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Old 08-13-2014, 10:30 AM   #467
Breeze
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Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Northern Suburbs of ATL
General Swimming News

Thought I'd throw this in, to provide perspective on where Georgia is as a swim state...


With both Junior and Senior U.S. Nationals now behind us, and Pan Pacs still a week away, now seems like the perfect time to take a look back at the two weeks that were from a slightly different lens.

Let’s start with Junior Nationals: one of the unique aspects of Juniors is that it brings together elite swimmers and clubs from across the country, combining states that are often separated by LSC divisions during the year. But which states tend to be best represented at Juniors? We compiled data from all point-scorers (top 16 finishers) at Junior Nationals to come up with the interactive maps and graphs below.

It’s not terribly surprising that California ran away with state scoring. After all, the state hosted Juniors, meaning very few California clubs decided to forgo the meet because of travel expenses. It’s also one of the biggest and most populous states in the U.S. But even taking those factors into consideration, Californians were impressive at Juniors. In total combined scoring, California didn’t just lead, it dominated, putting up more than double the points of the next-best state.

Some of that was overall team champ Palo Alto Stanford, but not nearly all of it. PASA put up just over 300 combined points, about a quarter of Cali’s total. California saw 22 boys teams and 18 girls teams put up points over the weeklong meet.

Indiana finished second, and its total was much more a one-team show. The girls of Carmel Swim Club led all female scoring with 290, and that accounted for over half of the state’s 523 total points. Interestingly enough, Indiana did quite well at this meet despite the state hosting YMCA Nationals the same week and NCSA Junior Nationals the following week. Those meets could have provided lower-cost options for Indiana’s junior swimmers, but the elite talent of the state still seemed to flock to Irvine for Juniors.

Other high-placing overall states: Florida, Texas and North Carolina rounded out the top five spots, showing some real geographic diversity among the meet’s top scorers. 36 of the 50 U.S. states scored points at the meet.

A disclaimer: in breaking down point totals by state, we counted every swimmer as a member of the state where his or her club is based. There are certainly some occasions where a swimmer will cross state lines to join a club, but for the sake of simplicity, we’re considering things at a club level.

Of course, there are some multi-site mega-clubs that span multiple states. Nation’s Capital Swim Club would be a well-known example. In those cases, we considered the club a member of the state where it’s main headquarters are located – in NCAP’s case, that is Virginia.

See below for point totals.


Code:
Rank State Total Boys Girls 1 CA 1268 751.5 516.5 2 IN 523 159 364 3 FL 453.5 184.5 269 4 TX 351 191 160 5 NC 347 109 238 6 GA 328 211 117 7 PA 314 207 107 8 VA 268 192 76 9 SC 208.5 0 208.5 10 OH 194 183 11 11 WA 182 62 120 12 MD 176 18 158 13 NJ 175.5 131.5 44 14 TN 174 138 36 15 AZ 147 99 48 16 OR 110.5 84 26.5 17 NY 99.5 79.5 20 18 KY 94 34 60 19 AL 86 16 70 20 MI 81 14 67

Last edited by Breeze : 08-13-2014 at 10:41 AM.
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