ACC Men
- Dates: Wednesday, February 26th – Saturday, March 1st; prelims 11AM/Finals 7PM (Diving is Feb. 20-22, with the women’s ACC Championships at Greensboro)
- Location: Greensboro Aquatic Center, Greensboro, NC (Eastern Time Zone)
- Defending Champion: Virginia (6x) (results)
- Live Results: Available here.
- Live Video (If available): Available here.
- Championship Central
Men’s 200 Yard Medley Relay – TIMED FINALS
For the second-straight season, the North Carolina State Wolfpack men opened up the ACC Championships on-fire on Wednesday evening. But unlike last year, where the show started in the 800 free relay (where they touched the wall first but were DQ’ed for a post-race reentry), the Wolfpack got heated up in the very first race this year.
The NC State men’s team leapt out to a 1:23.78 in the 200 medley relay, which crushed the old ACC Record by a full second. The runners-up from Florida State, who held the record with their 1:24.84 from last year, were also under the old mark in 1:24.72, followed by Virginia Tech (1:24.97) and Virginia (1:24.98).
The winning relay team was made up of Andreas Schiellerup (21.23 – backstroke), Ian Bishop (23.71 – breaststroke), Barrett Miesfeld (20.39 – fly), and David Williams (18.45 – freestyle) – and they now lead the nation. The time would have placed 4th at NCAA’s last year. There’s so many noteworthy things about those splits, but maybe the best is the emergence of the junior sprinter Williams with an impressive split.
What’s even more impressive about that list of names is who isn’t on it. Jonathan Boffa and Simonas Bilis, just like last season, were left off of this medley in preparation for the 800 free relay later in the session, where the Wolfpack will look to pull off the official Virginia-streak ending win this year.
The top 6 times in this relay were all under the NCAA Automatic Qualifying standard. Notre Dame was 5th in 1:25.46, and North Carolina placed 6th in 1:25.80.
Rounding out the 10 men’s teams were Pitt in 1:27.21, Duke in 1:27.35, Georgia Tech in 1:28.24, and Boston College in 1:29.20.
Men’s 800 Free Relay – TIMED FINALS
The North Carolina State men weren’t done after their first relay win. They popped off a dominant 6:15.58 to win the men’s 800 free relay by four seconds, and come up just half-a-second short of another ACC Record.
That win also broke the record of 6-straight event titles for Virginia, who took 5th in this relay in 6:23.84, but most importantly swam an NCAA Automatic Qualifying Time of 6:23.84.
The NC State win in this relay is some redemption for three of the relays’ members. Three of the four members of the relay were on the relay last year that was DQ’ed after a swimmer reentered the water in celebration prior to its completion.
That will hopefully clear out some demons from that meet for Jonathan Boffa (1:34.30), Simonas Bilis (1:33.12), and David Williams (1:33.83) who for the second-straight year anchored this 800 free relay with the team’s fastest split. The new addition was freshman Soeren Dahl who was a 1:34.33. That swim broke the old School Record by seven seconds.
Virginia Tech was 2nd in 6:19.69, including a 1:33.19 anchor leg from freshman Jan Switkowski. Notre Dame was 3rd in 6:21.74, with a 1:33.63 from their star and senior Frank Dyer, and Georgia Tech was 4th in 6:23.68. Those top five relays were all NCAA Automatic Qualifying Times.
North Carolina took 6th in 6:24.58, followed by Florida State (6:26.34), Pitt (6:28.61), Duke (6:34.65_. and Boston College (6:43.34).
Team Scoring
While the official scores after day 1 have North Carolina State in the lead, we’ve taken the liberty of rolling in the diving points, as diving was completed last week during the women’s meet. This should give a truer picture of where things sit right now, and allow our readers to focus on the impact of swimming results for the rest of the weekend.
As can be seen below, North Carolina State still has a big hole to dig out of – their 23 diving points left them in 10th. Of course, with how well they swam on night 1, they’re going to finish much higher than 9th. If they can squeeze a few points out of the 500 free and the 200 IM on Thursday, before scoring big points in the 50 free, they’ll fight their way back into this team battle in a hurry.
1. Virginia Tech – 315
2. Florida State – 271
3. Duke – 209
4. Virginia – 204
5. North Carolina – 194
6. Notre Dame – 182
7. Pitt – 165
8. Miami – 156 (diving only)
9. North Carolina State – 151
10. Georgia Tech – 147
I came to Townsville, NC to teach sch. yr. of ’73-’74 and witnessed a few performances of a NCST 440 yd. relay team, touted as fastest in the world at the time. They were blacks, and was told, Africans. Anything in the records?
The ACC website stinks. It’s the worst. SEC website/webmaster knows how to build a website with relevant info and LiveResults that actually work properly with “normal” search engines. This is ridiculous. PAC 12 has their network. SEC has results that you can actually pull up. The way that they tout the meet on the banner, then you can’t even get prelim results – it sucks.
“Jonathan Boffa (1:34.30), Simonas Bilis (1:33.12), and David Williams (1:33.83) who for the second-straight year anchored this 800 free relay with the team’s fastest split. The new addition was freshman Soeren Dahl who was a 1:33.12.”
Dahl, Soeren FR 1:34.33
Coach Easterling….darned spell check got me. All hail old school.
The Pack is back…somewhere the original ‘ole swam Coach Easterly is smiling.
Congratulations to Andreas on a new 50 back Danish record (yes, we have yards records even though in Denmark we only swim metres domestically) 🙂
Look at 200 medley relay take off times for NCSU. 3 consecutive .oo. Men of Science, I ask you what are the odds? Also, 800 free, negative big numbers with no DQ (look down the finish) Do we have issues?
the RJP most likely malfunctioned… so they just fill in .00 on the results.
Todd DeSorbo is a great sprint coach.