2022 NCAA DIVISION I MEN’S SWIMMING AND DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS
- March 23-26, 2022
- McAuley Aquatic Center, Georgia Tech, Atlanta, Georgia (Eastern Daylight Time)
- Prelims 10AM /Finals 6PM
- Short Course Yards (25 yards)
- Live Results
- Official Psych Sheets
- Virtual Championship Program
- SwimSwam Pick Em’s Contest
- Qualified relay teams
- Live stream link
We’ve seen a lot of freakishly fast 200 free relays this year. Last month, the UVA men took down the American Record in the 200 free relay. Tonight, six teams got under 1:15.
And yet, the most stubborn NCAA Record on the books, Auburn’s 2009 1:14.08 performance, still stands.
And who came closest to breaking it? Was the underclassmen-powered UVA? Nope, they ended up 5th at 1:14.70. Longtime sprint powerhouse NC State? No, 1:14.69, with a scorching 18.04 split by Nyls Korstanje.
How about Texas, who won this event three-straight years from 2015 and 2017 and put two men into the 50 free A-final today? 1:14.41, with a total reaction time on the three relay changeovers longer than some Vines (0.88s).
Cal, who won last year with the then-second-fastest time ever? Getting closer. They finished 2nd at 1:14.36, with leadoff Bjorn Seeliger moving up to #2 all-time individually with a 18.27 leadoff.
Wait, was it Florida, the team that had four scorers, including two A-finalists, in the 500 free and two B-finalists, but no A-finalists, in the 50 free?
That would be correct. The Florida Gators team of Adam Chaney, Eric Friese, Will Davis, and Kieran Smith swam the 2nd-fastest time in history tonight with a 1:14.11 to win an epic race.
Yes, we’re being a little facetious here. During the Dressel Era, Florida had some fast 200 free relays, and they won the event in 2018 with a 1:14.39. Then after a post-Dressel 11th-place finish in 2019, they bounced back last year to take 2nd behind Cal, posting the then-6th-fastest time ever. Not only that, but last night they won the 200 medley relay with the fastest time ever.
So, it’s not too unbelievable that Florida would win this relay tonight with the #2 performance of all-time.
Top Ten Performances 200 Free Relay
- Auburn, 2009 – 1:14.08
- Florida, 2022 – 1:14.11
- Stanford, 2009 – 1:14.22
- Cal, 2021/Cal, 2022 – 1:14.36
- (tie)
- Florida, 2018 – 1:14.39
- Texas, 2022 – 1:14.41
- Cal, 2019 – 1:14.46
- Virginia, 2022 – 1:14.47
- Florida, 2021 – 1:14.48
With Florida’s 1:14.11, Cal’s 1:14.36 (tying last year’s winning time), and Texas’ 1:14.41, three of the top ten performances in history came tonight. Throw in Virginia’s 1:14.47 from ACCs, which still stands as the American Record, and four of the ten fastest times ever have been done this year.
And yet, that Auburn record of 1:14.08 from 2009 just refuses to fall.
Cutting It Close
Here’s a quick look at how Florida’s splits from tonight compare to Auburn’s from 13 years ago:
Auburn | 2009 | Florida | 2022 |
Jakob Andkjaer | 18.89 | Adam Chaney | 18.85 |
Gideon Louw | 18.33 | Eric Friese | 18.39 |
Kohtlon Norys | 18.67 | Will Davis | 18.28 |
Matt Targett | 18.19 | Kieran Smith | 18.59 |
Florida gave it their best shot, risking a DQ on some incredibly tight relay exchanges, including as-close-as-you-can -0.03s RT from Eric Friese.
Auburn relay RTs: 0.24, 0.20, 0.17 = 0.61
Florida relay RTs: -0.03, 0.07, 0.19 = 0.23
That continues a trend we saw Florida exhibit last night on their record-setting medley relay, where their total reaction time on the three relay exchanges totaled 0.27s, including Friese cutting it close with a 0.00s RT. Last night, Texas had relay exchanges of over 0.20s on every single leg, and ended up losing by only 0.23s.
Clearly, there’s a measured amount of risk that comes when you time relay exchanges as Florida has on these two relays. NC State developed a reputation for drawing relay DQs around the beginning of their rise under Braden Holloway, but Florida shows that when it works, it can work very well and make a huge difference, especially on the shorter relays.
Could Florida Crack the Top Two?
You might notice that Florida currently holds a one-point lead over Cal, 159-158, with Texas leading at 180. According to our stats guru, Andrew Mering, this isn’t too surprising, however, as Florida was actually seeded to be in the lead at the end of today.
While all three teams are swimming well, psych sheet projections put Florida roughly 80 points behind Cal by the end of Saturday, and about 60 points behind Texas. That doesn’t include diving, although Texas whiffed on diving points today.
So, it’s certainly not out of the realm of possibility that the Gators could break the Cal-Texas stranglehold on the top two spots, but a lot would have to go right over the next two days.
Why wasn’t David Curtis on NC State’s relay?
Florida has won more relays in this champs than they ever did with Caeleb 👁👄👁
Because they only had Caeleb and Enzo as sprinters. They used Mark Szaranek and Jan Switkowski (NCAA IM Chompions) as utility hitters because they were Swiss Army knives. Now they have a cadre of sprinters. So much so that they left a 19.1 flat starter off the 200 free relay.
If each relay could make one change with an alumni from their school which team would be faster? Auburn with Cielo or Florida with Caeleb? I think Gators would take this one easily. Cielo 17.8 vs Caeleb 17.2.
Rewatching the race, Krueger completely botched his start–his front foot landed mid-foot at the end of the block, pretty much killing any power off that leg. With a better start they might’ve won it.
That’s the risk of these stepover starts, right? Must be a lot of strong belief that they work to take the risk.
the only thing is unless there’s 5th years next year, UF replaces 3/4 legs
UF had two seniors on that relay, not 3. And neither of those seniors swam on this relay at SECs. They’ll be ok
Florida has Mestre, who is 21.9 LC coming back, they have a freshman who went 19.1 this year that did not swim this relay, and they have a freshman coming in (Dawson Joyce) who is one of the top sprint recruits in the country. I have a feeling they will have a few fifth years though.
NC state loses no one🤑
So damn close! Will they be able to take a crack at it again next year or was this a lightning-in-a-bottle moment?
I think Targett was 18.19, not 18.67. I really thought Florida had it
Florida had 2 B finalists with will Davis. Also those Auburn splits don’t quite make sense.
Fixed, thanks!