2026 Men’s NCAA Division I Championships: Day 1 Finals Live Recap

2026 NCAA Division I Men’s Swimming and Diving Championships

Day 1 Finals Heat Sheet

**For those watching on ESPN, there is a second stream that will begin at 7:15pm (EST) for the 800 freestyle relay**

It’s time, swim fans. The first finals session of the 2026 Men’s NCAA Division I Championships gets underway tonight in Atlanta, Georgia. Thanks to the schedule change, the meet is already underway; this morning treated us to action in the early heats of the 1650 freestyle, 200 medley relay, and 800 freestyle relay. Tonight, we’ll see the fastest heats of all three events.

Zalan Sarkany aims to win the 1650 freestyle for the third-straight season. He won last year with a speedy 14:21.59, he was within three seconds of that swim earlier this season and comes in with the field-best 14:23.85. Two other swimmers are seeded under 14:30–Florida’s Ahmed Jaouadi (14:25.14) and Harvard’s William Mulgrew (14:26.79), both at their debut NCAA Championships. Another Florida first year, Ahmed Hafnaoui, could mount a challenge from elsewhere in the final. The Gators stand to pick up major points in this event as Gio Linscheer holds the fastest time from the early heats (14:34.18).

Then, the action shifts to the relays. NC State leads after the morning in the 200 medley relay, boasting a 1:21.23 courtesy of Quintin McCarty, Daniel Diehl, Aiden Hayes, and Drew Salls. Last year, Florida touched first in this relay in NCAA record time but was disqualified. Texas took the win and went onto win the meet. This year, the Gators are back for revenge and have reloaded with three of the four legs from 2025 (Jonny Marshall, Scotty Buffand Josh Liendo) and bringing in breaststroker Koen de GrootAt midseason, Texas’ Will Modglin fired off a 20.00 50 backstroke lead-off, coming tantalizingly close to becoming the first man under the 20 second barrier in the event. He’ll be chasing that accolade as he leads off for a Longhorns team aiming to start their title defense in style.

The 800 freestyle relay was one for the history books last year, with Cal and Texas going head to head, aiming to become the first team sub-six minutes in the event. Both relays have seen major turnover this year, making this a much different race. The Longhorns own the top time on the psych sheet (6:06.24) with Ohio State sitting four-tenths back. The Virginia Cavaliers fired off a 6:06.85 this morning and are the clubhouse leaders.

Men’s 1650 Freestyle — Final Heat 

  • NCAA Record: 14:12.08 — Bobby Finke, Florida (2020)
  • Championship Record: 14:12.52 — Bobby Finke, Florida (2021)
  • American Record: 14:12.08 — Bobby Finke, Florida (2020)
  • U.S. Open Record: 14:12.08 — Bobby Finke, Florida (2020)
  • Defending Champion: Zalan Sarkany, Indiana — 14:21.59
  • 2025 8th/16th Place Times: 14:31.08/14:43.50

Leader after early heats: Gio Linscheer, Florida — 14:34.18

Final Heat: 

  1. Ahmed Jaouadi (Florida) — 14:10.03 *NCAA, Championship, U.S. Open Record*
  2. Zalan Sarkany (Indiana) — 14:12.20
  3. Levi Sandidge (Kentucky) — 14:22.26
  4. Ahmed Hafnaoui (Florida) — 14:22.64
  5. Luke Whitlock (Indiana) — 14:34.30
  6. William Mulgrew (Harvard) — 14:40.07
  7. Max Carlsen (NC State) — 14:44.57
  8. Nathan Wiffen (California) — 14:46.81

Top 8:

  1. Ahmed Jaouadi (Florida) — 14:10.03
  2. Zalan Sarkany (Indiana) — 14:12.20
  3. Levi Sandidge (Kentucky) — 14:22.26
  4. Ahmed Hafnaoui (Florida) — 14:22.64
  5. Gio Linscheer (Florida) — 14:34.18
  6. Luke Whitlock (Indiana) — 14:34.30
  7. Liam Custer (Stanford) — 14:37.28
  8. Carson Hick (Kentucky) — 14:39.66

First NCAA Championship swim, first NCAA record for Ahmed Jaouadi. The women’s meet saw no individual NCAA records go down over the four day competition, but now we have one in the very first event of the men’s meet.

Jaouadi, the reigning 800/1500-meter freestyle world champion, kept pace with two-time defending champion Zalan Sarkany for the majority of the race. The final heat quickly became about these two swimmers, as they separated themselves from the field but could not shake each other. Sarkany flipped at the 500 yard mark in 4:12.86, with Jaouadi at 4:13.13.

We got two NCAA records in this race as Sarkany and Jaouadi pushed each other. Jaouadi took over as the 1650 freestyle NCAA record holder from Bobby Finke, but Sarkany got under Clark Smith‘s 1000 freestyle mark with his split. Sarkany made his 1000 freestyle turn in 8:33.10, getting well under Smith’s 8:33.93 from 2015.

The pair were tied at the 1450-yard mark, then Sarkany edged a bit out in front again. Jaouadi turned on the gas during the final 50, putting together a dizzying 22.73 final 50 yards to completely shake off Sarkany and pull away for the title.

Three of the top eight swimmers came out of the morning heats with Florida’s Gio Linscheer placing 5th and leading that trio of himself, Liam Custer, and Carson Hick. This was a strong event for the Gators who jumped out to the lead after the first event. Despite losing his cap, Hafnaoui held it together for fourth overall in 14:22.64.

Men’s 200 Medley Relay — Final Heat

  • NCAA Record: 1:20.03 – Florida (Marshall, de Groot, Buff, Liendo), 2026
  • Championship Record: 1:20.15 – Florida (Chaney, Smith, Liendo, McDuff), 2024
  • American Record: 1:20.92 – Indiana (Barr, Benzing, Brooks, King), 2025
  • U.S. Open Record: 1:20.03 – Florida (Marshall, de Groot, Buff, Liendo), 2026
  • Defending Champion: Texas (Modglin, Germonprez, Kos, Guiliano) – 1:20.28
  • 2025 8th/16th Place Times: 1:22.01/1:23.59

Leader after early heats: NC State (McCarty, Diehl, Hayes, Salls) — 1:21.23

Final Heat: 

  1. Arizona State (Chaney, Dobrzanski, Kharun, Kulow) — 1:20.08 *Championship Record*
  2. Florida (Marshall, de Groot, Buff, Liendo) — 1:20.16
  3. Texas (Modglin, Germonprez, Kos, Gould) — 1:20.46
  4. Indiana — 1:21.12
  5. California — 1:21.58
  6. Michigan — 1:21.64
  7. Kentucky — 1:22.00
  8. LSU — 1:22.06

Top 8:

  1. Arizona State (Chaney, Dobrzanski, Kharun, Kulow) — 1:20.08
  2. Florida (Marshall, de Groot, Buff, Liendo) — 1:20.16
  3. Texas (Modglin, Germonprez, Kos, Gould) — 1:20.46
  4. Indiana — 1:21.12
  5. NC State — 1:21.23
  6. California — 1:21.58
  7. Michigan — 1:21.64
  8. Kentucky — 1:22.00

Arizona State grabbed its first relay title of the weekend in record fashion as Adam Chaney, Andy Dobrzanski, Ilya Kharunand Jonny Kulow swam a 1:20.07 in the 200 medley relay. Their combined time broke the 1:20.15 mark Florida swam two years ago.

Texas held the lead at the first exchange in the final heat though, as Will Modglin logged a 20.19 50 backstroke lead off. Chaney–who owns a lifetime best of 20.19–led off for the Sun Devils in 20.35. The Longhorns continued to lead after the breaststroke leg thanks to Nate Germonprez‘s 22.39 split. Yamato Okadome‘s 22.35 split moved the Golden Bears into second place, followed by Indiana, then Arizona State. Both Okadome and Germonprez’s splits rank among the top five performances all-time.

The Sun Devils moved back into second behind Texas after the butterfly leg, thanks to Ilya Kharun‘s 18.70 split. That’s the second-fastest performance in history and Kharun now own the top five times. The Longhorns still held the lead though, with Kos splitting 19.30 in a preview for his upcoming 100 butterfly.

Jonny Kulow has been Arizona State’s trusted anchor for years and he delivered again tonight. He split 17.98, passing Texas and stopping the clock in 1:20.07. This swim is under the 1:20.92 American record, but Kharun is not eligible to set American records yet.

The Florida Gators were also able to get around Texas on the freestyle leg, thanks to Josh Liendo‘s 17.58 split, which ties as #5 all-time with his anchor from 2026 SECs. The Longhorns took third in 1:20.46.

The top three teams were all sub-1:21, with Indiana taking 4th in 1:21.12. NC State’s time from this morning was good for 5th overall. So far, the clubhouse leader from the early heats has finished 5th overall in both events tonight. The Golden Bears took 6th tonight (1:21.58) as freshman anchor Martin Wrede missed his wall.

Besides Liendo and Kulow, there were two more sub-18 seconds 50 freestyle splits. Kentucky freshman Falemana Tuufi brought the Wildcats home in 17.91 and Jere Hribar anchored for LSU in 17.96.

Men’s 800 Freestyle Relay — Final Heat

  • NCAA Record: 5:59.75 – California (Alexy, Jett, Lasco, Henveaux), 2025
  • Championship Record: 5:59.75 – California (Alexy, Jett, Lasco, Henveaux), 2025
  • American Record: 6:00.08 – Texas (Hobson, Guiliano, Maurer, Carrozza), 2025
  • U.S. Open Record: 5:59.75 – California (Alexy, Jett, Lasco, Henveaux), 2025
  • Defending Champion: California (Alexy, Jett, Lasco, Henveaux) – 5:59.75
  • 2025 8th/16th Place Times: 6:06.96/6:12.82

Leader after early heats: Virginia (Williamson, King, Heilman, Aikins) — 6:06.85

Final Heat: 

  1. Texas (Fente-Damers, Taylor, Maurer, Nelson) — 6:05.82
  2. Stanford (Dupont Cabrera, Ekk, Zhao, McFadden) — 6:06.39
  3. Ohio State (Navikonis, Jahn, Vilchez, Jankovics) — 6:06.40
  4. NC State — 6:07.20
  5. Indiana — 6:07.66
  6. Michigan — 6:07.81
  7. Arizona State — 6:08.71
  8. Wisconsin — 6:08.72

Top 8:

  1. Texas (Fente-Damers, Taylor, Maurer, Nelson) — 6:05.82
  2. Stanford (Dupont Cabrera, Ekk, Zhao, McFadden) — 6:06.39
  3. Ohio State (Navikonis, Jahn, Vilchez, Jankovics) — 6:06.40
  4. Virginia — 6:06.85
  5. NC State — 6:07.20
  6. Indiana — 6:07.66
  7. Michigan — 6:07.81
  8. Arizona State — 6:08.71

Remi Fabiani gave the Sun Devils the lead at the 200, leading off with a 1:30.99. That was not the fastest lead-off of the day; Koby Bujak-Upton swam 1:29.79 for Tennessee and Maximus Williamson posted 1:30.43 leading off for Virginia (both are freshmen).

Ohio State took control of the final heat on the second leg. After Tomas Navikonis led off in 1:31.36 for the Buckeyes, Cornelius Jahn swam 1:31.14 to move into the lead. Rex Maurer fired off a 1:30.76 split on Texas’ third leg which put the Longhorns into the lead by three-hundredths over the Buckeyes heading into the final leg. Senior Baylor Nelson anchored the Longhorns in 1:31.20, securing the win in 6:05.82.

The Buckeyes nearly held on for silver but Stanford junior Henry McFadden put together a huge anchor leg for the Cardinal. McFadden split 1:29.72, making up a two second deficit from Ohio State and taking silver a hundredth ahead of them, 6:06.39 to 6:06.40.

Virginia’s relay of Maximus Williamson, David King, Thomas Heilman, and Jack Aikins swam a 6:06.85 this morning, which held up for 4th overall. Per Virginia’s Instagram, that is the Cavalier men’s highest relay finish at NCAAs since 2012. The Virginia quartet that set the 200 freestyle American record in 2022 took 5th at that year’s NCAA Championships. Also from this morning, Princeton’s Ivy League record of 6:09.16 from Arthur Balva, Mitchell Schott, Parker Lenoce, and Patrick Dinu finished 10th.

Scores Thru Day 1

  1. Florida/Indiana, 86
  2. Texas, 72
  3. Arizona State, 62
  4. NC State, 61
  5. Kentucky, 49
  6. Michigan, 48
  7. Stanford, 46
  8. California, 45
  9. Ohio State, 32
  10. Virginia, 30
  11. Auburn, 22
  12. Tennessee, 20
  13. Wisconsin, 18
  14. Princeton/LSU, 14
  15. Louisville, 12
  16. Georgia, 10
  17. Harvard, 9
  18. Alabama/USC/Virginia Tech, 8
  19. Pittsburgh, 6
  20. Florida State/SMU, 4
  21. Yale, 1

In This Story

567
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

567 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Admin
2 months ago

If anyone talks to @eyeroll please make sure he reads this comment.

comment image

Bobthebuilderrocks
Reply to  Braden Keith
2 months ago

it didn’t even make it past the first day lol

Long Strokes
Reply to  Bobthebuilderrocks
2 months ago

What was his original take?

Admin
Reply to  Long Strokes
2 months ago

Original take:

Even after their mid performance, SwimSwam gives UVA men the obligatory rankflation position within the top 16 and even moves them ahead one spot…. Braden, how much is Todd paying you?

Spieker Pool Lap Swimmer
Reply to  Braden Keith
2 months ago

What were the specific comments and predictions?

Bobthebuilderrocks
Reply to  Spieker Pool Lap Swimmer
2 months ago

I think that UVA doesn’t get top 15

Admin
Reply to  Bobthebuilderrocks
2 months ago

Top 16* in fact.

Walsh-Madden-Grimes-Weinstein
Reply to  Braden Keith
2 months ago

Quibbling over a men’s swimming program not even ranked in the Top (10) Ten.

Sheesh!

jeff
Reply to  Spieker Pool Lap Swimmer
2 months ago

it’s from the final power rankings where UVA moved from 12 to 11

Even after their mid performance, SwimSwam gives UVA men the obligatory rankflation position within the top 16 and even moves them ahead one spot…. Braden, how much is Todd paying you?

Admin
Reply to  jeff
2 months ago

Which wildly ignores that they didn’t move up so much as Georgia sans Urlando moved down.

UVa is currently 11th. A lot of meet left to swim but the funniest possibility is still in play…

PFA
Reply to  Braden Keith
2 months ago

Remind me what that is? Top 10? Or them beating a certain team?

Andyb
Reply to  Braden Keith
2 months ago

I see one down vote… He must’ve seen it!

Marchandmaxxer
Reply to  Braden Keith
2 months ago

lol he’s replying to me too…how can I go back and see what I said to make him throw a tantrum?

Eyeroll
Reply to  Braden Keith
2 months ago

It’s the first day and (no shade to the athlete himself) Maximus went the same time he went in high school. I’ll admit defeat at the end of the meet. But I will admit 4th in the 800fr relay was WAY above where I had them. Hats off to them very well swam race

Bobthebuilderrocks
Reply to  Eyeroll
2 months ago

I don’t think you’re wrong in the sense that individually none of the splits were that much of an improvement. But as a relay, it was nice to see UVA do that

PFA
Reply to  Bobthebuilderrocks
2 months ago

Tbh they were the most impressive team today but thats kinda because expectations from many were kinda low to begin with but regardless this is a huge step in the right direction for the mens team even if its only 1 relay still better than anything they’ve done since 2022 really hopefully a bright future for them!

Eyeroll
Reply to  Bobthebuilderrocks
2 months ago

I’d have to agree I was pleasantly surprised to see that relay perform as well as it did. But in order to finish 11th all of those individuals are going to have to perform better than what they just did today. Which I will admit, this relay is a sign of that but again, only time will tell. Congrats on that relay to any Hoos reading

Admin
Reply to  Eyeroll
2 months ago

“Pleasantly” surprised? You sure about that?

Eyeroll
Reply to  Braden Keith
2 months ago

Believe it or not Braden, I don’t like watching dudes who are studs, go to a program and absolutely eat it. Which UVA men seem to do year after year. So yes I was “pleasantly” surprised to see some athletes in one of the best recruiting classes make a stride forward instead of being at a standstill. But even then, going the same time you went in high school, at NCAAs, because you “weren’t tapered” for ACCs, isn’t the BEST of signs. Again like you said earlier there’s still a LOT of meet left.

Bad Man
Reply to  Braden Keith
2 months ago

Is this Kamal Muhammand? Moved his yapping from Instagram to SS?

3M springboard merchant
2 months ago

could somebody please explain to me the new diving changes if there are any

Admin
Reply to  3M springboard merchant
2 months ago

They do 3 rounds of diving, then some swimming events, then another 3 rounds.

Troyy
2 months ago

Is there a video anywhere of Koby’s lead off?

Admin
Reply to  Troyy
2 months ago

Not unless you can access ESPN+ in Australia.

They only seem to be putting the replays of the final heats on YT.

I texted Kredich to see if they have a video they can put online somewhere.

SWimmer
Reply to  Troyy
2 months ago

The video of that heat is up on UVA Swimming’s YouTube channel.

Troyy
Reply to  SWimmer
2 months ago

Thanks.

Admin
Reply to  Troyy
2 months ago

@Troyy best I’ve got so far is on UVA’s YouTube. Bit of a blurry upload but you can see what’s happening.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5GKCqMz_Szk

Troyy
Reply to  Braden Keith
2 months ago

Thanks 👍️

Swimfan27
2 months ago

Am I missing something, or is Kos only entered in the 100 and 200 back?

Bobthebuilderrocks
Reply to  Swimfan27
2 months ago

he’s coming up as heat 2 lane 2 for me

Swimfan27
Reply to  Bobthebuilderrocks
2 months ago

For what?

swimfast
Reply to  Swimfan27
2 months ago

200 IM

lil_swimma
2 months ago

Hey guys may or may not have had practice so does anyone wanna give me a brief recap 😁🙏

Admin
Reply to  lil_swimma
2 months ago

Jaouadi had a bigggggg kick on his last 50 to break the record.
Arizona State real fast.
800 free relay kinda meh overall

Cal looks pretty rough
Texas, ASU, Indiana, Florida all look pretty good

Go Bears
Reply to  Braden Keith
2 months ago

*Cal mid/distance group looks rough. I thought they looked pretty good in the 200 medley. They were in 4th at the 175 mark and it looked like Wrede missed his wall.

Admin
Reply to  Go Bears
2 months ago

Fair point. We’ll get more data points today. At this point, though, I think Florida is on lock for 4th place and Cal is battling for 5th.

wild
2 months ago

Watching the 4 x 200 race video and just heard Rowdy refer Koby Bujak-Upton as “Kody Upton-Bujak”. Yeah no

boo
2 months ago

rowdy held at gunpoint to endorse the b final changes💔💔

scyboss
Reply to  boo
2 months ago

I see retirement in the imminent future

Marchandmaxxerr
2 months ago

wherre did my comments go

Steve Nolan
2 months ago

ESPN has heard your complaints about showing replays last week

comment image

About Sophie Kaufman

Sophie Kaufman

Sophie grew up in Boston, Massachusetts, which means yes, she does root for the Bruins, but try not to hold that against her. At 9, she joined her local club team because her best friend convinced her it would be fun. Shoulder surgery ended her competitive swimming days long ago, …

Read More »