Breakdown: USA Swimming’s Last List of Olympic Trials Qualifiers

USA Swimming’s final lists of Olympic Trials qualifiers prior to the official psych sheets have been posted, through the Charlotte UltraSwim Grand Prix, and so it’s time to have some fun with numbers.

First, for reference, here are the lists:

Men’s Olympic Trials Qualifiers.
Women’s Olympic Trials Qualifiers.

A few limitations. There are still swimmers included in these lists who have dual citizenship with the United States and another country or are USA Swimming members, and have already declared that they are competing for another country. For example, swimmers like Eric Ress (France) and Stephanie Au (Hong Kong).

There will also be more qualifications in the coming few weeks, as the country rolls into long course season. We already know of a few notable Olympic Trials cuts since Charlotte – including 40-year old Erika Braun in North Carolina.

But aside from that, we can come up with some pretty interesting facts and figures.

Number of Swimmers & Entries

First, the most hotly-debated numbers: how many Olympic Trials qualifiers will there be?

Women – 1040 qualifiers
Men – 1030 qualifiers

If we presume that there’s maybe 75 swimmers of either gender who aren’t actually going to race (that includes swimmers who have retired, swimmers who are competing for other countries, and swimmers who just don’t swim) we’re staring down the barrell of 1900 swimmers. The gender ratio is actually a shift from post summer Nationals, where there were a few more males that qualified than females (776-734)

Though there’s nearly an identical number of qualifiers, the number of entries by each woman, on average is higher than each male competitor, though the gap has closed since August.

Women – 1998 entries (1.92 entries/athlete
Men – 1854 entries (1.8 entries/athlete)

Both of these entries per athlete numbers have dropped since fall, speaking to more swimmers who have gotten their cuts in a single event during the winter season.

Youngest/Oldest

Let’s look at some superlatives about the youngest and oldest qualifiers. On the women’s side, 5 different swimmers have qualified in 2012 at only 13 years old – Keaton Blovad of the Phoenix Swim Club, Claire Adams of the Carmel Swim Club, Courtney Mykkanen from Irvine Novaquatics, Courtney Hanson from La Mirada, and Lauren Case from the Chatahoochee Swim Club in Georgia.

Of those three, only Adams and Blovad will stil be 13 by the time the trials roll around, and Blovad is the younger of those two. Blovad, who is qualified in the 100 back with a 1:03.43, almost scored her second Olympic Trials cut in the 50 free at this weekend’s Speedo Grand Challenge in Irvine (the home pool of Mykkanen). But it appears that we will have no super-young qualifiers ala Dana Vollmer at this year’s meet.

On the men’s side, there won’t be any swimmers under the age of 15 in attendance.

At the other end, the most recent official lists have three swimmers qualified over the age of 40 – Janet Evans (40), Dara Torres (45), and Steve West (40). We also know that Erika Braun also has her 50 freestyle cut from post-Charlotte, so that’s another 40-year old.

Further highlighting how early female swimmers retire, there are only 8 Olympic Trials qualifiers on the list so far who will even be 30 and over; aside from the 40+ crew, the next-oldest is T2’s Erika Erndl at 33. The men’s side will have roughly double that many over the age of 30.

Teams with Most Qualifiers

We also wanted to take a look at which programs were producing the most Olympic Trials qualifiers. Often times, this math can be fuzzy for post-grads who change teams very frequently and don’t always officially repreesent the team that they’re actually training with. But, if we give each team credit for every Olympic Trials qualifier who swam a best time while officially representing them, there are 16 programs with 15 or more Olympic Trials qualifiers. Most of the teams on this list are not that surprising – including Tucson Ford and their massive postgrad group with 45 qualifiers. But Boilermaker Aquatics – the Purdue-affiliated team – is a bit of a surprise.

Two of the best junior-level clubs in the country, the Bolles School and Curl Burke, are just behind with 14 qualifiers each.

Tucson Ford Dealers 45
SwimMAC Carolina  38
Longhorn Aquatics  37
California Aquatics  32
North Baltimore Aquatic 29
Indiana University  29
Stanford Swimming  28
Tennessee Aquatics  22
Club Wolverine  21
Ohio State University 20
Boilermaker Aquatics  19
FAST Swim Team 16
Trojan Swim Club 16
Minnesota Aquatics  16
Athens Bulldog Swim 16
Mission Viejo Nadadores 15

Separated by LSC, 56 of the 59 USA Swimming LSC’s have qualifiers. The lone exceptions are the Border Swimming LSC (near El Paso); the Alaska LSC; and the Maine LSC. Based on the same criteria as above, California not surprisingly dominates the lists, with the two most qualified LSC’s. In order, the top-10 LSC’s:

Southern California Swimming – 161
Pacific Coast Swimming – 124
Florida Swimming – 105
Indiana – 92
North Carolina Swimming – 92
Southeastern Swimming (Tennessee/Alabama/Western half of the Florida Panhandle) – 88
Middle Atlantic – 80
Georgia – 76
Ohio – 76
Arizona – 71

In most cases, these numbers are skewed heavily by the presence of big post-grad teams. For example, a huge chunk of Southeastern Swimming’s entry is made of swimmers from Auburnand Tennessee. More than half of the swimmers in the Arizona LSC come from a single program at Tucson Ford.

 

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Riley
9 years ago

What year is this information gathered from?

ChestRockwell
11 years ago

Anyone know off hand how many of those LSC’s in the top ten have high school associations that ban athletes from training with their club team during the HS season? For example, I know in CA, the athletes can train club and swim HS, but in other states, the swimmers can’t even speak to their club coach. Just wondering if there is a link between Club/HS harmony and the number of athletes who have made OT cuts. Is there an 18/U breakdown? This would be an interesting research project.

ChestRockwell
Reply to  Braden Keith
11 years ago

The thing that I’m trying to root out is whether an LSC that exists in a place where flexibility for athletes is a reality sees a higher level of success than those forced to play by the restrictive high school governing body’s rules. In my head, the answer has to be “yes” but I’d be interested in some numbers to back me up. One would also need to know the number of 18/U swimmers registered to an LSC. The real info one needs to root out is the state’s rules governing HS swimming. I know that USA Swimming offers data on Under 18 OT Quals by LSC, but I haven’t seen an updated one in a while.

John Sampson
11 years ago

Who has the most cuts? I saw kukors and tosky alot, as well as ryan lochte.

Coach
Reply to  John Sampson
11 years ago

Tosky has 12 of 13 cuts with only the 100 back missing. May pick up at SCSC Grand Prix this weekend.

Wonkabar23
11 years ago

When do you expect the psych sheet to be released. Need to start working on my predictions?

completelyconquered
Reply to  Braden Keith
11 years ago

We need to do an US Olympic Trials fantasy league.

SwimCoach
11 years ago

Florida State is not in the Southeastern LSC.

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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