With the 2026 Men’s and Women’s Division I NCAA Championships in the books, we wanted to highlight some of our articles that you might have missed.
In addition to our video interviews, Anya Pelshaw (women’s meet) and Yanyan Li (men’s meet) were able to perform numerous additional interviews that had been turned into written long form articles.
Features/Written Interviews
- Indiana State’s Grace Cummings Scores In 3rd 1650 Free Ever “I’ve learned not to go out as fast”
- Cummings became the first ever NCAA qualifier for Indiana State this year and finished 15th to score in the event on day 1 of 2026 NCAAs.
- UC-San Diego Scores At D1 NCAAs After Just Six Seasons Transitioning From D2 To D1
- Chloe Braun finished 16th in the 100 breast, helping UCSD score in just its 2nd season in which it is eligible for the NCAA Championships.
- At NCAAs, Former Power Four Swimmers Find New Opportunities With Mid-Major Programs
- Whether it be House v. NCAA cuts or finding a better fit, some P4 to mid-major transfers are reaching new heights with a smaller program.
- The Story Of The Swim-Off Sacrifice That Helped Maximus Williamson Win The 200 Free NCAA Title
- After Virginia teammates David King and Maximus Williamson tied in the 200 free prelims, King made a selfless decision that paid off
- Kentucky Men Earn First Top-Eight NCAAs Relay Finish Since 2010, Drop Three Seconds In One Season
- The Wildcats made history by standing on the podium, but are still hungry to accomplish more than they already have done so far.

So I think UVA nabbed Missouri’s commitment from Clement Secchi for this fall. What throws me off is this guy is gonna be 26 in a month.
What makes you think that he’s headed to UVA?
they posted about a new commit and he commented with the smily face with the stars emoji. Could be way off
I think it will be another French talent that they have committed. BS Athletics, a consulting firm for French athletes to study in the US, that is co-founded by Secchi, also commented on the post.
I’m also a fool. Secchi swam in the NCAA
This may be a little late, but Northwestern’s Aaron Baltaytis competed at NCAAs less than 2 years after being diagnosed with cancer