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2019 U.S. National Championships: Day 2 Prelims Preview

2019 PHILLIPS 66 NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS

Thursday morning prelims heat sheets.

Day 2 of the 2019 U.S. National Championships includes prelims of three events: the 200 freestyle, 200 breaststroke, and 200 backstroke. Prelims will swim heats of 10, but finals only heats of 8. The top 24 advance through to ‘A’, ‘B’, and ‘C’ finals, while the 8-fastest 18-and-unders that place 25th or lower will advance to the 18-under ‘D’ final.

Shakeups on the U.S. National Team roster became a major storyline on day 1, particularly in the men’s 100 freestyle. Day 2 is likely to feature more bumps and additions to the roster; Ryan Lochte is back in action following his 14-month suspension and will in the 200 freestyle, and will be joined by Caeleb Dressel, who has said he wants to be on the 4 x 200 freestyle relay in Tokyo. Other National Teamers such as Regan Smith will also race events we don’t often see them in at major competitions–in Smith’s case, also the 200 freestyle–and may also crack the top-6 U.S. times for the year.

Day 2 morning races:

  • Women’s 200 freestyle – Prelims
  • Men’s 200 freestyle – Prelims
  • Women’s 200 Breaststroke – Prelims
  • Men’s 200 Breaststroke – Prelims
  • Women’s 200 Backstroke – Prelims
  • Men’s 200 Backstroke – Prelims

The main theme this morning could be “who will be the new champion in [insert event]?” With so swimmers absent following the World Championships, and some others who did swim at Worlds but want to swim new events in California, not a single event on today’s schedule is going to be defended by the 2018 U.S. National Champion in that event.

Day 2 prelims storylines to watch:

  • Regan Smith will race the 200 freestyle today–and no backstroke. Smith has been a 1:58.44 this year at the Counsilman Classic in June, and judging by her World Championships performance, could potentially be significantly faster than that today, if the toll of three weeks of racing and training in Asia doesn’t hit too hard today. She won the 200 butterfly on night 1 in a new lifetime best of 2:07.26.
  • Ryan Lochte makes his official competitive debut in the men’s 200 freestyle today. Lochte appears to be in good form after putting up a 1:57.88 in a 200 IM time trial yesterday. If all goes well for Lochte, the 200 freestyle, formerly one of his best events (he was the 2011 World Champion), could be his ticket back onto the National Team.
  • Caeleb Dressel is entered in the 200 freestyle, generating a huge level of excitement to see what he’s capable of in this race. Dressel is also freshly-returned from the World Championships and likely tired, though he’s said before he’s no stranger to tough lineups.
  • Dean Farris, the American Record holder in the short course yards 200 freestyle, will also be in the race. Farris registered a new lifetime best in the 100 freestyle last night with a 48.07, an improvement of .45, demonstrating that he is in good form. Farris’ best time is a 1:47.94, but after going a 1:29.15 in yards he’s had fans speculating if he can put up a similar time in meters–such as a 1:44 or 1:45. Farris swam at the 2019 World University Games and led off the American 4 x 200 freestyle relay with a 1:48.73, but as he was a relay-only swimmer at WUGs (Farris also posted a 47.08 split on the 4 x 100 freestyle relay), it’s unlikely WUGs has really been his main focus this summer.
  • Beyond the Americans, there is a strong field of foreign men in the 200 freestyle, including Elijah Winnington from Australia, Jordan Pothain of France, and Stephen Milne of Scotland, just to name those with the fastest entry times. Winnington placed 8th in the 200 free at Australian World Trials in June in a 1:47.86, and 3rd in the 400 free in 3:48.45.
  • The men’s 200 backstroke is without Ryan Murphy or Jacob Pebley, America’s top-2 male 200 backstrokers for the past three years. Austin Katz beat Pebley at the 2018 Pan Pacific Championships in Tokyo and won the bronze medal, so he’s the good bet for gold today, though Katz will face intense pressure from Cal’s Bryce Mefford as well as junior star Carson Foster.
  • Similarly, the women’s 200 backstroke will not include Regan Smith, the new World Record holder in the women’s 200 backstroke, and Smith will focus exclusively on the 200 freestyle today. Smith and Team Elite’s Kathleen Baker tied for the National Championship in 2018, but Baker is not competing at this meet, meaning there will be a new champion.
  • Madisyn Cox, Breeja Larson, Lindsey Kozelsky, Zoe Bartel, Vanessa Pearl, and Kate Douglass in represent some of the top female American 200 breaststrokers of the present and future racing the event at Nationals today. Like the 200 backstrokes, this event does not feature the 2018 Champion Micah Sumrall, or Lilly King, or Molly Hannis, or Annie Lazor, leaving the podium wide open for a new champion.
  • The women’s 200 breaststroke, like the men’s 200 freestyle, features a handful of strong foreign contenders in Chloe Tutton (Great Britain), Hannah Miley (Scotland), and Jenna Strauch (Australia).
  • Reece Whitley, Daniel Roy, Devon Nowicki, and Chuck Katis will all race the men’s 200 breaststroke today, representing multiple eras of breaststroke all vying for the mantle as the best one year removed from Tokyo.

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Snarky
5 years ago

Regan Smith not quite 4×200 free relay material this am.

Swimswamswum24
5 years ago

Where is John Shebat? I didn’t see him on the psych sheet.

dmswim
Reply to  Swimswamswum24
5 years ago

He’s still in the warm-up pool in Italy.

JudgeNot
Reply to  Swimswamswum24
5 years ago

He’s on there: 100 fly, 100 back, 200 IM.

Togger
5 years ago

Is Clark Smith not swimming here?

HonestObserver
Reply to  Togger
5 years ago

He swam the 200 fly yesterday.

JudgeNot
Reply to  HonestObserver
5 years ago

And the 200 free this morning.

John26
5 years ago

Maybe based on the 100free successes, we can see 3 1:44’s tonight. Not holding my breath though

Caleb
5 years ago

ill predict:
1:57.4 for Smith today
146 for Lochte
Reluctantly, 1:47 for Dressel… I think he’s got a great one in him, but not today.
Same for Farris… 1:47.0.
Very intrigued to see what Rooney can do. Kibler and Foster, too.

Snarky
Reply to  Caleb
5 years ago

A bit off.

Ol’ Gator
5 years ago

This might be a dumb question but I don’t know too much about the national team funding stuff. Since people like Maxime Rooney and Luca Urlando will be on the national team and their amateurs still, do their teams receive the funding that they earned or does USA swimming keep the money instead or what?

Go Violets
Reply to  Ol’ Gator
5 years ago

They can get training expenses I believe.

Ol’ Gator
5 years ago

I’m also hoping dean is going for the 200 free this meet after not the best 200 free for him at WUGs

Ol’ Gator
5 years ago

Ryan Lochte 200 free prediction: I think he could go 1:46 today, it would make sense for him to be training 200 free a lot because we know the US needs more for that event, and if he’s 1:46 today he could be 1:45 next year which will get him to Tokyo. However if he’s been focusing more on the 2 IM then I say 1:47 high.

Ryan
Reply to  Ol’ Gator
5 years ago

This didn’t age well

Awsi Dooger
Reply to  Ryan
5 years ago

Older athletes can’t do it all the time. It’s like senior golfers who can play 2 or 3 good rounds in a major, but not all 4. The predictions here almost never deal with 35 year old swimmers so the necessary adjustments are not accepted. Lochte is going to throw in clunkers much more often than previously.

Besides, the 200 individual medley is a considerably weaker event than 200 freestyle. Lochte’s competent showing there is partially an indictment of the status of that event…nationally and internationally. With all the turns and underwaters and transition from stroke to stroke there is massive room to advance that event via one little detail after another, but nobody wants to bother with it.

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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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