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Arizona State Sets Pac-12 Record With 2:58.49 400 Medley Relay, #2 In NCAA All-Time

2024 MEN’S PAC-12 CHAMPIONSHIPS

MEN’S 400 MEDLEY RELAY – FINALS

  • NCAA Record: 2:58.32 – Florida (2023)
  • Pac-12 Record: 2:59.18 – Arizona State (2023)
  • Pac-12 Championship Record: 3:00.36 – Cal (2022)
  • NCAA ‘A’ Cut: 3:04.96

RESULTS:

  1. Arizona State (Kos, Marchand, Kharun, Kulow) – 2:58.49 (PAC-12 RECORD)
  2. Stanford (Maurer, Polonsky, Gu, Maurer) – 3:03.55
  3. Cal (Crews, Bell, Quarles, Frandson) – 3:04.02
  4. Arizona (Hardy, Purdy, Nabor, Daleiden) – 3:05.60
  5. USC (Makrygiannis, Dillard, Chmielewski, Selin) – 3:08.59
  6. Utah (McOmber, Horner, Van Brocklin, Woodall) – 3:11.31

The Arizona State men swam to a new Pac-12 Record in the 400 medley relay as Hubert Kos, Leon Marchand, Ilya Kharun, and Jonny Kulow touched in a 2:58.49. That also is the 2nd fastest time in the event in NCAA history, only 0.17 seconds behind Florida’s NCAA record of a 2:58.32.

Arizona State broke the old Pac-12 record that the team of Jack Dolan, Marchand, Max McCusker, and Kulow set to finish 3rd at 2023 NCAAs. The Florida men set the NCAA record last March at NCAAs as they were the fastest of three teams under the old record of a 2:59.22 that Texas set at 2017 NCAAs. Indiana and Arizona State were also faster than the previous record.

ARIZONA STATE – 2024 Pac-12s FLORIDA- 2023 NCAAs
ARIZONA STATE- 2023 NCAAs
Back Hubert Kos – 44.04 Adam Chaney – 44.28
Breast Leon Marchand – 49.87 Dillon Hillis – 50.23
Fly Ilya Kharun – 43.84 Josh Liendo – 42.91
Free Jonny Kulow – 40.74 Macguire McDuff – 40.90
2:58.49 2:58.32 2:59.18

The biggest difference in relay split is Josh Liendo‘s butterfly split which was the fastest fly split ever at the time of the Gators’ NCAA record. Liendo has since been faster as he swam a 42.77 at SECs but the split from the NCAA record swim is now #2 all-time.

Notably, Kulow anchored 0.04 seconds faster here than he anchored at NCAAs while Kos led off over half of a second faster than Dolan did last March. Tonight was Kos’s second big 100 back of the night as he also swam a Championship Record in the 100 back touching in a 43.75. If he had replicated that time again, the Sun Devils would have set a new NCAA record but this is one to watch out for come NCAAs.

Arizona State also broke the Pac-12 Championship record of a 3:00.36 that Cal set back in 2022.

Notably, the Arizona State men are now the only team in the NCAA this season to have been under the 3:00 mark. Florida previously was the fastest in the event this season as they swam a 3:00.49 at SECs.

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SWIM SAM
8 months ago

That photo is awesome!

Guy
8 months ago

If you summed each of their first 50s, you get a 1:23.31 200 medley relay… 🤯

Maxy Boy
8 months ago

#2 all time until UNC comes for them. They won’t stand a chance!

Big Zippy
8 months ago

This is the hardest cover photo in the history of swimswam

Steve Nolan
Reply to  Big Zippy
8 months ago

fr I just sorta looked at it for a beat, usually I just scroll past.

swimmer
Reply to  Big Zippy
8 months ago

Wait can someone please explain happening in this photo? The orientation is tripping me out, I’m not able to understand what’s happening

Mothman
Reply to  swimmer
8 months ago

He did a flip and entered the water head-first. Pretty cool to watch!

iLikePsych
Reply to  swimmer
8 months ago

It’s a backstroker (presumably Kos) falling headfirst into the pool before they start, and the image is flipped

Last edited 8 months ago by iLikePsych
Andrew
8 months ago

Kulow is him, dude has been on a tear for a year now and I cant remember the last time he’s missed on a relay swim

Justin Pollard
Reply to  Andrew
8 months ago

He only went 18.8 in the 200 FR at 2023 Pac-12s, but other than that, very strong performances all around. Reminds me of Bjorn Seeliger who nearly always crushes his relay swims, even when it isn’t freestyle.

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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