Cal’s 8th NCAA D1 Swimming & Diving Title Ties Auburn and Stanford for 5th-Most

The Cal Golden Bears won their 8th all-time NCAA team title on Saturday, including their 6th since 2011, and continued an incredible 13-meet streak of placing in the top 2. That team title moves them into a tie with Auburn and Stanford for the 5th most official titles in NCAA Men’s Swimming & Diving history

All-Time Team Championships (Official), Men’s Division I NCAA Swimming & Diving

Team Number Years won (official)
Texas 15 1981, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2010, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2021
Michigan* 12 1937, 1938, 1939, 1940, 1941, 1948, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1961, 1995, 2013
Ohio State 11 1943, 1945, 1946, 1947, 1949, 1950, 1952, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1962
USC 9 1960, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977
Auburn 8 1997, 1999, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009
Stanford 8 1967, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1998
California 8 1979, 1980, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2019, 2022, 2023
Indiana 6 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973
Yale 4 1942, 1944, 1951, 1953
Florida 2 1983, 1984
Arizona 1 2008
UCLA 1 1982
Tennessee 1 1978

* – Michigan (7), Northwestern (4), and Navy (2) won team championships from 1924 through 1936. While those were NCAA Championship meets, and the NCAA recognizes official event titles, no official team titles were awarded, and instead newspapers awarded the championships.

In spite of their team title, the Cal men this year won only a single event title on the final day of competition when Destin Lasco won the 200 back. That was their 99th event title in program history and Lasco’s second-consecutive win in that event.

Cal has won that event 8 times since it was added to the NCAA schedule in 1951. They’ve only won two events more frequently: the 100 free (12 times) and the 400 free relay (9 times).

Five different schools won at least 3 events each: Texas (3), Indiana (3), Florida (4), NC State (3), and Arizona State (3). Of those schools, only Arizona State improved its all-time ranking in the category, jumping Purdue and Rutgers to move into 23rd-place all-time.

The Florida Gators did, however, break a tie with Yale for the 8th-most titles of all-time, though they were only able to get 1 event win closer to the next-best team, Indiana. The Hoosiers still have a 29-win margin over the Gators.

Tennessee (Jordan Crooks in the 50 free), Minnesota (Max McHugh’s third-straight 100 breast title), and Ohio State (Lyle Yost on 1-meter) all added an individual title to their tallies. Virginia Tech got its first-ever program victory at the NCAA Championships when Youssef Ramadan won the 100 fly.

DAY 1 & 2 FINALS EVENT WINNERS

  • 200 medley relay – NC State (1:20.67) – NCAA Record
  • 800 free relay – Texas (6:03.42) – NCAA Record
  • 500 free – Luke Hobson, Texas (4:07.37)
  • 200 IM – Leon Marchand, ASU (1:36.34) – NCAA Record
  • 50 free – Jordan Crooks, Tennessee (18.32)
  • 1-meter diving – Lyle Yost, Ohio State (443.95)
  • 200 free relay – Florida (1:13.35)

DAY 3 FINALS EVENT WINNERS

  • 400 IM – Leon Marchand, Arizona State — 3:28.82 (NCAA Record)
  • 100 fly – Youssef Ramadan, Virginia Tech — 43.15
  • 200 free – Luke Hobson, Texas — 1:30.43
  • 100 breast – Max McHugh, Minnesota — 50.00
  • 100 back – Brendan Burns, Indiana — 43.61 (Pool Record)
  • 400 medley relay – Florida — 2:58.32 (NCAA Record)

DAY 4 FINALS EVENT WINNERS

  • 1650 free – Will Gallant, NC State — 14:28.94
  • 200 back – Destin Lasco, Cal — 1:35.87 (Pool Record)
  • 100 free – Josh Liendo, Florida — 40.28
  • 200 breast – Leon Marchand, Arizona State — 1:46.91 (NCAA Record)
  • 200 fly – Aiden Hayes, NC State — 1:38.79
  • 400 free relay – Florida — 2:44.07 (NCAA Record)

All-Time Individual Event Title Rankings – NCAA Division I Men’s Swimming & Diving Championships

CURRENT RANK TEAM PRIOR TITLES 2023 Titles NEW TOTAL PREVIOUS RANK
RANK CHANGE
1 Michigan 166 166 1 0
2 Stanford 151 151 2 0
3 Texas 146 3 149 3 0
4 USC 124 124 4 0
5 Ohio State 119 1 120 5 0
6 Cal 98 1 99 6 0
7 Indiana 90 3 93 7 0
8 Florida 60 4 64 8 0
9 Yale 60 60 8 -1
10 Auburn 59 59 10 0
11 Arizona 52 52 11 0
12 Tennessee 45 1 46 12 0
13 UCLA 41 41 13 0
14 Northwestern 31 31 14 0
15 Miami 30 30 15 0
16 SMU 28 28 16 0
17 Georgia 23 23 17 0
18 Michigan State 22 22 18 0
18 Princeton 22 22 18 0
20 Iowa 21 21 20 0
21 Minnesota 19 1 20 21 0
22 NC State 16 3 19 22 0
23 Alabama 15 15 23 0
23 Arizona State 12 3 15 26 3
25 Purdue 14 14 24 -1
26 Rutgers 13 13 25 -1
27 Harvard 12 12 26 -1
27 Washington 12 12 26 -1
29 Long Beach State 9 9 29 0
30 Columbia 8 8 30 0
30 Navy 8 8 30 0
32 Illinois 7 7 32 0
33 Florida State 6 6 33 0
33 Louisville 6 6 33 0
35 Texas A&M 5 5 35 0
36 LSU 4 4 36 0
36 BYU 4 4 36 0
36 Duke 4 4 36 0
36 La Salle 4 4 36 0
36 North Carolina 4 4 36 0
36 Virginia 4 4 36 0
42 Cincinnati 3 3 42 0
42 UT Arlington 3 3 42 0
42 Wayne State 3 3 42 0
42 Williams College 3 3 42 0
42 Wisconsin 3 3 42 0
47 Arkansas 2 2 47 0
47 Dartmouth 2 2 47 0
47 Oklahoma 2 2 47 0
50 Air Force 1 1 50 0
50 Amherst 1 1 50 0
50 Army West Point 1 1 50 0
50 Brown 1 1 50 0
50 Cornell 1 1 50 0
50 Denver 1 1 50 0
50 Florida Atlantic 1 1 50 0
50 Franklin & Marshall 1 1 50 0
50 Georgia Tech 1 1 50 0
50 Houston 1 1 50 0
50 Miami (OH) 1 1 50 0
50 Missouri 1 1 50 0
50 Nebraska 1 1 50 0
50 Oregon 1 1 50 0
50 Penn 1 1 50 0
50 Penn State 1 1 50 0
50 Pitt 1 1 50 0
50 SUNY Cortland 1 1 50 0
50 UCSB 1 1 50 0
50 Utah 1 1 50 0
50 Villanova 1 1 50 0
50 Wesleyan (CT) 1 1 50 0
50 Virginia Tech 0 1 1 NR N/A/

 

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Lamboswam
1 year ago

Nice analytical article.

However, the event winners for the
3 meter (Day 3) as well as Platform
(Day 4) were left out.

The Championship is awarded for
Swimming AND Diving.

Diving matters.

Reid
1 year ago

Where can we find the up to date record book? The most recent one I have is over a decade old: http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/swimming_champs_records/2011-12/2011md1_swim.pdf

Which also raises the question in my mind, who do fans of each school think is their greatest swimmer ever? Some are clear cut (ASU, probably IU with Spitz and USC with Naber), others are debatable between a couple (Cal it’s tough between Biondi, Adrian, and Murphy, Michigan has Dolan and Borges), and some I have no idea (Texas).

BearlyBreathing
Reply to  Reid
1 year ago

Maybe the Wikipedia page for American swimming records

THEO
1 year ago

Can anyone give me the TLDR on how Arizona won in 2008 over Auburn?

Onehandtoucher
Reply to  THEO
1 year ago

Albert subirats

Canadian swim nerd
Reply to  Onehandtoucher
1 year ago

And he is such an amazing coach now at VT! I had a pleasure meeting him few times

TH.
1 year ago

You can’t do this and not have hyperlinks to see who won what and when. I’d love to see who won from SUNY Cortland, Franklin & Marshall College, Faber College…..

Noah Beck
Reply to  TH.
1 year ago

George Breen was SUNY Cortland’s national champ in 1955 while Doc Counselman was coaching the team.

F&M Alum
Reply to  TH.
1 year ago

Gordon Chalmers won the 150 Backstroke in 1932, giving Franklin & Marshall its only D1 NCAA swimming championship title

Andrew
1 year ago

fraud ring like the lakers in the bubble during the covid year

Bah
Reply to  Andrew
1 year ago

What?

Sun Yangs Hammer
Reply to  Andrew
1 year ago

Deep State fudged the final score, SMU ahead #stopthesteal

I suck
Reply to  Sun Yangs Hammer
1 year ago

What is the origin of bringing up SMU in all of these comment sections?

Taa
Reply to  Andrew
1 year ago

Hugo Gonzalez is clearly a robot who malfunctioned at the Arizona dual meets and they had him refurbished good as new prior to PAC 12s

Taa
Reply to  Braden Keith
1 year ago

He’s an aquatic humanoid not a tesla!

Observing
Reply to  Taa
1 year ago

Twas the hardware, not the software.

4th Place NCSU 4Ever
1 year ago

NC State has peaked. It will be interesting to see what Coach Braden does. Does he stay at NCSU and he can ride out his career? Or do you try taking a job at a bigger school and go for glory?

Last edited 1 year ago by 4th Place NCSU 4Ever
4th Place NCSU 4Ever
Reply to  Braden Keith
1 year ago

I agree with all of this. He’s a heck of a coach. State should do everything to keep him. The one thing that could really change the dynamic there is a new pool. That might get them over the top and keep him there permanently.

Swimmer
Reply to  4th Place NCSU 4Ever
1 year ago

Texas or Cal would be the only place Holloway would move to.

Andrew
Reply to  4th Place NCSU 4Ever
1 year ago

that’s what i said and got downvoted. NC State cannot escape the matrix and finish better than 4th.

While they had many highs this meet, laying an egg in the 100/200 free is completely unacceptable and wound up costing them

Stokowski’s 100 fly (while strategically sound) was unsportsmanlike and classless at best.

How much of this is coaching? I would say very little, i think it’s more Hallaway’s swimmers not performing

they lose Izzo, Mason Hunter (breast gonna be a problem again lol), Korstanje (i don’t think he gets a 5th year for redshirting 20-21 season), and probably Stokowski, Tapp, and Pisczcorwitz as well

i remember all the talk last year after NCs about how they lost no scorers… Read more »

Swimmer
Reply to  4th Place NCSU 4Ever
1 year ago

NC State gets a really good recruiting class every so often but until they consistently top notch talent year in and year out they are always going to lag behind Cal and Texas. Cal and Texas consistently have the top recruiting classes and look where it takes them. Success breeds success. Look at the difference between the men’s and women’s teams at UVA and AZ state. Getting top notch recruits is the key to winning national titles. Yes there are diamonds in the rough and coaches can develop some swimmers but you have to start with a solid base to work with.

Reid
Reply to  Swimmer
1 year ago

Their last two freshman classes have been right up there with the best in the country and they have a smaller but very good class coming in next year. Assuming they can get everyone healthy, that should be enough; Cal and Texas have won it with comparable talent levels. I think it will be and they can get a championship in the next couple years, but if they never break into the top three recruiting isn’t an excuse

Last edited 1 year ago by Reid
Swimmer.
Reply to  Reid
1 year ago

It takes several years of consistent quality recruiting to develop a culture not just a couple of good recruiting classes. Look at UVA How can the mens and women’s programs be so far apart from each other. Quality consistent recruiting is key to college championship success.

Observing
Reply to  Swimmer.
1 year ago

UVA men have been stockpiling a few good classes, what are the chances they jump back up the ranks?

Swimmer.
Reply to  Observing
1 year ago

The men can definitely get there. The UVA women’s team is at a point now where the swimmer doesn’t choose UVA, UVA chooses the swimmer.

Chuck
Reply to  Swimmer
1 year ago

Not sure you can say Cal had a top two recruiting class the past two years (current Sophomores and Freshman). Some good swimmers, but mostly they are developed. We see them now as strong, but at the time of commitment, not top 2. They do have a big class coming in this fall though. NCstate has had monster recruits and I agree that they somehow have missed on that potential.

Shaddy419
1 year ago

Uh I think the title should say Stanford instead of Yale

ReneDescartes
Reply to  Shaddy419
1 year ago

Hours later, still got Yale up there.

Awsi Dooger
Reply to  Shaddy419
1 year ago

Yale receives the x2 multiplier

In those years it looks like all you had to do was predict Yale and Ohio State to alternate

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, …

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