You are working on Staging1

Margalis doubles, hits world’s #4 time in 200 IM at Athens Sectionals

Night 1 of the 2015 Athens Sectionals was all Melanie Margalis, with the Georgia Bulldog grad winning two events and hitting the fourth-fastest 200 IM the world this year.

Margalis won the first two women’s events back-to-back, starting off with that 200 IM. Margalis went 2:10.26, a new season-best. That improved her previous best from the Arena Pro Swim Series at Charlotte by a couple tenths and strengthened her grip on the #4 time in the world this year.

2014-2015 LCM Women 200 IM

KatinkaHUN
HOSSZU
08/03
2:06.12*WR
2Siobhan-Marie
O'CONNOR
GBR2.08.4508/02
2Kanako
WATANABE
JPN2.08.4508/03
4Maya
DiRADO
USA2.08.9908/03
5Sydney
PICKREM
CAN2.10.0808/02
View Top 27»

Margalis beat Zimbabwean Olympian Kirsty Coventry in that race. Coventry, who trains and competes out of SwimMAC’s pro hub in Charlotte, NC, was 2:14.97.

Margalis was also able to show off her short speed, going 25.79 to nip NC State’s ACC Champ Riki Bonnema in the 50 free just a few events later. Bonnema was 25.88.

It’s been a great couple of months now for Margalis, who really seems to be heating up as she approaches the World Championships in Kazan, Russia. Margalis will swim the 200 IM there.

The other winner on the women’s side was SwimMAC’s Cammile Adams, who took the 200 fly by a wide margin. Adams was a 2012 U.S. Olympian in that event, and will represent the red, white and blue in the race again in Kazan. Adams was 2:08.06, only a half-second off her season-best, which still sits 6th in the world.

Things were a bit sleepier on the men’s side. Ryan Lochte was fast enough to win the men’s 200 IM by a wide margin, but his 2:00.00 was still nearly three second off his season-best. Lochte may now be the gold medal favorite in Kazan with the withdrawal of Japan’s Kosuke Hagino, but he’ll have to be much faster than two minutes flat to win the race at Worlds.

Club Wolverine’s Connor Jaeger was second in 2:02.28, a rare 200 IM appearance for the distance man.

SwimMAC’s Michael Chadwick won the 50 free. The rising junior at Mizzou was 22.39, beating another Club Wolverine pro, Miguel Ortiz (22.62) as well as SwimAtlanta/Georgia Bulldog Michael Trice (22.63).

The Wolverines finally broke through with a win in the final event, though. South African Dylan Bosch, a former NCAA champ, went 1:57.28 for the win. Dynamo’s Mick Litherland, a rising sophomore at Georgia, took second in 1:58.29.

Full results are available on Meet Mobile.

In This Story

3
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

3 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Dee
9 years ago

Great swim for Margalis – I just struggle to see a medal. Hosszu & O’Connor are the top two by quite some way for me, I will be surprised if either woman misses a medal. Then you have a big fight – Margalis, Shiwen, Watanabe, Belmonte (?), Miley, and of course the inevitable surprise package.

Exciting race ahead!

bad anon
9 years ago

Kirsty Coventry 2.14.97, quite disappointed by that time, she needs to drop a big chunk off that just to make the semis in Kazan!

bobo gigi
9 years ago

2.10.26 for Melanie Margalis, not fully tapered. Very promising for worlds.

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 »