2022 ACC SWIMMING AND DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS
- When: Tuesday, February 15th to Saturday, February 19th Prelims 10:00am | Finals 6:00 pm (Tuesday 11:00am/4:30pm)
- Where: McAuley Aquatic Center, Atlanta Georgia (Eastern Time Zone)
- Defending Champions
- Streaming: ACC Network
- Championship Central: Here
- Detailed Timeline: Here
- Psych Sheets: Here
- Live Results
- Day 3 Finals Live Recap
The University of Virginia women put on another show on Thursday at the ACC Championships, breaking the NCAA and U.S. Open Records in the 200 medley relay by 1.3 seconds.
The Cavaliers swept the day’s four swimming events to take a six point lead after day 1 and blow it up into a 100.5-point margin.
On the men’s side, an early DQ for NC State didn’t hamper their lead, which stands at 209 points with two days of racing left.
Also on the men’s side, Virginia Tech’s Youssef Ramadan swam a 44.08 in the 100 fly to break the ACC Record.
SCORES THROUGH DAY 3
Women
- Virginia – 790.5
- NC State – 690
- Louisville – 547.5
- Duke – 425
- North Carolina – 365
- Virginia Tech – 356
- Notre Dame – 340
- Miami (FL) – 273
- Florida State – 268
- Georgia Tech – 211
- Pitt – 175
- Boston College – 104
Men
- NC State – 843.5
- Louisville – 634.5
- Virginia Tech – 561
- Virginia – 487
- Georgia Tech – 382.5
- Florida State – 344
- North Carolina – 332
- Notre Dame – 212
- Pittsburgh – 202
- Duke – 187
- Boston College – 115.5
- Miami (FL) – 57
Race Videos
WOMEN’S 200 MEDLEY RELAY – TIMED FINALS
Top 3:
- Virginia – 1:31.82
- NC State – 1:33.25
- Florida State – 1:35.40
The Virginia Cavaliers demolished the meet, conference, American, NCAA, and U.S. Open Records, swimming the fastest time in history by over a second to kick off the night.
Considering Gretchen Walsh has been 23.0 in dual meets this season, it wasn’t surprising to see her lead off in 22.82, becoming the first woman to ever break 23 in the 50 back, and unofficially setting an American Record in the event. The difference between Walsh’s swim and the 23.70 the Cavalier got from Caroline Gmelich when they set this record last year at this meet provided most of the overall difference between the two times.
MEN’S 200 MEDLEY RELAY – TIMED FINALS
Top 3:
- Louisville – 1:21.84
- Virgina Tech – 1:22.82
- Florida State – 1:23.15
The Louisville Cardinals broke the meet and conference record in this event, winning with a 1:21.84 that was faster than the time their winning time from NCAAs last year.
WOMEN’S 400 IM – FINALS
Top 3:
- Ella Nelson (Virginia) – 4:02.11
- Emma Weyant (Virgina) – 4:04.90
- Grace Sheble (NC State) – 4:05.61
UVA’s Ella Nelson successfully defended her title in this event, lowering her own meet record from 4:02.62 to 4:02.11. Nelson finished atop a strong field that included her teammate Emma Weyant, who earned a silver medal in the long course version of this event at last summer’s Tokyo Olympics. Weyant finished 2nd tonight in 4:04.90.
MEN’S 400 IM – FINALS
Top 3:
- Daniel Sos (Louisville) – 3:41.77
- Filippo Dal Maso (Virginia Tech) – 3:42.67
- Mikey Moore (NC State) – 3:43.47
Daniel Sos captured Louisville’s first ACC title in this event with a well-executed race that led to him winning by nearly a second over Virgina Tech’s Filippo Dal Maso. Sos didn’t compete last year, to focus on the Olympics for his native Hungary, and Del Maso moved up from 7th last year to 2nd.
WOMEN’S 100 FLY – FINALS
Top 3:
- Kate Douglass (Virginia) – 49.86
- Kylee Alons (NC State) – 50.82
- Gabi Albiero (Louisville) – 50.90
Kate Douglass once again defended her titles event and shaved a bit off of her meet record from the morning the process. Douglass took it out a bit quicker tonight than she did this morning, and she said in the post-race interview that she had been experimenting with some different kick counts. Tonight, Douglass touched first in 49.86, breaking her own meet record of 49.94 from this morning.
MEN’S 100 FLY – FINALS
Top 3:
- Youssef Ramadan (Virginia Tech) – 44.08
- Antani Ivanov (Virginia Tech) – 44.73
- Nick Albiero (Louisville) – 44.79
Virginia Tech sophomore Youssef Ramadan also defended his title in this event, rocking a 44.08 win that makes him the #4 performer all-time, behind only Caeleb Dressel, Joe Schooling, and Tom Shields.
Hokies go 1-2 in the 100 Fly‼️
🥇 Youssef Ramadan
🥈 Antani Ivanov pic.twitter.com/uPJTokcelw— Virginia Tech Swimming & Diving (@HokiesSwimDive) February 18, 2022
Fulll Race Video Not Available
WOMEN’S 200 FREE – FINALS
Top 3:
- Alex Walsh (Virginia) – 1:42.28
- Sarah Foley (Duke) – 1:44.20
- Emma Atkinson (Virginia Tech) – 1:44.43
Alex Walsh of Virginia and Sarah Foley of Duke finished 1-2 for the second night in a row, duplicating 200 IM yesterday’s finish in today’s 200 free. Walsh easily won in 1:42.28, right in line with her 1:41.64 anchor leg on UVA’s 800 free relay Tuesday.
MEN’S 200 FREE – FINALS
Top 3:
- Luke Miller (NC State) – 1:32.46
- Hunter Tapp (NC State) – 1:32.72
- Murilo Sartori (Louisville) – 1:32.75
No one has repeated as the champion of this event since 2016, when Simonas Bilis won his second-straight title for the Wolfpack. Tonight, the last three winners of this event were all in the A-final, so you might think that they’re be a decent chance that one of them would win. However, in one of those odd twists of fate, those three men actually finished in the bottom three spots in the A-final.
Race Video Not Available
I think you mean WATCH: Youssef Ramadan Swim Last 25