How Did We Do? Reviewing SwimSwam's Final 2025 Women's NCAA Power Rankings

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By James Sutherland on SwimSwam

2025 NCAA Division I Women's Swimming and Diving Championships

The 2025 Women’s NCAA Championships came to a close on Saturday night with the Virginia Cavaliers rolling to their fifth consecutive national title, becoming just the third program to do so in the sport’s history.

Led by the Walsh sisters, the UVA victory was, as expected, a decisive one, topping runner-up Stanford by 127 points, while the Cardinal were surprise 2nd-place finishers as they edged out Texas after the Longhorns were the runners-up to the Cavaliers for the previous three seasons.

Stanford snatching the 2nd-place spot from Texas was one of several surprises in the team standings relative to our final edition of the power rankings.

2024-25 Women’s NCAA Power Rankings:

Below, find the top 25 teams from the championships alongside our final predictions as we take a look at what we got right, what we got wrong and what we got really wrong.

2025 WOMEN’S NCAA RESULTS VERSUS SWIMSWAM PICKS

FinishTeamFinal Power RankingDifference
1Virginia1
2Stanford3↑1
3Texas2↓1
4Indiana6↑2
5Tennessee5
6Florida4↓2
7Louisville10↑3
8Cal7↓1
9Michigan9
10NC State8↓2
11USC11
12Wisconsin12
13Miami (FL)21↑8
14Ohio State13↓1
15Alabama15
16Georgia14↓2
17UNC16↓1
18Purdue25↑7
19Arizona State19
20Virginia Tech22↑2
21Duke17↓4
22LSU23↑1
23BYUNR+
24South CarolinaNR+
25KansasNR+

WHAT WE GOT RIGHT

  • Virginia was a slam-dunk selection for the top spot, but after we nailed the top five in the correct order in 2024, that wasn’t the case this year. Besides the Cavaliers, the only other team we placed in the correct spot in the top five was 5th-place Tennessee. We also had Michigan, USC and Wisconsin in the rights spot at 9, 11 and 12, respectively, though the squads surrounding them were different than predicted.
  • In the bottom half of the rankings, Alabama was correctly ranked at #15, as was Arizona State at #19.
  • Ohio State and UNC were two teams in particular we had the right idea for, but both ended up finishing one spot lower than predicted due to the surprise Miami (FL) Hurricanes.

WHAT WE GOT WRONG – TOP 10

  • No one picked Stanford to beat Texas in the race for 2nd, but the Cardinal pulled it off, registering their highest finish since winning the title in 2019. Stanford was only ranked 4th based on psych sheet scoring coming into the meet, but finished with four swimmers scoring 40+ points and outscored their projected individual total by 52 points and their relays by 18 (they also got 14 diving points).
  • Texas fell to 3rd after being unanimously picked to finish 2nd despite scoring 92 diving points, which was the most of any team.
  • Indiana was picked 6th but ended up placing 4th with 312 points, finishing 14 clear of Tennessee and 80 ahead of Florida. The Hoosiers scored 47 diving points, but more importantly, outscored their psych sheet score in the pool by 56.5 points.
  • The Gators finished two spots lower than predicted in 6th—they outscored their projected relay points by 12, but scored 33.5 fewer individually.
  • Louisville, known for executing their taper at NCAAs, did so once again, landing in 7th place after we predicted them 10th. The Cardinals scored the exact number of individual swimming points they were projected to, but outscored their relay psych sheet total by 30, earning 130 relay points to rank 3rd among all teams.
  • Cal finished one spot lower than predicted in 8th, as they were edged out by Louisville by just seven points. This was more the Cardinals performing well than it was the Bears swimming poorly. Cal outscored their projections both in relays and individually.
  • NC State fell two spots from their prediction to 10th, their lowest finish since 2018. The Wolfpack underperformed in the relays relative to their seed, scoring 83 relay points after they were seeded for 112. They finished outside the top eight in three of the five relays, including placing 16th in the 800 free relay (as the 11th seed).

OTHER SURPRISES

  • The team that outperformed our predictions the most was Miami (FL), which dove to a 13th-place finish after they were predicted to place 21st. The Hurricanes were seeded for 19 swimming points, and ended up only scoring 6.5, but it didn’t matter as their divers took care of business. Chiara Pellacani and Mia Vallee went 1-2 on 1-meter, and then finished 2-4 on 3-meter to combine for 69 points.
  • The other standout team outside the top 10 was Purdue, which placed 18th after they were predicted 25th. The Boilermakers lost one of their key divers from last year, but it didn’t matter as Daryn Wright (26 points) and Sophia McAfee (21 points) combined for 47 of the team’s 53 points.
  • Duke dropped four spots relative to their prediction, finishing 21st  after they were picked 17th. The Blue Devils finished six points back of their projected psych sheet points in the pool, but only had seven diving points, which may have been lower than what some were projecting when casting their ballot.

MOVING UP & MOVING OUT

  • BYU, South Carolina and Kansas all cracked the top 25 after they weren’t predicted to finish there. Mackenzie Miller led the way for the Cougars, scoring all 29 of their points, while diver Shiyun Lai scored all 25 of Kansas’ points. For South Carolina, diver Sophie Verzyl led the way with 15 points, while their 13 swimming points nearly doubled their psych sheet projection (seven).
  • The teams we picked to finish in the top 25 that didn’t quite come through were Texas A&M, Pitt and Auburn. The Aggies placed 26th, the Panthers were 27th, and the Tigers fell to 35th.
FinishTeamFinal Power RankingDifference
26Texas A&M20↓6
27Pitt24↓3
35Auburn18↓17
  • Texas A&M only scored one individual swimming point after they were projected for six, though they registered 10 relay points after being seeded for none. They got 11 diving points from Else Praasterink after she scored 15 last year at Louisville.
  • Pitt, seeded for 26 swimming points, finished with 21, with Sophie Yendell breaking through and making an ‘A’ final in the 50 free and also scoring in the 100 fly.
  • Auburn finished with 10 points after scoring six in the 200 free relay and four in diving. They were seeded for 10 points in the pool, all in relays, and only managed to crack the top 16 in one of them. They were 17th twice and were disqualified in the 400 medley relay (though their time wouldn’t of cracked the top 16).

See the full NCAA Championship box score here.

Final Scores

TeamTotalIndividual Swim PointsRelay PointsDiving PointsIndividual Score CountRelay Score CountDiving Score Count
1UVA54434419462651
2Stanford417243160142151
3Texas394174128921558
4Indiana312148117471355
5Tennessee29817812001750
6Florida23212211001540
7Louisville209.579.513001150
8California202.5108.59401250
9Michigan196811141951
10NC State164818301050
11USC13050782641
12Wisconsin12670560650
13Miami (FL)75.56.5069204
14Ohio State6646200630
15Alabama6529360440
16Georgia5834240430
17UNC574251314
18Purdue530053006
19Arizona State41.55.5360130
20VT3725120220
21Duke332607201
22LSU320428012
23BYU292900200
24South Carolina2813015202
25Kansas250025002
26Texas A&M2211011121
27PITT212100300
28Minnesota213018102
29Arizona200146012
30SIU171700200
31Houston161303101
32Cincinnati151500100
33Washington St.141400200
34Nebraska131300100
35Auburn10064011
36Florida St8620210
37UCLA7007001
38Princeton6600200
39Ohio6600100
40Arkansas4004001
41Akron2200100
42Rutgers2002001
43Fresno State1100100

Read the full story on SwimSwam: How Did We Do? Reviewing SwimSwam’s Final 2025 Women’s NCAA Power Rankings

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