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NCAA MALE SWIMMER OF THE YEAR: CAELEB DRESSEL
Caeleb Dressel had a senior year to remember with the Florida Gators as he takes home his second consecutive Swammy for NCAA Male Swimmer of the Year.
Throughout his collegiate career he had stuck to the same event lineup: the 50 free, 100 free and 100 fly. But Dressel branched out in his final NCAA season, and ended up making a mark in the history books.
At the Purdue Invite in November, he swam the 200 IM in a time of 1:40.61, becoming the 9th fastest performer in history and going a time faster than what it took to win NCAAs the previous season.
He continued to expand his event lineup at the SEC Championships, entering the 100 breast and the 200 IM instead of the 50 free and 100 fly. He ended up dropping the fastest time in history by a full 1.25 seconds in the 200 IM in 1:38.13, and then took .01 off of the American and NCAA Records in the 100 breast in 50.03. He also comfortably won the 100 free there (for the 3rd straight time) and left the competition as the holder of five NCAA, American and U.S. Open Records in the 50/100 free, 100 breast, 100 fly and 200 IM.
His performances at SECs were really just an appetizer for what would come at NCAAs, as Dressel rewrote the record books once again.
On the second day of competition (after just the 800 free relay on day 1, which he didn’t swim) Dressel broke his American and NCAA Record in the 50 free on three separate occasions. He took his 18.20 mark down to 18.11 in the individual prelims, and then became the first man in history to break the 18-second barrier with a lead-off leg on the 200 free relay of 17.81.
That swim led the Gators to the win in that relay, giving Dressel the first national relay title of his career. He followed up with a earth shattering 17.63 in the individual final to win his fourth consecutive title, and also contributed a 50.62 breast leg as Florida finished 5th in the 400 medley relay.
He was back at it on day 3, registering the fastest 50 free relay leg in history in the morning in 17.30, and then became the first man ever under 43 seconds in the 100 fly as he won his second straight title in a time of 42.80. This coming just 16 months after Tom Shields became the first man under 44. He closed the night out with a 17.37 anchor leg as Florida took 3rd in the 200 medley relay.
Dressel swam four 100 freestyles on the final day of the meet, becoming the first man to break 40 seconds in the individual final in 39.90, one year after stopping the clock in 40.00. A 40.25 third leg helped the Gators to a runner-up finish in the 400 free relay, capping an incredible 14 races for Dressel in just three days.
With four in his final season, Dressel finished his collegiate career with ten national titles, finishing off what could be considered the greatest NCAA career and single season performance of all-time.
HONORABLE MENTIONS
- Ian Finnerty (Indiana) – In his first two collegiate seasons, Finnerty had performed well at the B1G Championships but hadn’t been able to back it up at the NCAAs. He turned that around in a big way in his junior year, becoming the first swimmer to crack 50 seconds in the 100 breast in 49.69 as he won the National title. He also went on to win the 200 in 1:50.17, and had the fastest split in the field (50.33) on Indiana’s winning 400 medley relay. He was instrumental in getting the Hoosiers to a 3rd place finish in the team race, just 27 points back of the winners from Texas.
- Townley Haas (Texas) – Haas continued his reign atop the NCAA in the 200 free in his junior year, winning his third straight title in a new American Record of 1:29.50. Indiana’s Blake Pieroni had become the first ever under 1:30 on the lead-off of the 800 free relay in 1:29.63, but Haas answered back with this swim. He also won the 500 free for the second time in 4:08.60, reclaiming his 2016 title, and showed the improvements in his sprints as he finished 6th in the 100 free (41.67) and had the fastest split (41.11) on Texas’ 400 free relay. His 53 individual points led all Longhorns as they won their fourth straight team title.
Are we sure? He only won the 50 at NCAAs by a second and set 5 American records, seems like there should have been more debate.
Seliskar for this season. Heard it here first
Gotta get past Haas
DeCoursey of TN
Haas would need to win the 100/200/500 triple to get that award IMO
Crazier things have happened.
I think this year a record breaking swim in the 2 and a win in the 500 would be enough not many records will go down this year and not many double winners