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Coleman Stewart Uncorks 46.2 Back as NC State Overpowers Duke

NC STATE V. DUKE

  • October 20th, 2018
  • Durham, NC
  • Results
  • Scores
    • WOMEN: NC State 196, Duke 104
    • MEN: NC State 209, Duke 91

WOMEN’S MEET

The NC State women were dominant against Duke, only giving up a single swimming event to the Blue Devils. They started things off with a 1-2 in the 200 medley relay, with their A going 1:39.41 with a 24.87 lead-off from Elise HaanSophie Hansson was a 27.65 breast on the B relay, and had she have been on the A, they would’ve gone 1:38.31.

Makayla Sargent was really impressive today, winning three tough races. She was 1:58.18 in the 200 fly, 4:50.58 in the 500 free, and a stand-out 4:11.64 in the 400 IM with a B cut there. That’s a best time in the fly for her, while her 400 IM time is within a second of her lifetime best done in February of 2017 at a Last Chance meet when she was competing for Florida. Sargent’s been better than or right on her PRs in several events this year, so it looks like her transfer is already paying dividends.

Ky-lee Perry was 22.35/48.99 to sweep the sprints, and Hansson owned the breaststrokes (1:01.40/2:14.45). Perry beat Duke’s Alyssa Marsh to the wall in the 50 (22.66) and 100 (50.03).

Kylie Jordan was Duke’s sole winner, as she was 54.09 in the 100 fly to edge Kylee Alons of NC State (54.11).

MEN’S MEET

Coleman Stewart had a huge swim in the 100 back today, going 46.26 to win by over two full seconds. For reference, it took a 45.93 to score a NCAAs last season, and the defending champion was three tenths off of that today. He leads the NCAA this year with that swim by nearly a full second.

His only other swim was the 200 medley relay, where he led off the A in 21.71 as they won it in 1:27.40, an exact second ahead of Duke. The Blue Devils’ Yusuke Legard was 19.29 with a field-leading anchor.

Freshman Nyls Korstanje swam well for the Wolfpack, highlighted by a 20.87 fly split on their B 200 medley relay. He was the only swimmer sub-20 in the 50 free, going 19.90, while he was 48.04 in the 100 fly to take 2nd behind his teammate Giovanni Izzo (47.69).

Jacob Molacek won twice today, posting a 44.18 in the 100 free and 1:37.15 in the 200 free, while he was 20.15 leading off their winning 200 free relay. They were 1:19.91, with Justin Ress at 19.27 to anchor. Korstanje was 19.34 anchoring the B, while Miles Williams of Duke anchored their A with a 19.44.

Duke’s Judd Howard gave the Blue Devils their sole win, going 55.96 in the 100 breast to just edge Izzo’s 55.97.

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Socrateshatesoliveoil
6 years ago

Holloway and Bernadino ONE HECK of a coaching team!!! Go PACK

Swoman
Reply to  Socrateshatesoliveoil
6 years ago

Don’t forget Bobby Gunturo

Oldswimfan
Reply to  Swoman
6 years ago

Guntoro is the man! Nicest guy you’ll ever meet!

Oldswimfan
6 years ago

The Wolfpack Women looked very impressive. Freshmen and Sargent are on fire!

Swoman
Reply to  Oldswimfan
6 years ago

If the freshman and Sargent stay on fire, the women return eight NCAA scorers as well. With Haan and Perry swimmng well, they could challenge Louisville and Virginia for the ACC title and be strong at Nats.. They deserve some good stuff after all of last year’s injuries.

Emmie
Reply to  Swoman
6 years ago

Wahoo!

SwimCoachDad
Reply to  Oldswimfan
6 years ago

Now THAT’s the real Makayla Sargent. The relentless racer is back.

swimboi
6 years ago

i love how you guys always find a different verb for “swims”

Jmanswimfan
6 years ago

NC don’t know how to swim slow

Swoman
6 years ago

Where was Vasios?

Dudeman
Reply to  Swoman
6 years ago

Was he not a senior?

ct swim fan
Reply to  Dudeman
6 years ago

He swam in their 1st meet last week vs South Carolina. Maybe he’s sick.

Dudeman
Reply to  Dudeman
6 years ago

I knew I shouldn’t have trusted Rowdy and his unknown co-announcer

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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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