You are working on Staging1

Arakelian, Afrik smash records, Birmingham Brother Rice wins Michigan high school D1 title

Full results

Birmingham Brother Rice overcame 4-time defending champs Saline High School to win the Michigan Division I (big schools) boys state title.

Brother Rice swept all three relays and saved their best swim for last, breaking the all-time Michigan state record in the 400 free relay to close out the victory.

In the meantime, Livonia Stevenson senior Nick Arakelian and Holland West Ottawa junior Tabahn Afrik stole the individual show, winning a pair of events and shattering two state records each.

Arakelian broke records in both his individual swims. He won the 200 IM in 1:47.47, breaking Division 1 and all-time records. Later, he won the 500 free with a Division 1-record 4:24.84. Arakelian, who has commited to Division II Queens University for next season, also put up two great relay splits. His 45.74 leading off the 400 free relay was the best of the field, and more impressive might be his 25.07 breaststroke leg on the 200 medley relay.

Afrik blew away the 200 free field to win in 1:38.18, winning by three seconds. He started his record-book onslaught late in the meet by winning the 100 free with a 43.90, breaking his own Division 1 record set in prelims.

Afrik then broke the Division 1 record in the 50 free while leading off Holland West Ottawa’s 200 free relay. Afrik went 20.27 and his relay took third. He also added a 43.66 split on the end of the third-place 400 free relay.

Brother Rice senior Joe Krause was a three-event winner for the weekend. He dominated the 50 free with a 20.63, nearly a half-second ahead of the rest of the field, and took second behind Afrik in the 100 free with a 45.47. Krause kept his sprinting skills sharp by swimming both of the freestyle relays.

Krause joined Bobby Powrie, Jack Kennedy and Bradford Jones on the 200 free relay, going 1:25.10 to eke out a win over Ann Arbor Pioneer. Krause’s 20.81 lead0ff split was the second-fastest of the field, trailing only Afrik.

He also anchored the 400 free relay in 45.48 in his fourth and final swim of the night. In that event, he and teammates Gust Kouvaris, Powrie, and Mark Blinstrub combined for a 3:02.06 that blew away the Division 1 and all-time records in the race. Blinstrub put up the relay’s fastest split at 44.92.

Brother Rice also won the 200 medley relay, getting another big Blinstrub split. The junior went 23.53 on backstroke to set the tone early, and Drew Grady, Kouvaris and Jones continued things from there, going 1:32.77 for the strong win. Kouvaris went 21.65 swimming butterfly, easily the field’s fastest fly split.

That relay set up several of the later individual winners. The fastest breaststroke split came from third-place Bloomfield Hills, where senior John Schihl split 25.02. He would go on to win the 100 breast at 55.39. In addition, the fastest medley relay backstroker, Jack Walsh of Detroit Catholic Central, went on to win the open 100 back. The junior went 49.08, just about a tenth off the Division 1 record set by Monroe sophomore Cameron Craig in prelims.

Craig took second in that race at finals, slipping to a 49.12. He also won the 100 fly, going 48.95 to top Brother Rice’s Kouvaris.

1-meter diving went to Rockford sophomore Jake Herremans, who scored 458.00 points.

Top 5 Teams

1. Birmingham Brother Rice 345
2. Livonia Stevenson           202
3. Holland West Ottawa         191
4. Ann Arbor Pioneer           185
5. Bloomfied Hills            136

1
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

1 Comment
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Marc Carman
10 years ago

Congrats to Coach Shoemaker on his runner-up finish & Coach of the Year Award!

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

Read More »