The first semester is winding down, and the peak of invite season has passed. This was already a fast year in collegiate swimming, and before the midseason invites began, we took a look at the top three swimmers in each event. Now that the majority of schools have suited up to end the semester, we’re revisiting the project.
We’re only considering yards times done in an NCAA competition for this table. So, there are no converted times included or swims from the 2024 Short Course World Championships or the 2024 U.S. Open.
EVENT | Fastest | 2nd Fastest | 3rd Fastest |
50 free | Jordan Crooks (TENN), 18.12 | Ilya Kharun (ASU), 18.51 | Gui Caribe Santos (TENN), 18.76 |
100 free | Jordan Crooks (TENN), 40.26 | Gui Caribe Santos (TENN), 40.85 | Jonny Kulow (ASU), 40.97 |
200 free | Jordan Cooks (TENN), 1:30.00 | Charlie Hawke (BAMA), 1:31.05 | Tomas Navikonis (OSU), 1:31.55 |
500 free | Rex Maurer (TEX), 4:04.45 | David Johnston (TEX), 4:09.41 | Jake Magahey (UGA), 4:10.93 |
1650 free | Rex Maurer (TEX), 14:30.47 | Noah Millard (YALE), 14:33.47 | David Johnston (TEX), 14:35.42 |
100 back | Will Modglin (TEX), 43.91 | Johnny Crush (ARMY), 44.53 | Gabriel Jett (CAL), 44.54 |
200 back | Will Modglin (TEX), 1:37.84 | Owen McDonald (IU), 1:38.07 | Hubert Kos (TEX), 1:38.14 |
100 breast | Julian Smith (FLOR), 49.98 | Nate Germonprez (TEX), 50.39 | Yamato Okadome (CAL), 50.87 |
200 breast | Carles Coll Marti (VT), 1:50.09 | Josh Matheny (IU), 1:50.31 | Matt Fallon (PENN), 1:50.39 |
100 fly | Jordan Crooks (TENN), 43.77 | Ilya Kharun (ASU), 43.85 | Luca Urlando (UGA), 44.16 |
200 fly | Ilya Kharun (ASU), 1:38.74 | Luca Urlando (UGA), 1:39.03 | Josh Liendo (FLOR), 1:39.14 |
200 IM | Hubert Kos (TEX), 1:40.51 | Owen McDonald (IU), 1:40.86 | Will Modglin (TEX), 1:40.97 |
400 IM | Rex Maurer (TEX), 3:34.19 | Tristan Jankovics (OSU), 3:39.05 | Baylor Nelson (TAMU), 3:39.35 |
200 free relay | Arizona State, 1:13.93 | Tennessee, 1:13.96 | Florida, 1:15.10 |
400 free relay | Tennessee, 2:44.13 | Arizona State, 2:46.58 | Florida, 2:46.81 |
800 free relay | Texas, 6:09.30 | Tennessee, 6:12.33 | Florida, 6:12.85 |
200 medley relay | Florida, 1:21.49 | Arizona State, 1:21.63 | Tennessee, 1:21.71 |
400 medley relay | Tennessee, 3:01.62 | Virginia, 3:02.01 | Arizona State, 3:02.04 |
There are a couple of notable differences between the women’s and men’s tables. First, the men’s table has two events where the top time stayed the same. No one went faster than Ilya Kharun’s 1:38.74 in the 200 fly or Hubert Kos’ 1:40.51 in the 200 IM. Kharun was one of the most electrifying swimmers through the first months of the NCAA season. At one point, he held the league’s top time in four events. He’s only retrained his 200 fly top time post-midseason invites, as Jordan Crooks exploded at the Tennessee Invitational.
Crooks has the most league-leading times with four. Crooks took over the sprint freestyles and the 100 fly, clocking 18.12/40.26 in the 50/100 free and leading off the 800 free relay with a 1:30.00 Both his 100 and 200 free times were lifetime bests, as was his 43.77 in the 100 fly. He and Kharun are the two swimmers to break 44 seconds in the 100 fly this season.
Rex Maurer is right behind him with three and has dominated the collegiate distance scene. He set an American record in the 500 freestyle an hour after Carson Foster, swimming a blistering 4:04.45. He also owns the top time in the 1650 free (14:30.47) and 400 IM (3:34.19). The Longhorn men own seven NCAA top times. In addition to Maurer and Kos, Will Modglin has both backstroke top times (43.91/1:37.84), and the program has the fastest 800 freestyle relay time.
The other noticeable difference between the women’s table and the men’s is the presence of mid-major schools. This was true before invites as well, though now there are more mid-major swimmers present. Mitchell Schott’s 400 IM time is no longer in the top three, but Noah Millard (500 freestyle), Johnny Crush (100 backstroke), and Matt Fallon (200 breaststroke) all swim for mid-major schools.
And while program newcomers were more prevalent on the women’s side, there are still plenty here. Owen McDonald has been a factor for Indiana, and freshmen like Crush and Yamato Okadome are contributing heavily to their programs, too.
In all, five programs have at least one league-leading time: Texas (7), Tennessee (6), Arizona State (2), Florida (2), and Virginia Tech (1). Ten other schools appear on the table as well: Alabama, Yale, Army, Indiana, Georgia, Ohio State, Virginia, Cal, Penn, and Texas A&M.
The events where the same person or program got faster to retain their top spot in the league were the 500 freestyle, 100 backstroke, 200 breaststroke, 400 IM, and 200 freestyle relay. The 50 free, 100 free, 200 free, 1650 free, 200 backstroke, 100 breaststroke, 100 butterfly, 400 free relay, 800 free relay, 200 medley relay, and 400 medley relay all changed hands during invites.
and some kid named Heilman would be third in the 100 fly but he’s still in high school!
Charlotte Crush would be third in two events and only a junior!
In fairness this is much more common for girls but I agree both are impressive in their own right
And second in the 200.
I was thinking about Crooks’ chances at taking down some of Dressels records and it got me thinking about the 50 free.
I’m 40 and I think that in my lifetime I will get to see someone go 16.** in the 50 free and that thought simply breaks my brain. I was swimming when someone finally broke 19 and I thought we were pushing the limit then. What a world!
I am 69 and watched the first person (Joe Bottom) break 20 at NCAA s in 1977. We were amazed then. How do you think my brain feels?
Johnny Crush mentioned rahhhh!
Liendo top 3 in the 200 fly but not in the 50 free/100 free/100 fly is funny
And Jett top 3 in exactly one event (not the one you’d think!)
Men’s CSCAA swimmer of the year race should be electric. Crooks and Kos have to be the frontrunners so far but with Leon gone it feels way more open
Liendo vs Crooks 3 is going to be the best round yet
Mauer should be in conversation as well
I hear you, but I just don’t know if he has a clear path in a 3rd event
He looks like a favorite in the 500 free, 400 IM, and 1650, no?
I don’t think there’s a clear picture how fast Kos can go in the 4IM. His best comes from an in-season meet and could upset Mauer. Maybe he doesn’t compete it though, we’ll see.
He probably won’t compete in it, and he would be Maurer’s only true challenger at this point.
He definitely isn’t a favourite over Sarkany in the 1650.