Texas Men, Stanford Women Top Season-Opening CSCAA Dual Meet Polls

Editor’s Note: SwimSwam is not on the voting panel for the CSCAA Dual Meet Rankings, but the rankings are posted as a courtesy to the CSCAA. See our most recent men’s Power Rankings here and women’s Power Rankings here.

The defending NCAA champions on the men’s and women’s sides remain #1 in the first edition of the College Swimming Coaches Association of America (CSCAA) dual meet polls released today.

The CSCAA system measures teams by “head-to-head competition,” polling a number of college coaches to periodically produce rankings.

On the women’s side, Stanford is the clear-cut number one, leading Cal by 14 points. The men’s rankings are much closer, with Texas sitting just four points ahead of Cal. That mirrors what we saw in our own preseason Power Rankings, where Texas received 3 of 5 first-place votes, but Cal took the other two.

You can find the full CSCAA ranks below, or on their website here.

Division I Women

Rank Prev Team Points
1 Stanford 300
2 California 286
3 Michigan 272
4 Texas 262
5 Texas A&M 250
6 Indiana 233
7 Georgia 222
8 Louisville 218
9 Tennessee 195
10 Virginia 188
11 NC State 183
11 Southern California 183
13 Minnesota 171
14 Kentucky 156
15 Missouri 126
16 Auburn 109
17 Ohio State 105
18 Notre Dame 91
19 Florida 80
20 Wisconsin 76
21 Arizona 67
22 Duke 35
23 Arkansas 21
24 Arizona State 17
25 Florida State 15

Also Received Votes:
North Carolina (13), Virginia Tech (7), South Carolina/Northwestern (6), Alabama (5), Akron (2)

Women’s Poll Committee

Colleen Murphy, Air Force;   Dan Colella, Duke;   Ryan Wochomurka, Houston;  Lars Jorgenson, Kentucky;  Naya Higashijima, UCLA;  Jennifer Buffin, Oregon State;     David Geyer, LSU;     Neil Harper, Arkansas;     Jesse Moore, Minnesota;     Kristy Brager, Wisconsin;     Niko Fantakis, Brown;     April Jensen, Notre Dame;    Nathan Lavery, TCU;

Division I Men

Rank Prev Team Points
1 Texas 296
2 California 292
3 Indiana 273
4 NC State 258
5 Stanford 255
6 Michigan 232
7 Southern California 217
8 Florida 205
9 Georgia 191
10 Texas A&M 184
11 Louisville 181
12 Tennessee 155
13 Arizona 151
14 Arizona State 145
15 Virginia 110
16 Ohio State 109
17 Alabama 108
18 Minnesota 107
19 Harvard 102
20 Florida State 59
20 Purdue 59
22 Missouri 50
23 Notre Dame 46
24 South Carolina 24
25 Auburn 19

Also Received Votes:
Georgia Tech (17), Denver (14), Virginia Tech (13), Iowa (9), Grand Canyon (7), Brigham Young (5), Penn State (4), Utah (2), Cornell (1)

Men’s Poll Committee

Brian Schrader, Denver;     Steve Schaffer, Grand Canyon ;     Bill Roberts Navy;   Craig Nisgor, Seattle;     McGee Moody South Carolina;    Chad Cradock UMBC;    Chase Bloch, USC;   Jason Calanog, Texas A&M;     Ashley Dell, Iowa;     Damion Dennis, West Virginia;    Dan Kesler, Arizona State;    Neal Studd, Florida State;    Jamie Holder, Dartmouth;     Kevin Woodhull-Smith, East Carolina

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Harambe
5 years ago

Texas is Back!

Well I mean they never really left the pool, but Texas is Back

Admin
Reply to  Harambe
5 years ago

Well they did leave the pool for a while when it was broken last year.

Gaondatmind
5 years ago

Great to see the pool poll. Disappointing to see the SEC men have declined in recent years. Auburn in particular has much ground to gain. Their new exciting coaching staff will bring them back close to the top soon I suspect.

2 Cents
Reply to  Gaondatmind
5 years ago

Yes, they have fallen. In fact, have they not dropped to a historic low point? By that I mean of any team who has finished 1-5 in the last 20 years, none of them have been ranked as low as 25 in the last 20 years, correct?

On a separate point, look at the votes or point totals in the mens poll. There are some obvious gaps or natural breaks in the poll. The gap between 11 and 12 and 14 and 15, along with the gap between 19 and 20. It kind of makes the division of “tiers” pretty obvious.

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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