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Breaking Down The 2024 U.S. Olympic Team By NCAA Ties


Two of the most dominant college programs in recent memory, the Virginia women and Texas men, headline the 2024 U.S. Olympic swimming teams in terms of NCAA affiliation.

Future NCAA Commitments

Women

Swimmer NCAA School Current Training Base Event(s) Notes
Claire Weinstein Cal Sandpipers of Nevada 200 free 2025
Alex Shackell Cal Carmel Swim Club 200 fly, 4×200 FR 2025

Men

Swimmer NCAA School Current Training Base Event(s) Notes
Thomas Heilman Virginia Cavalier Aquatics 100/200 fly 2025
Luke Whitlock Florida Fishers Area Swimming Tigers 800 free 2024
Aaron Shackell Texas Carmel Swim Club 400 free
Matt King Indiana Tucson Ford Dealers Aquatics 4×100 FR 2024 (Transfer from Virginia)

NCAA Teams During the 2023-2024 Season

Women

Swimmer NCAA School Current Training Base Event(s) Notes
Phoebe Bacon Wisconsin Wisconsin 200 back
Katharine Berkoff NC State NC State 100 back
Mariah Denigan Indiana Indiana 10K
Erin Gemmell Texas Texas 200 free
Torri Huske Stanford Stanford 100 free, 100 fly Redshirt
Anna Peplowski Indiana Indiana 4×200 FR
Alex Walsh Virginia Virginia 200 IM
Gretchen Walsh Virginia Virginia

50 free, 100 fly, 4×100 FR

Emma Weber Virginia Virginia 100 breast
Emma Weyant Florida Florida 400 IM

Swam 1 season at Virginia

Men

Swimmer NCAA School Current Training Base Event(s) Notes
Jack Alexy Cal Cal 100 free
Matt Fallon Penn Penn 200 breast
Chris Guiliano Notre Dame Notre Dame 50/100/200 free
Luke Hobson Texas Texas 200 free
David Johnston Texas The Swim Team 1500 free, 10K Redshirt
Josh Matheny Indiana Indiana 200 breast
Ivan Puskovitch West Virginia West Virginia 10K
Luca Urlando Georgia Arizona State 200 fly Redshirt

Past NCAA Teams (Transfers/Graduations/Went Pro)

Women

Swimmer NCAA School Current Training Base Event(s) Notes
Erika Connolly Tennessee Tennessee 4×100 free Graduated
Kate Douglass Virginia Virginia

100 free, 200 breast, 200 IM

Graduated
Lilly King Indiana Indiana 100/200 br Graduated
Katie Ledecky Stanford Florida

400/800/1500 free, 4×200 FR

Graduated
Paige Madden Virginia Texas Graduated
Simone Manuel Stanford Arizona State 50 fr, 4×100 FR Graduated
Regan Smith Stanford Texas Graduated
Abbey Weitzeil Cal Cal 4×100 FR Graduated
Emma Weyant Virginia Florida 400 IM 1 year at Virginia before transferring to Florida

 

Men

Swimmer NCAA School Training Base Event(s) Notes
Hunter Armstrong Ohio State Cal 100 back, 4×100 FR

Spent 1 year at West Virginia

Hunter Armstrong West Virginia Cal

1 year, transferred to Ohio State

Shaine Casas Texas A&M Texas 200 IM Turned Pro
Brooks Curry LSU Cal 4×200 FR Graduated
Caeleb Dressel Florida Florida 50 free, 100 fly, 4×100 FR Graduated
Nic Fink Georgia Georgia Tech 100 breast Graduated
Bobby Finke Florida Florida 800/1500 free Graduated
Carson Foster Texas Texas 200/400 IM Turned Pro
Ryan Held NC State Arizona State 4×100 FR Graduated
Chase Kalisz Georgia Texas 400 IM Graduated
Drew Kibler Texas Texas 4×200 FR Graduated
Matt King Alabama Texas Ford Dealers Aquatics 4×100 FR

Transfered to Virginia after one year

Matt King Virginia Texas Ford Dealers Aquatics 4×100 FR

Redshirted, transfered to Indiana after two seasons at Virginia

Ryan Murphy Cal Cal 100/200 back Graduated
Blake Pieroni Indiana Indiana 4×200 FR Graduated
Aaron Shackell Texas Carmel Swim Club 400 free

Spent 1 semester at Cal, went home to Carmel, will transfer to Texas next season

Kieran Smith Florida Florida 400 free, 4×200 FR Graduated
Charlie Swanson Michigan Michigan 100 breast Graduated

A modern dynasty, the University of Virginia women have won four straight national titles and have built Charlottesville into a hub for some of the top swimmers in the country, attracting some of the best recruits annually while keeping a post-grad superstar like Kate Douglass around after turning pro.

Along with Douglass, who won the women’s 100 free, 200 breast and 200 IM at the Olympic Trials, Virginia will be sending current team members Alex WalshGretchen Walsh and Emma Weber to Paris, along with a former member of the team, Paige Madden.

If you’re a Virginia fan, you’ll have another American swimmer to root for at the Olympics, as 17-year-old Thomas Heilman, the top-ranked recruit in the boys’ high school class of 2025 who is committed to join the Cavaliers next fall, qualified for the Olympic team in the men’s 100 and 200 fly.

Also sending multiple female swimmers to the Games are Stanford, Cal and Indiana.

Of Stanford’s four, Torri Huske is notably the only one currently training in Palo Alto, with Simone Manuel and Regan Smith now both at Texas with Bob Bowman and Katie Ledecky being based out of Gainesville with Anthony Nesty.

U.S. WOMEN’S ROSTER

Swimmer NCAA School Training Base Event(s)
Phoebe Bacon Wisconsin Wisconsin 200 back
Katharine Berkoff NC State NC State 100 back
Erika Connolly Tennessee Tennessee 4×100 free
Mariah Denigan Indiana Indiana 10K
Kate Douglass Virginia Virginia

100 free, 200 breast, 200 IM

Erin Gemmell Texas Texas 200 free
Katie Grimes Uncommitted Sandpipers of Nevada
Torri Huske Stanford Stanford 100 free, 100 fly
Lilly King Indiana Indiana 100/200 br
Katie Ledecky Stanford Florida

400/800/1500 free, 4×200 FR

Paige Madden Virginia Texas
Simone Manuel Stanford Arizona State 50 fr, 4×100 FR
Anna Peplowski Indiana Indiana 4×200 FR
Alex Shackell Cal Carmel Swim Club
Regan Smith Stanford Texas
Alex Walsh Virginia Virginia 200 IM
Gretchen Walsh Virginia Virginia

50 free, 100 fly, 4×100 FR

Emma Weber Virginia Virginia 100 breast
Claire Weinstein Cal Sandpipers of Nevada 200 free
Abbey Weitzeil Cal Cal 4×100 FR
Emma Weyant Florida Florida 400 IM

On the men’s side, Texas leads the way with five swimmers on the U.S. team, including one current member in Luke Hobson, one future member in Aaron Shackell, and two former members in Drew Kibler and Carson Foster.

The fifth swimmer is David Johnston, who took a redshirt season and moved to train with The Swim Team in California, but is expected to return next year.

In addition to Manuel, Smith and Madden, Texas also has male swimmers Shaine Casas and Chase Kalisz on the team currently training in Austin though never having raced for the Longhorns.

Following Texas’ five is the Florida Gators, who have four men on the team—though none of them competed for UF this past NCAA season. Caeleb DresselBobby Finke and Kieran Smith are three decorated former Gators—all still training in Gainesville—while Luke Whitlock is an incoming freshman fresh off a breakout showing in Indianapolis.

MEN’S ROSTER

In terms of a combined total, joining Virginia and Texas with six qualified swimmers is Cal and Indiana, both with three men and three women apiece.

The Golden Bears put two future members, Alex Shackell and Claire Weinstein, on the women’s team, along with graduated sprinter Abbey Weitzeil.

The men put current members Jack Alexy and Keaton Jones on the Olympic squad along with Ryan Murphy, who will represent the U.S. men in both backstroke events for the third straight Games.

Cal also has Brooks Curry (LSU) and Hunter Armstrong (Ohio State by way of WVU) on the team who train in Berkeley but never represented the Bears in the NCAA.

Indiana landed post-grads Lilly King and Blake Pieroni, current members Josh MathenyAnna Peplowski and Mariah Denigan, and incoming transfer Matt King on the team.

NCAA TEAMS RANKED BY U.S. OLYMPIC QUALIFIERS

  1. Virginia / Texas / Indiana / Cal, 6
  2. Florida, 5
  3. Stanford, 4
  4. Georgia, 3
  5. NC State, 2
  6. Nine teams tied with 1 (Wisconsin, Tennessee, Ohio State, Texas A&M, LSU, Penn, Notre Dame, WVU, Michigan)





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