2023 NCAA DIVISION I MEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS
- March 22-25, 2023
- Jean K. Freeman Aquatic Center | Minneapolis, MN
- SCY (25 yards)
- Meet Central
- Psych Sheets
- SwimSwam Preview Index
- SwimSwam Pick ’em Contest
- Live Results
- Day 1 Finals Live Recap
- Day 2 Prelims Live Recap | Day 2 Finals Live Recap
- Day 3 Prelims Live Recap | Day 3 Finals Live Recap
- Day 4 Prelims Live Recap | Day 4 Finals Live Recap
It was the most fitting way to end the Men’s NCAA Championships.
In the last heat of an epic four days of racing that saw records falling left and right, Florida edged out Cal by one one-hundredth of a second to break the all-time record in the 400 freestyle relay, the Gators’ third relay mark in as many nights.
Florida finished in a time of 2:44.07, followed by Cal at 2:44.08, as they both got under the five-year-old NCAA and U.S. Open Record of 2:44.18 set by NC State in 2018.
Josh Liendo put the Gators out into the early lead in a time of 40.66, following up on his individual 100 free victory with another impressive performance, and he was joined by Adam Chaney (41.10), Julian Smith (41.26) and Macguire McDuff (41.05) as Florida picked up its first national title in the relay since 1983.
Cal’s runner-up squad featured Bjorn Seeliger (41.50), Jack Alexy (40.51), Matthew Jensen (41.12) and Destin Lasco (40.95), as the Bears cemented their second straight team title with the second-place finish. Alexy, who was the runner-up to Liendo earlier in the night in the individual 100 free, had the fastest split in the field.
The previous record set by NC State in 2018 featured a loaded lineup consisting of Ryan Held, Justin Ress, Jacob Molacek and Coleman Stewart.
Split Comparison
NC State, 2018 | Florida, 2023 | Cal, 2023 |
Ryan Held – 41.05 | Josh Liendo – 40.66 | Bjorn Seeliger – 41.50 |
Justin Ress – 40.62 | Adam Chaney – 41.10 | Jack Alexy – 40.51 |
Jacob Molacek – 41.02 | Julian Smith – 41.26 | Matthew Jensen – 41.12 |
Coleman Stewart – 41.62 | Macguire McDuff – 41.05 | Destin Lasco – 40.95 |
2:44.31 | 2:44.07 | 2:44.08 |
Taking third was Arizona State, which had Leon Marchand scorch a 40.55 split on the second leg to put them right in the mix with Florida and Cal for the majority of the race.
The Sun Devils clocked a time of 2:45.12 and ultimately walks away with second place in the overall standings.
The Gators finish the meet with three relay victories, all in record-setting fashion. Florida won the 200 free relay on Thursday in a time of 1:13.35, shattering a 14-year-old super-suited relay record, and followed up by claiming the 400 medley relay record on Friday.
That’s a picture of the 200 free relay.
Still cool though
Macguire McDuff was clutch on relay anchor all week. And their relays might get even better next year. Savickas swaps in for Hillis, and Scotty Buff for Friese. Most of all I’m looking forward to Buff-McDuff relays lol
it’s crazy that NC State did this prelims/finals relays. Too be clear, I’m not for/against the timed finals, but I wonder Ress/Molacek/Stewart/Held could go with timed finals
Kudos to the old NCState group.
Prelims and finals are rough.
Timed finals is the way to go. Still very exciting
Dressel was absolutely gassed at the end of 2018’s NCAA’s and he still went under 40 seconds. Same thing with Marchand, still won by 2 seconds and went under 147.