Zone Diving Locations & Allocations for 2020 NCAA Championships

Between conference championships and national championships, there is a 3rd rung of NCAA Division I swimming & diving championship season: the zone diving qualifying events.

Unlike swimmers, where hitting a certain qualifying standard or a national rank earns an athlete a spot at the NCAA National Championship meet, divers have just one opportunity to qualify for the big meet: via one of 6 Zone Diving meets. That’s because diving scoring isn’t objective like swimming scoring, and so the closer they can come to standardizing the scoring, in this case by creating relatively-uniform judging by high-level judges.

To qualify for the zone meets, divers must hit the Diving Standards listed below.

Who qualifies from those zone meets forward to the NCAA Championships gets a little complicated. Basically, each zone is allocated a certain number of spots in each event, based on how well the zone performed at the prior year’s NCAA Championship meet. In short, each zone starts with a baseline of 5 women and 4 men in each discipline, and then are allocated an additional spot for each top 16 finisher they had at NCAAs the prior year. No Zone A men, for example, scored on platform at NCAAs last year, so they still only get 4 spots for that event. Zone C, which includes the powerhouse programs at Indiana and Purdue as well as IUPUI, Kentucky, and Ohio State, had 6 men score at NCAAs last year on the 1-meter, so they get 10 spots (4+6) for this year.

Once a diver is qualified, he or she can dive in any of the other 2 events, so long as they finished in the top 12 in their zone in that event. A certain number of divers from each zone have their costs reimbursed, while other schools will have to pay their athletes’ way – part of new rules instituted in the last few years to expand the diving field at NCAAs.

When calculating roster limits (each school can take up to 18 men and 18 women to the NCAA Championships), divers count as one-half of a competitor toward the total team limit. This means that a school that qualifies 18 swimmers from the meet would have to drop 1 swimmer from that roster to add 1 or 2 divers to their NCAA Championship roster.

2020 NCAA Championship Zone Diving Meets

  • Zone A – The Aquatic Center at Mylan Park, Morgantown, West Virginia (University of West Virginia) – March 9th-11th
  • Zone B – Ramsey Center, Athens, Georgia, (University of Georgia) – March 9th-11th
  • Zone C – Lancaster Aquatic Center, Lexington, Kentucky (University of Kentucky) – March 12th-14th
  • Zone D – Robson & Lindley Aquatics Center and Barr-McMillion Natatorium, Dallas, Texas (SMU) – March 9th-11th
  • Zone E – King County Aquatic Center, Federal Way, Washington (Utah hosting officially at non-collegiate facility) – March 9th-11th

Qualifying Spots Per Zone

WOMEN 1M 3M Platform MEN 1M 3M Platform
Zone A 5 6 5 Zone A 6 5 4
Zone B 7 7 8 Zone B 10 8 8
Zone C 7 6 10 Zone C 7 7 10
Zone D 10 13 9 Zone D 9 9 8
Zone E 12 9 9 Zone E 4 7 6

See last year’s Zone Qualifying charts for comparison here.

Zone Map

Editor’s note: this is the 2014 Zone Diving Map. The map hasn’t changed since then. The NCAA actually included the 2015 map in this year’s championship manual.

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Laurie Herremans
4 years ago

Where can I find the daily schedule for Zone C Diving Championships at the University go Kentucky 3/12-14?

Judy Sanchez
4 years ago

I noticed the hotel information has been posted for many of the other zones. Do we have any idea when Zone D will be posting the hotel information?

peyton lester
4 years ago

do you know the schedule?

Swimmy
4 years ago

Is this for all divisions?

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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