You are working on Staging1

Stanford Commit Aaron Sequeira Breaks 50 in 100 Fly for First Time, Goes 47.2

CINCINNATI MARLINS INTRASQUAD

  • August 1-2, 2020
  • Cincinnati, Ohio
  • SCY (25y) course
  • Results on Meet Mobile: “2020 OH CM August Intrasquad Meet”

At the Cincinnati Marlins Intrasquad meet, which ran yesterday and today, Stanford ’24 commit Aaron Sequeira won all three of his events and set two huge personal bests along the way.

Sequeira won the 100 back (47.89), 100 fly (47.27) and 200 IM (1:48.87), taking each win by at least five seconds. He hit bests in the 100 fly and 200 IM.

Today was his first time ever under the 50-second barrier in the 100 fly, demolishing his old best of 50.70 with a 22.11/25.16 splitting. In the 200 IM, he was entered with a 1:51.36, though CollegeSwimming.com has a user-entered best of 1:50.07 from January. No matter which one was his actual best, Sequeira took at least a full second off of his old best, marking his first sub-1:50 performance in the event.

In the 100 back, Sequeira was just over a second off of his best of 46.71. He swam the 100 back in the first event in Saturday’s session and the 200 IM in the final Saturday race, then just raced the 100 fly this morning.

Sequeira has improved big-time since he announced his commitment to Stanford in September of 2019.

September 2019 Bests now
50 free 20.74 19.92
100 free 45.24 44.65
100 back 47.81 46.71
200 back 1:45.67 1:44.17
100 breast 59.95 57.40
100 fly 50.70 47.27*
200 IM 1:51.36 1:48.87*

*denotes a lifetime best from this weekend

Sequeira was already, by far, Stanford’s best incoming backstroker in their #2-ranked class nationally. With his butterfly development, he makes an incredibly good fly class that much stronger; the Cardinal class of 2024 already has Russian international standout Andrei Minakov leading with a world-class 50.8 in the 100 LCM fly, along with Ethan Hu (45.6/1:43.6), Preston Forst (47.4/1:43.5) and Jonathan Affeld (46.9/1:44.0).

Last season, Stanford’s best 100 flyer was 47.24, which is right where Sequeira was this morning.

On the women’s side of the intrasquad, rising high school junior Ella Jo Piersma dominated with six wins in six events.

Piersma hit lifetime bests in three events: the 100 back (57.32), 200 back (2:05.31) and 200 IM (2:08.40). She lopped 1.8 seconds off in the 100 back, 7.9 in the 200 back, and 1.5 in the 200 IM. Additionally, she collected wins in the 50 free (24.04), 100 free (51.49) and 200 free (1:51.79).

OTHER NOTABLE SWIMS

  • Rising high school senior Nathan Wall, publicly uncommitted to an NCAA program, won both breaststrokes, the 50 free and the 100 free. He clocked a 57.40 in the 100 breast (a best by .8), a 2:04.44 in the 200 breast (a best by 1.1), then was 21.98 in the 50 free (best by .8) and 47.2 in the 100 free.
  • Though Wall won the 15 & over age group in the 200 free (1:45.99), Thackston McMullan, 14, was the fastest swimmer overall at 1:45.14. McMullan won 14 & under events in all of his other events, too: the 50 free (22.36), 100 free (49.14), 100 fly (51.96) and 200 fly (1:56.84). He hit bests in all three freestyle events and took 1.6 seconds off of his old 200 fly best.

9
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

9 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Yup
4 years ago

What was he doing in 2019?

Amos
Reply to  Yup
3 years ago

Being late to every practice

tnp101
4 years ago

Congratulations Aaron! Fast swim. Keep improving.

Amos
4 years ago

The Marlins are so slow. I bet none of them could even break 9:13 in a 1000 free!

SCCOACH
Reply to  Amos
4 years ago

I remember highlight of my career breaking 10:00 #upsetting

HISWIMCOACH
4 years ago

HUGE swims. Congrats!

Austinpoolboy
4 years ago

Wow! Stanford men building a class the women can be proud of

GA Boy
4 years ago

Dang! Glad he was able to get under 50!

sven
4 years ago

Yeesh, that fly class. If a few of them improve a bit we could see a Texas-esque 100 fly final at NCAAs.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

Read More »