How Has the New Day 3 Event Lineup Affected Swimmers at 2025 Women’s NCAAs?

2025 NCAA Division I Women’s Swimming and Diving Championships

You would have been forgiven had you yelled at your ESPN screen this morning in prelims, “Wrong event!” Although the 2025 NCAA Division I Women’s Psych Sheet listed the 400 IM as the first event of the day, it was in fact the butterflyers who kicked off the heats.

At their April 2024 meeting, the NCAA Division I Men’s and Women’s Swimming & Diving Committee discussed, among other things, a proposal to change the NCAA Championship event schedule, swapping the order of the 400 IM and 100 fly on Day 3. As we reported when the notes from this meeting were released, the pretense for the change was that the 100 fly/100 back double is by far the most common same-day double in collegiate swimming, and moving those events further apart would make that double more plausible.

The proposal was eventually approved and the 2025 NCAA Division I Championships are the first to feature the 100 fly preceding the 400 IM on Day 3.

Day 3 Finals Schedule  
2025 Start Time
100 fly consolation final 6:03 PM
400 IM consolation final 6:19 PM
200 free consolation final 6:40 PM
100 breast consolation final 6:56 PM
100 back consolation final 7:10 PM
2024 Start Time
400 IM consolation final 6:03 PM
100 fly consolation final 6:23 PM
200 free consolation final 6:37 PM
100 breast consolation final 6:53 PM
100 back consolation final 7:07 PM

We wondered if this might encourage more swimmers to double up with the extra 23 minutes between the 100 fly and the 100 back. Here is what we found.

16 swimmers were slated to swim the 100 fly and a second event (either the 100 back or 100 breast) on Day 3 at the 2024 NCAA Women’s Championships, but only six of them (Olivia Bray of Texas, Miranda Grana from Texas A&M, USC’s Caroline Famous, Alabama’s Gabrielle Van Brunt, Morgan Kraus from Ohio State, and UVA’s Carly Novelline) swam in both their events. Florida’s Olivia Peoples dropped the 100 breast after competing in the 100 fly in prelims. Auburn’s Meghan Lee and Florida State’s Jenny Halden swam in prelims of the 100 fly but scratched the 100 back. The rest either scratched the 100 fly to focus on the 100 breast (Joleigh Crye of Cincinnati) or the 100 back (SIU’s Celia Pulido, Mackenzie McConagha of Wisconsin, Alex Roberts from San Diego State, and Auburn’s Ellie Waldrup).

A year later, 17 swimmers were on the psych sheet with two events. This year no one attempted the fly/breast combination but seven swimmers doubled up with the fly/back: Bray, Famous, Novelline, and Grana, as well as Leah Shackley (NC State), Erika Pelaez (NC State), and Mackenzie McConagha (Wisconsin). It is interesting to note that McConagha scratched the 100 fly last year to focus on the back but chose to compete in both events this year. Peoples swam the fly this year and scratched the breast. Abigail Arens of Texas did the same thing. They both made the A final in the fly. Cincinnati’s Crye focused on the breast, as she had last year. Lora Komoroczy of Auburn, SIU’s Pulido, Nyah Funderburke from Ohio State, and Zoe Carlos-Broc of LSU opted for the backstroke only. Scarlett Ferris of Nevada did not swim in either event.

2025 NCAA Women’s Championships

Swimmer Team Event 1 Psych Rank Psych Time Prelims Rank Prelims Time Finals Rank Finals Time Event 2 Psych Rank Psych Time Prelims Rank Prelims Time Finals Rank Finals Time
Leah Shackley NC State 100 fly 4 50.33 11 51.08 9 50.59 100 back 6 50.22 T6 50.23 6 50.06
Miranda Grana Indiana 100 fly 6 50.80 5 50.79 4 50.01 100 back 9 50.69 T6 50.23 3 49.62
Olivia Bray Texas 100 fly 13 51.26 18 51.53 100 back 29 51.52 39 52.28
Carly Novelline Virginia 100 fly 18 51.5 23 51.81 100 back 36 51.68 40 52.32
Erika Pelaez NC State 100 fly 33 51.81 10 51.07 10 50.65 100 back 8 50.46 11 50.47 11 50.53
Caroline Famous USC 100 fly 36 51.84 27 51.94 100 back 24 51.37 36 52.07
Mackenzie McConagha Wisconsin 100 fly 50 52.52 47 53.40 100 back 39 51.86 49 53.76
Lora Komoroczy Auburn 100 fly 26 51.65 DFS 100 back 21 51.21 17 51.28
Joleigh Crye Cincinnati 100 fly 43 52.13 SCR 100 breast 7 58.09 6 58.15 4 58.11
Celia Pulido SIU 100 fly 44 52.25 SCR 100 back 17 51.07 3 49.84 4 49.77
Nyah Funderburke Ohio State 100 fly 47 52.36 SCR 100 back 19 51.18 20 51.34
Zoe Carlos-Broc LSU 100 fly 48 52.38 SCR 100 back 33 51.6 26 51.72
Olivia Peoples Florida 100 fly 8 50.96 8 51.02 8 51.09 100 breast 46 1:00.6 SCR
Abigail Arens Texas 100 fly 9 51.01 6 50.81 6 50.90 100 breast 12 58.49 SCR
Alexis Greenhawt Michigan 100 fly 26 51.65 37 52.26 100 back 49 52.45 SCR
Annika Parkhe Stanford 100 fly 30 51.7 34 52.21 100 back 44 52.04 DFS
Scarlett Ferris Nevada 100 fly 54 52.74 SCR 100 back 33 51.60 SCR

2024 NCAA Women’s Championships

Swimmer Team Event 1 Psych Rank Psych Time Prelims Rank Prelims Time Finals Rank Finals Time Event 2 Psych Rank Psych Time Prelims Rank Prelims Time Finals Rank Finals Time
Olivia Bray Texas 100 fly 4 50.47 3 50.33 3 50.52 100 back 16 51.7 12 51.39 11 51.15
Miranda Grana Texas A&M 100 fly 16 51.32 25 51.76 100 back 5 50.65 8 50.99 8 51.65
Caroline Famous USC 100 fly 25 51.64 20 51.48 100 back 7 50.78 9 51.01 14 51.44
Gabrielle Van Brunt Alabama 100 fly 26 51.68 43 52.35 100 back 54 53.69 36 52.52
Morgan Kraus Ohio State 100 fly 29 51.76 23 51.62 100 back 39 52.31 34 52.30
Carly Novelline Virginia 100 fly 30 51.77 22 51.60 100 back 18 51.72 20 51.69
Ellie Waldrep Auburn 100 fly 43 52.29 DFS 100 back 23 51.98 22 51.81
Celia Pulido SIU 100 fly 56 52.75 SCR 100 back 20 51.82 7 50.98 7 50.73
Mackenzie McConagha Wisconsin 100 fly 57 52.79 SCR 100 back 12 51.46 46 53.15
Alex Roberts San Diego State 100 fly 60 52.96 SCR 100 back 22 51.95 30 52.08
Joleigh Crye Cincinnati 100 fly 64 53.34 SCR 100 breast 8 58.24 12 58.61 13 58.73
Olivia Peoples Florida 100 fly 4 50.47 T5 50.85 6 50.93 100 breast 45 1:00.3 SCR
Meghan Lee Auburn 100 fly 6 50.66 T5 50.85 5 50.72 100 back 24 51.99 DFS
Jenny Halden Florida State 100 fly 34 51.83 36 52.10 100 back 52 53.52 SCR
Miriam Sheehan NC State 100 fly 49 52.41 DFS 100 back 37 52.28 SCR

While it might be premature to draw any sweeping conclusions from the first championships with the new schedule, it is reasonable to assume that those 23 minutes might make a difference in the way coaches and swimmers plan their championship meet lineup going forward.

 

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About Anne Lepesant

Anne Lepesant

Anne Lepesant is the mother of four daughters, all of whom swam in college. With an undergraduate degree from Princeton (where she was an all-Ivy tennis player) and an MBA from INSEAD, she worked for many years in the financial industry, both in France and the U.S. Anne is currently …

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