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Cullen Jones Continues Sprint Career At Wolfpack Elite

In 2016, American sprinter Cullen Jones narrowly missed out on a 3rd Olympic Games appearance, finishing 3rd in his signature event, the men’s 50m freestyle. At the Olympic Trials in Omaha, Jones, the reigning Olympic silver medalist in the event from London, found himself just .23 out of a spot on the U.S. roster for Rio, finishing behind winner Nathan Adrian and eventual gold medalist Anthony Ervin.

Leading up to Omaha, Jones trained under U.S. Olympic Women’s Head Coach David Marsh as a high-profile member of SwimMAC Team Elite alongside close friend Ryan Lochte. Although Madison Kennedy, Katie Meili and Time Phillips, among others, remain, several members of the squad have since moved on, with Lochte headed West to California, Arianna Vanderpool-Wallace taking time off at Auburn and Roy Burch outright retiring.

For his part, Jones has decided to make a training base move himself for 2017, essentially moving his career in a full circle. The 32-year-old is returning to his roots, joining the Wolfpack Elite squad at NC State University, his alma mater. Jones competed as part of the Wolfpack as a student-athlete from 2002-2006, becoming a four-time ACC Champion and 2006 NCAA 50m freestyle Champion in the process.

Arriving in Raleigh just 2 weeks ago, Jones is training alongside ACC champion and Lithuanian record holder Simonas Bilis under NC State Associate Head Coach Todd DeSorbo. Right now, just the two elite sprinters comprise the Wolfpack Elite squad, but coaches say additional athletes may join in the future. No word at this point as to what meet Jones will use as his return to competition and potential run for a World Championships roster spot.

Below is a social media post from Coach DeSorbo, giving us a taste of how quick a Bilis/Jones practice is on a daily basis.

https://twitter.com/ToddDeSorbo/status/822563844337926144

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AvidSwimFan
7 years ago

I’m so happy he’s not retired yet.

Dayum swammer
7 years ago

Which club did lochte move to?

Confused
7 years ago

That gave us absolutely no idea “how quick a Bilis/Jones practice is on a daily basis.”

Swimmer
7 years ago

Great move. Only one school has had a sprinter in the finals of the 4 x 100 relay in the past 3 Olympics – NC State. GO PACK!!

He Gets It Done Again
Reply to  Swimmer
7 years ago

Incorrect. Arizona also has had alumni in each of the last three 4×100 Olympic finals. Oliveira for Brazil in ’16, Schoeman and Townsend for South Africa in ’08 and ’12. In fact in ’08 they also had Ferns, Greenshields, and Burnett.

Swimmer
Reply to  He Gets It Done Again
7 years ago

My bad. I should have specified US relay or medal winning relay.:)

cynthia curran
Reply to  He Gets It Done Again
7 years ago

Good point, I remember them swimming for Arizona.

Hook \'em
Reply to  Swimmer
7 years ago

Typical NC State fan right here

Person
7 years ago

Well, obviously a great sprinting team. It was tough at OT, that 50 free for me was like men’s 100 back, I wanted more than two to make it.

Hswimmer
7 years ago

Smart move! The Wolfpack is a great team.

Mikeh
7 years ago

Heard an interview with one of the NC state coaches not long ago, I think it was Todd Desorbo. It was astounding how much anaerobic training they do. Power speed stuff almost daily, it seemed.

Cheatinvlad
Reply to  Mikeh
7 years ago

Almost like USRPT?

Steve Nolan
Reply to  Mikeh
7 years ago

I find this incredibly heartening. Power and speed man, that’s sprinting.

Taa
Reply to  Mikeh
7 years ago

I hear they feed them raw meat and make them sleep in a cave

Bigly
Reply to  Mikeh
7 years ago

Yeah, they stopped practicing relay false starts a few years ago.

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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