2018 Pacific Coast League Finals
- May 1st-4th, 2018
- William Wollett Jr. Aquatics Center, Irvine, California
- Full Meet Results
The 2018 Pacific Coast League Finals were among the first of dozens of California High School league meets to be run this weekend. The league, incorporating mostly large high schools in Orange County, feeds up into the CIF – Southern Section Division I level, for the league’s biggest schools.
Final Team Scores
The boys of Northwood, who placed 3rd in the 2017 CIF-Southern Section championships last season, ran away with the overall team title on Friday at the Pacific Coast League Finals.
The girls’ meet was significantly more competitive, coming down to the final relay where Irvine won and Woodbridge was 2nd: which was just enough to give Irvine a 6.5-point win. Had Woodbridge won the relay, the title would have been theirs.
The Woodbridge girls placed 4th at last year’s CIF – SS Division I finals, while Irvine was just 16th.
Boys’ scores:
- Northwood – 550
- University – 425
- Corona del Mar – 359.5
- Irvine – 322.5
- Beckman – 214
- Woodbridge – 143
Girls’ scores:
- Irvine – 481.5
- Woodbridge – 475
- Northwood – 329
- University – 263
- Corona del Mar – 244
- Beckman – 221.5
Boys’ Meet
Northwood sprinted out to a lead thanks to winning the first 8 swimming events of the meet. That included a pair of wins by senior and Columbia University commit Shawn Lou, who won both the 200 free (1:37.95) and 500 free (4:38.10). Those are both new lifetime bests for Lou, including the 500 by four-and-a-half seconds.
He was supported by a win in the 100 free from his longtime Irvine Novaquatics teammate Hunter Hitchens, who touched in 45.84. The two were a part of National Age Group Record-setting relays when they were 13-14s, and now both will head to the Ivy League together – Hitchens is signed with Columbia.
Other winners for the veteran Northwood team included senior Gabe Munoz in the 200 IM (1:52.93), senior Collin Press in the 50 free (21.12), senior Hwa Min Sim in the 100 fly (49.49 – the only swimmer under 50 seconds), and a sweep of the day’s 3 relays.
The first non-Northwood winner didn’t come until the boys’ 100 back, where University’s Caedon Ng swam a 51.66 to run-down Munoz – who was the top seed coming into the final. Corona del Mar’s Ryan Schildwachter won the 100 breaststroke in 55.57 – his new lifetime best by more than a second – to fill out the winners.
Girls’ Meet
The girls’ meet wasn’t quite so one-sided as the boys’ affair was. Woodbridge, the defending league champions, took an early lead thanks to 4 wins in the day’s first 5 events. That included a 1-2-3 finish from Jamie Yeh (2:03.37), Sydney Okubo (2:05.20), and Amanda Anderson (2:05.28) in the 200 IM for a 53-point event.
But as strong as Woodbridge’s front-half was Irvine’s back-half of the meet. Their surge began with a dominant 18-second margin from UCLA commit Julia Wright in the 500 free (4:54.60), which was part of a 1-4-5 finish for Irvine.
Irvine then won the 200 free relay by just .01 seconds ahead of Woodbridge (another result that would’ve swung the team title), anchored by their fastest split, a 24.02 from Wright shortly after that 500 win.
Yeh from Woodbridge picked up a 2nd individual win of the meet, part of another 1-2 for her team, in the 100 back with a 54.70. but Irvine’s depth kept them within striking distance, and a half-point lead, going into the 400 free relay. That meant whichever team placed higher in the final event would win the meet. Woodbridge entered with the top seed, but with neither showing their hands in prelims, Wright was able to lurk on the anchor for one more magical swim, splitting 50.72 to pull her team away from Woodbridge anchor Melodie Pugar (51.55) and the meet win.
Other event winners on the girls side include Northwood’s Amanda Hsieh in the 200 free in 1:50.77, just beating-out Wright’s 1:50.90; Juliana Witting of Woodbridge won the 50 free in 23.75; Woodbridge’s Molly McCance won the 100 fly in 55.97; Hsieh picked up her 2nd win, the only double winner of the day for the girls, with a 51.58 in the 100 free; and Corona del Mar’s Michelle Tekawy giving her team their only win of the meet with a 1:03.34 in the 100 breaststroke to close the day. Tekawy, just a freshman, had never been under 1:04 coming into this meet and never under 1:05 coming into February.
BTW, Ryan Schildwachter is Corona Del Mar HS student (not Univeristy HS)
Hunter signed with Cornell not Columbia. Shawn Lou swam a 1:40.49 and a 4:27.61. The times you listed are his seed times.
Some great swims from Occidental College commits Jessica Thompson and Claire Jang. Way to go Claire and Jessica! Io Triumphe