NCAA Division I Men’s Championships: Texas Takes Big Day One Lead Against California
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Texas fired on all cylinders tonight to jump to a big day one lead during finals of the NCAA Division I Men’s Championships. While the night was not without controversy, and was filled with some amazing records by David Nolan in the 200 IM and Caeleb Dressel in the 50 free, the big development proved to be Texas head coach Eddie Reese moving much closer to an 11th career coaching title.
Texas, typically not known as a strong day-one team, pushed itself to a 171-119 lead against California following an impressive day of competition.
Florida (108) and Michigan (105) stand third and fourth following day one, while Alabama (79), Southern California (77) and Stanford (75) all are jockeying for fifth.
NC State still managed to close out day one in 11th with 53.5 after losing first-place points to a relay DQ in the 200 free relay.
Men - Team Rankings - Through Event 6 1. Texas 171 2. California 119 3. Florida 108 4. Michigan 105 5. Alabama 79 6. Southern Cali 77 7. Stanford 75 8. Auburn 67 9. Georgia 61.5 10. Arizona 54.5 11. NC State 53.5 12. Missouri 49 13. Miami (Fl) 29 13. Indiana 29 15. Purdue 20 16. UNC 18.5 17. Ohio St 17 18. Georgia Tech 14 19. Univ of Utah 12.5 20. Unlv (M) 12 20. Tennessee 12 22. Wisconsin 10 23. Louisville 9 24. Texas A&M 4.5 25. Minnesota 4 26. South Carolina 2 26. Virginia Tech 2 26. Northwestern 2 29. Florida St 1
Men’s 200 free relay
No team has been hit with more impactful relay disqualifications than NC State in the past few years, and the most costly happened tonight in the men’s 200-yard free relay.
After fighting through a preliminary disqualification this morning to regain the top seed in the event tonight, NC State lost its first NCAA relay title with a disqualification during a 1:15.16 swim. That would have been NC State’s first national title since Cullen Jones in 2006.
N.C. State has made a habit with some huge relay disqualifications. In 2013, N.C. State lost its 800-yard free relay at the Atlantic Coast Conference Championships after a swimmer jumped into the water to congratulate anchor David Williams for a win against Virginia.
Then, at the 2014 NCAA Division I Men’s Championships, N.C. State drew a preliminary disqualification in this same event, the 200-yard free relay, for an early takeoff as well.
Texas claimed its fifth 200-yard free relay title as Matt Ellis, John Murray, Jack Conger and Kip Darmody posted a 1:15.86. That’s Texas’ first win in the event since 1996.
Other Texas wins:
1989 Texas (Shaun Jordan, Keith Anderson, Alex Wittig, Doug Gjertsen), 1:18.44
1990 Texas (Shaun Jordan, Jack Currin, Doug Dickinson, Alex Wittig), 1:18.73
1991 Texas (Shaun Jordan, Brett Stone, Alex Wittig, Doug Dickinson), 1:18.32
1996 Texas (Brian Esway, Sean McGrath, Steve Martyak, Neil Walker), 1:17.90
California’s Tyler Messerschmidt, Seth Stubblefield, Fabio Gimondi and Ryan Murphy placed second overall in 1:16.02 with Auburn’s Arthur Mendes, Jacob Molacek, Michael Duderstadt and Kyle Darmody taking third in 1:16.04.
1 Texas 1:15.91 1:15.86 40 1) Ellis, Matt JR 2) Murray, John JR 3) Conger, Jack SO 4) Darmody, Kip SR 9.41 19.33 (19.33) 28.10 (8.77) 38.18 (18.85) 46.87 (8.69) 56.93 (18.75) 1:05.83 (8.90) 1:15.86 (18.93) 2 California 1:16.57 1:16.02 34 1) Messerschmidt, Tyler JR 2) Stubblefield, Seth SR 3) Gimondi, Fabio SR 4) Murphy, Ryan SO 9.31 19.24 (19.24) 28.00 (8.76) 38.06 (18.82) 47.22 (9.16) 57.34 (19.28) 1:06.05 (8.71) 1:16.02 (18.68) 3 Auburn 1:16.35 1:16.04 32 1) Mendes, Arthur JR 2) Molacek, Jacob FR 3) Duderstadt, Michael SO 4) Darmody, Kyle SO 9.46 19.58 (19.58) 28.35 (8.77) 38.36 (18.78) 47.18 (8.82) 57.32 (18.96) 1:06.16 (8.84) 1:16.04 (18.72) 4 Alabama 1:16.52 1:16.54 30 1) Gkolomeev, Kristian SO 2) Gray, Alex SO 3) Kaliszak, Luke FR 4) Walsh, Brett JR 9.26 18.98 (18.98) 27.88 (8.90) 38.20 (19.22) 47.17 (8.97) 57.36 (19.16) 1:06.20 (8.84) 1:16.54 (19.18) 5 Southern Califor 1:15.85 1:16.55 28 1) Condorelli, Santo SO 2) Carter, Dylan SO 3) Tribuntsov, Ralf FR 4) Spinazzola, Luca SR 9.39 19.53 (19.53) 28.28 (8.75) 38.27 (18.74) 47.09 (8.82) 57.28 (19.01) 1:06.37 (9.09) 1:16.55 (19.27) 6 Missouri 1:16.90 1:17.18 26 1) Margritier, Matt JR 2) Chadwick, Michael SO 3) Aragona, Christian SO 4) Tierney, Sam SR 9.39 19.54 (19.54) 28.53 (8.99) 38.44 (18.90) 47.52 (9.08) 57.82 (19.38) 1:06.89 (9.07) 1:17.18 (19.36) 7 Michigan 1:16.52 1:17.23 24 1) Powers, Paul FR 2) Tafuto, Vincent SO 3) Glanda, Justin SR 4) Ortiz, Bruno SR 9.35 19.44 (19.44) 28.64 (9.20) 38.98 (19.54) 48.16 (9.18) 58.29 (19.31) 1:07.09 (8.80) 1:17.23 (18.94) -- NC State 1:15.79 DQ 1) Bilis, Simonas JR 2) Held, Ryan FR 3) Schiellerup, Andreas SO 4) Williams, David SR 9.34 19.19 (19.19) 27.83 (8.64) 37.78 (18.59) 46.63 (8.85) 56.90 (19.12) 1:05.19 (8.29) DQ (18.26)
1. Texas 40 2. California 34 3. Auburn 32 4. Alabama 30 5. Southern Cali 28 6. Missouri 26 7. Michigan 24 8. Arizona 18 9. Florida 14 10. Unlv (M) 12 11. Louisville 9 11. Ohio St 9 13. Stanford 6 14. UNC 4 15. Tennessee 2
Men’s 500 free
Texas’ Clark Smith dropped the hammer with a 24.03 final split to become the first Longhorn ever to win the men’s 500-yard free at the NCAA Division I Men’s Championships.
Smith scorched the finale with a time of 4:09.72, vaulting him to sixth all time in the event’s history.
All Time 500 Free
[table “” not found /]Although Smith won, Texas was unable to maximize point scoring from three A finalists as Sam Lewis (4:16.75) and Jonathan Roberts (4:16.89) took seventh and eighth.
Florida’s Dan Wallace wound up second in 4:10.48 to move up to 11th all time in the event’s history, while USC’s Reed Malone earned third in 4:11.94.
Defending champion Cristian Quintero of USC finished fifth in 4:13.21, while Georgia’s Matias Koski would have finished third overall with his 4:11.83 to win the B final.
1 Smith, Clark SO Texas 4:11.17 4:09.72 20 r:+0.69 22.69 47.35 (24.66) 1:12.54 (25.19) 1:38.02 (25.48) 2:03.47 (25.45) 2:28.97 (25.50) 2:54.51 (25.54) 3:20.11 (25.60) 3:45.69 (25.58) 4:09.72 (24.03) 2 Wallace, Dan SR Florida 4:12.52 4:10.48 17 r:+0.69 22.88 47.76 (24.88) 1:13.00 (25.24) 1:38.61 (25.61) 2:04.07 (25.46) 2:29.41 (25.34) 2:54.65 (25.24) 3:19.90 (25.25) 3:45.20 (25.30) 4:10.48 (25.28) 3 Malone, Reed SO Southern Califor 4:13.07 4:11.94 16 r:+0.73 22.85 47.67 (24.82) 1:12.72 (25.05) 1:38.46 (25.74) 2:04.38 (25.92) 2:29.87 (25.49) 2:55.26 (25.39) 3:20.88 (25.62) 3:46.63 (25.75) 4:11.94 (25.31) 4 Nielsen, Anders JR Michigan 4:13.65 4:12.16 15 r:+0.73 23.13 48.36 (25.23) 1:13.86 (25.50) 1:39.49 (25.63) 2:05.38 (25.89) 2:31.27 (25.89) 2:56.79 (25.52) 3:22.67 (25.88) 3:47.83 (25.16) 4:12.16 (24.33) 5 Quintero, Crist SR Southern Califor 4:13.24 4:13.21 14 r:+0.67 22.44 47.21 (24.77) 1:12.42 (25.21) 1:38.40 (25.98) 2:04.37 (25.97) 2:30.15 (25.78) 2:55.68 (25.53) 3:21.49 (25.81) 3:47.59 (26.10) 4:13.21 (25.62) 6 D'Arrigo, Mitch SO Florida 4:12.72 4:14.30 13 r:+0.72 23.52 48.83 (25.31) 1:14.44 (25.61) 1:40.05 (25.61) 2:05.76 (25.71) 2:31.36 (25.60) 2:56.66 (25.30) 3:22.18 (25.52) 3:48.08 (25.90) 4:14.30 (26.22) 7 Lewis, Sam JR Texas 4:12.44 4:16.75 12 r:+0.67 23.00 47.96 (24.96) 1:13.30 (25.34) 1:39.13 (25.83) 2:05.16 (26.03) 2:31.41 (26.25) 2:57.71 (26.30) 3:24.28 (26.57) 3:51.06 (26.78) 4:16.75 (25.69) 8 Roberts, Jonath FR Texas 4:13.10 4:16.89 11 r:+0.75 23.54 48.72 (25.18) 1:14.24 (25.52) 1:39.99 (25.75) 2:06.05 (26.06) 2:32.25 (26.20) 2:58.68 (26.43) 3:24.98 (26.30) 3:51.31 (26.33) 4:16.89 (25.58)
1. Texas 83 2. Southern Cali 58 3. Florida 45 4. Michigan 39 5. California 34 6. Auburn 32 7. Alabama 30 8. Missouri 26 9. Arizona 18 10. Georgia 12.5 11. Unlv (M) 12 12. Ohio St 9 12. Louisville 9 14. UNC 7.5 15. NC State 7 16. Wisconsin 6 16. Stanford 6 18. Univ of Utah 5 19. Northwestern 2 19. Tennessee 2
Men’s 200 IM
Stanford’s David Nolan crashed through the 1:40 barrier in the men’s 200-yard IM as he demolished his NCAA and American record at the NCAA Division I Men’s Championships.
Nolan blasted his way to a stunning effort of 1:39.38, crushing his former record of 1:40.07 set during the Pacific 12 Championships earlier this month. Nolan absolutely blasted the front half of his earlier record, and held on for the rest of the new record.
Comparative Splits
[table “” not found /]That win adds to Stanford’s NCAA record amount of 200 IM victories, raising the total to 11.
Other Stanford wins:
1959 George Harrison, Stanford, 2:06.7
1967 Dick Roth, Stanford, 1:56.09
1985 Pablo Morales, Stanford, 1:46.08
1986 Pablo Morales, Stanford, 1:45.43
1987 Pablo Morales, Stanford, 1:45.42
1992 Jeff Rouse, Stanford, 1:45.81
1998 Tom Wilkens, Stanford, 1:45.16
2002 Markus Rogan, Stanford, 1:44.03
2011 Austin Staab, Stanford, 1:41.57
2013 David Nolan, Stanford, 1:41.21
Texas’ Will Licon gave Nolan a race most of the way, but settled for moving to third all time with a 1:40.09 for second. California’s Josh Prenot placed third overall in 1:42.34.
All Time 200 IM
[table “” not found /]1 Nolan, David SR Stanford 1:41.37 1:39.38N 20 r:+0.70 21.67 45.99 (24.32) 1:15.20 (29.21) 1:39.38 (24.18) 2 Licon, Will SO Texas 1:40.68 1:40.09C 17 r:+0.72 21.67 47.07 (25.40) 1:15.82 (28.75) 1:40.09 (24.27) 3 Prenot, Josh JR California 1:42.28 1:42.34 16 r:+0.72 22.25 48.09 (25.84) 1:17.27 (29.18) 1:42.34 (25.07) 4 Kremer, Tom JR Stanford 1:42.40 1:42.43 15 r:+0.74 22.30 47.91 (25.61) 1:18.03 (30.12) 1:42.43 (24.40) 5 Murphy, Ryan SO California 1:41.76 1:42.49 14 r:+0.63 21.86 46.73 (24.87) 1:17.45 (30.72) 1:42.49 (25.04) 6 Bosch, Dylan JR Michigan 1:42.29 1:42.62 13 r:+0.66 22.49 48.06 (25.57) 1:17.64 (29.58) 1:42.62 (24.98) 7 Solaeche-Gomez, SR Florida 1:42.05 1:42.96 12 r:+0.67 22.12 47.54 (25.42) 1:17.29 (29.75) 1:42.96 (25.67) 8 Bentz, Gunnar FR Georgia 1:42.44 1:43.00 11 r:+0.74 22.85 48.87 (26.02) 1:18.52 (29.65) 1:43.00 (24.48)
1. Texas 109 2. California 70 3. Florida 64 4. Southern Cali 58 5. Michigan 52 6. Stanford 41 7. Georgia 35.5 8. Auburn 32 9. Alabama 30 10. Missouri 26 11. Arizona 18 12. Unlv (M) 12 13. Ohio St 9 13. Louisville 9 15. UNC 7.5 16. NC State 7 17. Wisconsin 6 18. Tennessee 5 18. Univ of Utah 5 20. Northwestern 2
Men’s 50 free
Florida’s Caeleb Dressel lowered his 17-18 U.S. National Age Group mark in the 50-yard free again with a winning effort at the NCAA Division I Men’s Championships.
Dressel turned in a sizzling time of 18.67 for the win. That’s better than the 18.86 he posted a pair of times this morning for the 17-18 U.S. NAG.
His time vaulted him into a sixth-place tie all time with Fred Bousquet, and Dressel is the first Florida Gator to ever win the 50-yard free.
All Time 50 Free
[table “” not found /]Alabama’s Kristian Gkolomeev (18.74) and Arizona’s Brad Tandy (18.91), who tied for the title last year with 18.95, finished second and third with Tandy actually tying NC State’s Simonas Bilis (18.91) for third-place points.
1 Dressel, Caeleb FR Florida 18.86 18.67 20 r:+0.60 9.06 18.67 (9.61) 2 Gkolomeev, Kris SO Alabama 18.92 18.74 17 r:+0.68 9.09 18.74 (9.65) 3 Tandy, Brad SR Arizona 19.17 18.91 15.5 r:+0.66 9.04 18.91 (9.87) 3 Bilis, Simonas JR NC State 19.09 18.91 15.5 r:+0.72 9.23 18.91 (9.68) 5 Kosic, Andrew SR Georgia Tech 19.10 19.18 14 r:+0.69 9.36 19.18 (9.82) 6 Messerschmidt, JR California 19.07 19.19 13 r:+0.74 9.29 19.19 (9.90) 7 Ortiz, Bruno SR Michigan 19.09 19.32 12 r:+0.67 9.34 19.32 (9.98) 8 Powers, Paul FR Michigan 19.28 19.44 11 r:+0.65 9.40 19.44 (10.04)
1. Texas 109 2. California 85 3. Florida 84 4. Michigan 75 5. Southern Cali 59 6. Alabama 47 7. Stanford 41 8. Auburn 39 9. Georgia 35.5 10. Missouri 35 11. Arizona 33.5 12. NC State 31.5 13. Georgia Tech 14 14. Unlv (M) 12 15. Univ of Utah 9.5 16. Ohio St 9 16. Louisville 9 18. UNC 7.5 19. Wisconsin 6 20. Tennessee 5 21. Texas A&M 4.5 22. Northwestern 2
Men’s one-meter diving
Purdue’s Steele Johnson claimed Purdue’s third men’s one-meter diving title at the NCAA Division I Men’s Championships.
Johnson collected a total of 468.15 points for the win to join David Boudia (2010, 2011) as fellow Purdue winners of the one-meter event.
Miami’s Samuel Dorman placed second with 457.30 points, while 2013 champion Kristian Ipsen of Stanford took third overall with 449.45 points.
Indiana claimed fourth and fifth as James Connor (437.85) and defending champion Michael Hixon (430.90) picked up big points for the Hoosiers.
Texas’ Cory Bowersox snared points for the Longhorns in the team-title race with a sixth-place tally of 420.00.
1 Johnson, Steele Purdue 400.00 468.15 20 2 Dorman, Samuel Miami (FL) 379.95 457.30 17 3 Ipsen, Kristian Stanford 421.85 449.45 16 4 Connor, James Indiana 403.95 437.85 15 5 Hixon, Michael Indiana 400.00 430.90 14 6 Bowersox, Cory Texas 391.10 420.00 13 7 Herrera, Briada Miami (FL) 389.00 397.85 12 8 Quintero, Rafae Arizona 388.75 347.70 11
1. Texas 131 2. California 85 3. Florida 84 4. Michigan 75 5. Southern Cali 65 6. Stanford 57 7. Alabama 47 8. Arizona 44.5 9. Auburn 39 10. Georgia 35.5 11. Missouri 35 12. NC State 31.5 13. Miami (Fl) 29 13. Indiana 29 15. Purdue 20 16. Georgia Tech 14 17. Univ of Utah 12.5 17. UNC 12.5 19. Tennessee 12 19. Unlv (M) 12 21. Ohio St 9 21. Louisville 9 23. Wisconsin 6 24. Texas A&M 4.5 25. Minnesota 4 26. Northwestern 2 26. South Carolina 2 28. Florida St 1
Men’s 400 medley relay
The men’s 400-yard medley relay proved be record-filled as Texas held off California for the win at the NCAA Division I Men’s Championships.
Texas’ Kip Darmody, Will Licon, Joseph Schooling and Jack Conger delivered the NCAA and U.S. Open record with a time of 3:01.23. That swim cleared the previous mark of 3:01.39 set by Auburn in 2009, but did not break the American record as Schooling represents Singapore internationally.
California’s Ryan Murphy, Chuck Katis, Justin Lynch and Seth Stubblefield turned in an American-record time of 3:01.60 for second place. That time beat the 3:01.91 posted by Stanford in 2009 behind Auburn that drew huge USA USA chants for the second-place finish at that time.
Murphy’s leadoff of 44.17 broke Ryan Lochte’s NCAA record of 44.60 from 2006, and moved him really close to Nick Thoman’s American mark of 44.07. In fact, Murphy’s time is the second-fastest ever.
All Time 100 Back
[table “” not found /]Alabama’s Connor Oslin, Anton McKee, Brett Walsh and Kristian Gkolomeev picked up third-place honors in 3:04.46.
The win for Texas tied it with Stanford for the most 400 medley relays in NCAA history at 12, and first win since 2004.
Former Texas wins:
1980 Texas (Clay Britt, Scott Spann, William Paulus, Kris Kirchner), 3:14.59
1981 Texas (Clay Britt, Scott Spann, William Paulus, Kris Kirchner), 3:12.93
1982 Texas (Clay Britt, Nick Nevid, William Paulus, Eric Finical), 3:14.24
1984 Texas (Rick Carey, Stuart Smith, Chris Rives, John Smith), 3:13.35
1988 Texas (Andy Gill, Kirk Stackle, Keith Anderson, Chris Jacobs), 3:13.97
1989 Texas (Andy Gill, Hans Dersch, Keith Anderson, Doug Gjertsen), 3:11.60
1990 Texas (Jeff Thibault, Kirk Stackle, Shaun Jordan, Doug Gjertsen), 3:09.70
2000 Texas (Tom Hannan, Russell Chozick, Nate Dusing, Bryan Jones), 3:31.23 *SCM
2001 Texas (Nate Dusing, Brendan Hansen, Tom Hannan, Ian Crocker), 3:05.37
2003 Texas (Aaron Peirsol, Brendan Hansen, Ian Crocker, Chris Kemp), 3:04.47
2004 Texas (Aaron Peirsol, Brendan Hansen, Ian Crocker, Garrett Weber-Gale), 3:25.38 *SCM
1 Texas 3:05.53 3:01.23N 40 1) Darmody, Kip SR 2) r:+0.22 Licon, Will SO 3) r:+0.30 Schooling, Joseph FR 4) r:+0.20 Conger, Jack SO 22.03 45.39 (45.39) 1:09.13 (23.74) 1:36.32 (50.93) 1:56.54 (20.22) 2:20.27 (43.95) 2:39.21 (18.94) 3:01.23 (40.96) 2 California 3:04.69 3:01.60A 34 1) Murphy, Ryan SO 2) r:+0.33 Katis, Chuck SR 3) r:+0.36 Lynch, Justin FR 4) r:+0.05 Stubblefield, Seth SR 21.36 44.17 (44.17) 1:07.20 (23.03) 1:34.29 (50.12) 1:54.89 (20.60) 2:19.76 (45.47) 2:39.79 (20.03) 3:01.60 (41.84) 3 Alabama 3:05.65 3:04.46 32 1) Oslin, Connor SO 2) r:+0.17 McKee, Anton SO 3) r:+0.14 Walsh, Brett JR 4) r:+0.04 Gkolomeev, Kritian SO 21.80 45.08 (45.08) 1:09.13 (24.05) 1:37.45 (52.37) 1:58.21 (20.76) 2:23.52 (46.07) 2:42.77 (19.25) 3:04.46 (40.94) 4 Michigan 3:05.15 3:05.18 30 1) Whitaker, Aaron FR 2) r:+0.33 Funk, Richard SR 3) r:+0.31 Bosch, Dylan JR 4) r:+0.35 Ortiz, Bruno SR 22.13 46.24 (46.24) 1:10.36 (24.12) 1:37.45 (51.21) 1:58.70 (21.25) 2:23.34 (45.89) 2:43.25 (19.91) 3:05.18 (41.84) 5 Auburn 3:05.67 3:05.38 28 1) Patching, Joe SO 2) r:+0.21 Duderstadt, Mihael SO 3) r:+0.29 Morris, Hugo FR 4) r:+0.23 Darmody, Kyle SO 22.11 46.22 (46.22) 1:10.04 (23.82) 1:37.43 (51.21) 1:58.60 (21.17) 2:23.52 (46.09) 2:43.34 (19.82) 3:05.38 (41.86) 6 Georgia 3:06.07 3:05.39 26 1) Dale, Taylor SO 2) r:+0.13 Fink, Nicolas SR 3) r:+0.26 Clark, Pace SO 4) r:+0.03 Trice, Michael JR 22.19 45.78 (45.78) 1:09.55 (23.77) 1:37.29 (51.51) 1:58.61 (21.32) 2:23.32 (46.03) 2:42.73 (19.41) 3:05.39 (42.07) 7 Florida 3:05.58 3:05.71 24 1) Blyzinskyj, Jack SO 2) r:+0.33 Solaeche-Gomezardo SR 3) r:+0.12 Homer, ChristiPaul SR 4) r:+0.23 Dressel, Caeleb FR 22.23 45.78 (45.78) 1:10.34 (24.56) 1:38.31 (52.53) 1:58.94 (20.63) 2:23.52 (45.21) 2:43.48 (19.96) 3:05.71 (42.19) 8 NC State 3:06.41 3:11.63 22 1) Schiellerup, Andreas SO 2) r:+0.40 Hren, Derek SO 3) r:+0.47 Newell, John SR 4) r:+0.40 Deana, Jason JR 22.61 47.38 (47.38) 1:11.84 (24.46) 1:40.69 (53.31) 2:02.31 (21.62) 2:27.46 (46.77) 2:48.15 (20.69) 3:11.63 (44.17)
1. Texas 171 2. California 119 3. Florida 108 4. Michigan 105 5. Alabama 79 6. Southern Cali 77 7. Stanford 75 8. Auburn 67 9. Georgia 61.5 10. Arizona 54.5 11. NC State 53.5 12. Missouri 49 13. Miami (Fl) 29 13. Indiana 29 15. Purdue 20 16. UNC 18.5 17. Ohio St 17 18. Georgia Tech 14 19. Univ of Utah 12.5 20. Unlv (M) 12 20. Tennessee 12 22. Wisconsin 10 23. Louisville 9 24. Texas A&M 4.5 25. Minnesota 4 26. South Carolina 2 26. Virginia Tech 2 26. Northwestern 2 29. Florida St 1
SCHEDULED EVENTS
- Men’s 200 free relay
- Men’s 500 free
- Men’s 200 IM
- Men’s 50 free
- Men’s one-meter diving
- Men’s 400 medley relay