USA Swimming Announces 9 Sites That Will Host the 2020 U.S. Open

USA Swimming has announced the 9 sites that will host the 2020 U.S. Open Swimming Championships.

As part of a reimagined calendar amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, USA Swimming announced in September that the U.S. Open would be held at multiple sites around the country, instead of the traditional single-site setup. Specifically, 9 venues around the country will host the meet. Rather than the traditional 700-800 athletes in one location, this means that that there will be around 1,800 athletes competing around the country.

In order to further reduce crowding at any one time, the format will be:

  • 4 timed-final sessions for each meet
  • A male and female flight for each session

This means that, on average, there will be 100, or fewer, athletes in any given session.

Daily Event Schedule:

The U.S. Open, which has replaced the former Winter Nationals as the mid-season championship meet in the United States, is being held in long course again this year, much as it was last year. It’s unclear yet if this will become the new normal for the event, or if that choice is simply being rolled forward in the pre-Olympic year.

Results from the meet will be combined by USA Swimming and put into a collective results report.

The event in Irvine, California will be live-streamed on usaswimming.org and a one-hour broadcast package will air on NBC on Sunday, November 15, from 3-4 p.m. ET.

While many of the top American swimmers will be away at the International Swimming League competition in Budapest, Hungary, others among America’s top swimmers will still be in the U.S. and able to compete if they choose to. That includes the Stanford women’s group (Katie Ledecky, Simone Manuel, Katie Drabot, Ella Eastin), 8-time Olympic medalist Nathan Adrian, and the United States’ newest World Record holder teenage phenom Regan Smith.

Like Smith, amateur athletes who are not eligible for ISL competition will all be available. With a very quiet and controlled start to the NCAA season, that means a number of college swimmers will likely participate.

2020 U.S. Open 9-Site Venues

City Venue
Beaverton, Ore. Tualatin Hills Aquatic Center
Des Moines, Iowa Wellmark YMCA-The YMCA of Greater Des Moines
Greensboro, N.C. Greensboro Aquatic Center
Huntsville, Ala. Huntsville Aquatics Center
Indianapolis, Ind. Indiana University Natatorium *
Irvine, Calif. William Woollett Jr. Aquatics Center
Richmond, Va. SwimRVA
San Antonio, Texas North East ISD Blossom Athletic Complex
Sarasota, Fla. Selby Aquatic Center

*pending approval from Indiana University

The list of hosting locations features a few sites that are new to the USA Swimming national-level rotation, likely afforded by the smaller sessions and fewer spectators that will be present.

That includes places like the new Huntsville Aquatics Center in Alabama, the Selby Aquatic Center in Sarasota, Florida, and the Tualatin Hills Aquatic Center in Beaverton, Oregon.

While most of these facilities have auxiliary pools for warmup and cool down, at least one, the Tualatin Hills Aquatic Center, does not.

With the exception of Indiana University Natatorium on the IUPUI campus in Indianapolis, which is pending approval, most of these facilities are also not college facilities. While colleges are home to many of the biggest and best aquatics centers in the country, use of those facilities by outside groups continues to be limited in many parts of the country.

Last week, USA Swimming announced its scheme for the 2020 Winter Junior Championships, which will be far less structured than the U.S. Open.

Time Standards

The Qualification period for the meet is July 1, 2019 through the entry deadline.

 

35
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

35 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Jennifer Martin
4 years ago

I’m posting this after the fact, but anyone know why the Irvine site had no track start on their blocks? And what did the swimmers at the Tualatin Hills site do for warm-down, warm-up for their events? And can anyone explain the young man at the Irvine site swimming an 18:22 something in the 1500 meter freestyle? I forget his name, but the poor guy had the live stream camera following him up close in the pool since he was the only one swimming in there for a long while a the end. Anyone know his story? Thanks in advance.

Yasemine safargar
4 years ago

Hi, I got 4:57.58 on my 400 I’m back in March. According to USA Swimming desk pass it shows that I qualify for Us open meet, but the time standard shows 4:57.29. Do I still qualify?

Yasemine safargar
Reply to  Braden Keith
4 years ago

Yes it said 2019 winter us open

Anne
4 years ago

Will spectators be allowed?

Brandi
4 years ago

Which college conferences are not allowing their athletes to attend USAS meets? PAC-12? SEC? B1G? Or do their conference COVID rules not apply to these meets?

Last edited 4 years ago by Brandi
webeswimmin
4 years ago

come on IU!

Clown Show
4 years ago

Is it 1 day long, with 4 sessions in that day? Or 4 days long with 1 session per day?

JohnDoe
Reply to  Braden Keith
4 years ago

Actually, it’s 4 sessions over 3 days. Distance Thurs, 2 sessions on Friday and 1 session on Sat. All timed finals.

Last edited 4 years ago by JohnDoe
CTF
Reply to  JohnDoe
4 years ago

I think it might actually even be four sessions on Friday and two on Saturday, since it sounds like their will be separate men’s and women’s flights.

sscommentor
4 years ago

the Northeast has to get its stuff together, as a boston resident its a bummer to not have representation

coco
Reply to  sscommentor
4 years ago

How can swimmers from NJ, NY and CT attend – they will have to quarantine when they return for 2 weeks which would be an issue for those in schools

Braden 2020
Reply to  coco
4 years ago

most schools are online in the northeast anyway or online for part of it so they just go online when they quarantine. Plus you can get a test after 72 hours of returning then don’t have to quarantine

NE Swim
Reply to  Braden 2020
4 years ago

Because of plane and travel > 100 miles you will still have to quarantine for most schools and teams

coco
Reply to  Braden 2020
4 years ago

Branden that is incorrect you have to quarantine for 2 weeks regardless of a negative test and lots of schools are in person here this is a major issue for NY,NJ & CT

coco
4 years ago

Which location has the fastest pool?

Tupperware
Reply to  Braden Keith
4 years ago

That is an interesting point – windy outdoor pools could play a big role in the overall champs.
Do I remember that Sjostrom’s crazy 50 fly record was set outdoors during a windy day?

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

Read More »