2022 MINNESOTA INVITE
- November 30 – December 3, 2022
- Jean K. Freeman Aquatic Center, Minneapolis, Minn.
- SCY (25 yards)
- Meet Central
- Heat Sheets (when uploaded)
- Live Results
- Results on Meet Mobile: “Minnesota Invite 2022”
- Live Stream ($)
- Races to watch, all the links you need
- 2023 NCAA Qualifying Times
- Day 3 Finals Live Recap
WOMEN’S 100 BREASTSTROKE – FINALS
- NCAA ‘A’ Cut – 58.10
- 2022 NCAA Invite – 59.87
- Pool Record – 57.23, Breeja Larson (2014)
Top 3:
- Anna Elendt (Texas) – 57.48
- Lydia Jacoby (Texas) – 57.54
- Emma Lezer (Minnesota) – 59.96
When Lydia Jacoby was ranked #3 in the girls’ class of 2022 high school recruit rankings last year, there was a lot of talk about how her short course performances weren’t on par with her ones in long course. There was plenty of evidence to back that up, such as when she failed to final at 2021 Short Course Worlds despite winning Olympic gold the same year, or when she didn’t set personal bests in yards during her senior year of high school (that being said, she didn’t race at any big taper meets in yards, such as NSCAs and Winter Juniors).
However, Jacoby proved her doubters wrong on Friday at the 2022 Minnesota Invite, and showed what she was truly capable in yards. In the 100 breast finals, the Texas freshman swam a massive personal best time of 57.54 to beat out Kaitlyn Dobler‘s 17-18 U.S. National Age Group record time of 57.71, which was set in February 2021. Jacoby finished just 0.06 seconds behind Anna Elendt tonight, and dropped over a second from her previous lifetime best of 58.87.
Elendt and Jacoby are now the second and third fastest swimmers in the NCAA behind Dobler, who swam a nation-leading time of 56.94 at the 2022 Art Adamson Invite.
Jacoby does not turn 19 until February 29 (a date that only exists on leap years, so we can say February 28/March 1 for now) 2023, which means she’s capable of resetting this NAG up until the end of Big 12 conference championships.
Top 17-18 U.S. Performers, Women’s 100 Breast:
- Lydia Jacoby, Texas — 57.54 (2022)
- Kaitlyn Dobler, USC — 57.71 (2021)
- Miranda Tucker, Indiana — 58.10 (2019)
- Zoie Hartman, Georgia — 58.27 (2019)
- Alexis Wenger, UVA — 58.31 (2019)
Compared to Dobler’s old record, Jacoby was 0.14 seconds faster on her front end, and 0.03 seconds faster on her back end. She has improved her opening speed substantially since getting to college, being able to take out her race over a second faster than she was capable of last year.
Comparative Splits, Lydia Jacoby vs. Lydia Jacoby Kaitlyn Dobler:
Lydia Jacoby, 2022 Minnesota Invite (current NAG) | Lydia Jacoby, 2021 Alaska Junior Olympics (previous PB) | Kaitlyn Dobler, USC vs. UCLA vs. Utah 2021 (former NAG) | |
50y | 27.07 | 28.12 | 27.21 |
100y | 30.47 | 30.75 | 30.50 |
Total | 57.54 | 58.87 | 57.71 |
With Jacoby now for certain capable of making an NCAA ‘A’ final (her time would have finished seventh at NCAAs last year), the 2020(1) Olympic champion in the 100 breast is finally beginning to show her potential and value in the yards pool.
Congratulations Jacoby! Alaska!
Good for her! Congratulations, Texas is really paying off!
Of course she is a leap day child. What else would she be? So technically she is like 4 years old?
What was the NAG record in the 4-6 age group? Guessing that won’t be broken again for quite some time.
Didn’t Alex Walsh go 58.1 when she was in that age group?
Nope, she was 16 then.
Pleeeease beat Lily King in 2024!!!!