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10 SEC schools participate in men's swimming and diving, and 12 in women's swimming and diving. The following schools have both men's and women's teams: Alabama , Auburn , Florida , Georgia , Kentucky , LSU , Missouri , South Carolina , Tennessee Texas , and Texas A&M
In his freshman year at the 2024 Southeastern Conference championships, Marshall won the 100 yard backstroke in 44.12 besting runner up Adam Chaney. This mark lands Marshall as the fastest freshman in NCAA history in the event. [13] Marshall also won the 200 yard backstroke in a time of 1:36.68, setting the SEC meet record in the event. [14]
The list of Southeastern Conference national championships begins in 1933, the first year of competition for the Southeastern Conference (SEC), and includes 214 team national championships sanctioned by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), and four additional national championships sanctioned by the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW), won by current ...
Since Florida's swim and dive program was established in 1930, the men's team has won forty SEC team championships and two NCAA national championships. Since the NCAA and the SEC began sanctioning women's swimming in 1981, the Lady Gators have won seventeen SEC team championships and three national championships. [3]
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.
This is a list of college swimming and diving teams that compete in the NCAA or NAIA men's and/or women's swimming and diving championships. NCAA Division I [ edit ]
They have been SEC Champions four time times (2003, 2004, 2005, 2007). In 2005, Auburn lost to Georgia by two points at the NCAA championships and in the SEC Championships in 2006. The second-place finisher at the SEC championships went on to win the national championship while the SEC champion won national runner-up in 2005 and 2006.
Finally, the "Other team titles" column also includes championships won in three other sports: men's rowing (1871–present), which has voluntarily remained outside NCAA sponsorship, and two NCAA "emerging sports" that organize championships, women's equestrian (2002–present) and women's rugby (1991–present).