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Alabama Women Break SEC 200 Medley Relay Record with 1:33.94

The Alabama women broke the SEC record in the 200 medley relay during the first evening of the 2022 SEC Championships, posting a 1:33.94.

The team consisted of Rhyan White, Avery Wiseman, Morgan Scott, and Kalia Antoniou, and they defeated the previous record of 1:34.10 set by Tennessee in 2019.

Alabama’s 200 Medley (2022 SEC Champs) Tennessee’s 200 Medley (2019 NCAA Champs)
Back (Rhyan White): 23.65 Back (Meghan Small): 24.03
Breast (Avery Wiseman): 26.35 Breast (Nikol Popov): 26.51
Fly (Morgan Scott): 22.37 Fly (Madeline Banic): 22.58
Free (Kalia Antoniou): 21.57 Free (Erika Brown): 20.98
Total: 1:33.94 Total: 1:34.10

Notably, White, Wiseman, and Scott all posted faster splits than the Tennessee women swimming the same legs of the relay.

Wiseman also had a reaction time of -0.07. Given that Scott had a reaction time of .02 and Antoniou had a reaction time of .03, the relay’s overall reaction time was still -.02.

The record is also a new meet record, defeating Tennessee’s 1:34.26 from 2019, and was just .03 from setting a pool record. The pool record is currently held by Virginia, also set in 2019.

Alabama is now just over a second off the NCAA record, which Virginia set last season at 1:32.93. The Roll Tide women will have the opportunity to face off with UVA at NCAA Championships next month, as well as the reigning NCAA champions, NC State, who just set a meet record at their conference championships.

With this swim, Alabama also broke its school record. The previous Alabama school record was set at the 2021 SEC Championships at 1:34.68. White was also a part of that relay, as well as Scott, but the 2021 relay also featured now-graduated Kaila Wong and current junior Cora Dupre. Wiseman replaced Wong on the breast leg, while Antoniou replaced Dupre.

Alabama’s 200 Medley (2022 SEC Champs) Alabama’s 200 Medley (2021 SEC Champs)
Back (Rhyan White): 23.65 Back (Rhyan White): 23.35
Breast (Avery Wiseman): 26.35 Breast (Kaila Wong): 27.35
Fly (Morgan Scott): 22.37 Fly (Morgan Scott): 22.45
Free (Kalia Antoniou): 21.57 Free (Cora Dupre): 21.53
Total: 1:33.94 Total: 1:34.68

Alabama also won the 200 medley relay last year, marking the 2nd-straight time they took home the title in the event.

The win is a strong start for Alabama, who is projected to come in second behind Tennessee at this meet. Tennessee finished 2nd in the event with a time of 1:34.63.

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Aaron
2 years ago

What’s the point of keeping relay records when we just arbitrarily allow some relays to break the rules

ACC fan
2 years ago

Alabama women will also have to face off against NC STATE, the defending NCAA champs, not just UVA.

Ol' Longhorn
2 years ago

Margo Greer can’t coach…blah, blah, blah. She’s going to shut a lot of people up.

Slade
Reply to  Ol' Longhorn
2 years ago

She inherited quite a few gems and hasn’t brought in anyone on either side at this meet. Let’s see what happens when she has to do her own recruiting in a year.

Virtus
Reply to  Slade
2 years ago

Well recruiting out of the way, keeping elite athletes consistent st their peaks is crazy hard and she seems to be doing it well

Slade
2 years ago

The false start was glaring. As in this should have been called and was somehow overlooked.

Clown Show
2 years ago

Wait am I missing something? I feel like -.07 is a clear DQ.

Ol' Longhorn
Reply to  Braden Keith
2 years ago

-.07 with a Southern drawl is completely legal.

-0.07
2 years ago

How can you break a record with a false start?

Swimm
Reply to  -0.07
2 years ago

Stay mad

-0.07
Reply to  Swimm
2 years ago

Well when some teams play by the rules and some don’t it’s hard not to be mad. A DQ was made on the men’s side with a -0.10. A jump is a jump.

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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