NCAA Releases Official Psych Sheets for 2026 NCAA Division III Championships

2026 NCAA DIII Men’s and Women’s Swimming and Diving Championships

  • March 18-21, 2026
  • Location: IUPUI Natatorium, Indianapolis IN
  • Defending Champs: MIT women (1x) & Denison men (1x)

The official psych sheets for this year’s NCAA Division III Swimming and Diving Championships were released earlier this week, giving us a peek at the meet to come in two weeks. The NCAA Diving Regional Qualifiers wrapped up last weekend, so these reflect teams’ final rosters.

In total, 579 athletes will participate at their year’s championships.

Men’s Meet

Emory leads the number of swimming qualifiers with a roster of 15. The Eagles placed 2nd at last year’s championships. They will also have one diver competing on the boards.

NYU is set to bring a squad of 14 swimmers. The Violets matched their program-best finish at last year’s championships, raising the 4th place trophy for the second year in a row.

Defending champions Denison round out the top three teams in terms of swimming qualifiers. Last year, the Big Red swam to a dominant team title without winning a single event title. They will also have three divers competing this year who will add crucial points in their quest for a repeat.

Centre College qualified the most divers of any men’s team. Last year, they had five athletes compete on the boards; all non-graduating athletes return to the championships this year. The diving powerhouse will also have one swimmer at the meet.

MIT has three athletes on the alternates list, the most of any institution. All the schools on the alternates list are already represented elsewhere in the meet.

Men’s Teams With Most Swimmers Qualified

  1. Emory – 15
  2. NYU – 14
  3. Dension – 12
  4. Chicago – 11
  5. CMU/JHU/Kenyon – 10
  6. Williams/TCNJ/Tufts – 9

Men’s Teams With Multiple Divers Qualified

  1. Centre – 4
  2. Denison – 3
  3. Williams – 2

Men’s Links

Women’s Meet

Emory and NYU are tied for swimming qualifiers with 17 each. The Eagles are also tied with Chicago for the most divers. Emory finished 5th last year.

NYU placed 2nd behind MIT last year, a program high. The Violets held the lead at the start of the last day of the meet, but were eventually passed by the Engineers for a 27 point margin. They will bring two divers to the meet.

Kenyon, who placed 3rd last year, are set to bring 16 qualifiers. Defending champions MIT qualified 15 swimmers and two divers. The squad that won the Engineers their first team title in program history totalled 10 swimmers and two divers.

Women’s Teams With Most Swimmers Qualified

  1. Emory/NYU – 17
  2. Kenyon – 16
  3. MIT – 15
  4. Denison – 14
  5. Tufts – 13
  6. PP/Williams – 11
  7. Colby/JHU/Salisbury/Swarthmore – 10

Women’s Teams With Multiple Divers Qualified

  1. Emory/Chicago – 3
  2. Amherst/Hope/Ithaca/MIT/NYU/RIT/SUNY Geneseo – 2

Women’s Links

Swimmers may be entered in a maximum of eight events, five relays and three individual events, but are only permitted to compete in a maximum of seven events, with a maximum of three individual events. Once a swimmer is selected in one event, they are able to enter additional events in which they have the ‘B’ cut time.

Divers qualify to the meet through one of the four Regional Qualifiers, which has a set number of spots available per region. An athlete only competing in diving counts as 1/3 towards a team’s roster cap, which is 18.

This year’s cut line fell around 16 for the men and 32 for the women. This is the same number for last year’s men, but the women dropped significantly from 25 last year. However, the pre-selection psych sheets had the women’s cutline around 29.

Women’s Cutline Time – 2025 vs 2026

2025 Cut 2025 Cut
50 Free 23.38 23.45
100 Free 51.01 51.13
200 Free 1:51.49 1:51.81
500 Free 4:58.57 4:59.75
1650 Free 17:19.16 17:21.11
100 Back 56.13 56.34
200 Back 2:02.01 2:02.75
100 Breast 1:03.44 1:04.12
200 Breast 2:19.42 2:20.07
100 Fly 55.48 55.83
200 Fly 2:03.90 2:04.53
200 IM 2:05.42 2:05.44
400 IM 4:26.91 4:28.76

Men’s Cutline Time – 2025 vs 2026

2025 Cut 2026 Cut
50 Free 20.14 20.05
100 Free 44.39 44.33
200 Free 1:38.05 1:37.84
500 Free 4:27.21 4:28.72
1650 Free 15:36.67 15:40.80
100 Back 48.67 48.20
200 Back 1:47.04 1:47.17
100 Breast 54.46 54.36
200 Breast 1:59.71 1:59.20
100 Fly 48.15 48.02
200 Fly 1:47.90 1:48.05
200 IM 1:48.81 1:48.57
400 IM 3:54.62 3:54.83

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Megaman Main
3 months ago

Does anyone have the scored out meet for men and women?

Editor
Reply to  Megaman Main
3 months ago

I’ve done the score out. We’re working on a write up

D3swammer
3 months ago

anyone else excited to see what happens in the mens sprint free events?

PFA
Reply to  D3swammer
3 months ago

It’s actually insane how deep it got in 1 year. There’s 5 guys at 43.16 or faster which is wild. The men’s 100 free is arguably the most exciting event this year. Multiple guys could break the record this year and get down to 42 mid. I legit could see up to 18 D3 records being threatened this year which is crazy.

LizR
Reply to  D3swammer
3 months ago

I’m excited for all of it!

Juan Cena
3 months ago

Top 16 or 17 per event invited for men, but top 27 to 33 invited for women? Every single individual invited time got slower than last year on the women’s side.

J J
Reply to  Juan Cena
3 months ago

The fact that d3 still uses the pre-2014 d1 qualification model is absurd IMO. The lines vary so much every year just depending on how many relay-only swimmers there are – you also leave objectively faster swimmers at home in exchange for people who sneak in on relays.

Realistically, if we used the d1 model (pre 2025), the line for men and women would shift to 25/30 naturally anyways, and most of the people who were relay-onlys would be under that line anyways. The only thing you’d be preventing is letting people get carried to the meet on relays that take up space – using the d1 model where schools get to bring more relay alternates that don’t count towards… Read more »

flipngo
Reply to  Juan Cena
3 months ago

And, for two relays on the men’s side, only 15 teams got invited (not the “regular” 16). Disappointing for the men on that 16th relay!

bailey
Reply to  flipngo
3 months ago

Yeah bad luck on the last few lines/tiebreaks for those 2 relays. That is incredibly tough

bailey
Reply to  Juan Cena
3 months ago

More women always get invited then the men for division 3, 290 vs 236. I believe it is because there is more womens teams overall. But it seems like the top teams are pretty much the same for both genders so imo the mens meet is a lot harder to qualify for.

Go Big Red
3 months ago

Men’s Scores (No Diving)

Psych sheets are out for NCAAs

Denison
505

NYU
464

Chicago
454

Emory
318

CMU
317

Bates
309

Kenyon
297

GBR
Reply to  Go Big Red
3 months ago

I scored it much differently….but I like your numbers better….GO BIG RED.

Denison Fan
Reply to  Go Big Red
3 months ago

This scoring is very far off from the psych sheet scored out based on ncaa point values. NYU is ahead. GBR tho!