You are working on Staging1

HardCore Swim of the Week: Quintero does it all for USC freestyle corps

Hardcoreswim horizontial banner

This week’s HardCore Swim goes to a swimmer who inspired some engaging chatter in our comments section not for one single swim, but instead for the hardcore way he swam a number of events (and distance) at the Pac-12 Men’s Championships.

USC had the great fortune of entering an oustanding distance/middle distance swimmer into the Pac-12 ring, one who won both the 200 (1:32.81) and 500 (4:12.56) frees. The Trojans also had an athlete who  could bring the heat in the splash-and-dash, anchoring their 200 free relay in 18.8, one of the faster splits in the nation so far.

The interesting part is that those two athletes are the same person: junior Cristian Quintero.

Quintero showed off some impressive range at Pac-12s, combining big-time speed with the length and endurance to impact longer races. He won the 200 and 500 frees and finished a strong second in the 100. But where his range might be most helpful to USC is in relays – as good as many freestylers in the NCAA are, you won’t find many who can headline a 200 free relay and an 800 free relay in the same week, which Quintero did. He split 1:31.9 on the Trojan’s 800 team before putting up that 18.8 over the shorter distance.

There’s no doubt Quintero could have scored big points in any of the freestyle distances, even outside the range that he entered in (100-500 yards). The question has arisen if Quintero is the first men to break 15 minutes in a mile as well as 19 seconds in a 50, and whether he’s the first or not, he’s certainly in very elite company with that kind of resume.

The Trojans will likely need to lean on Quintero even more at NCAAs, but they couldn’t pick an athlete with more weapons to rely on. His scary combination of speed and endurance is a truly hardcore feat.

About HardCoreSwim

HardcoreswimFounded on the pool decks of Southern California, HARDCORESWIM examines and explores the ethos of the hardcore swimmer. HARDCORESWIM is an authentic and innovative designer, marketer and manufacturer of premium quality men’s and women’s swimsuits, Custom Team Swim Suits, training gear, clothing, accessories and related products. Our true, authentic, innovative, iconoclastic, and creative style differentiates us from the bland competitive swim industry and gives us reason to be. All made in the USA. Check us out at www.hardcoreswim.com or find us at www.facebook.com/hardcoreswim .

Go to HardCoreSwim here.

Follow HardCoreSwim on Twitter here.

Like HardCoreSwim on Facebook here.

In This Story

7
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

7 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Baltimoron
10 years ago

Gotcha. Thanks, Braden!

Baltimoron
10 years ago

Quintero is always an exciting Olympian to watch. I believe he’s been in the 14:40s in the mile, and in the 42s in the 100. Can anyone tell me, though, why his eligibility will be up after his junior year?

Admin
Reply to  Baltimoron
10 years ago

Baltimoron – USC didn’t share that information with us, unfortunately. He’ll only be 21 after this season, so it doesn’t seem intuitive, but there’s a number of reasons in general why people only receive three years of eligibility. It could have to do with some benefits, or when he first enrolled in post-high school education in Venezuela…there’s probably a dozen different reasons why it could happen.

Eric McGinnis
10 years ago

Good pick. Being able to be that competitive across that range of distances is absurd, especially today when people are really figuring out how to specialize properly.

QuinteroFanboy
10 years ago

He also split 41.5 in the 400 medley relay that got DQ

PAC12BACKER
10 years ago

Really impressive range! If he had picked the 1650 over the 100 free, he would have likely won 3 events at PAC 12’s. He surely would have been the swimmer of the meet instead of Cordes. The 2nd place in the 100 cost him that award.

YouGotLezakd
10 years ago

Interesting pick. I have to agree with them; that is some impressive range.

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

Read More »