You are working on Staging1

2017 Men’s Ivies: Farris’ 1:31 Anchor Puts Harvard Out Front on Day 1

2017 Ivy League Men’s Swimming & Diving Championships

The Harvard Crimson took advantage of its home-pool advantage to shine on Day One of the 2017 Ivy League Men’s Swimming and Diving Championships. The men of Cambridge set a pool record in the 200 medley relay and a championship, pool, and school record in the 800 free relay to jump to an early lead over the field.

Steven Tan (22.04), Shane McNamara (24.27), Max Yakubovich (20.32), and Dean Farris (18.89) combined for 1:25.52 in the medley relay for Harvard’s first win. Penn’s CJ Schaffer, Colin McHugh, James Jameson, and Thomas Dillinger finished second with 1:26.34. Cornell (Dylan Curtis, Alex Evdokimov, Luke Reisch, and Jack Brenneman) placed third with 1:26.68. Yale’s Aaron Greenberg anchored the Bulldogs’ sixth-place relay with 18.60.

In the next event, Harvard destroyed the competition, as well as all the records on the books, with an NCAA “A” cut of 6:19.80, thanks in large part to a stunning 1:31 anchor from Farris. The Crimson relay consisted of of sophomore Brennan Novak (1:36.47), freshman Zach Snyder (1:36.65), senior Aly Abdel Khalik (1:35.39), and freshman Farris (1:31.29).

Yale hit the NCAA “B” standard and beat the pool record by 1.6 seconds with their 6:24.24 from junior Jonathan Rutter (1:36.86), sophomore Adrian Lin (1:34.71), freshman Tristan Furnary (1:39.15), and junior Kei Hyogo (1:34.52).

Standings after Day One:

  1. Harvard University 128
  2. University of Pennsylvania 110
  3. Yale University 104
  4. Columbia University 104
  5. Cornell University 104
  6. Brown University 96
  7. Dartmouth College 94

 

In This Story

16
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

16 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Dozer
7 years ago

Farris Splits
20.25, 42.9 (22.7), 1:06, 1.31.29 (24.7)
Ouch Ouch Ouch. So fast. So painful.

Joel Lin
Reply to  Dozer
7 years ago

Out in 42.9. Yikes.

Dylan
Reply to  Joel Lin
7 years ago

Yikes and 1:31.2 do not belong in association

Swim mom
7 years ago

Abdel-Khalik was 1:35.39 not 1:36.

Tea rex
7 years ago

That was not Dean Farris. Katie Ledecky snuck into the meet to swim for Harvard.

GET BEANED
7 years ago

Heard he wore a blue-seventy full body suit!!! Maybe even had fins on. This is ridiculous.

newswim
Reply to  GET BEANED
7 years ago

Don’t forget he’s going to be half a body length behind Haas according to our friends in New Jersey with the cow bells.

gator
7 years ago

great to see fast swimming at Ivy’s. Seems like SwimSwam should also run an article on Ledecky’s 140 anchor. I know she gets a lot of run, but man, has any woman ever gone 140 SCY?

Northeastswim
Reply to  gator
7 years ago

Missy Franklin went 1:39.10 at 2015 NCAAs from a flat start for the NCAA, US Open and American Records. Not sure if anyone else has ever broken the 1:40 mark.

iLikePsych
Reply to  gator
7 years ago

Yes, several, and then there’s one who went 1:39 as well.

Hswimmer
Reply to  gator
7 years ago

Yes. Missy Franklin has been 1:39.1

Sean
7 years ago

Just think how fast it could have been if he was out a touch more conservatively

Uberfan
7 years ago

And just like that I’m gonna pay attention to the Ivy Leauge championships

Onii-chan
7 years ago

What a MASSIVE split from Farris-senpai on the 800 Free relay! 1:31! I’m definitely gonna add him to the yaoi fanfiction I’ve been working on… maybe I should pair him with Rooney-senpai! (*^∀゜)

Uberfan
Reply to  Onii-chan
7 years ago

Your comments crack me up. But RooneyXGrant is my OTP

iLikePsych
Reply to  Onii-chan
7 years ago

I wonder how many of your upvotes know what yaoi is…

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, …

Read More »