USA Swimming Power Point Calculator

USA Swimming Power Point Calculator

Estimate a USA Swimming power-point style score from event, course, gender, age group, race time, base reference time, formula exponent, and standards band context.

📌Swim Score Presets

Presets are examples. Edit the event, course, time, base reference, exponent, and standard profile before using a score for planning.

Calculator Inputs

Match the course of the entered swim time.
Yard and meter distance equivalents use separate reference bases.
Used to select the estimated base reference.
Age group can adjust the model base or stay open.
Use custom if you have a current official base time.
Changes band labels and target score thresholds.
Enter minutes, seconds, and hundredths. Example: 51.75 seconds is 0, 51, 75.
Used when custom mode is selected. Auto-filled otherwise.
Approximation: 1000 x (base time / swim time) raised to this power.
Estimated swim score

Power-point estimate

Enter a race time to estimate a score.

Power points
--
estimate
Standards band
--
context
Base time
--
reference
Next target
--
next band

📊Score Context

--
Base ratio
base divided by time
--
Drop to next
time needed
--
Percent of base
lower is closer
--
Band gap
points to next

📋Reference Tables

Approximate standards bands
BandPointsReadUse
Elite / N900+Very close to base referenceTop finals context
AAA800-899High-performance age-group swimNational-style planning
AA700-799Strong competitive swimZone or state context
A600-699Solid meet swimState or club goals
BB500-599Developing competitive swimProgress tracking
B / belowUnder 500Early benchmark scoreTechnique and base work
Formula reference
InputMeaningTypical valueEffect
Swim timeYour official race mark0:51.75Faster raises points
Base timeRecord or table reference0:41.64Faster base lowers points
ExponentCurve steepness3.00Higher punishes gaps
ScaleTop score anchor1000Base swim equals 1000
CourseSCY, SCM, or LCMSCYMust match the swim
BandPlanning categoryAANot an official cut
Sample open reference bases used by this estimator
EventSCY maleSCY femaleLCM note
50 Free17.6320.37about 20.9 / 23.6
100 Free41.6445.56about 46.8 / 52.0
200 Free1:29.151:39.10about 1:42 / 1:53
100 Back43.3549.18about 51 / 58
100 Breast49.6956.88about 56 / 1:05
200 IM1:36.341:50.08about 1:54 / 2:06
Age-group base multipliers
Age groupModelPurposeReminder
10U1.45 x openYounger-event contextUse official age tables when available
11-121.28 x openAge-group scoring feelDifferent strokes vary widely
13-141.16 x openJunior comparisonPuberty changes results fast
15-161.07 x openSenior approachStill not an official standard
17-181.03 x openLate age-group contextClose to open reference
Masters1.10 x openAdult comparisonNot age-graded masters scoring

💡Use Notes

Keep course consistent. Do not compare a SCY swim against a LCM base time unless you intentionally want a rough cross-course experiment.
Edit the base. The best use of this calculator is entering the current official base or record reference you want to compare against.
Use hundredths. Near a band edge, a few hundredths can change the score because the formula uses a power curve.
Compare like events. Stroke, distance, course, meet conditions, and start type all matter more than a single point number.
Estimate disclaimer This calculator provides an approximate USA Swimming power-point style estimate only. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or a replacement for USA Swimming's official Power Points, official time standards, current records, meet results, or eligibility rules. Use official sources for entries, cuts, recruiting, awards, and rankings. Consult a coach for training interpretation.

USA Swimming power points is a means of comparing a swim time to a reference marks. A reference mark indicates the base time for a swimmer of a specific skill level. A swim time that is exactly the same than the reference mark will earn one thousand power points.

Many coaches and parents uses power points because they permit for the individuals to discuss the performance of the swimmer without utilizing the swim time. A swim time is a raw number that represents the performance of a swimmer relative to all other swimmers, but the power point will indicate the performance of that swimmer in comparison to a specific reference mark. To calculate the power points for a swimmer’s time, several different input are required.

How USA Swimming Power Points Work

One such input is the course for the swim. Swim courses can be short course yards, short course meters, or long course meters. Each of these courses can be non-interchangeable for the calculation of power points.

As such, the coach must select the course for the swim time for the power points calculation, as well as the course for the reference mark. If the swim time and the reference mark are not from the same type of course, the power point score will be inaccurately. The next selection for the power points calculation is the event for the swimmer.

Each event will have different reference times for that specific swimmer. For instance, a 100 yard freestyle and a 100 yard backstroke will have different reference times. Furthermore, each swimmer will have a different reference time according to their age group.

Younger age groups will have a more lenient reference time for their age group then older age groups, as younger swimmers are expected to have relatively slower times than those who is age groups. The third selection for power points is the gender of the swimmer. Separate reference marks and historical data exist for male and female swimmers.

Thus, the gender of the swimmer will determine which data column is selected for that swimmer for the power point calculation. The fourth selection is the base reference mode. This mode determine the reference mark to be used for the power point score.

Reference marks can be based on the estimated age of the swimmer, the rough open water record for the swimmer’s event, or a custom base time can be selected. A custom base time allows for the insertion of a specific time to be compared to the swimmer’s time. For example, if the swimmer intends to compete in a specific championship meet, that meets time standard could be entered into the power point calculation as the custom base.

The other selections for the base time will work best in instances where specific time standards are not known or selected by the coach or swimmer. The fifth selection is the exponent for the calculation. An exponent that is relatively low will provide power point scores that are relatively even for different swimmers, yet a higher exponent will provide scores that drop more quickly for swimmers with slower times.

Most programs use an exponent of three for the power point calculation, as this is the standard for USA Swimming’s power points system. Other exponents may be utilized if a different standard is required for that swim team or coach. The sixth and final selection is the standards profile.

Standards profiles can be based upon national swim team standards, state swim team standards, or club development standards. Each standard is used to describe the same power point score. Thus, a power point score may indicate that a swimmer’s time is within a national style band, yet another may note that it is within a state style band.

The output of the power point calculation will be a score for the swimmer. That score will allow coaches to begin to discuss the performance of the swimmer. For instance, a score of 820 may indicate high performing swimmer, but a score of 620 may indicate that the swimmer is competitive yet has areas of improvement.

This score can help coaches to determine the time required to earn the next threshold for scoring, yet cannot account for all variables. For instance, a tired swimmer may score relatively low compared to another swimmer of similar skills and abilities who may have rested prior to the race. Additionally, other variables in relay races might impact a score for a swimmer.

Thus, USA Swimming power points are a helpful tool yet not a perfect tool for coaches to monitor the performance of their swimmers over time. In order for the power points to reflect the performance of the swimmer, the custom base time should of been kept up to date. The custom base time can be updated if there are changes to records or time standards for specific swim events.

Additionally, the course for the swimmer’s time should match that for the reference mark. By ensuring the coaches appropriately update these variables for each swimmer, the USA Swimming power points will reflect the performance of the swimmer over time.

USA Swimming Power Point Calculator

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