ATLANTA – The No. 13 Florida State swimming and diving workforce earned its third All-America honor on day three of the 2026 Division I Men’s Swimming and Diving Championships at McAuley Aquatic Center in Atlanta, Georgia.
Seeded eighth and competing within the closing warmth of the 400 medley relay, the quartet of seniors
Max Wilson and
Tommaso Baravelli, sophomore
Logan Robinson and junior
Gustav Olsson clocked a 3:01.58 to put ninth total. With the end, the lads secured All-America honors, awarded to the highest 16 finishers.
“It was a really great day,” FSU head coach
Neal Studd stated. “We had another All-American relay and some amazing splits in there, especially from
Logan Robinson and
Gustav Olsson. Ninth overall in the country is great, and I’m looking forward to tomorrow. Logan and Carlos have their big days, so we’re looking to see if we can move up in the rankings.”
The relay swim marked the ultimate race of Baravelli’s collegiate profession.
Also competing within the 100 backstroke, Wilson positioned twenty fourth total with a time of 45.00. The senior will compete collegiately for the ultimate time Saturday within the 100 freestyle and within the 400 freestyle relay alongside sophomore
Michel Arkhangelsky, Olsson and Robinson.
Sophomore
Carlos Vargas will make his 2026 NCAA Championships debut on platform Saturday afternoon, with prelims starting at 12:30 p.m. ET. Vargas returns to the nationwide stage after ending thirty third on platform eventually 12 months’s championship and most lately incomes bronze within the occasion on the 2026 ACC Championships.
Florida State is represented by eight student-athletes on the 2026 NCAA Men’s Swimming and Diving Championships, held March 18-21. The Seminoles will conclude competitors Saturday with Wilson’s 100 freestyle, Arkhangelsky within the 100 freestyle, Robinson within the 200 butterfly, Vargas on platform and the 400 freestyle relay.
The high eight finishers in each occasion will advance to finals and can decide locations 1-8 by means of the A closing. Athletes who end 9-16 is not going to compete in a B closing; their closing placement and level totals will likely be decided primarily based on their preliminary rankings. Relays are timed finals and can all happen throughout finals classes.
All classes will likely be streamed
live on ESPN+. Live outcomes might be discovered at Meet Mobile and
online here, and extra championships data is out there
here. Direct hyperlinks and reside updates might be discovered by following and connecting with the Seminoles on
Twitter/X,
Instagram and
Facebook.
Saturday, March 28 10:00 a.m. ET – Prelims: 100 Freestyle (
Max Wilson), 200 Butterfly (
Logan Robinson)
12:30 p.m. ET – Diving Prelims: Platform (
Carlos Vargas)
6:00 p.m. ET – Finals: 100 Freestyle, 200 Butterfly, 400 Freestyle Relay (
Michel Arkhangelsky,
Max Wilson,
Gustav Olsson,
Logan Robinson)
Watch Prelims Day 4 Watch Diving Prelims Day 4 Watch Finals Day 4 For updates and unique content material, observe the Seminoles on Twitter/X (@FSU_Swimming), Instagram (@FSUSwimDive) and Facebook (FSUSwimmingDiving).