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2018 Men’s NCAA 200 IM Yields 5 of 11 Fastest Swimmers In History

2018 MEN’S NCAA SWIMMING & DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS

In a massive surge of IM performances, this year’s NCAA Championships produced 5 of the fastest 11 200 IMers in history.

This morning, Cal’s Andrew Seliskar went 1:40.40 to take the top qualifying spot. At the time, that ranked him #7 all-time.

As of tonight’s final, Seliskar has been bumped from the all-time top 10.

That’s because four men topped his prelims time, effectively rewriting the all-time top IM list. Florida’s Jan Switkowski won in 1:39.54, the 3rd-fastest performance of all-time. NC State’s Andreas Vazaios sits #4 after going 1:39.97. Instantly, the number of men under 1:40 in the event had doubled.

In addition, Florida’s Mark Szaranek moved up to tie Ryan Murphy for 8th all-time at 1:40.27. And Stanford’s Abrahm Devine went 1:40.35 to take over 10th, bumping Seliskar to 11th.

If you count Caeleb Dressel‘s American record 1:38.13 from a month ago, 6 of the top 11 swimmers ever and 6 of the top 12 performances have come in the year 2018, and more specifically in the last 5 weeks.

Here’s a look at the updated top 10 lists all-time of both performers and performances, with the 2018 swims bolded:

Top 10 All-Time Performers, 200 yard IM

Place Swimmer Time
1 Caeleb Dressel 1:38.13
2 David Nolan 1:39.38
3 Jan Switkowski 1:39.54
4 Andreas Vazaios 1:39.97
5 Will Licon 1:40.04
6 Ryan Lochte 1:40.08
7 Josh Prenot 1:40.14
8 Ryan Murphy 1:40.27 (T-8)
9 Mark Szaranek 1:40.27 (T-8)
10 Abrahm Devine 1:40.35

Top 10 All-Time Performances, 200 yard IM

Place Swimmer Time
1 Caeleb Dressel 1:38.13
2 David Nolan 1:39.38
3 Jan Switkowski 1:39.54
4 Andreas Vazaios 1:39.97
5 Will Licon 1:40.04
6 David Nolan 1:40.07
7 Ryan Lochte 1:40.08
8 Will Licon 1:40.09
9 Josh Prenot 1:40.14
10 Ryan Murphy 1:40.27 (T-10)
Mark Szaranek 1:40.27 (T-10)

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KSchwim
6 years ago

What in the world are they putting in the water…

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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