Revisiting NCAA Recruit Rankings: Men’s High School Class of 2021

Each summer, college swimming fans look forward to recruiting – the lifeblood of any NCAA swim program. Since 2012, we’ve been ranking down the top NCAA prospects in the nation from each recruiting class. But sports are inherently unpredictable, and even the most sure-fire prospect can go awry or completely change their role over four years.

As we do each year, we’ll look back at the high school class of 2021, which just finished four years of college eligibility this spring.

First, a few notes:

  • Most of the data we’re tracking here deals with NCAA scoring. Obviously, some swimmers are great assets for their teams in dual meets and conference competition without ever being national factors. While we don’t discount the impact of those types of swimmers, the difference in competition between various teams’ dual meet schedules and conference meets makes NCAA scoring the best “apples to apples” comparisons between swimmers.
  • Relays are another point of contention, as a swimmer in a strong program has more opportunity for NCAA relays, though they also have more competition for those relay spots. We’ve left relay results out of the data below, except where specifically indicated. That, too, gives us a more fair comparison between athletes.
  • We don’t rank diving recruits, but we have started to track individual diving scoring, which is helpful in determining how much of an impact a diver is likely to have on NCAA finish.
  • We did our best to scour NCAA results over the past four-plus years, but it’s certainly possible we made a mistake in compiling our data. If you spot an error, please respectfully let us know in the comment section so we can update our work!

We only include domestic recruits in our recruit rankings, as it’s often harder to predict if and when an international recruit will join the NCAA, and which class they should be ranked with. However, we’ve gone back through and tallied up all individual scorers that roughly fit into this class – international and domestic.

REVISITING OUR TOP 20

Check out this post for our analysis of the top 20 recruits in the high school class of 2021. For the sake of being the most accurate in terms of gauging a swimmer’s pre-college ability, we’re using the re-ank of the class after their senior year of high school rather than the original ranks from their junior seasons.

Here’s a look at our top 20 recruits, plus how many individual points they scored at NCAAs in each of their four years:

Note: we’ve made an effort to put a dash (–) in a season in which an athlete didn’t compete (or was cut short due to injury) rather than “no invite”. If you see an error please let us know in the comments.

Rank Name College Team Total NCAA Points 2022 NCAA Points 2023 NCAA Points 2024 NCAA Points
2025 NCAA Points
1 Aiden Hayes NC State 84 15 33 36
2 Josh Matheny Indiana 47 0 24 13 10
3 Jack Aikins Virginia 9 9 0 redshirt 0
4 Anthony Grimm Texas/Virginia 0 0
5 Matt Fallon Penn 56.5 22.5 17 17
6 Jack Alexy Cal 121.5 0 30 49 42.5
7 Arsenio Bustos NC State 54 no invite 21 33
8 Tim Connery Texas/Virginia 4 0 0 4
9 David Curtiss NC State 4.5 2 2.5
10 Luke Hobson Texas 146 18 40 43 45
11 Luke Barr Indiana 14 no invite 0 7 7
12 Sam Hoover NC State 0 0 no invite 0 relay-only
13 Matthew Fenlon Stanford 0 no invite no invite no invite no invite
14 Henry Bethel Auburn 0 no invite 0 0 relay-only
15 Jacques Rathle Auburn 0 0 0 0 no invite
16 Ziyad Saleem Cal 0 no invite no invite no invite no invite
17 Brady Samuels Purdue 3 relay-only 1 no invite 2
18 Trent Frandson Cal 0 no invite no invite 0 no invite
19 Nate Stoffle Auburn 11 0 11 0 0
20 Daniel Matheson USC/Arizona State 26 0 3 14 9
HM Max Iida Virginia 0 no invite no invite no invite
HM Connor Hunt Michigan 0 no invite no invite no invite no invite
HM Tyler Lu Northwestern 0 no invite no invite no invite 0
HM Hayden Zheng Stanford 0 no invite no invite no invite no invite
HM Garrett Boone NC State 0 no invite
HM Tyler Hulet Texas A&M 0 no invite no invite relay-only no invite
HM Alex McMahon Arizona 0 no invite
HM Mateo Miceli Alabama/Louisville 0 no invite 0 no invite no invite

The Hits:

  • The two recruits from this class who have eclipsed the 100-point barrier through four NCAA seasons have both evolved into two of the best freestylers in the United States at present, Luke Hobson and Jack Alexy.
  • After scoring 18 points as a freshman, Hobson has reeled off three straight NCAA titles in the 200 free, eclipsing 40 points in all three seasons including a career-high 45 points as a senior. The 200 and 500 free were Hobson’s bread and butter, and after scoring one point in the mile as a freshman, he transitioned to the 100 free as his third event, placing 17th as a sophomore before back-to-back ‘B’ final appearances.
  • Alexy finished 23rd in the 50 and 100 free as a freshman, but really took off after that, scoring 121.5 points for Cal in his last three seasons, including 49 as a junior when he was 2nd in the 200 free and 3rd in both the 50 and 100 free. As a senior, he was 4th in the 100 free and 5th in the 50 and 200 free.
  • The top-ranked recruit in this class coming out of high school, NC State’s Aiden Hayes, was well on his way to surpassing 100 points before missing his senior season due to injury. His teammate Arsenio Bustos also missed the season due to injury after scoring 54 points combined in his sophomore and junior years.
  • The #2 ranked recruit, Josh Matheny, scored in his sophomore, junior and senior seasons, with 24 in 2023 being his best showing when he was 4th in the 200 breast and 9th in the 100 breast. He made his second career ‘A’ final last season, taking 6th in the 100 breast.
  • Penn’s Matt Fallon has finished no lower than 3rd in the 200 breast across his three NCAA Championship appearances, missing the 2023 meet due to injury. He also scored in the 100 breast as a freshman and produced 56.5 points in three seasons.
  • The #20 recruit Daniel Matheson had his highest finish as a freshman come in the mile, where he was 26th, and then he scored in three straight years at Arizona State, including 14 points as a junior when he was 11th in both the 1650 and 400 IM.
  • Indiana’s Luke Barr progressed each of his four years with the Hoosiers, going from missing an NCAA invite in 2022, to qualifying in 2023, to scoring in one event in 2024, and ultimately scoring in both the 100 breast (15th) and 200 IM (12th) as a senior.

The Misses:

  • Jack Aikins, the #3 ranked recruit in the class, scored nine points as a freshman at Virginia, but was off form and didn’t score at the 2023 and 2025 meets. He redshirted his junior year and narrowly missed qualifying for the U.S. Olympic team.
  • The two top Texas recruits in this class, Anthony Grimm and Tim Connery, never scored an individual point for the Longhorns during their careers. Both swam for Texas at NCAAs as freshmen in 2022 and then transferred to Virginia. Connery went on to score four points for the Cavaliers in 2024.
  • David Curtiss chipped in a few points for NC State in his first two years while also swimming on some NCAA relays, but announced he was leaving the program prior to the 2023-24 season.
  • Among the recruits ranked 11-20, six of them never scored at NCAAs, and Matt Fenlon (Stanford) and Ziyad Saleem (Cal) never earned an invite.
  • None of the Honorable Mention recruits scored, with only Tyler Lu (Northwestern) and Mateo Miceli (Alabama) earning an NCAA invite during their career.

OTHER IMPACTFUL RECRUITS IN THE HIGH SCHOOL CLASS OF 2021

Of course, not every contributor comes from our top 20 list. Some swimmers develop extremely well in college. Some swimmers slip under our radar, or don’t prove to be late bloomers once they hit the NCAA.

We dug through NCAA results to find the best American swimmers from this class to not appear on our top 20 list. Again, it’s not always easy to account for redshirt years, gap years or mistakes in an athlete’s listed class each season. So if we forgot anyone, please let us know in the comments.

RANK NAME COLLEGE TEAM Total NCAA Points 2022 NCAA POINTS 2023 NCAA POINTS 2024 NCAA Points
2025 NCAA Points
BOTR Gabriel Jett Cal 132 13 46 41 32
BOTR Chris Guiliano Notre Dame 105.5 0 16 45 44.5
Julian Smith Florida 55 no invite 4 18 33
BOTR Jack Kelly Brown 33 no invite 0 11 22
Patrick Sammon Arizona State 30 relay-only 12 3 15
Mason Laur Florida 25 0 6 13 6
Finn Brooks Indiana 24 no invite 0 2 22
Mason Mathias Auburn 20 no invite 2 18 0
Macguire McDuff Florida 11 0 3 8
Aaron Sequeira Stanford 9 0 4 0 5
Chris O’Grady USC 7 1 0 0 6
BOTR Trey Dickey Texas A&M 3 no invite no invite 3 no invite

Standouts:

  • Gabriel Jett was the only unranked domestic recruit to score in four straight NCAA meets and his 132-point total ranks 2nd overall in this class among Americans, only trailing Luke Hobson. Jett, who was featured as a BOTR distance freestyler coming into college, developed into a versatile high-end option for Cal, earning ‘A’ final appearances in four different events during his career. After placing 6th in the 200 fly as a freshman, Jett was a top-eight finisher in eight of his final nine individual races at NCAAs, going three-for-three in ‘A’ finals in his sophomore and junior seasons including a runner-up finish in the 200 free in 2023. As a senior, he was 3rd in the 200 free and 200 back, but had an off swim on Thursday and was 30th in the 500 free.
  • The other 100-point scorer among unranked domestic recruit is Chris Guiliano, who didn’t score as a freshman at Notre Dame but has reeled off 89.5 points in his upperclass years after contributing 16 as a sophomore. In 2024, Guiliano made the first ‘A’ finals of his career by placing 3rd in the 200 free, 4th in the 50 free and 5th in the 100 free for the Fighting Irish, parlaying that success into a berth on the U.S. Olympic team and ultimately walking away with two Olympic medals in Paris. After Notre Dame was suspended for the 2024-25 season, he transferred to Texas, placing 2nd in the 200 free and 5th in the 50 and 100 free to help push the Longhorns to the national title.
  • Florida’s Julian Smith was among the swimmers who steadily progressed throughout his four-year career, starting out by missing an NCAA invite as a freshman and then finishing with an individual national title as a senior. Smith made the first ‘A’ final of his career as a junior, placing 7th in the 100 breast, and then followed up by winning the 100 breast and placing 6th in the 200 IM as a senior. He also grabbed hold of the NCAA, American and U.S. Open Record in the 100 breast at the 2025 SEC Championships.
  • Two other unranked breaststrokers who improved over the course of their careers were Brown’s Jack Kelly and Indiana’s Finn Brooks, who both scored 22 points as seniors.
  • Kelly was an ‘A’ finalist in the 200 breast as a junior, and then cracked the top eight in both breast events as a senior to finish his career with 33 points.
  • Brooks raced the 100 breast for the first time in two years last season, placing 2nd at Big Tens in a PB of 51.30 and then scoring a few points in the 100 fly at NCAAs. He took another massive leap forward in the 100 breast this season, cracking 50 seconds at Big Tens (49.94) before placing 4th at NCAAs. Brooks also scored in the 50 free and 100 fly as a senior, potting 22 points to bring his career total to 24.
  • ASU’s Patrick Sammon and Florida’s Mason Laur scored in the last three years of their careers, with Sammon hitting his all-time best total of 15 as a senior after taking 9th in the 200 free and 11th in the 100 free. Laur set his career-high of 13 points last season, making the ‘A’ final of the 400 IM, and this year he was 11th in the event for six points.

INTERNATIONAL RECRUITS

NAME COLLEGE TEAM TOTAL NCAA POINTS 2022 NCAA POINTS 2023 NCAA POINTS 2024 NCAA Points
2025 NCAA Points
Leon Marchand Arizona State 177 57 60 60
Jordan Crooks Tennessee 171.5 29.5 47.5 45 49.5
Gal Cohen Groumi Michigan 91 15 16 37.5 22.5
Ron Polonsky Stanford 82.5 14 19.5 16 33
Charlie Hawke Alabama 58 relay-only 1 29 28
Rafael Miroslaw Indiana 36 11 4 20 1
Matt Sates Georgia 36 36
Bar Soloveychik Minnesota 28 4 0 18 6
Murilo Sartori Louisville 22 11 0 11 0
Kaique Alves Alabama 16 relay-only relay-only 9 7
Bjoern Kammann Tennessee 9 0 0 relay-only 9
Joaquin Gonzalez Pineiro Florida 8 no invite 7 1 no invite
Robin Hanson Cal 8 2 no invite 2 4
Alex Quach Ohio State 6 6 0
Mert Kilavuz Georgia Tech 6 6 0 0
Victor Baganha Penn State 4 0 4 scratch no invite
Oskar Lindholm Florida 3 3 0 0

Standouts:

  • After scoring 177 out of a possible 180 points in his three seasons at Arizona State, Leon Marchand turned pro and forwent his final season of NCAA eligibility, but still leads all swimmers in this class, though Jordan Crooks nearly ran him down.
  • Crooks followed up a 29.5-point freshman campaign with three straight seasons of 45 or more, hitting a career-high 49.5 as a senior after winning the 50 free, placing 2nd in the 100 free and taking 6th in the 200 free. The 50 free win marked the second individual title of his career, and Crooks also became the NCAA Record holder in the prelims of the 100 free (39.83) before taking 2nd in the final.
  • Gal Cohen Groumi was a reliable contributor in his four years at Michigan, following up a career-high 37.5 points as a junior with 22.5 this season, placing 7th in the 200 IM, 11th in the 200 free and 12th in the 200 fly.
  • Stanford’s Ron Polonsky has consistently scored throughout his career, and stepped up as a senior by making two ‘A’ finals after he wasn’t predicted to make any in the SwimSwam previews. Polonsky hit a lifetime best of 33 points in 2025, placing 5th in both the 100 breast and 200 IM and adding a 12th-place finish in the 200 breast (setting personal best times in all three).
  • Alabama’s Charlie Hawke was a relay-only swimmer as a freshman, scored one point as a sophomore, and then took off in final two seasons, scoring 29 points in 2024 and 28 more this past season. Hawke has finished 4th in the 200 free in back-to-back seasons, and was 5th in the 500 free in 2024 and 6th in 2025.
  • Rafael Miroslaw scored in all four years with Indiana, while Minnesota’s Bar Soloveychik scored in three of his four seasons with the Gophers, both having their best performances as juniors.

DIVING RECRUITS

NAME COLLEGE TEAM TOTAL NCAA POINTS 2022 NCAA POINTS 2023 NCAA POINTS 2024 NCAA Points
2025 NCAA Points
Carson Tyler Indiana 145 5 35 56 49
Quentin Henninger Indiana 143 16 32 46 49
Jack Ryan Stanford 85 5 16 31 33
Jordan Rzepka Purdue 70 19 0 15 36
Shangfei Wang USC 62 6 31 9 16
Clayton Chaplin Ohio State 49 0 15 23 11
Tyler Downs Purdue 43 43
Cameron Cash Pitt 37 0 0 24 13
Mohamed Farouk Miami (FL) 25 0 11 14
Rhett Hensley Texas A&M 23 4 4 15
Allen Bottego Texas A&M 17 0 11 0 6
Adrian Abadia Garcia LSU 10 0 10
Jack Matthews Miami (FL)/Ohio State 10 0 10 no invite
Adam Wesson Harvard 1 1 0 no invite no invite
Joseph Victor Princeton 1 1 0

Standouts:

  • Carson Tyler and Quentin Henninger were truly a dynamic duo for Indiana throughout their careers, combining for 288 points and matching 49-point totals as seniors. Tyler only scored five as a freshman, and then averaged a staggering 46.6 over the final three seasons of his career, winning three straight platform titles and two consecutive 3-meter titles. Henninger was the 1-meter champion this past season, giving IU a sweep of the diving events.
  • Stanford’s Jack Ryan progressively got better as his career went on, starting with five points in 2022 and finishing with 33 in 2025 for 85 total.
  • Purdues’ Jordan Rzepka had one off showing as a sophomore, but scored 70 points across the other three championship meets, including a career-high 36 as a senior.
  • USC’s Shangfei Wang scored in four straight seasons for 62 total points, posting half of them in his junior year, while Clayton Chaplin (OSU) and Cameron Cash (Pitt) are two others who were among the top scorers from this class, both improving as their careers went on.

ALL INDIVIDUAL SCORERS IN THIS CLASS

FINAL RANK RECRUIT RANK NAME COLLEGE TEAM Total NCAA Points 2022 NCAA POINTS 2023 NCAA POINTS 2024 NCAA Points
2025 NCAA Points
1 INTL Leon Marchand Arizona State 177 57 60 60
2 INTL Jordan Crooks Tennessee 171.5 29.5 47.5 45 49.5
3 10 Luke Hobson Texas 146 18 40 43 45
4 DIVE Carson Tyler Indiana 145 5 35 56 49
5 DIVE Quentin Henninger Indiana 143 16 32 46 49
6 BOTR Gabriel Jett Cal 132 13 46 41 32
7 6 Jack Alexy Cal 121.5 0 30 49 42.5
8 BOTR Chris Guiliano Notre Dame 105.5 0 16 45 44.5
9 INTL Gal Cohen Groumi Michigan 91 15 16 37.5 22.5
10 DIVE Jack Ryan Stanford 85 5 16 31 33
11 1 Aiden Hayes NC State 84 15 33 36
12 INTL Ron Polonsky Stanford 82.5 14 19.5 16 33
13 DIVE Jordan Rzepka Purdue 70 19 0 15 36
14 DIVE Shangfei Wang USC 62 6 31 9 16
15 INTL Charlie Hawke Alabama 58 relay-only 1 29 28
16 5 Matt Fallon Penn 56.5 22.5 17 17
17 NR Julian Smith Florida 55 no invite 4 18 33
18 7 Arsenio Bustos NC State 54 no invite 21 33
19 DIVE Clayton Chaplin Ohio State 49 0 15 23 11
20 2 Josh Matheny Indiana 47 0 24 13 10
21 DIVE Tyler Downs Purdue 43 43
22 DIVE Cameron Cash Pitt 37 0 0 24 13
23 INTL Rafael Miroslaw Indiana 36 11 4 20 1
23 INTL Matt Sates Georgia 36 36
25 BOTR Jack Kelly Brown 33 no invite 0 11 22
26 NR Patrick Sammon Arizona State 30 0 (relay-only) 12 3 15
27 INTL Bar Soloveychik Minnesota 28 4 0 18 6
28 20 Daniel Matheson USC/Arizona State 26 0 3 14 9
29 NR Mason Laur Florida 25 0 6 13 6
29 DIVE Mohamed Farouk Miami (FL) 25 0 11 14
31 NR Finn Brooks Indiana 24 no invite 0 2 22
32 DIVE Rhett Hensley Texas A&M 23 4 4 15
33 INTL Murilo Sartori Louisville 22 11 0 11
34 NR Mason Mathias Auburn 20 no invite 2 18 0
35 DIVE Allen Bottego Texas A&M 17 0 11 0 6
36 INTL Kaique Alves Alabama 16 relay-only relay-only 9 7
37 11 Luke Barr Indiana 14 no invite 0 7 7
38 19 Nate Stoffle Auburn 11 0 11 0 0
38 NR Macguire McDuff Florida 11 0 3 8
40 DIVE Adrian Abadia Garcia LSU 10 0 10
40 DIVE Jack Matthews Miami (FL)/Ohio State 10 0 10 no invite
42 3 Jack Aikins Virginia 9 9 0 redshirt 0
42 NR Aaron Sequeira Stanford 9 0 4 0 5
42 INTL Bjoern Kammann Tennessee 9 0 0 relay-only 9
45 INTL Joaquin Gonzalez Pineiro Florida 8 no invite 7 1
45 INTL Robin Hanson Cal 8 2 no invite 2 4
47 NR Chris O’Grady USC 7 1 0 0 6
48 INTL Mert Kilavuz Georgia Tech 6 6 0 0
48 INTL Alex Quach Ohio State 6 6 0
50 9 David Curtiss NC State 4.5 2 2.5
51 8 Tim Connery Texas/Virginia 4 0 0 4
51 INTL Victor Baganha Penn State 4 0 4 scratch no invite
53 17 Brady Samuels Purdue 3 relay-only 1 no invite 2
53 BOTR Trey Dickey Texas A&M 3 no invite no invite 3 no invite
53 INTL Oskar Lindholm Florida 3 3 0 0
56 DIVE Adam Wesson Harvard 1 1 0 no invite no invite
56 DIVE Joseph Victor Princeton 1 1 0

ARCHIVES: REVISITING RECRUIT RANKINGS

ANALYSIS AS OF: SPRING 2025 SPRING 2024 SPRING 2023 SPRING 2022 SPRING 2021 SPRING 2020 SPRING 2019 SPRING 2018 SPRING 2017
Class of 2024
After Freshman Year
Class of 2023 After Sophomore Year
Class of 2022 After Junior Year After Sophomore Year
Class of 2021 After Senior Year After Junior Year After Sophomore Year
Class of 2020 After Senior Year After Junior Year After Sophomore Year
Class of 2019 After Senior Year After Junior Year After Sophomore Year
Class of 2018 After Senior Year After Junior Year After Sophomore Year
After Freshman Year
Class of 2017 After Senior Year After Junior Year After Sophomore Year
After Freshman Year
Class of 2016 After Senior Year
After Junior Year
Class of 2015
After Senior Year
Class of 2014
After Senior Year
Class of 2013
After Senior Year

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Captain Bubbles
4 hours ago

If you told me a class that was supposed to include Hayes, Bustos, Curtiss, Hoover, Boone, Ponti, and Noorgaard would have no individual NCAA qualifiers as seniors, I would have assumed there was a tragedy.

Glad that, in the big picture, there was no tragedy

Steve Nolan
14 hours ago

Curtiss and Sates are names I haven’t heard in a while. Wild how some trajectories go, which is why I tend to get so grumpy over people projecting who “the future” of the sport is.

Swim2
Reply to  Steve Nolan
12 hours ago

Facts

Breezeway
23 hours ago

“Jack Aikins, the #3 ranked recruit in the class, scored nine points as a freshman at Virginia, but was off form and didn’t score at the 2023 and 2025 meets”

Off Form?

Breezeway
Reply to  James Sutherland
22 hours ago

I meant has he ever been “on form” in SCY or is that “off form” just normal for him

Admin
Reply to  Breezeway
22 hours ago

Yeah, his season best times would’ve scored at both meets, but he missed his NCAAs taper.

Expat Swimmer
23 hours ago

Don’t know if this is public information or not, but did Grimm get any scholarship money from UVa? Even if he just used the idea of swimming to get in it seems like really took advantage of them.

Admin
Reply to  Expat Swimmer
22 hours ago

Nobody would have any way of knowing unless Anthony or the coaches were sharing, and I would guess they would not share if he was on scholarship.

I would not describe what happened with Grimm as that. He’s dealing with some personal stuff and I don’t think I would share it unless he chose to, but it’s a situation where a little grace would go a long way.

4 kick pullout
Reply to  Braden Keith
21 hours ago

I don’t know anything about him or if he’s overcome any of those challenges, but thinking of 50s in the Olympics… that kid was made to take advantage of that even after years away if he wants.

Expat Swimmer
Reply to  Braden Keith
13 hours ago

I didn’t realize that. Probably not the best way to frame it then. Even if he never swims again, he gave us all the most impressive 50 backstroke video we’ll ever see. Hope everything works out ok for him.

Missy Franklin fan
1 day ago

Andrei Minakov?

WaterAce
Reply to  Missy Franklin fan
1 day ago

Same with Polonsky

USA
Reply to  Missy Franklin fan
21 hours ago

He was originally class of 2020.

Ryan
1 day ago

A lot of people are calling this class a disappointment, and while I generally agree, I do think it’s fair to point out this was the high school class that was arguably the most affected by the pandemic- the class of 2020 was probably 90-95% done with high school/club careers when the pandemic started. It wouldn’t be shocking to me if the large-scale unprecedented interruption in training at that stage of their careers at least somewhat hampered development for some of these athletes.

barelyaswammer
1 day ago

This class fell short of the lofty expectations for various reasons, but I will say that the domestic top 10 was 15m of backstroke short of going 5/10 on producing Olympians for Paris. Wishing the best of luck to everyone on this list with whatever is next, swimming or otherwise.

I miss the ISL (go dawgs)
1 day ago

What a flop of a class especially for the UVA men among others

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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