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Lochte Tops Phelps in 100 Fly Final at 2014 Mesa Grand Prix

Make sure to keep this page open as we’ll be constantly updating a live recap of finals.

Headlining tonight, Michael Phelps will be returning for his first final since the London Olympics after taking the top seed this morning in the 100m fly with a 52.84. None other than Ryan Lochte took the second seed, meaning we’re going to be able to watch Phelps and Lochte go head-to-head again as they swim beside each other in tonight’s final.

The first final of the night, the women’s 10om freestyle, is absolutely packed with talent. Just to name-drop the field: Simone Manuel, Allison Schmitt, Amanda Weir, Natalie Coughlin, Megan Romano, Katie Ledecky Margo Geer, and Cheyenne Coffman will all be vying for that top spot tonight. The amount of international talent in this field is outstanding, and should make for a good race.

The men’s 100m freestyle final is shaping up to be a good one after some good prelims swims. Nathan Adrian was the only swimmer to crack the 50 second mark this morning grabbing the top spot in 49.98. Look for Lochte to try and make a move, displaying some of his new sprint freestyle techniques that he’s been developing in North Carolina. Also in the race will be Jimmy Feigen, Conor Dwyer, Roland Schoeman, and Josh Schneider.

Micah Lawrence and Breeja Larson should make tonight’s 200m breaststroke final interesting as they both posted fairly similar times in prelims. Lawrence was the only one to dip under 2:30 with a 2:28.37. Larson was just over two seconds behind her.

Mike Alexandrov and Azad Al-Barazi will be the two favorites going into tonight’s mens 200m breaststroke.

Also worth a definite watch is the women’s 400m freestyle featuring freestyle star Katie Ledecky. Allison Schmitt and Lotte Friis will both be in tonight’s final as well, so look for them to make things interesting.

Conor Dwyer is the favorite heading into the men’s 400m freestyle, but should expect some stiff competition from Tyler Clary, Michael McBroom, and Micahel Weiss.

ALL THE LINKS YOU NEED TO FOLLOW THE 2014 MESA GRAND PRIX

WOMEN’S 100 FREESTYLE

31-year old veteran Natalie Coughlin kicked off the women’s 100m freestyle with a strong start, leading the field to the wall in 26.16 – very similar to how she paced her prelims swim.

Closing on on the 75m mark the field started catching up with her, though. Allison Schmitt, swimming to her left, passed her in the last 25, winning the race in 54.46. That’s Schmitt’s first race since the 2013 World Championship Trials, and now back training at North Batlimore, she seems to be firing on all cylinders.
Schmitt’s Georgia teammate Megan Romano from lane two finished behind her in 55.05 for 2nd. Coughlin was able to hold off advances from Katie Ledecky and hold onto a 3rd-place finish in 55.14, still an improvement from prelims.
Ledecky was 4th in 55.22, a few races before going on to win the 400 free later in the meet. As she’s gotten older, she’s gradually expanded her abilities to shorter-and-shorter races, and this swam was a lifetime best for her by half a second.
 The American record holder in the event, Amanda Weir, was 5th in 55.34, top seed out of prelims Simone Manuel was 6th in 55.42 (adding about four-tenths), and Margo Geer was 7th in 55.79.

MEN’S 100 FREESTYLE

This race was all about Nathan Adrian. Adrian exploded off the start and gave himself the lead within the first five seconds of the race. Keeping somewhat pace with him in the first 50 was Roland Schoeman, but Adrian was first at the turn touching in at 23.00 on his feet. Lochte came off the wall with a great underwater dolphin kick, but wasn’t able to put himself in competition with Adrian, who smoked the rest of the field by over a full second touching the wall in 48.23.

In his post-race interview, when Rowdy Gaines pointed out that Adrian went into his ‘dig for the wall’ technique earlier than he normally does, Adrian said it wasn’t really a plan, but that in-season meets are a good place to try those things. It seemed to work out, as this swim bumped him to 3rd in the world this year, and as the fastest swimmer who hasn’t had a national championship meet yet.

2014 LCM Men 100 Free TYR World Ranking

2Cameron
McEVOY
AUS47.6504/03
3Zetao
NING
CHN47.7009/25
4Florent
MANAUDOU
FRA47.9808/22
5Nathan
ADRIAN
USA48.0806/14
View Top 51»

Adrian didn’t look all that smooth at the end of this 100 free, but the power he was generating was palpable to a spectator.

Schoeman finished second in 49.39. Connor Dwyer was third in 49.57, followed by Lochte who used more of a straight arm technique than we’ve seen from him in the past to place 4th in 49.68.

Darian Townsend, a local who trains at Tucson Ford, placed 5th in 49.88, followed by Jimmy Feigen(49.93), Josh Schneider (50.53), and Matt Lindebauer(50.60). Lindenbauer from Louisville at 20 years old was the youngest swimmer in this A-Final by about four years.

Stanford post-grad Alex Coville won the B-Final in 50.08.

WOMEN’S 200 BREASTSTROKE

Alia Atkinson stole the show tonight in the 200m breaststroke leading from start to finish. Atkinson is a former NCAA Champion in the 200, but as a professional swimmer has had more success in the breaststroke sprints. Atkinson went out in a 33.57, and maintained consistent splits around 36-38 seconds for the remaining 50′s. What’s most impressive is that Atkinson had a body length lead over second place finisher Micah Lawrence going into the last 100, but managed to pull away further despite being more of a front half, sprint swimmer

The finishing time of 2:25.52 was a lifetime best for Atkinson by about three seconds. According to Atkinson, after college, she focused a lot on improving her 100 with great success, and somehow lost the 200. This race might be an indication that we could see her having a lot more success in the 200 at international competitions in the near future.

Atkinson, who swims for Jamaica, posted  time faster than any American this year. Micah Lawrence had a good closing 50, which is her specialty, to place 2nd in 2:26.60.

Breeja Larson, who with Lawrence represented the U.S. in this race at Worlds last year, was a 2:28.87 for 3rd, as this final brough a lot more fireworks than a relatively lackluster prelim heat.

Utah freshman Stina Colleou, a native of Norway, held up her good prelims swim fairly well with a 2:31.58 for 5th. Of note, another former NCAA Champion Caitlin Leverenz placed 7th in 2:33.51.

SwimMAC’s Katie Meili torched the B-Final in 2:33.23, a much better swim than she had in the morning in all facets.

MEN’S 200 BREASTSTROKE

With some key figures missing in the 200m breaststroke, it opened up tonight’s final to some new faces. The race was in the middle of the pool through its entirety with Mike Alexandrov taking the lead after the first 50 in 30.09.

Following that, fastest seed after this mornings prelims Azad Al-Barazi took the lead through the next 100m touching the wall at the 150m mark in 1:39.89.
Valdes Murillo, however, a Colombian national, won the race in 2:14.81 after challenging the field on the last 50m. Murillo was within a second of the Columbian national record in the event with that time. Currently Murillo holds all national breaststroke records for Columbia.
Al-Barazi would cruise into 2nd in 2:15.53, and Carl Mickelson had a very fast last 50 to touch 3rd in 2:16.50.
Alexandrov fell off in his final 50, conversely, for 4th in 2:16.71, and the times after htat dropped off significantly to 17-year old Gunther Cassell from the Long Island Express in 2:19.91.

WOMEN’S 400 FREESTYLE

In what seems to be a trend tonight, Katie Ledecky won the women’s 400m freestyle in start-to-finish fashion in a new junior world record of 4:03.84. That improved upon her own official record of 4:05.27 from prelims, though it was still four seconds slower than her personal best.

Ledecky already swam one final tonight, the 100 free, and showed off her range in what she called a “long sprint” after the race. In tonight’s final she was a little slower on the first 100m then this morning’s prelim, but made up for it during her last 200m. See the splits below.

KEDECKY’S  PRELIMS SPLITS: 58.38, 1:01.81, 1:02.51, 1:02.56

KEDECKY’S FINALS SPLITS: 58.58, 1:00.23, 1:02.26, 1:01.77

Clearly by analyzing these splits you can see that Ledecky was out a little slower during that first 100m, but her second 100 and fourth 100 really kicked in to give her a stronger swim tonight. Noteably, Ledecky seems be gaining a little more speed in the short races as she gets older, which should continue to help her in distance and middle distance races.

That swim ties Katie Ledecky with Mireia Belmonte-Garcia for the world-leader in 2014.

2014 LCM Women 400 Free TYR World Ranking

KatieUSA
LEDECKY
08/23
3.58.37*WR
2Jazmin
CARLIN
GBR4.03.2408/24
3Sharon
VAN ROUWENDAAL
NED4.03.7608/24
4Mireia
BELMONTE GARCIA
ESP4.03.8404/13
5Federica
PELLEGRINI
ITA4.04.4208/24
View Top 51»

There wasn’t really much of a race for the 17-year old champion, but NBAC’s Gillian Ryan took 2nd in 4:08.51 to lead five NBAC swimmers in this A-Final. 16-year old Becca Mann was 3rd in 4:08.71, and was able to hold off University of Virginia freshman Leah Smith, who was 4th in 4:08.81.

Andreina Pinto, part of a large Venezuelan contingent at this meet, placed 5th in 4:10.79, followed by Lotte Friis in 4:10.91. Friis hasn’t looked great since coming to train in the United States following a great Worlds last year, though changing coaches can always lead to somewhat of a transition period. We’ll have to wait and see how she tapers for the European Championships this summer to make conclusions about how year one has gone in the U.S.

Of big-picture curiosity, all 8 A-Finalists train in states on the east coast of the United States (bordering the Atlantic Ocean). That’s relatively significant in the broader swimming landscape.

Elizabeth Beisel, swimming her first final as a professional swimmer, dominated the B-Final in 4:11.93, about three seconds ahead of Chloe Sutton (4:15.17).

MEN’S 400 FREESTYLE

15-year old Sean Grieshop from Nitro Swimming in Austin led off the men’s 100m freestyle at an eager pace, taking the lead over seasoned swimmers such as Connor Dwyer, Michael McBroom, and Tyler Clary at the first 100m with a time of 55.99.

But McBroom, who seems poised for a big explosion in long course, said that he felt really good on his first 200 (much better than his back 200) and that showed in the 1:53.96 split he put up.

Dwyer was a body length behind McBroom at the halfway point, and couldn’t catch up to him going into the last 100, with McBroom winning in 3:50.87. That’s withing about a second of his lifetime best.

Toward the end of this race, McBroom began to pull away from Dwyer, and Dwyer seemed to lose the pop in his stroke as it was clear that he was hurting. Dwyer was able to hold off a hard-charging Clary, though, for 2nd place 3:53.85-3:54.47.

Crimson Aquatics’ Liam Egan, a Stanford commit, was 4th in 3:57.82, followed by Michael Weiss in 3:58.37. Aidan Burns rounded out the sub-four-minute group, with Grieshop fading all the way back to 7th in 4:00.26.

Matthew Hirschberger won the B-Final in 3:59.61.

WOMEN’S 100 BUTTERFLY

Claire Donahue took a big win in the 100m fly with a time of 59.05 in her return from a three-week training trip to New Zealand. After training nearly non-stop at Western Kentucky from the time she was 18 until earlier this year, she’s spent a lot of time in 2014 training in other places while the WKU undergrads focus on their college training, and that seems to have done a lot for her.

When we last spoke to her, it sounded like she had every intention of remaining at Western Kentucky in the long-haul, but the ability to experience other groups and other training groups should go a long way toward helping Donahue really hold her position as the United States’ number-one butterflier while Dana Vollmer continues to be out.
16-year old Katie McLaughlin took 2nd in 59.60 as the only other swimmer to break a minute.
SMU freshman Marne Erasmus, one of the biggest surprises at this year’s NCAA Championship meet and the South African National Champion, was 3rd in 1:00.66, followed by Bolles’ Caroline Colorado (from Colombia) in 1:00.80.
Katie Hoff added about three-tenths from prelims (like most of this field aside from the top two) to place 5th in 1:00.95.
Jamaican Alia Atkinson, after her win in the 200 breaststroke, showed off her versatility with a 1:00.87 in the 100 fly, which is another lifetime best for her. That was the 5th-best time in finals overall.

MEN’S 100 BUTTERFLY

So the storybook version of the men’s 100 fly final in Phelps’ big comeback didn’t go exactly according to plan, but afterall, it’s sort of Ryan Lochte’s comeback too. Neither swimmer lept out to a big lead at the turn, and neither is really want to do so in their ideal race, Coming off of the turn, however, Lochte took command and opened up about a half-a-body length lead.

But Phelps showed the fight we all know in him, that fight that caused him to be so great as much as his talent, and with Lochte tightening up a little in the last 15 meters, Phelps made it a close race.

Lochte, however, had juts enough left for the last couple of strokes, winning in 51.93 – a time that ranks him 2nd in the world so far this year. Phelps took 2nd in 52.13.

2014 LCM Men 100 Fly TYR World Ranking

2Chad
LE CLOS
RSA51.2907/28
2Tom
SHIELDS
USA51.2908/08
4Konrad
CZERNIAK
POL51.3808/23
5Tim
PHILLIPS
USA51.4908/08
View Top 51»

In their post-race interview, the two were joking with each other a little bit and having some fun, which was good to see, as both had really great times. Phelps sits 5th in the world right now, .01 seconds ahead of his South African nemesis Chad le Clos.

That time for Phelps is faster than he was at any Grand Prix in the lead up to his 2012 Olympic gold medal in this race, which is a strong sign for the fitness of his comeback.

Kenyan Jason Dunford took 3rd in 53.08.

Gaines asked him about Rio, and Phelps gave one of his usual illusive answers, but did state that he was having fun getting in the pool and racing again in front of a great crowd.

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tall n wet
10 years ago

I knew MP was gonna go 52.1!! Called it :p

calswimfan
10 years ago

what about that Justin Lynch tho..

TheTroubleWithX
10 years ago

Just watched a NBC video with Ryan Lochte. He said that he contemplated not coming back after Worlds and the injury last year, but at least part of the reason that he decided to stick with the sport was hearing rumors of Phelps training again, and wanting to swim with/against him again.

liquidassets
10 years ago

100 fly Grevers 54.1, Andrew 54.9, Hoffer up 2.5 secs to 57.7, yikes!

aswimfan
Reply to  liquidassets
10 years ago

It’s crazy that MA keeps consistently swimming fast anywhere anytime. What will happen in this summer? Will he drop a lot? Will he drop a little?
These are questions I am waiting eagerly for the answers.

aswimfan
10 years ago

By the way, I am totally impressed with Schoeman. He is 33! and keeps swimming fast every single time. I almost wished the Olympics had 50 fly so he get the chance to win medal again.

Hulk Swim
Reply to  aswimfan
10 years ago

I would love to see the day when the 50’s are Olympic Events… but I doubt it happens.

While we are at it- I’d also love to see an World Champs type of event but with no athlete limits per country- so just an international meet cut, and if you have the cut, you can compete. Something like the a top 50 in the world cut and anyone with the cut can attend.

aswimfan
Reply to  Hulk Swim
10 years ago

Hulk,

I agree with your idea of no swimmers limit per country for world championships, but let’s start with 3 per country first, which is more feasible and doable. IAAF allows 3 athletes per country at the athletic world champs, why can’t FINA. Yes, USA may sweep in one or two events sometimes, but it will never go back to the 70s where either East Germany or USA swept the podiums often. There is too much parity in swimming right now.

liquidassets
Reply to  aswimfan
10 years ago

Agreed; it’s no fun seeing a potential medalist left behind at home, regardless of which country they’re from.

beachmouse
Reply to  aswimfan
10 years ago

IAAF also give a world champion a direct pass into the next world championship without it counting against the normal three per country rules (aka the American sprinter and Kenyan distance runner clause). Which does help improve event quality while still encouraging participation among a lot of different countries.

I can’t see FINA going back to three per country because of general cost concerns but it would be nice to see a similar defending champion gets a pass rule for their world championships.

aswimfan
10 years ago

Bobo,

when will Hoffer turn 16?

liquidassets
Reply to  aswimfan
10 years ago

I think he went back to bed. Otherwise he is even more insane than Hulk thinks he is. 😉

aswimfan
Reply to  liquidassets
10 years ago

LOL yeah he must have. I fell asleep last night at 2 AM waiting for Phelps to swim 100 fly..after soldiering on watching countless heats of 400 free.

liquidassets
Reply to  aswimfan
10 years ago

Are you in France?

aswimfan
Reply to  liquidassets
10 years ago

No, Indonesia. The prelims starts at around 1200 am (or was it 11 pm) local time here.. and I managed to be awake until around 140 am or 2 am, when I fell asleep before Phelps swam his heat

liquidassets
10 years ago

51.56 for Andrew, 52.44 for Hoffer; not even close! Close to a PB for Andrew, not sure about Hoffer.

aswimfan
Reply to  liquidassets
10 years ago

Hoffer swam 51.98 this morning in the prelims.

Sven
Reply to  liquidassets
10 years ago

Although, to be fair, MA can be fast at any meet. We’re not sure how rested Hoffer is at the moment.

liquidassets
Reply to  Sven
10 years ago

Is that characteristic of USRPT, and they don’t have as much of a taper drop? Or just Andrew? I don’t know how long he can keep this up; he’s been racing for months!!

aswimfan
Reply to  liquidassets
10 years ago

All of our collective questions will be answered during this summer nationals.

sven
Reply to  liquidassets
10 years ago

USRPT. In theory, you should be able to train normally, scale it back a bit over three days, go a best time, and be back to normal training on Monday, vs. the long taper and retraining period. I do think the constant racing of the past 2 months could have been better spent training, and that his improvement lately has been slowed a bit because of it, but I can’t hold anything against the kid for wanting to break some records. He’ll buckle down again and drop more time as we come in to summer.

bobo gigi
10 years ago

Haha! I’m sure most of the stupid press headlines will be about the second place of MP.

No surprise with the time of Lochte. He has changed his training at SwimMAC and we must get used to seeing him swim fast in-season now.
After the prelims I was sure he would push MP to swim a 52 low.
52.13 was absolutely unexpected before the meet.
It’s an amazing comeback!
Give 2 years of sprint training to MP and he could again surprise us with very very very fast times in the 100 fly.
If he wants it of course.

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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