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Cal, USC Split Day 1 Relays at 2013 Pac 12 Championships; Stanford Holds Lead on Diving Advantage

The 2013 men’s Pac 12 Championship begins on Sunday in its rescheduled home of Federal Way, Washington; and they began with a bang. Stanford has a new coach this year for the first time in their legendary 31-straight year Pac 12 Championship run with former assistant Ted Knapp taking over for Skip Kenney. Many have whispered that the streak would end this season, but tapered or not tapered, Stanford’s depth is vastly underrated.

They have a huge lead already after diving, and are swimming very well early in this meet. We’ll have to wait until the end of this month to see if that’s a tapered thing or not, but expect the streak to continue this year.

Note: the Pac 12, despite many requests, has chosen not to air a live stream of the meet, and instead will tape-delay it on the Pac 12 Network. Fortunately, all of the glitches with live results seem to have been worked out.

Day 1 results, with splits, available here (PDF).

Men’s 200 Medley Relay

Cal lost some key pieces to this medley relay who were the national runners-up last season; namely, every lead except for the butterflier Tom Shields. They’ve still managed to cobble together a very good relay, and took the first win of the meet in 1:24.42. That included junior Shayne Fleming just holding off Stanford anchor Aaron Wayne as the Golden Bears won 1:24.42-1:24.48.

Tony Cox, a transfer from Auburn, was a big part of this Cal effort, leading off in 21.53 (just about a tenth behind Stanford’s Nolan). Trevor Hoyt gave Cal the lead, before Shields extended it with a 19.86. That’s a great swim for Shields, though we’ve now seen there’s a few other guys who will be under 20 at NCAA’s. He was a 19.80 in this same spot at last year’s national championship meet for reference.

With Wayne looming for the Cardinal, and splitting a big 18.93 anchor, Fleming was strong as well in 19.28 to hang on for the victory. Both relays were nailing their exchanges, speaking to the focus that the two teams are coming into the meet with.

Arizona took 3rd in 1:24.83 – exactly .01 better than they were at their mid-season rest meet where they shot for most of their NCAA qualifying times. Carl Mickelson swam their breaststroke leg in a grand 23.65: the best of the scoring relays. The American Record holder, Kevin Cordes, was on the B-relay, though and outsplit him just a bit in 23.50. (Note that B relays don’t score at this meet).

USC took 4th in 1:25.04, with head coach Dave Salo tweeting afterward that his last 100 (Chase Bloch and Vlad Morozov) aren’t shaved. Bloch split a 21.01 on the butterfly leg, and Morozov maybe took the most attention of the whole race with an 18.32 anchor. Salo’s tweet is backed up by the fact that Morozov split 18.3 at the Cal dual meet last week also.

(note, since we’ve already had questions about this: there were some issues with the relay takeoff equipment at the women’s meet, and have been a few glitches here early, so don’t take the pad reaction times as official, including Aaron Wayne’s -.02).

Men’s 800 Free Relay Final

Strengthened by a phenomenal back-half, the USC Trojans won the men’s 800 free relay in relatively easy fashion, with a 6:16.88 ahead of Cal’s 6:18.83.

For USC, that included a 1:32.58 third leg from sophomore Cristian Quintero, and a 1:33.83 from Dimitri Colupaev. That time broke a 2002 team record that included Klete Keller.

Cal was 2nd, including a 1:33.60 from Tom Shields, the only swimmer from the major A-relays to pull double duty on this relay.

Stanford was 3rd in 6:22.32, with their best leg coming from freshman Tom Kremer on the leadoff from 1:34.57. Their B-relay was in a 6:24.04; their A could’ve been about two seconds faster had they combined their four fastest legs on this day, but that wouldn’t have been enough to move them to a higher placement. That time disparity likely points to different levels of taper for this meet.

Arizona took 4th in 6:22.88, with Utah 5th in 6:26.06. For the Utes, that’s a new school record by 10 seconds, and the leadoff leg of sophomore Nick Soedel of 1:35.83 is also a new School Record.

Live Meet Results available here.

Team Standings

Unlike the women’s meet, this men’s Pac-12 meet only scores to 16 places, just like NCAA’s. Diving was completed last week with the women’s competition, and we have incorporated those scores below (though official results won’t yet have them).

Stanford dominated the diving scoring with 137 points; Arizona was 2nd with 81 thanks to a second-straight Platform title. Cal was 5th among diving points with just 54.

1 Stanford 203
2 Arizona 143
3 Utah 131
4 Cal 128
5 Arizona State 128
6 USC 106
7 UCSB 54
8 Cal Poly 44

Who will win the Men's PAC 12 Championships this week?

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Dan Dingus
11 years ago

this is swimswam not dive swam…..

Simple Truths
11 years ago

Great way to start out the meet with tremendous relay team effort by all 4 but especially the huge 3rd & 4th legs by Olympians Quintero and Colupaev to pull out win over Cal. Congrats to USC!

Max
11 years ago

From L-R in the photo is Quintero, Bobrosky, Lendrum, Colupaev.

bobo gigi
Reply to  Max
11 years ago

Only one American in this relay! USC, like Auburn, is very international.

CraigH
11 years ago

He’s probably just not tapered, so they went with the shaved guy for the relay.

Sean S
11 years ago

Interesting choice by Zona to leave Cordes off of the A relay, I wonder if they will stick with it come NCAA’s

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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