Mountain West Conference – Women
- Wednesday, February 19 – Saturday, February 22
- Jean K. Freeman Aquatic Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota (Central Time Zone)
- Defending Champion: San Diego State (1x) (results)
- Live results
- Championship Central
- Day 1 Results
TEAM SCORES THROUGH DAY 1
- San Diego State – 202
- Nevada – 193
- Wyoming – 142
- Fresno State – 139
- Boise State – 1:32
- Colorado State – 122
- New Mexico – 117
- UNLV – 108
- San Jose State – 96
- Air Force – 87
Defending Mountain West champions San Diego State got out to an electric start, winning both relays on the first night of competition, breaking a conference record, and achieving an NCAA ‘A’ cut.
SDSU came out swinging, swimming a 1:36.30 to touch the wall first by over 2 seconds. Elliyana Ferrin led off in 24.88, with Klara Thormalm posting a very fast 26.24 breaststroke split, Courtney Vincent swimming a 23.20 fly split, and Alma Thormalm anchoring in 21.98. The Thormalm sisters led the field in their respective strokes. With that swim, San Diego State broke their school record, the Mountain West conference record, and hit the NCAA ‘A’ cut of 1:36.40. Hitting the ‘A’ cut means that San Diego State will automatically get to swim the 200 medley at NCAA, and if they have a swimmer hit an ‘A’ standard individually, they will be able to swim each relay they have a ‘B’ cut in at NCAAs.
Nevada came in 2nd in the 200 medley relay, thanks in large part to a field-leading 24.46 on the backstroke leg from Josien Wijkhuijs. Donna dePolo was also the 2nd fastest breaststroker in the field, posting a 27.34 split, and helping Nevada to their 1:38.43 finish.
Mia Ryan, a freshman, led San Diego State’s 800 free relay off in 1:47.98. She was followed by Peyton Wilson (1:48.96), Milena Karpisz (1:47.37), and McKenna Meyer (1:47.63), touching in a final time of 7:11.94. Nevada’s Andressa Cholodovskis posted the fastest time in the field, swimming a 1:46.39 on the 2nd leg of the relay. Additionally, San Diego State was the only team in the field to have all 4 legs come in under 1:50.
Isabel Vasquez of Nevada won women’s 1 meter diving with a final score of 315.25, narrowly beating out Colorado State’s Skylar Williams by 2.20 points.