paradis USC 775.75
14 Geoffrey Vavitsas Cal 769.90
15 Tommaso Zannella Mizzou 762.00
16 Derek Colbert Mizzou 753.45

SCORING OUT THE “PSYCH SHEET”

1 Indiana 113
2 USC 49
3 Stanford 43
4 Purdue 39
5 Texas A&M 37
6 Miami 32
7 SMU 25
8 Mass Amherst 22
9 Minnesota 20
10 Georgia Tech 19
11 LSU 16
11 Florida 16
13 Texas 15
14 Auburn 5
15 Virginia Tech 4
16 Princeton 3
16 Cal 3
16 Mizzou 3
19 Pitt 1

As expected, the Indiana men look to bring in a huge points haul this weekend in Federal Way. They are projected to have seven different A final appearances across all their divers and add a massive 113 points, which is vital for Indiana in their hopes to take home the team title. The most dominant performance across all the zone meets comes from the Hoosier, Carson Tyler on the three meter. He is ranked first with a massive margin of almost 70 points ahead of the next competitor. Diving can be unpredictable, so despite the dominant zone score, he is still not a lock for the title.

In terms of the team race, the other top swim teams are projected to score on the diving boards as well, though not nearly as much as the Hoosiers. The Texas Longhorns qualified four divers and are slated to add 15 points to their swimming total. While this is not as many points as they may be used to bringing in, it’s worth noting that they have divers ranked 17th on two events, just outside of scoring. So if those athletes can improve just a little bit, they’ll move into scoring position and the Longhorns can move into the 30 point scoring range or so.

The Gators project to bring in 16 points from their divers and the Cal Bears are expected to score just three points. Unlike the women’s meet, this team race is expected to be very close between many teams, so every point is crucial.

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Floptropicans
18 hours ago

Notable divers who didn’t compete in 2024
-Moritz Wesemann (USC)
-David Ekdahl (TCU)
-Misha Andriyuk (Stanford
-Max Flory (Miami)
-Tyler Wills (Purdue)
-Luke Sitz (SMU)
-Jesus Gonzalez (Florida)
-Zach Welsh (Purdue)
-Jaxon Bowshire (Texas a&m)

Last edited 18 hours ago by Floptropicans
Floptropicans
18 hours ago

Team scored on diving in 2024 NCAA compared to project score

1. Indiana 121 (88) +33
2. Texas 26 (55) -29
3. Minnesota 22 (36) -14
4. Stanford 31 (33) -2
5. Pittsburgh 24 (30) -6
6. Texas a&m 21 (29) -8
7. USC 15 (27) -12
8. OSU 55 (26) +29
9. Purdue 25 (24) +1
10. Miami (FL) 21 (22) -1
11. Tennessee 32 (21) +11
12. LSU 18 (14) +4
13. Cal 21 (13) +8
14. Notre Dame 2 (9) -7
14. Georgia Tech (9) -9
16. Princeton (8) -8
17. CBU (7) -7
18. Florida 4 (6) -2
… Read more »

Cassandra
20 hours ago

when did stanford all of a sudden have one of the top diving programs in the country? theyre projected to score more points than purdue and texas?

from the top recruits article it looks like theyre also bringing in two guys w scoring potential next year 😮

Jimbo
Reply to  Cassandra
10 hours ago

Jack Ryan is the main reason. Probably the best springboard diver who doesn’t have stripey warmup pants.
Historically, they’ve had many NCAA champions and Olympians.

Jimbo
23 hours ago

In the 200 bk article there is speculation that Cal is not bringing their divers. Josh Thai and Geoff Vavitsas scored 21 last year on tower. 1A and 1B. That seems insane.

Jimbo
Reply to  Jimbo
20 hours ago

Hmm. Both are registered on divemeets.

SaveCollegeSwimming
Reply to  Jimbo
2 hours ago

Looks like both divers are listed and Cal dropped a swimmer. And alternate Campbell now entered. I believe USA Swimming hasn’t been updating

chickenlamp
1 day ago

If you add the projected diving points to the projected swimming points, final scoring is:

  1. Texas 495
  2. Florida 436
  3. Indiana 404.5
  4. Cal 295
  5. Tennesse 277
  6. ASU 245
  7. NC State 197.5
  8. Stanford 192
  9. Georgia 165
  10. Michigan 133

There’s a lot of potentially tight battles for placement

Dennis Dale
1 day ago

I would like to see the projections from women’s meet compared to the actual results. I am curious to see if the projections have merit. Ideally the breakdown would be by school and by zone. Your staff seems to be particularly capable of analyzing this data.

IU Swammer
1 day ago

This and the women’s results are keeping my hopes alive for an IU win.

jablo
1 day ago

Is this 11 dives? Used to seeing 400-500 for 6 dives, so are these divers just cracked?

Rory
Reply to  jablo
1 day ago

Zones scores carry over from prelims. So these totals for 1M and 3M are 12 dives.

IU Swammer
Reply to  Rory
1 day ago

Platform is 10 dives (2 rounds of 5).

Jimbo
Reply to  IU Swammer
1 day ago

2 six round dives for men. Women are 5.