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2018 Mesa Pro Swim Series: SwimSquad & Relay Projections

2018 TYR Pro Swim Series – Mesa

  • Thursday, April 12 – Sunday, April 15
  • Skyline Aquatic Center, Mesa, AZ
  • Long Course Meters
  • Meet site
  • Psych Sheet

As a quick refresher, four retired Olympians drafted the entire U.S. National swim team (as well as a couple of 2016 Olympians) into four SwimSquads, and each captain gets to select 6 swimmers to start for each of the Pro Swim Series stops. Athletes earn points for their teams with a winning squad crowned at the end of the season. The captain of the winning team gets $10,000 to donate to a charity of their choice. The athletes can earn sponsor prizes (though NCAA athletes are restricted in prize acceptance under NCAA amateurism rules).

We covered the captains and rosters as they were announced. You can read more here, or check them out below:

CURRENT POINTS:

TOTAL AUSTIN ATLANTA
KrayzelburgSquad 178 107 71
CoughlinSquad 160 88 72
SandenoSquad 155 76 79
LezakSquad 119 67 52

 

FULL ROSTERS

SCORING FORMAT

  • Prior to each meet, the captain will select 6 swimmers from their overall roster to score.
  • Each of the six athletes is designated for one specific category, and can score in up to two events from that category. The categories are:
    • Free (50 through 1500)
    • Back (50 through 200)
    • Breast (50 through 200)
    • Fly (50 through 200)
    • IM (200 and 400, not the mystery order 200 IM)
    • Flex (any two races)
  • An athlete must make the top 8 to score points:
    • 1st: 10
    • 2nd: 8
    • 3rd: 7
    • 4th: 5
    • 5th: 4
    • 6th: 3
    • 7th: 2
    • 8th: 1

Mesa OUTLOOK

Most of these teams are going to have relatively full-strength lineups in Mesa, after the widely-expected absences of most college stars during the first two stops. Only five of the top 20 picks are missing: #9 Katie Ledecky, #11 Lilly King, #12 Caeleb Dressel, #14 Simone Manuel and #20 Jack Conger.

That said, there are still some rosters strapped for starters. Team Krayzelburg leads the points, but has a meet-low 8 swimmers active in Mesa. Still, Lenny’s lineup fits together awfully well, in contrast to the unfortunate black hole that is Jason Lezak’s backstroke spot.

Here’s the team-by-team breakdown:

TEAM KRAYZELBURG

Swimming for: Never Ever Give Up: Jessie Rees Foundation

Krayzelburg only has eight active swimmers in Mesa, but they coalesce very well in this lineup format. The addition of the 50 stroke shootouts is a boon to Krayzelburg, too, with high-level sprint-types in all four strokes.

He’s basically got two options at almost every spot, the exception being the IM spot that should be Chase Kalisz‘s every month after he was drafted #1 overall. At backstroke, Krayzelburg can use Matt Grevers or Olivia Smoliga – both were second in the 50 at Austin and were big scorers in the 100 as well. The one who doesn’t start probably starts as Krayzelburg’s flex play.

Kelsi Dahlia (formerly Kelsi Worrell) is the best fly option. Abbey Weitzeil is probably the best free option. Amanda Kendall seems second-best at both, but its possible we see her take over free for Weitzeil or perhaps contend with one of the backstrokers for a flex spot.

The only really tough call is at breaststroke. Nic Fink has been more productive so far this series (17 points to Larson’s 12 in Austin, 9 to Larson’s 7 in Atlanta), but the Mesa, AZ native Breeja Larson does tend to swim well in her home city.

Team Krayzelburg
Free
Abbey Weitzeil
50/100
Back
Matt Grevers
50/100
Breast
Nic Fink
50/100
Fly
Kelsi Dahlia (Worrell)
50/100
IM
Chase Kalisz
200/400
Flex
Olivia Smoliga
50BK/100BK

Probable Medley Relay: Grevers, Fink, Dahlia, Smoliga

TEAM COUGHLIN

Swimming for: DAM-Cancer Foundation

Team Coughlin’s biggest problem is that her crew of versatile stars are fighting her with their event choices. Melanie Margalis is entered in five events spread across the five different disciplines, which means she either has to take the flex spot, or her points are capped at 10 instead of 20. Meanwhile Hali Flickinger is entered in six events across four disciplines, and the past two stops of the tour suggest she’ll scratch at least one event, making her a risky play anywhere.

Here’s how we’re solving it: Margalis takes the flex spot, where she’s probably best-suited anyway. She’s not swimming the 400 IM, which has been her biggest point-earner so far, but the 200 IM/200 free combo should be plenty lucrative in SwimSquad points. Flickinger can take the fly role. She won the 200 fly in Atlanta and was third in Austin, and could potentially be a 100 fly scorer, too, if she swims it.

Ryan Murphy and Molly Hannis are locks for back and breast, respectively. Hannis should be particularly well-suited for the 50, which she won by a longshot in Austin. Madisyn Cox is the only two-event IMer on the roster, and a great choice there. The free spot is wide open between Michael Chadwick, Katy Campbell, Ali Deloof and Cullen Jones. We’ll take Chadwick for his propensity to bust big times in the spring (22.5/49.5 last May, 22.7/49.9 in April of 2016).

Team Coughlin
Free
Michael Chadwick
50/100
Back
Ryan Murphy
100/200
Breast
Molly Hannis
50/100
Fly
Hali Flickinger
100/200
IM
Madisyn Cox
200/400
Flex
Melanie Margalis
200IM/200FR

Probable Medley Relay: Murphy, Hannis, Moffitt, Chadwick

TEAM SANDENO

Swimming for: Never Ever Give Up: Jessie Rees Foundation

Sandeno has had Leah Smith and Conor Dwyer show up on heat sheets twice and ultimately scratch twice so far this year. But Sandeno always seems to have a heads-up (or perhaps USA Swimming is allowing its captains to adjust their lineups due to late scratches, supported by the relatively late announcements of starting lineups), so we’ll trust that she’s up-to-date on both of their statuses. For what it’s worth, we think it’s highly likely that Smith will swim in Mesa (not terribly far from her new training base in Tucson), but we wouldn’t start Dwyer unless we see an Instagram post of him warming up in the Mesa pool.

Michael Andrew has excellent flex possibilities with the stroke 50s involved, but unfortunately, Sandeno won’t be able to use them. It’s impossible to bench freestyler Zane Grotheand that means first-round pick Leah Smith is either taking the flex role or riding the bench. That’s fine, though, because Andrew can still fit into the fly role, where Sandeno doesn’t really have any blue-chippers to start.

It’s hard to go anyone but Andrew Wilson on breaststroke, even if he can’t match his bruising Atlanta output. Jacob Pebley is one of the consensus top-3 backstrokers and Sandeno’s only two-event backstroker active. The IM spot is weak here, especially with Dwyer uncertain and Andrew not swimming the 200 IM. The only IM options are Smith (200 IM), Dwyer (200 IM), Emily Escobedo (200 IM) and Katie McLaughlin (200 IM, 400 IM), and we’ll go with McLaughlin, who hasn’t swum IM in a long time but has the talent to grit out some points there.

Team Sandeno
Free
Zane Grothe
400/800
Back
Jacob Pebley
100/200
Breast
Andrew Wilson
100/200
Fly
Michael Andrew
50/100
IM
Katie McLaughlin
200/400
Flex
Leah Smith
400FR/800FR

Probable Medley Relay: Pebley, Wilson, Gibson, Smith

TEAM LEZAK

Swimming for: USA Swimming Foundation

For the second month in a row, the absence of Kathleen Baker, Justin Ress and Regan Smith will leave Team Lezak in the lurch for a backstroker. That’s a big blow for Lezak, who has hoarded all the breaststroke talent but hasn’t been able to capitalize while leaving a valuable starting breaststroker on the bench and while getting goose-eggs from the backstroke slot. If ever there was time for a trade, this would be it.

(Kevin Cordes to Team Coughlin for Ali Deloof. Who says no? Probably Coughlin, who doesn’t need to help an opponent to get a breaststroker who might still sit behind Molly Hannis anyway. Lezak’s strategy of hoarding the breaststrokers looked smart on draft day, but its downfall has been that each of the other three teams already have at least one reliable breaststroker and no incentive to trade for one of Lezak’s).

Nathan Adrian makes this lineup-writing stuff easy. Month-in and month-out, he enters the 50 and 100 free and reliably racks up points. Thanks, Nathan. You make these projections much less work for us.

Josh Prenot is maybe higher-scoring as a breaststroker, but he’s the team’s only two-event IMer in Mesa. That leaves the breaststroke spot between Kevin Cordes and Cody Miller, who are virtually in a toss-up right now, unless Lezak is really feeling optimistic about NCAA record-shatterer Ian FinnertyPace Clark is the best of a bunch of iffy fly options. Cordes/Miller could vie for a flex spot, but it’s hard to not start Mallory Comerfordwho was third in the 100 free in Atlanta with the top two not competing in Mesa.

Team Lezak
Free
Nathan Adrian
50/100
Back
Aaron Peirsol’s force-ghost
Breast
Kevin Cordes
50/100
Fly
Pace Clark
100/200
IM
Josh Prenot
200/400
Flex
Mallory Comerford
100FR/200FR

Probable Medley Relay: Prenot, Cordes, Comerford, Neal

TL;DR: Who Looks Best?

Team Krayzelburg has been a marvel of drafting so far, with great options every month. It certainly doesn’t hurt that he has the only swimmer to score a perfect 40 points so far (#1 overall pick Chase Kalisz) along with top scorers at fly (Kelsi Dahlia) and back (Matt Grevers and Olivia Smoliga). What we’re finding out is that the league so far has been turned on scarcity at IM.

So far in the IM slots, Kalisz has scored 40, Madisyn Cox 35 and no other swimmer more than 16. That’s been a huge boost to Krayzelburg and Coughlin, and it’s no coincidence their teams are leading points. At the other end of the spectrum, breaststroke has basically been a monthly crapshoot, with five swimmers scoring between 13 and 26 points. That’s made breaststroke scores relatively even (or at least, less-dependent on draft position) across the board, so those who invested high in breaststrokers haven’t had as much to show for it.

Krayzelburg again has the most complete lineup, with no major holes and standouts at IM and fly. With Leah Smith presumably back in action, this is the month for Team Sandeno to make a run – they’ve got red-hot breaststroker Andrew Wilsonnearly-unstoppable distance man Zane Grotheand should get consistent points in back and from Smith in their flex spot. The worry is how much they’ll get from fill-in flyer Michael Andrew and converted IMer Katie McLaughlin.

Coughlin might not get the production she has been out of Melanie Margalis with no 400 IM, but her lineup looks pretty safe to score double-digit points all-around, with the exception of freestyler Chadwick. Lezak is going to need massive scores from Nathan Adrian and Mallory Comerford at either end of the lineup, along with Prenot in the IMs and he needs to make the right call on his breaststrokers to cover the backstroke weakness.

In relay terms, Krayzelburg’s ideal relay fits together better than anyone else’s, with great male swimmers to take the first two legs, following what’s proven to be the preferred strategy worldwide for mixed relays. Sandeno’s relay probably has the best shot to give Krayzelburg a run, though it’s impossible, of course, to predict which swimmers will actually swim the relay.

Team Krayzelburg Team Coughlin Team Sandeno Team Lezak
Free
Abbey Weitzeil Michael Chadwick Zane Grothe Nathan Adrian
50/100 50/100 400/800 50/100
Back
Matt Grevers Ryan Murphy Jacob Pebley Aaron Peirsol’s force-ghost
50/100 100/200 100/200
Breast
Nic Fink Molly Hannis Andrew Wilson Kevin Cordes
50/100 50/100 100/200 50/100
Fly
Kelsi Dahlia Hali Flickinger Michael Andrew Pace Clark
50/100 100/200 50/100 100/200
IM
Chase Kalisz Madisyn Cox Katie McLaughlin Josh Prenot
200/400 200/400 200/400 200/400
Flex
Olivia Smoliga Melanie Margalis Leah Smith Mallory Comerford
50BK/100BK 200IM/200FR 400FR/800FR 100FR/200FR

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Swimmers Ear
6 years ago

The strategy for mixed relays worldwide favor male swimmers on the first two legs, presumably because these are the two slowest strokes, creating the opportunity for a larger spread between men & women. But what it really boils down to is how big (in seconds & tenths) of a difference is there between the fastest male vs fastest female in each stroke. For example, if the fastest 100 free people are SIX seconds apart and the 100 backstroke are FIVE seconds apart, then the woman should swim the back leg instead of the free leg. The first two legs should have the largest gap between men and women, but not always. Also of note, not all of the teams have… Read more »

swimmerTX
6 years ago

Soooo… we’re not going to give Aaron Piersol’s force-ghost a shoutout, who turns out to be Josh Prenot…

iLikePsych
6 years ago

Humor’s on point in this article, well done.

dave92029
6 years ago

I find these contrived teams silly. Except to be able to create relays, for me they don’t create any “real” competition. Let’s face it most of these team members are Pros or athletes hoping to make the next international team. Silly imho.

PVSFree
Reply to  dave92029
6 years ago

It would work if done differently, but the sentiment is in the right spot. USA Swimming should have made this a fantasy-swimming type of thing available to the public

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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