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2017 Men’s Ivies Day 2: Harvard Remains Solidly On Top of Standings

2017 Ivy League Men’s Swimming & Diving Championships

500 Yard Freestyle

  • Meet Record: 4:16.13 M 2016 Chris Swanson (Pennsylvania)
  • Pool Record: 4:17.81 P 1980 Brian Goodell (UCLA)

Yale junior Kei Hyogo, whose lackluster prelims swim put him in lane 4 for the consolation, broke a 37-year-old pool record and destroyed his competition, winning the B final in 4:16.71. That bested the Brian Goodell mark by 1.1 seconds, and was 2.22 faster than the winning time in the A final. Hyogo lowered his own school record by 9/10

The Ivy title went to Harvard’s Brennan Novak, who edged classmate Logan Houck, 4:18.93 to 4:18.99, for the win.

200 Yard Individual Medley

  • Meet Record: 1:43.94 M 2013 Nejc Zupan (Dartmouth)
  • Pool Record: 1:45.45 P 2014 Teo D’Allesandro (Princeton)

The top three finishers all came in under the previous pool record, but Nejc Zupan’s Ivy record remains intact for another year. Penn sophomore Mark Andrew (1:44.75) edged classmate Thomas Dillinger (1:444.85) for the win; Harvard senior Jack Manchester (1:45.32) touched third.

50 Yard Freestyle

  • Meet Record: 18.90 M 2009 Alex Righi (Yale)
  • Pool Record: 19.41 P 2008 Alex Righi (Yale)

Yale junior Aaron Greenberg won the 50 free and tied the pool record with 19.41. He equaled the mark set 9 years ago by former Bulldog Alex Righi. Harvard junior Steven Tan followed in 19.77. Third place went to Columbia junior Kevin Frifeldt with 20.03, a mere .02 ahead of Brown senior Daniel Klotz. Greenberg and Cornell’s Trevor Lake were the only two who improved on their morning times in the A final.

1-Meter Diving

  • Meet Record: 387.05 M 2013 Michael Mosca (Harvard)
  • Pool Record: 405.75 P 2009 Terry Horner (Florida State)

Columbia junior Jayden Pantel repeated his Ivy title on the one-meter board with 338.35 points. Harvard junior Bobby Ross came in second with 320.00. Harvard freshman Austin Fields (298.15) performed well in finals, and just edged teammate David Pfeifer (295.20) and Brown senior Jonathan Schlafer (291.95) for third.

200 Yard Freestyle Relay

  • Meet Record: 1:17.35 M 2015 Princeton
  • Pool Record: 1:17.94 P 2014 Harvard

After Day One, when three teams (Harvard, Cornell, and Penn) beat their school records in the 200 medley relay and three (Harvard, Yale, and Penn) took down their 800 free school records, only Cornell broke a school record in the 200 free relay.

Harvard came out on top with 1:18.40, with swims from Tan (19.82), Ed Kim (19.78), Max Yakubovich (19.31), and Manchester (19.49). Cornell finished second in 1:19.09, thanks to Jack Brenneman (20.23), Luke Reisch (19.77), Lake (19.47), and Jack Mahoney (19.62).

Standings after Day Two:

  1. Harvard University 573.5
  2. University of Pennsylvania 443
  3. Columbia University 389.5
  4. Yale University 357.5
  5. Cornell University 306.5
  6. Brown University 284
  7. Dartmouth College 198

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PetE
7 years ago

Where did Dean Farris disappear to? He throws down 18.8 and 1:31.2 splits yesterday and then doesn’t swim at all today. That is a bit strange

He Gets It Done Again
Reply to  PetE
7 years ago

He’s the #1 seed in the 200 free and 100 back on Friday, and the 100 free on Saturday. Looks like the 4×50 free is the only relay he’s sitting out – and Harvard still won without him.

newswim
Reply to  He Gets It Done Again
7 years ago

Goodbye Rowdy Gaines pool record and Doug Lennox’s Ivy record in the 200 free. Comes back and just misses the A cut in the 100 back!

newswim
Reply to  PetE
7 years ago

Doing the 200 free/100 back double today.
He has to sit one relay so why not the 200 free? Doesn’t have a chance for an invite time

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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