You are working on Staging1

GMX7 Weekly Wonders of Age Group Swimming – 5/14/2022

In our GMX7 Weekly Wonders of Age Group Swimming series, we celebrate swimmers of every age and experience level with age group profiles of some recent results.

Gareth Hollender, 11, NOVA of Virginia Aquatics, Inc (NOVA-VA): Hollender notched seven personal bests at the NOVA LC Kick Off two weeks ago, including swims in the 200 butterfly (2:35.11) and 400 IM (5:22.58) that rank him as the fastest 11-year-old boy in the U.S. this season. The 400 IM swim also ranks Hollender second amongst 11-year-olds since the beginning of 2020. The NOVA of Virginia swimmer is also second-fastest this season among 11-year-olds in the 200 back (2:34.04) and 200 breast (2:57.21).

Mikayla Tan, 12, DART Swimming (DART-SN): Tan dropped a new National Age Group Record in the girls’ 11-12 200 breaststroke (SCY) at DART’s “Post HS Meet,” which took place on Monday and Tuesday this past week. Tan clocked 2:15.38 to erase the previous record of 2:15.64, set by Alex Walsh back in 2014. Tan’s previous best, set in February while she was still only 11, was 2:15.95. Tan also recorded a time of 1:03.35 in the 100 breast, ranking her sixth in 11-12 history.

The meet also featured some long course racing, with Tan producing a time of 1:12.75 in the 100 breast (LCM) to improve her previous best of 1:13.11 and move up into third all-time in the girls’ 11-12 age group.

Morgan Wendler, 11, Terrapins Swim Team (TERA-PC): Wendler hit a pair of best times at the Pacific Swimming LC meet for the Terrapins, becoming the fastest 11-year-old male swimmer this season in the 50 butterfly (29.05) and second-fastest in the 200 breaststroke (2:51.05).

Gracyn Aquino, 14, Mission Viejo Nadadores (MVN-CA): Competing at the CIF-SS Division I meet, Aquino swam the two fastest 50 frees of her young career, including a 23.09 swim in the prelims which ranks her tied for 77th all-time among 13-14 girls. Despite being just a freshman, Aquino finished fifth in the final (23.14), and matched that finish in the 100 free (50.84, 50.79 prelims). She also anchored Santa Margarita to victory in the 200 medley relay with a 22.55 split, and had the quickest leg (22.93) on the team’s winning 200 free relay.

Reid O’Connell, 12, Long Island Aquatic Club (LIAC-MR): O’Connell put up seven best times in East Meadow as LIAC hosted a series of time trial sessions, with three of them ranking inside the top 10 all-time in the boys’ 11-12 age group and all seven inside the top 50. O’Connell clocked 4:50.43 in the 400 IM to rank third all-time, while his swims in the 200 IM (2:17.37) and 400 free (4:17.82) both rank ninth.

Camden Doane, 16, King Aquatic Club (KING-PN): Doane dropped seven-tenths in the 200 free at the Tualatin Hills Spring Invite (LCM) last weekend, clocking 2:03.35 to move into the top 100 all-time in the girls’ 15-16 age group (99th). That swim was one of five best times the 16-year-old King Aquatic Club member set at the meet.

David McCagg, World Champion swimmer and GMX7 Founder

About GMX7

Founded in 2018, GMX7 is based in St. Petersburg, Florida and is dedicated to changing the world of swimming by empowering competitive swimmers with the best aquatic resistance training devices ever created. GMX7 was founded by David McCagg, a 7-time gold medalist, former world record holder and winner of multiple national championships. The first device on the market by GMX7 is the X1-PRO. Designed by ROBRADY Engineering, it has already been the recipient of several awards including the 2020 International Design Excellence Award and the 2020 Red Dot Award for product design.

 

GMX7 is a SwimSwam partner. 

0
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

0 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

Read More »