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2015 M. NCAA Picks: Alabama, USC and Michigan Among Top Contenders in 400 Medley Relay

2015 NCAA MEN’S CHAMPIONSHIPS

400 MEDLEY RELAY

  • NCAA record: 3:01.39 – Auburn (P Wollach, A Klein, T McGill, M Targett) – 2009
  • American record: 3:01.91 – Stanford (E Godsoe, P Kornfeld, A Staab, A Coville) – 2009
  • U.S. Open record: 3:01.39 – Auburn (P Wollach, A Klein, T McGill, M Targett) – 2009
  • 2014 NCAA Champion: 3:02.66 – Cal (R. Murphy, C. Katis, M. Tarczynski, S. Stubblefield)


As with years past, the 2015 edition of the 400 medley relay is a “who’s who” of the upper echelons of men’s college swimming.  The event embodies the very best in each discipline, as teams strategize to assemble the most lethal combination of athletes with the ultimate goal of standing atop the podium at the end of the night.

Last year’s winning relay from Cal retained three of its members, with only Marcin Tarczynski having graduated. That leaves Ryan Murphy, Chuck Katis and Seth Stubblefield to try to defend the team’s 400 medley relay title, most likely with new member Tyler Messerschmidt also attending the party.  With Stubblefield moving to the fly leg and Messerschmidt anchoring, the foursome clocked a swift 3:05.28 to come in as runner-up at their own Pac-12 championships.  Murphy’s split of 45.18 was the fastest across all conference winners this year, so the key to the Bears’ success is to build on that momentum as each leg progresses.  Stubblefield’s 45.49 split from Pac-12s was right in line with most of the other school’s flyers, highlighting the need for breaststroker Katis and anchor Messerschmidt to throw down some nasty times to keep Cal in the running against the likes of USC and Alabama.

Alabama comes into the championship meet with the fastest qualifying time, that of 3:04.22 earned at the SEC Championships.  The foursome of Connor Oslin (45.45), Anton McKee (51.95), Brett Walsh (45.49) and Kristian Gkolomeev (41.33) combined to lay waste to the rest of the field and bring home the conference title in dominating fashion.  Oslin’s backstroke split was the 3rd fastest across all conferences, while McKee’s sub-52 breaststroke is an absolute must to fend off the charging competitors such as Thomas Dahlia (Louisville), Richard Funk (Michigan) and Nic Fink (Georgia).  If butterflyer Walsh can at least match his 45-mid split and maintain any lead Alabama may earn, then you know the Tide can count on their speeding-bullet-of-an-anchor Gkolomeev to shut the door on the field and get his hand on the wall first.  Alabama just needs to ensure that all pieces of its high-velocity puzzle fall nicely in place to replicate their NCAA-leading time when it truly counts in the Final.

In addition to Alabama, USC and Michigan are the only other two teams whose qualifying time dipped beneath the 3:05 threshold.  USC’s monster 3:04.80 swim took the Pac-12 title and further established freshman Ralf Tribuntsov as a viable backstroke threat.  His 45.30 split was the 2nd-fastest behind Murphy, but his 44.95 from Pac-12 prelims signals of what damage this young stud is capable of inflicting to catapult the Trojans out in front. Andrew Malone’s 52.68 breaststroke split was enough within his team’s formula that day to win the conference, but the senior will need to leave a bit more in the pool, with several key competitors dropping 51-mids and highs like it’s their job.  However, with sophomore sprinter Santo Condorelli and senior speed demon Cristian Quintero ready to set the pool aflame in the butterfly and freestyle legs, respectively, the Trojans certainly have a strong chance to roll right over the Crimson Tide.

The University of Michigan team is also right there on the cusp of a monumental performance as well.   As warning shots to the rest of the NCAA,  the Wolverine squad of Aaron Whitaker (46.46), Richard Funk (51.08) Dylan Bosch (45.49) and Bruno Ortiz (41.79) just wreaked havoc on Iowa’s pool record, turning in a Big Ten title-winning time of 3:04.92, third in the country by less than a second behind Alabama and less than a tenth behind USC.  This in itself is a huge improvement over the 7th place-finishing time of 3:07.61 for Michigan from 2014’s NCAA championships.  Funk is an absolute beast on the breaststroke, where his split of 51.08 was the fastest across all conferences.  Bosch is Mr. Reliable on butterfly and Ortiz has been consistent on his sprint speed, making the Wolverines a competitor right up there in contention to win the title.

With swimmers such as Jack Blyzinskyj in lead-off and Caeleb Dressel as anchor, the Florida Gators have some serious speed to open and close their medley.  Texas also certainly has its arsenal of big guns in the form of sophomore phenom Jack Conger, who could basically fill in several different roles in the relay,  and Joseph Schooling.  Explosive doesn’t begin to describe these men’s performances up until this point, and they seem to have yet to unleash their fastest swims this season, as scary of a prospect as that is.

TOP 8 PREDICTIONS

Alabama
Michigan
USC
Texas
Cal
Florida
Georgia
Louisville

Dark Horse: NC State sits as the 10th-ranked squad in this event, with a competitive 3:06.59, just two seconds off the top mark of Alabama.  The Wolfpack had a phenomenal outing as a whole at the ACC Championships, with notable key swims by junior Simonas Bilis.  The most frightening part about this relay is the youth factor – with 3 of 4 members only being sophomores, the Wolfpack medley is just getting started.

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Peter davis
9 years ago

This relay is all about Texas v Cal.

Texas 44.9, 50.9, 44.2, 41.2 = 301.2
Cal 44.5, 50.3, 45.0, 41.2 = 301.0

I think all of the splits above are at the fast end of what we could see, but I think they are all reasonable. Both teams have a shot to be 301 and break records, and I’d be surprised if either were slower than 302.5. What other team is gonna be under 303?

JP
Reply to  Peter davis
9 years ago

I’m curious as to who on Texas is going to split a 50.9 breast?

Sean S
Reply to  JP
9 years ago

Will Lincon was 51 low at Big 12s so not much of a stretch.

JP
Reply to  Sean S
9 years ago

51.5. Missed it first look through of results because his name’s not listed.

Put it this way: If he’s got .6 seconds of drop on his 100 breast, how dang fast is his 200 breast going to be with a totally unchallenged 1:51.7 at conference?

Hulk Swim
9 years ago

I’ve been wondering how Texas figures out this relay… but it just occurred to me that Conger is doubling on Day 2… so he’ll likely only swim one of the 200 Medley and 800 Free Relays… meaning he’d HAVE to swim this one. I was curios if they’d go Darmody and Schooling.

I think they lock in at Conger at backstroke and Schooling at fly… and then the likelier 51 low split Breaststroke leg, and probably Murray at the anchor.

Hulk Swim
Reply to  Hulk Swim
9 years ago

I think Conger does the 800 on day 2… saves him a swim and leaves his prelims to focus on the individuals and only has to swim the relay once.

Then he’s free to swim both day 1 relays.

completelyconquered
Reply to  Hulk Swim
9 years ago

It will definitely be interesting to see what relays Conger does. I think you are right that he will be on the 800 free relay, but I think the most least likely relay for Conger to be on is the 200 free relay for Texas just because I think they could use him more on the other relays. This is how I see the 200 free relay lineup being for Texas: Ellis, Murray, Ringgold, and then either Cooper (19.21 last year)/Darmody (18.77 last year as Stubblefield ran him down).

And the 400 Medley being Darmody,Licon,Conger,Murray.

Derek Mead
Reply to  completelyconquered
9 years ago

I agree he won’t do the 200 free relay, but I would put Youngquist in those relay mentions as well.

I know he hasn’t improved as much as he’d like, but he did split 19.2 and a 42 his freshmen year. If he’s swimming well, I think he could sneak on 1 or both 200/400 free relays

Hulk Swim
9 years ago

We could see a handful of teams in the 302/303 range… we have the deepest breaststroke field, and seemingly everyone has a 45 low backstroker and 44 split flyer handy. If these breaststroke can split 50 highs / 51 lows… yikes. Could be the best relay race of the meet.

Hulk Swim
Reply to  Hulk Swim
9 years ago

I like Texas, California and Michigan here… and wouldn’t rule out a Tennessee final.

CJM
9 years ago

I really don’t think there’s a single race you can exclude Texas from having a chance to win. Most these guys have only had a small rest for Texas Invite and/or Big XIIs. I wouldn’t put it past Texas to, amongst other things, have a 44.0 or 44.1 fly split.

calswimfan
9 years ago

I think this battle is between Cal and Texas. Also, Texas might have a bigger advantage on the fly leg relative to Cal’s advantage on the breast leg. So I give advantage to Texas.

JP
9 years ago

Funny thing I just noticed, apparently all 400 medley relay fly legs split 45.49 – Stubblefield, Walsh and Bosch at least!

SamH
9 years ago

Cal seems like they should definitely be the favorites. Murphy as of late looks like he is going to do some serious damage in the pool. Katis also seems to have improved and he split 50 point last year. Whether they use Lynch or Stubblefield or Lynch is a mystery. Lynch could drop a 45.5 individual then split low 45 then move Stubblefield to freestyles once again.

I said this about the 200 medley, but I will say it again: Texas will be a huge threat simply because of butterlfy. Schooling might be able to get into Shields territory splits. Conger, fresh, will throw down a solid backstroke but not near Murphy. They should use Licon on breast but for… Read more »

PK
Reply to  SamH
9 years ago

It will be tough for Cal to use Lynch since they will be playing a guessing game at that point, with the 100 fly on day 2 and the relay on day 1. I do think Cal is the favorite, if only because I think they’re going to have a pretty solid lead at the 200 mark.

I imagine after Eddy’s comments at Big 12s we will see Will Licon doing breast on this relay. I forget what his split there was in the Eddy video-it was either 51.3 or 51.7.

completelyconquered
Reply to  SamH
9 years ago

I’m not quite sure Conger will be doing backstroke on this relay. Darmody, while having an interesting season thus far, has been just great for them at NCAAs (45.2 in 2014, and 46.0 in 2013).

Hulk Swim
Reply to  completelyconquered
9 years ago

Is Darmody swimming on day 1?

let’s assume Darmody continues to come up big and goes 49.9… you don’t think Conger can go 44.8? I do. They may split duties morning and night…

But it’s kinda crazy that a case could be made for Conger not swimming 4 relays…

If Texas gets 44 splits from the bk/fly legs and a 41 mid from free… they just need a 51 low to get into the 301 zone.

JP
Reply to  Hulk Swim
9 years ago

Conger’s their best 100 fly as of right now anyway, though obviously it’s close.

I would bet they leave him out of either the 2 medley (Darmody/Murray or Temple/Schooling/Ringgold or Ellis or Murray) or the 8 free (Youngquist/Schooling/Roberts/Smith) just because he is doubling up on individuals that second day.

iLikePsych
Reply to  completelyconquered
9 years ago

Note that Darmody had the fastest 50 back in the 200 Medley last year – .02 faster than Murphy!

TheTroubleWithX
9 years ago

My over/under on Texas is 3:03-low, and it wouldn’t be shocking to see them at 3:01-low.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

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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