The NCAA Men’s and Women’s Swimming and Diving Rules Committee has approved expanding the real-time use of underwater cameras, when available, to make calls on disqualifications.
Under previous NCAA rules, underwater cameras were allowed to confirm violations called by an official on deck. The new rule change allows officials to use the cameras to make original calls.
This approval brings NCAA rules in line with international swimming, which already allows infraction calls to be initiated with the use of video review equipment.
In the official NCAA press release, committee members stated: “Officials should use the technology, if available, with the goal of ensuring the proper application of the technical rules.”
Additionally, the committee also approved the use of video review to determine whether the starter’s call for a false start in individual events is accurate.
The NCAA described the procedure as follows in their press release:
Video review can be used at championship or invitational competitions governed by a meet or games committee composed of representatives of multiple schools.
Before the beginning of the competition, a decision will be made by the meet committee as to when video reviews will be conducted, and all participants should be informed.
If video review is in place in championship meets, all disqualifications will be reviewed to evaluate whether the false start should be upheld. The referee and a conference or NCAA meet committee representative with no participating school affiliation can review the video to determine whether clear evidence exists to overturn the call.
The referee will have sole authority over the review. The decision will be a judgment call not subject to further review or appeal.
Other Approved Changes
- 50-yard stroke events are now allowed to be included in championship meets, and the committee clarified that in the event of an appeal in championship meets, “the meet committee has the authority to act in cases of procedure but not to overturn rules violations.”
- Allow the order of consolation and championship finals to be decided by the respective championship committee.
- Clarify that changing lanes for any reason during a race, while other swimmers are still competing, would result in disqualification (the Owen Lloyd rule).
- Align diving technical rules with USA Swimming and World Aquatics standards.
- Proximity to the diving board during the flight.
- Definition of tuck position.
- Description of diving positions.
- Align diving referee duties and responsibilities with USA Swimming and World Aquatics standards.
- Protocols for inclement weather.
- Clarification of points allocation and process for wrong position.
- Declaration of failed dives.

Honest question…Why don’t pools have a line going across the bottom to mark the 15 meter, a line swimmers can actually see? We don’t make basketball players guess the 3 point line…
100 breast getting won with a 50.8 this year
Ray Loose breaststroke group is punching walls right now
Breaststrokers are shook 😂
A turtle speed shift of underwater video and 50s of the strokes – ABOUT TIME!
NOW ADD: 25s of every stroke, 100 IM, 800 Med Relay, flip turns on all strokes and add 25/50/200 relay of underwater races.
50s of stroke allowed in championship meets? That’s exciting
Exactly which is why many of the readers downvote. So many are stuck in the mud of the traditional. (BORING)
B finals for breastroke just gonna be 4 swimmers who didn’t get DQd lol
This would’ve been devastating in 2021: https://youtu.be/XT1W20ZZNsg?t=157
The DQ allegations towards Alex just keep coming…
Not sure why you’re picking on Alex. It’s safe to say that if they had this any year over the last 40 to 50 years, someone would have been DQd. They basically didn’t make calls at NCAAs until probably the early 2000s. You had like four real officials and a bunch of high school coaches from the NISCA conference on deck as stroke and turn officials. If that sounds insane, you should have seen it in person. The directive was don’t make a call. Pat Lunsford worked with the NCAA to help change that. Relay takeoffs were also definitely not called frequently in some places back in the day, and certainly not at the championship meet. Takeoff pads and video… Read more »
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