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Will Drury Be Dethroned?: NCAA Division II 2013-2014 Season Outlook

The end of last season saw the Drury Panthers Men run away with their 9th consecutive NCAA Division II National Championship Crown.  The Drury Women avenged themselves from last years 1-point loss to Wayne State (Mich.) and won their 9th Overall Championship, not consecutively as the men have though.  This year will prove to one of the more interesting in past years on both sides of the ball.

35 Seniors from last years top-10 teams have graduated, but a slew of young-guns look to take advantage of these openings after falling short this past year.  With strong freshman classes coming in across the country, you never know what exactly will been seen until they hit the pool.

Here’s the top ten teams from nationals last year, with a list of seniors who placed top sixteen that graduated, followed by returning athletes to watch for in the coming season. Individual national champions are in bold.

Men’s Meet:

1. Drury (546)

Losses: Vladimir Sidorkin, Ryan Arabejo, Taylor Westby, Cory McVey

Drury looks to repeat for the 10th consecutive championship.  Supported by their great relay combinations; and, with only graduating 4 seniors and recruiting a strong incoming class, the Panthers look as though they could pull it off.  They had almost a 150 point advantage on the nearest team from last year.  Look for strong relays to anchor the Panthers run. Sean Feher will anchor the distance, he place 11th in the 1000, and 14th in the 500.

*NOTE: Daniel Swietlicki, the defending champion in the 200 Backstroke has transferred to LSU.

2. Florida Southern (397)

Losses: Jeffrey Halfacre, Miguel Ferreira, David Janzen

The Mocs graduated most of there individual event points between its three seniors, but with the leadership of senior Zachary Edwards and Robert Swan holding down the relays they could stay in contention.  Also look for Luis Rojas who finished second in the 200 Freestyle last year.

3. Incarnate Word (389) (NOW IN DIVISION I

Losses: Mark Rubin, Conrado Chede, Thiago Parravicini

Junior Evandro Silva, who was second in the 200 IM and 9th in the 400 IM will lead this team into Division I.  He is joined by Senior Daniel Torres who was 5th in the 400 IM and 4th in the 200 IM at last year’s DII championships.  Torres will also play a major role in the Cardinals Relays, as their year-end championship will be the CSCAA invitational.

4. Grand Canyon (336) (NOW IN DIVISION I)

Losses: Eetu Karvonen, Kyle Shores, Taylor Turner

Returning the champion in the 50 Freestyle from last year, Senior Michael Branning won’t defend his title, as the Lopes are headed to Division I.  Look for Sophomore John Feely to also swim well at the CSCAA Invitational in the distance event as he returns with two top-16 placings from last year in the 1000 and 500 freestyles.

5. Wayne State (264)

Losses: Joaquin Abscal Gallegos

Returning what very well might be the best all-around swimmer in the bunch, Junior Piotr Jachowicz looks to defend his titles in both the 200 and 400 IM’s which he broke both National records in last year.  He also placed 4th and 5th in the 100 and 200 Breaststrokes, respectively. Look to the leadership of Senior Kristian Larsen to make an impact on the relays.

6. Wingate (262)

Losses: Spencer Waganaar, Rory Julyan

Senior Marko Blazevski looks to end his college career with a NCAA title as he was runner-up in the 400 IM and 4th in the 200 fly last year.  Senior Tim Kniffler looks to improve from his 6th place finish in the 200 Backstroke as well.

7. UC-San Diego (237)

Losses: Adam Rice, Adam Yen

Senior Nicholas Korth looks to avenge his narrow loss in the 200 Breaststroke from last year where he missed victory by 4-hundreths of a second.  Senior Reid McCallam looks to lead the relays to a repeat of multiple top-8 finishes from last year.

*NOTE: Dane Stassi, 200 Fly Champion, is no longer on the UCSD Roster, according to his Facebook page he now attends UC Berkley, but was not on their roster either.

8. Bridgeport (227)

Losses: Krzysztof Wilk

Senior Oscar Pereiro looks to defend his title in the 100 Backstroke from last year. He also finished 6th in the 50 Freestyle. Also returning is Senior Vyacheslav Fattakhov who finished 6th in the 200 Breaststroke and 11th in the 100 Breaststroke.

9. Queens (NC) (201)

Losses: Kyle House

Junior Alex Menke looks to repeat as the 1650 champion and add to his medal count as he was 2nd in the 1000 and 8th in the 500 just a year ago. Queens also adds Matthew Josa, a member of the American Junior World Championship team and Junior National team, who will immediately contend for multiple national titles. His addition alone should be worth 80 points to Queens’ overall scoring, at least, which could move them into the top 3, but they will need more than that to contend for the title.

10. Nova S’Eastern (151)

Losses: Oskar Nordstrand

With the loss of Nordstrand, who attributed 72 points (including relays) last year, the Sharks have a large hole to fill.  Look to Seniors John Haynes and Florian Mehlan, two members of those relays to help a younger Sharks team to succeed on the national level.

Women’s Meet:

1. Drury (432.5)

Losses: Ekaterina Alyabyeva, Tiffany Bell, Deanna Sorenson, Molly Brown

Returning no event winner from the previous year, just like on the Men’s side Drury looks to their depth and their relays to drive them to victory.  Sophomore Sarah Pullen looks to improve on a phenomenal freshman outing as she was top-8 in the 1000 and 500 Freestyles.  Junior Wai Ting Yu returns to the pool looking to take the 100 Freestyle crown that she narrowly missed last year.

2. Wayne State (388)

Losses: Sarah Maraskine, Ashley Corriveau

Junior Kristina Novichenko looks to bolster he resume after finishing 4th in the 200 Fly and 8th in the 400 IM.  Senior Kayla Scott returns looking to earn back the crown in the 100 Breaststroke which she won two years ago, but finished 2nd last year.

3. UC- San Diego (313)

Losses: Olivia Fountain, Katherine Tse, Casey Adams

Returning Senior Anjali Shakya will try to defend her title in the 200 Freestyle.  Sophomore Colleen Daley looks to improve on her performance from last year helping to score two top-8 relay teams.

4. Incarnate Word (252) (NOW DIVISION I)

Losses: Tamiris Nascimento, Victoria Lowe

Graduating the winner of the 100 and 50 Freestyles last year, the Cardinals are looking to Junior Kaitlyn Whalen and Senior Molly Freeman to lead the team this year. Whalen finished 11th in the 200 Butterfly while Freeman and Sophomore Mikayla Felchak hold down the distance events finishing 4th and 3rd in the 1650, respectively. Incarnate Word is beginning their first season in Division I this fall.

5. Wingate (242.5)

Losses: Paige Schmidt, Elly Speer

Senior Kathryn Pheil looks to improve her 4th place ranking in the 200 Backstroke from last year while Sophomore distance swimmer Julie Wessler returns from a 19th place finish from last year in the 1650 looking to continue a strong Bulldog distance trend.

6. Florida Southern (219)

Having the “Queen of Division II Distance Swimming” in their back pockets in Sophomore Alli Crenshaw (defending champion in the 1000 and 1650) the Mocs can only improve from last years performance.

7. West Chester (209)

A team with no graduating seniors at the meet, the Golden Rams look to capitalize on their young talent store. Junior Lauren Carastro returns after finishing 2nd in the 1000, 7th in the 500, and 12th in the 1650 to lead a young Rams team.

8. LIU Post (186)

Graduating no seniors, eturning Sophomore Joyce Kwok returns to Post looking to defend her title in the 200 Butterfly from last year, also provided a blazing 24.5 Fly split on the 200 Medley Relay.

9. Simon Fraser (175)

Losses: Kristine Lawson

Junior Carmen Nam, who placed 16th in the 400 IM and Junior Nicole Cossey who helped relays to multiple top-8 finishes help pace the only Non-American NCAA School.

10. Queens (NC) (174)

Returning the defending champion in the 400 IM and 200 Backstroke in Sophomore Caroline Arkelian the Royals look to improve there national standing as a still young program.

National Names:

These swimmers were not part of any of the top ten teams but deserve recognition as NCAA Champions. Last Years Seniors have been bolded.

Southern Conneticut- Amanda Thomas 200 IM

Nova Southeastern- Erin Black 500 Free

Alaska- Bente Hiller 100 BK

Ouachita Baptist- Marucs Schlesinger 100 Fly

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GO STATESMEN
11 years ago

LETS GO DELTA STATE!!!

PurpleKnight
11 years ago

Vyacheslav Fattakhov has one year of eligibility remaining and will be swimming for the Purple Knights this year.

We did graduate Krzysztof Wilk, 8th in 200 Free and solid Freestyle relay contributor from 200 – 800.

Michael Sanders
Reply to  PurpleKnight
11 years ago

Thank you for your information, the results had him listed as a SR. The story has been updated to include his performances from last year.

JP
11 years ago

Drury’s going to be hard to beat with UIW and GCU gone.

Going down the list, UB might just be the next-best team, their recruiting class looks pretty nasty, with a bunch of competent sprinters.

Wayne losing Abascal isn’t too bad, a worse loss is relay stalwart Hesche, though they have a mid-D and flyer coming in who should more than make up for that. They still need a sprint anchor though.

Queens lost Trice to UGA, that’s a huge hole for them though Josa is a stud.

Schlesigner was a senior last year, so he won’t be back in the 100 fly, not to mention 100 back, 50 or 100 free.

I would be scared of St. Leo… Read more »

JP
Reply to  JP
11 years ago

Also on the “figure out second taper” train is Missouri S&T. They lack some depth but can put together some very solid relays, although probably not as good as last year’s without Schranck/Dole especially.

Observer
11 years ago

I believe incarnate word and Grand Canyon are both not in D2 anymore. Went D1

About Braden Keith

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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