Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 2009 NCAA Division I Men's Swimming and Diving Championships were contested in March 2009 at the Student Recreation Center Natatorium at Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas at the 86th annual NCAA-sanctioned swim meet to determine the team and individual national champions of Division I men's collegiate swimming and diving in the United States.
The NCAA Division I men's swimming and diving championships (formerly the NCAA University Division swimming and diving championships) are contested at an annual swim meet hosted by the National Collegiate Athletic Association to determine the individual and team champions of men's collegiate swimming and diving among its Division I members in the United States.
NCAA Men's Division II Swimming and Diving Championships, since 1964; NCAA Men's Division III Swimming and Diving Championships, since 1975; NCAA Swimming Championship (Philippines), since 1926; NCAA Women's Division II Swimming and Diving Championships, since 1982; NCAA Women's Division III Swimming and Diving Championships, since 1982
Their belief climaxed Saturday night around 8:52 p.m., when Kulow anchored another relay, the 4x100-yard freestyle, to victory in NCAA-record time. Bowman leapt up and down, his arms stretching ...
USA college (including NCAA competition) and high school swimming are traditionally swum in SCY. Short-course meter competitions are also denoted by listing of the actual meter distance: "25m" (in swimming, a space is not placed between the number and the m for meter). [5] Lists of world and other records are kept separately for short- and long ...
2–6 July: Swimming at the 2009 Asian Youth Games, Singapore; 8–12 July: European Junior Swimming Championships in Prague, Czech Republic; 30 October – 9 November: Swimming at the 2009 Asian Indoor Games in Hanoi, Vietnam; 10–13 December: European Short Course Swimming Championships in Istanbul, Turkey
The NCAA invites 235 male swimmers and 281 female swimmers to the competition each year based on the qualifying standards. There are two qualifying standards, "A" and "B", where those qualifying with the "A" time standard are automatically invited to the championship. Then the next fastest swimmers with the "B" time standard are invited to keep ...
The world record in the men's 50 yards freestyle is not an official record ratified by World Aquatics (previously FINA), which only recognizes records set in meters. . Practically, the unofficial world record is now limited today to swimmers competing in the United States, as short course races in yards are only currently used for record keeping in the Unit