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2019 ACC Swimming & Diving Championships (W): Day 2 Up/Down/Mids

Braden Keith
by Braden Keith 9

February 21st, 2019 ACC, College, News

2019Β ACCΒ WOMEN’S CHAMPIONSHIPS

After the first preliminary session of the meet (2nd day of the meet with timed final relays on Wednesday night), the NC State women lead the pack with a total of 13 finals swims to come Thursday night – a whopping 10 of those in A finals. The Wolfpack are followed closely by Notre Dame (12), Louisville (11), and Virginia (10); however, they will have twice as many A final swims as the next team (Louisville), so they will be heavily favored to stand atop the team standings after tonight thanks to the point distribution between A-B-C finals. Louisville and Virginia are dispersed fairly evenly between A-B-C finals, while Notre Dame will have the most B and C final appearances of any team with 6 and 5, respectively.

One of the biggest storylines of the morning was Louisville’sΒ Mallory Comerford scratching the 50 free for the 500 free. This wasn’t entirely surprising as she is the reigning ACC champion (4.36.09). However, Comerford does have a lifetime best of 21.87 in the 50, which would have been good enough for 2nd this morning behind NC State’sΒ Ky-lee Perry (21.59). Ultimately, she placed 5th out of prelims in the 500 with a 4:42.25. Look for Comerford to challenge the top seedΒ Paige Madden of Virginia tonight (4:39.09).

For those unfamiliar with swimming terminology, the concept of β€œUps” and β€œDowns” is a good way to track which teams performed best at prelims. In prelims, swimmers qualify for one of three finals heats: the top 8 finishers make the A final, places 9 through 16 the B final and places 17 through 24 the C final. In finals, swimmers are locked into their respective final, meaning a swimmer in the B heat (spots 9-16) can only place as high as 9th or as low as 16th, even if they put up the fastest or slowest time of any heat in the final.

With that in mind, we’ll be tracking β€œUps,” β€œMids” and β€œDowns” after each prelims session. β€œUp” refers to swimmers in the A final, β€œMid” to swimmers in the B final and β€œDown” to swimmers in the C final.

Up/Mid/Downs

500 FREE 200 IM 50 FREE
TEAM UP MID DOWN TEAM UP MID DOWN TEAM UP MID DOWN
Boston College 0 0 0 Boston College 0 0 0 Boston College 0 0 0
Duke 1 0 1 Duke 0 2 0 Duke 1 1 0
Florida State 0 0 2 Florida State 0 1 0 Florida State 0 1 2
Georgia Tech 0 1 0 Georgia Tech 0 0 0 Georgia Tech 0 0 0
Louisville 1 1 2 Louisville 2 1 0 Louisville 2 1 1
NC State 3 0 1 NC State 4 0 1 NC State 3 1 0
North Carolina 0 2 0 North Carolina 1 0 0 North Carolina 1 2 1
Notre Dame 1 3 1 Notre Dame 0 2 3 Notre Dame 0 1 1
Pittsburgh 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 0 0 2 Pittsburgh 0 0 0
Miami (FL) 0 0 0 Miami (FL) 0 1 0 Miami (FL) 0 0 0
Virginia Tech 1 0 1 Virginia Tech 0 0 0 Virginia Tech 0 0 1
Virginia 1 1 0 Virginia 1 1 2 Virginia 1 1 2
TOTAL
TEAM UP MID DOWN TOTAL SWIMS
Boston College 0 0 0 0
Duke 2 3 1 6
Florida State 0 2 4 6
Georgia Tech 0 1 0 1
Louisville 5 3 3 11
NC State 10 1 2 13
North Carolina 2 4 1 7
Notre Dame 1 6 5 12
Pittsburgh 0 0 2 2
Miami (FL) 0 1 0 0
Virginia Tech 1 0 2 3
Virginia 3 3 4 10

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John Hancock
5 years ago

Ky-lee Perry πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚ that must be the greatest name of all time

Wahooswimfan
Reply to  John Hancock
5 years ago

Zion tops it !

Eddie Rowe
5 years ago

Can I be the guy who asks for “Up/Mid/Down” to be changed?

To me the concept of up/down after prelims are those who overperformed or underperformed their seeds. If you really only want to talk about scoring potential based on which heat of finals, how about “Hi/Mid/Lo”

dmswim
Reply to  Eddie Rowe
5 years ago

Or just A/B/C final works too.

Snarky
Reply to  Eddie Rowe
5 years ago

How about A, B, and C. Pretty darned simple.

SaintJoseph
Reply to  Snarky
5 years ago

How about Best – OK – Almost worst

Wahooswimfan
5 years ago

Non scoring swims are also important as they represent potential swims used that are not available to score the next 2 day. By my count UVa had 4, NCSU 2, and L’ville 6. So UVA used 13 total swims today, NCSU 16, and L’ville 19.

Mary Holloway
Reply to  Wahooswimfan
5 years ago

UVA had 14 swims this morning. NCSU had 15. I think the other counts are right.

2 Cents
Reply to  Wahooswimfan
5 years ago

I think your counts are off on Louisville as well. They had 7 non scoring swims from what I counted. Which puts their total used at 18 not 19.

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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