After two weeks of competition filled with NCAA records, epic comebacks and historic wins, the 2026 NCAA swimming and diving season has officially wrapped.
Between the back-to-back women's and men's championships, the two weeks of racing in the 1996 Atlanta Olympic pool fostered some of the fastest swimming the sport has ever seen, riddled with stories that showed why the sport is so special.
⏮️ REWIND: UVA wins 2026 NCAA DI women's swimming and diving championships
Headlining the women's weekend was Virginia clinching its sixth-consecutive national title, becoming the first program in NCAA history to do so — and it wasn't even close. UVA's 589 points towered over second-place Stanford's 380.5 after accruing first-place finishes in all five relays and three individual golds.
The Hoos opened the week with sophomore Anna Moesch clocking a 1:39.03 anchor leg in the 800 freestyle relay to claim the fastest 200 free split all-time. At the final exchange, Michigan led the field while Virginia sat at fifth before Moesch dove in.
The exclamation point came on Saturday when UVA broke its own NCAA record in the 400 freestyle relay with an 3:05.26 to close out the meet.
But there were other stories that slid under the cracks worth noting, like Jillian Cox's seven-second comeback in the 1650 free to clinch her second-straight title in the event and Pitt's 12th-place finish in the 800 free relay that gave the Panthers their first scoring relay in 39 years.
Those historic firsts and drought-ending performances spilled over into the men's championship.
👀 LOOK BACK: Texas wins 2026 NCAA DI men's swimming and diving championships
For instance, SMU saw its first-ever national title with Luke Sitz's 1 meter, Kentucky earned its first top-eight NCAA relay finish since 2008 and Virginia's Maxiumus Williamson became UVA's first champion since 2011.
Williamson's 200 freestyle gold came in dramatic fashion after he tied for eighth in prelims with teammate David King. Instead of a traditional swim-off to joust for the last spot of the A final, King sacrificed his spot to Williamson.
Out of lane eight that night in finals, Williamson shocked the field with a 1:30.03 to become the first freshman to win the event since Texas' Townley Haas in 2016.
Florida's Ahmed Jaouadi was another freshman who made waves, snatching the 1650 title in a race that rewrote the record books. His 14:10.03 broke Olympian and former Florida Gator Bobby Finke's NCAA record to become the first swimmer under the 14:20 mark since 2021.
Meanwhile, Jaouadi's NCAA record was one of six broken that weekend, including Josh Liendo breaking the 100 butterfly standard twice with a 42.54 and Arizona State's blazing 1:12.46 200 freestyle relay.
Texas' Hubert Kos added to the party by rewriting two of his own in the 100 (42.61) and 200 backstroke (1:34.13), which propelled the Longhorns to their 17th national title after edging Florida by a mere 29.5 points.
The last two weekends combined for some of the greatest swimming in history. Now, the countdown is on for the 2026-27 season.