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17-Year-Old Maximus Williamson Blazes 1:41.18 200 IM to Break Nolan’s NAG Record From 2011

2023 SPEEDO WINTER JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIPS – WEST

Thursday evening heat sheets

Just about an hour after Thomas Heilman lowered his own Winter Juniors meet record in the 200-yard IM from 1:41.71 to 1:41.41 at the East edition in Columbus, Ohio, future University of Virginia teammate Maximus Williamson issued an emphatic response.

Williamson, 17, crushed a personal-best 1:41.18 to win the 200 IM by more than two seconds at Winter Juniors – West in Westmont, Illinois, taking almost a full second off his previous-best 1:42.07 from last year’s meet. The victory gave the Lakeside Aquatic Club standout the new meet record as well as the new U.S. boys’ 17-18 national age group (NAG) record, erasing David Nolan‘s 12-year-old standard of 1:41.39 from 2011.

Nolan’s 200 IM record was way ahead of its time, evidenced by the fact that it stood as the oldest NAG standard in the boys’ 17-18 age group by four years and the only swim in the top 10 from more than a decade ago. Before Nolan came along, the NAG record stood at 1:43.83 by Dan Trupin in 2002.

U.S. 17-18 Boys’ NAG Rankings

  1. Maximus Williamson, 1:41.18 (2023)
  2. David Nolan, 1:41.39 (2011)
  3. Owen McDonald, 1:41.60 (2023)
  4. Baylor Nelson, 1:42.01 (2021)
  5. Ryan Murphy, 1:42.24 (2014)
  6. Kieran Smith, 1:42.26 (2019)
  7. Carson Foster, 1:42.43 (2019)
  8. Raunak Khosla, 1:42.80 (2019)
  9. Luca Urlando, 1:42.81 (2021)
  10. Nate Germonprez, 1:42.82 (2022)

Williamson went 21.79 on the butterfly leadoff, 24.40 on the backstroke leg, 30.78 on the breaststroke leg, and 24.21 on the freestyle anchor.

Maximus Williamson, 2023 David Nolan, 2011
50 fly 21.79 22.07
50 back 24.40 24.92
50 breast 30.78 29.76
50 free 24.21 24.64
200 IM 1:41.18 1:41.39

Williamson’s time tonight would already rank 3rd in the NCAA this season behind Destin Lasco (1:40.16) and Hubert Kos (1:39.26), and he won’t arrive in Charlottesville with Heilman until the fall of 2025.

It was deja vu after Thursday night, when Williamson broke the 17-18 NAG record in the 200 free (1:32.00) just minutes after Heilman crushed Williamson’s previous 15-16 mark with a 1:32.46. These two are going to be a problem together in Charlottesville, and they still have nearly two years left before beginning their collegiate careers.

Day 2 Finals Livestream, Courtesy of USA Swimming: 

BOYS’ 200 YARD INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY – FINALS

Final:

  1. Maximus Williamson, Lakeside Aquatic – 1:41.18P
  2. Cooper Lucas, Lakeside Aquatic – 1:43.88
  3. Campbell McKean, Bend Swim Club – 1:44.23
  4. Jake Eccleston, Fort Collins Area – 1:46.58
  5. Tony Laurito, South Shore Sail – 1:446.83
  6. Joe Polyak, Iowa Flyers Swim – 1:47.12
  7. Logan Noguchi, Rose Bowl Aquatics – 1:47.25
  8. Hudson Schuricht, Scottsdale Aquatic Club – 1:46.63

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Summer Love
11 months ago

Max Williamson – Thomas Heilman friendly rivalry will push each other to greatness, hopefully to the level of Phelps – Lochte

maverick1993
Reply to  Summer Love
11 months ago

I am also excited by the fact they will also hopefully be training together for a few years 🙂 Will be insane practices…need many practice with pancake episodes Coleman!

ncaa fan
11 months ago

Cooper Lucas going 4:16.2 and then 1:43.8 20 minutes later (came home in 24.1) and then splitting 53.3 Br on the relay is incredible

Last edited 11 months ago by ncaa fan
Curious
11 months ago

Why is no one talking about Charlotte Crush? 49.53!!!

Joe
Reply to  Curious
11 months ago

I think a lot of people did

bubo
11 months ago

RIP to a legendary record

dirtswimmer
11 months ago

Amazing swim by Williamson but to me this just shows how ahead of his time Nolan was. So many studs have taken a crack at this and failed, and it finally took a potentially generational talent to finally sneak by it.
Video of Nolan’s swim always gets me fired up
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FwXrUjzOf2k

ncaa fan
Reply to  dirtswimmer
11 months ago

chills… I love the kid’s reactions under the scoreboard of David’s swim

Paul
Reply to  dirtswimmer
11 months ago

Not to mention, it was at a time where from back to breast no type of flip was allowed AND no downward kicks on the breast pullout. I’m sure he could’ve shaved some tenths off with those perfections

The Original Tim
Reply to  Paul
11 months ago

Was that a PIAA rule? At least in USAS at the time, the crossover turn was allowed, as was a dolphin kick on the pullout

Last edited 11 months ago by The Original Tim
Steve Nolan
11 months ago

Dangit

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Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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