Olympic champions Nathan Adrian (Bremerton, Wash./California Aquatics), Anthony Ervin (Valencia, Calif./SwimMAC Carolina), Katie Ledecky (Bethesda, Md./Stanford Swimming) and Simone Manuel (Sugar Land, Texas/Stanford Swimming) highlight the expected field of the 2017 arena Pro Swim Series at Mesa, set for April 13-15 at the Skyline Aquatic Center.
Additional individual Olympic medalists expected to compete include Kathleen Baker (Winston-Salem, N.C./SwimMAC Carolina), three-time defending series champion Conor Dwyer (Winnetka, Ill./Trojan Swim Club), Matt Grevers (Lake Forest, Ill./Tucson Ford Dealers Aquatics), Cullen Jones (Irvington, N.J./Wolfpack Elite), Katie Meili (Colleyville, Texas/New York Athletic Club), Josh Prenot (Santa Maria, Calif./California Aquatics), Dana Vollmer (Granbury, Texas/California Aquatics) and Leah Smith (Pittsburgh, Pa./Cavalier Swimming).
The three-day meet opens Thursday, April 13 and continues through Saturday, April 15, with daily prelims at 9 a.m. PT followed by finals at 5 p.m. Single- and all-session tickets are on sale now online.
Two days of television coverage from Mesa will air on delay on NBC Sports Network – Friday, April 14 and Saturday, April 15 at 1 a.m. ET. All three finals sessions also will be streamed live via NBC Sports, while a live webcast of the entire meet also will be available at usaswimming.org.
In total, approximately 500 swimmers will swim in Mesa, including 40-plus members of the USA Swimming National Team and more than 20 U.S. Olympians. On the local front Mesa native and 2012 Olympian Breeja Larson is expected to compete, as are a number of standout area age-groupers.
This event is the third of five stops of the 2017 arena Pro Swim Series. Japan’s Daiya Seto and U.S. Olympian Melanie Margalis (Clearwater, Fla./St. Petersburg Aquatics) are the current series leaders with 32 and 25 points, respectively, after strong performances in Austin and Indianapolis.
The arena Pro Swim Series scoring system awards eligible swimmers prize money and points based on first-, second- and third-place performances at each meet in the Championship final only. The prize money and scoring system is as follows: First place, $500 (five points); second place, $300 (three points) and third place, $100 (one point).
At 2017 Phillips 66 Nationals, the point totals will double to 10 points for first place, six for second and two points for third place. The final series tally will be computed after the 2017 Phillips 66 National Championships, slated for June 27-July 1 in Indianapolis, and the prizes will be awarded at that time.
The top eligible male and female overall point total winners in the series will earn a one-year lease of a BMW vehicle, as well as a $10,000 series bonus.
About USA Swimming
As the National Governing Body for the sport of swimming in the United States, USA Swimming is a 400,000-member service organization that promotes the culture of swimming by creating opportunities for swimmers and coaches of all backgrounds to participate and advance in the sport through clubs, events and education. Our membership is comprised of swimmers from the age group level to the Olympic Team, as well as coaches and volunteers. USA Swimming is responsible for selecting and training teams for international competition including the Olympic Games, and strives to serve the sport through its core objectives: Build the base, Promote the sport, Achieve competitive success. For more information, visit www.usaswimming.org.
News courtesy of USA Swimming.
Nice to see Ervin still going for it – the sky is the limit at 35 ?
Interesting to see Dana entered at this meet. Good luck to her
Only a pervert can agree to pay money to enjoy the swimming competition of six months and above pregnant women.
It is PSS – pro swim series. Don’t make a joke of it.
It will be basically the first LCM competition where we can see our best swimmers who may make national team in Budapest. The first time right after unusually fast SCY season. If Dana Vollmer is not going to compete at corresponding level then what is the reason to show up. If she IS going to make her races stressful then it is not safe for her child and she should be banned by authorities.
I guess you’re the self appointed judge and jury. I would imagine Ms. Vollmer has discussed her swimming at the meet with her baby doctors and the doctors said it was okay.
Ya know, it’s her life, not yours and I’m sure she would not do a darn thing to harm the birth of her child. Maybe you should mind your own beeswax. JMHO.
What?