After deferring his enrollment at the University of Texas, World Championship bronze medalist Ksawery Masiuk reaffirmed his commitment to the Longhorns by officially signing with the team.
4/15/25 Update: Texas confirmed to SwimSwam it expects Masiuk will have “two possibly three years” of eligibility.
Masiuk, who is also a four-time World Junior champion, originally committed to Texas in October 2024, with plans to arrive in January and help the teamβs postseason push. However, Masiuk deferred his enrollment until fall 2025, citing βformalitiesβ as the reason for the delay.
One of Europe’s best is officially a Longhorn π€#HookEm pic.twitter.com/pKbGBfNUOe
β Texas Men’s Swimming & Diving (@TexasMSD) April 14, 2025
This isnβt the first time that Masiuk has been attached to an NCAA team. He previously committed to NC State in the fall of 2023, but changed his mind last April, deciding to stay and train in his home nation, Poland, under coach Pawel Wolkow. When Masiuk deferred his initial plans with Texas, it seemed like the same pattern was about to play out; however, signing with the team now is a strong indication Masiuk will compete in the NCAA next season.
Masiukβs Best Times LCM/SCM:
- 50 free β 22.77/21.97
- 100 free β 48.37/46.29
- 200 free β 1:48.93/1:45.58
- 50 back β 24.44/23.29
- 100 back β 52.58/50.43
- 200 back β 1:56.48/1:52.86
- 50 fly β 23.59/22.94
- 100 fly β 52.18/50.33
Masiuk is best known for his backstroke capabilities as he won bronze medals at the 2022 and 2024 World Championships in the 50 backstroke. But heβs a capable sprint freestyler as well, swimming on Polandβs historic bronze medal-winning 4×100 freestyle relay at the 2024 Short Course World Championships. Itβs those abilities that make him particularly attractive to the Longhorns. Sprint freestyle was one of the holes in the newly crowned NCAA Menβs champions roster, which they plugged with Chris Guiliano.
However, with Giuliano and 200 freestyle star Luke Hobson out of eligibility, the Longhorns find themselves back on the hunt for sprint freestylers ahead of the 2025-26 season. After improving to 52.18 in the long-course 100-meter butterfly last month, he’s got an intriguing best in the event that suggests he could develop that event in the yards pool. Whichever of his events he chooses to pursue in his NCAA lineup, Masiuk projects as a significant scorer in the individual events based on his lifetime bests. But the value he could bring to Texasβ relays cements him as a particularly valuable recruit.
While this signing reaffirms Masiukβs original commitment to the program, it still caps a busy week for Texas. Last week, the Longhorns signed Texas A&M transfers Jacob Wimberly and Baylor Nelson as they load up for a title defense.
Nah weβre cooked π»
Please. You guys will be fine, after signing Milak, Popovici, Pan, Chalmers, Ceccon and Wiffen in January.
The other Wiffen**
What? No, both Wiffens. And Kolesnikov for good measure.
But like how do we say this guys first name?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Vz6MCBCWkQ&t=11s
With all the swimmers headed to Texas, aren’t they over 22 team members which is apparently the limit in the SEC?
Welcome to the Longhorns!
Does Andrew Shackel still have a slot in the team? Or have they hooked him out? His times are not Texas calibre tbh.
He left the team after their midseason meet, and I donβt think he has any intentions of going back. Regardless of what you feel about the Shackells, his times coming out of high school were definitely βTexas caliberβ – anyone thatβs a 1:32/4:15 freestyler in high school could find a place on any NCAA team
you have brothers mixed up. Andrew is still in HS but committed a while back. Seems obvious for a while that he won’t ever make it to campus.
Youβre talking about Aaron who left Texas, heβs referring to Alexβs twin brother Andrew Shackell who committed for 2025.
My bad, I misread that. I donβt believe Andrew is going to Texas anymore
Looks like he took down his commitment photo and took it out of his bio.
I am shaking in my boots for the havoc he is about to wreck π€ πππ΅π±πΊπΈπππ
*wreak
πππ
REK!
I dunno, I think heβs speaking Texanβ¦
Do we know if he’s getting the full 4 years? Figured it’s worth asking since he’ll be 21 in December, and eligibility has been a per person case for international swimmers recently.
We don’t, but I’ll ask
Will need to ask Cal on how they can get him past 26 years old …
Huge pickup to an already pretty stacked team