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2017 U.S. Open Day 5 Finals LIVE RECAP

2017 U.S. OPEN CHAMPIONSHIPS

It’s an abbreviated finals session on the last night of the 2017 U.S. Open Championships, as the Nassau County Aquatics Center prepares to switch over to the Junior National Championships that start next week.

There are still plenty of intriguing story lines for Sunday evening, though, not the least of which is the 4th swim for Ryan Lochte at this meet, which is his first back from a 10 month suspension. He’s the top qualifier in the 200 IM, and in finals will be chasing a 1:58.54 that would tentatively earn him a spot on the U.S. National Team for next season, which he says is his big goal for the meet.

South African Brad Tandy, who missed the World Championships, due to what he called “bad timing with visas.” After a 21.95 in the morning, he’ll be looking to prove in finals of what could have been in Budapest last week.

Women’s 1500 Free – TIMED FINAL

  • American: 15:25.48 8/4/2015 Katie Ledecky
  • U.S. Open: 15:34,23 6/19/2014 Katie Ledecky
  1. GOLD- Erica Sullivan, Sandpipers of Nevada 16:05.83
  2. SILVER- Ashley Twichell, North Carolina Aquatic Club 16:10.99
  3. BRONZE- Cassy Jernberg, Schroeder YMCA/Indiana 16:29.76

The three heats leading up to the finals session produced quite a few strong performances, the fastest of which belonged to the Kowal twins, Molly Kowal of Ohio State (16:40.05) and Grace Kowal of  H2okie Aquatics (16:43.54). Both finished on the podium with their swims, placing 6th and 8th, respectively.

In the timed final, 16-year-old Erica Sullivan of Sandpipers of Nevada and North Carolina Aquatic Club’s Ashley Twichell took it out fast from the get-go, and never let up. They traded leads several times, but Sullivan took off at about the 1100 and left Twichell in her wake. She turned out 32-lows over the final 300 meters and finished with 16:05.83, the third-fastest time in history for 15-16 girls. Twichell touched second in 16:10.99. Cassy Jernberg of Schroeder YMCA and Indiana University picked up the bronze medal from the outside lane, going 16:29.76.

WOMEN 200 LC METER IM

  • American: 2:06.15 7/27/2009 Ariana Kukors
  • U.S. Open: 2:08.66 5/17/2015 Katinka Hosszu
  • U.S. Open Meet: 2:11.06 8/3/2013 Justine Mueller
  1. GOLD- Meaghan Raab, Nashville Aquatic Club/Georgia 2:12.56
  2. SILVER- Margaret Aroesty, Long Island Aquatic Club 2:12.83
  3. BRONZE- Fantine Lesaffre, France 2:14.58

Lisa Bratton of Texas A&M led the field after a very fast backstroke leg (33.23). The breaststrokers narrowed the gap over the next 50 meters, with Margaret Aroesty of Long Island Aquatic Club and Meaghan Raab of Nashville Aquatic Club and University of Georgia taking the lead heading into the freestyle. Raab brought it home nearly a second faster though, and eked out the win, 2:12.56 to 2:12.83. Third place went to France’s Fantine Lesaffre in 2:14.58.

MEN 200 LC METER IM

  • American: 1:54.00 7/28/2011 Ryan Lochte
  • U.S. Open: 1:54.56 7/10/2009 Ryan Lochte
  • U.S. Open Meet: 1:59.26 11/30/2006 Michael F Phelps
  1. GOLD- Ryan Lochte, Trojan Swim Club 1:59.24
  2. SILVER- Xavier Mohammed, Swim Wales 2:00.47
  3. BRONZE- Sam Stewart, Longhorn Aquatics 2:01.51

The field was bunched at the fly wall, but Texas A&M’s Brock Bonetti turned just ahead of Trojan Swim Club’s Ryan Lochte. Lochte had a smooth backstroke leg and pulled ahead of the field, although Swim Wales’ Xavier Mohammed stayed with him. The pair had the clear lead heading into the breaststroke, where Lochte broke away and led by about 3/4 of a body heading into the freestyle. Lochte increased his lead over the final 50 meters and touched in a new U.S. Open meet record of 1:59.24, taking 2/100 off Michael Phelps’ 2006 meet mark.

Mohammed finished second with 2:00.47. Third place went to Sam Stewart of Longhorn Aquatics in 2:01.51.

Men 800 LC Meter Free

  • American: 7:43.60 7/28/2013 Michael McBroom
  • U.S. Open: 7:46.78 6/25/2013 Connor Jaeger
  1. GOLD- Damien Joly, France 7:53.26
  2. SILVER- Logan Houck, Sandpipers of Nevada 7:56.05
  3. BRONZE- Matt Hutchins, Wisconsin Aquatics 7:56.14

Sandpiper of Nevada’s Logan Houck had set the pace in the morning heats with a best-by-9.9-seconds 7:56.05. In the timed final, France’s Damien Joly went out right away, building up more than a body length lead over teammate Joris Bouchaut and Wisconsin Aquatics’ Matt Hutchins by the 200. As Joly continued to dominate the field, Bouchaut and Hutchins were battling for second in the middle lanes.

Joly finished comfortably ahead, winning in 7:53.26. Eventually Hutchins pulled away, but Bouchaut fought back hard over the final 50 meters. Bouchaut made up nearly a body length but Hutchins got the touch, 7:56.14 to 7:56.22, for second in the heat. France’s Mathis Castera was fourth in the heat with 8:01.74.

Hutchins finished third overall after Joly and Houck; Bouchaut was fourth and his teammate Castera, fifth.

WOMEN 50 LC METER FREESTYLE

  • American: 23.97 7/30/2017 Simone Manuel
  • U.S. Open: 24.13 5/18/2008 Cate Campbell
  • U.S. Open Meet: 24.90 8/8/2009 Jessica Hardy
  1. GOLD- Madison Kennedy, SwimMAC Carolina, 24.92
  2. SILVER- Marie Wattel, France 25.06
  3. BRONZE- Rebecca Millard, Longhorn Aquatics 25.52

Top qualifier Madison Kennedy of SwimMAC Carolina got off to a fast start and looked dominant throughout the 50 meters. Next to her, France’s Marie Wattel gained momentum as the race went on but she wasn’t able to catch Kennedy, who won in 24.92, a mere 2/100 off the meet mark set by Jessica Hardy in 2009.

Kennedy was the only sub-25 in the field. Wattel took second with 25.06, her best by 0.40, and the second-fastest French performance of the year. The race for third was tight, with Rebecca Millard of Longhorn Aquatics getting the nod with 25.52 from the outside lane.

14-year-old Gretchen Walsh of Nashville Aquatic Club was just 5/100 behind Millard, but it was her best time by another 16/100. She had already taken 10/100 off her PB in prelims, and now moves from #5 all-time to #4 all-time in the 13-14 age category.

MEN 50 LC METER FREESTYLE

  • American: 21.15 7/29/2017 Caeleb Dressel
  • U.S. Open: 21.14 7/9/2009 Cesar Cielo
  • US Open Meet: 21.73 8/8/2009 Nicholas Brunelli
  1. GOLD- Brad Tandy, Unattached 21.70
  2. SILVER- Cullen Jones, Wolfpack Elite 22.03
  3. BRONZE- Michael Andrew, Race Pace Club 22.22

Brad Tandy and Wolfpack Elite’s Cullen Jones, swimming in the middle lanes, were a half body length ahead of the field from the outset. Over the last 15 meters Tandy surged ahead and got the win with 21.70, taking down Nicholas Brunelli’s meet record from 2009. Jones took second in 22.03. Michael Andrew pulled clear of the rest of the field to win the bronze in 22.22, while Longhorn Aquatics’ Tate Jackson touched out Alabama’s Robert Howard, 22.40 to 22.46, for fourth.

South Africa’s Tandy was .03 off Roland Schoeman’s national record of 21.67.

 

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bobo gigi
7 years ago

Great time for Erica Sullivan. She can win the gold at world juniors. Hopefully she focuses on the pool in the next few years and not on open water.
Great 50 free for Gretchen Walsh. Next year sub 25.
Very good meet overall for Damien Joly and Marie Wattel.
Lochte will be much stronger next year. He will qualify in the 200 IM for pan pacs 2018 and worlds 2019.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  bobo gigi
7 years ago

totally agree about Lochte’s qualification next year

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  ERVINFORTHEWIN
7 years ago

Happy to see the french guys having solid racing over there …they need it .

teddy
7 years ago

Swim of the meet to Tandy

Danjohnrob
7 years ago

That 1500 time by Sullivan knocks Twichell down to 9th in the TYR Rankings this year, VERY impressive! Is this a big time drop from her? I didn’t know she had developed into an international top 10 athlete!

Becky D
Reply to  Danjohnrob
7 years ago

Her seed time was 16:25, so…. yeah, it was a big drop.

Hannah
Reply to  Danjohnrob
7 years ago

It doesn’t always translate, but she has a very impressive SCY 1650, 15:47.39

aquajosh
Reply to  Danjohnrob
7 years ago

She may not be done yet, either. She is going to Junior Worlds.

TINY HANDS
7 years ago

Lochte swims a 1:59.24 while training “1 or 2 days a week”? Give me a break.

Becky D
Reply to  TINY HANDS
7 years ago

And he only does that when someone is holding a gun to his head.

samuel huntington
Reply to  TINY HANDS
7 years ago

with the base he’s built up over the years, yes he can definitely go 1:59 only swimming once a week. Phelps could do that also I’m sure.

crooked donald
Reply to  samuel huntington
7 years ago

It’s all about that base. No treble.

DutchWomen
Reply to  crooked donald
7 years ago

The rhythm is the bass and the bass is the treble….

Swimmer?
Reply to  samuel huntington
7 years ago

Phelps went 1:55 after skipping days or even weeks in the 200 im in 2010 lol. 2009-2012 was just swimming off that base he worked so hard for 2003-2008. Lochte could be back into 1:55 shape next year with a normal commitment

aquajosh
Reply to  TINY HANDS
7 years ago

For the same reason Beisel could swim a 4:40 at Santa Clara on a month and a half of training and then pop a 4:34 at Worlds after being out of the water for eight months. That base doesn’t go away.

TINY HANDS
Reply to  aquajosh
7 years ago

There is a large body of evidence that says the base does go away, even in elite athletes. Endurance performance, aerobic capacity, and VO2 max all decrease when elite athletes (and recreational athletes) reduce training over moderate to long periods of time.

Swimnerd
7 years ago

Tandy Time

Damiansport1
7 years ago

What do we make of Lochte’s time

marklewis
Reply to  Damiansport1
7 years ago

Hard to imagine him swimming fast times anytime soon.

His strokes look the same, so his technique in intact.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  marklewis
7 years ago

As if his technique ( trained for so many years with Troy / Marsh ) could have gone by the window ……come on

crooked donald
Reply to  Damiansport1
7 years ago

The 33.8 breast split from prelims was the most promising. Still pretty amazing that he got close to Licon at #6 with so little training.

marklewis
7 years ago

In the men’s 800, Logan Houck split 4:00.56 going out and then 3:55.49 coming back. A five-second “negative split.”

Is that good pacing? Total time was 7:56.05 for second place. Maybe he had more in the tank than he knew.

Becky D
Reply to  marklewis
7 years ago

I think it means that Sandpipers of Nevada had a great day (i.e. Sullivan #1 in 1500, Houck #2 in 800).

Science Geek
Reply to  marklewis
7 years ago

In my opinion you’re an awesome swimmer if you can go a 3:55 immediately after going a 4:00 freestyle. Excellent swim.

Becky D
7 years ago

If Gretchen Walsh can get her last 5 meters to match the first 45, she’ll be a force to reckon with!

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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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