Texas Sets Two NCAA and US Open Records on Night Two of NCAA Men’s Division I Swimming and Diving Championships
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The second night of finals kept the IU Natatorium fans on their feet throughout the night with records and close races across the program. Texas set an NCAA and US Open Record in the 400 medley relay to become the first team to swim under three minutes in that race. Clark Smith also broke all the records in the 500 free at 4:08.42 in the fastest 500 free field of all time. Read below how the rest of the events went in the session. View live results.
Here are the team scores right now:
Men - Team Rankings - Through Event 7 1. Texas 225.5 2. California 143 3. Florida 138.5 4. NC State 123 5. Indiana 121 6. Stanford 105 7. Southern Cali 75 8. Univ of Georgia 73 9. Missouri 71.5 10. Auburn 69.5 11. Louisville 57 12. South Carolina 40 13. Michigan 39 14. Arizona State 34 15. Purdue 33 16. Alabama 32 17. Texas A&M 23 18. Wisconsin 21 19. Tennessee 19 20. Ohio St 17 21. University of Miami 14 22. Lsu 12 22. Notre Dame 12 24. Arizona 10 25. Florida State 7 26. UNC 6 26. Harvard 6 28. Kentucky 4 28. Virginia Tech 4 28. Northwestern 4 31. Penn St 2 31. Hawaii 2 33. Pittsburgh 1
Tonight’s events:
- 200 Free Relay
- 500 Free
- 200 IM
- 50 Free
- 1m Diving
- 400 Medley Relay
200 Free Relay
NCAA Record: 1:14.08, Auburn (2009)
American Record: 1:15.26, Stanford (2011)
US Open Record: 1:14.08, Auburn (2009)
The Texas Longhorns won their third straight championship title in the 200 free relay thanks to a monster anchor leg from junior Joseph Schooling at 18.34. Florida got off to a strong start thanks to Caeleb Dressel, who led off the Gators with an 18.23, the second fastest 50 free in history. But the Gators did not have the horses to contend with Texas, who had Brett Ringgold (18.96), Jack Conger (18.37), Tate Jackson (18.92) and Schooling. The Longhorns swam a 1:14.59, a little off the NCAA and US Open record held by Auburn from 2009 at 1:14.08.
Florida was second at 1:14.88 and California was third at 1:15.29. NC State, Alabama, Auburn, Missouri and Indiana also swam in the A-final.
This is Texas’ seventh win in the 200 free relay in school history. The 2017 team joins the teams from 2016, 2015, 1996, 1991, 1990 and 1989 to win the event at the NCAA Championships. Texas (74) now has the lead over NC State (70) in the team standings. Florida is in third (66) and Cal is in fourth (62).
Event 2 Men 200 Yard Freestyle Relay ================================================================================== NCAA: N 1:14.08 3/28/2009 Auburn J Andkjaer, G Louw, K Norys, M Targett Championship: C 1:14.08 3/28/2009 Auburn J Andkjaer, G Louw, K Norys, M Targett American: A 1:15.26 3/24/2011 Stanford A Coville, A Staab, J Allen, A Wayne U. S. Open: O 1:14.08 3/28/2009 Auburn J Andkjaer, G Louw, K Norys, M Targett Pool: P 1:15.35 3/23/2017 Texas T Jackson, B Ringgold, J Shebat, J Conger School Prelims Finals Points ================================================================================== === Championship Final === 1 Texas 1:15.35 1:14.59P 40 1) Ringgold, Brett JR 2) r:0.10 Conger, Jack SR 3) r:0.29 Jackson, Tate SO 4) r:0.25 Schooling, Joseph JR r:+0.70 9.28 18.96 (18.96) 27.44 (8.48) 37.33 (18.37) 46.35 (9.02) 56.25 (18.92) 1:04.88 (8.63) 1:14.59 (18.34) 2 Florida 1:15.52 1:14.88P 34 1) Dressel, Caeleb JR 2) r:0.08 Switkowski, Jan JR 3) r:0.24 Martinez ScarpeEnzo JR 4) r:0.15 Blyzinskyj, Jack SR r:+0.62 8.81 18.23 (18.23) 26.98 (8.75) 36.98 (18.75) 45.80 (8.82) 55.70 (18.72) 1:04.78 (9.08) 1:14.88 (19.18) 3 California 1:16.11 1:15.29P 32 1) Sendyk, Pawel FR 2) r:0.10 Jensen, Michael FR 3) r:0.17 Lynch, Justin JR 4) r:0.06 Josa, Matthew JR r:+0.65 9.04 18.92 (18.92) 27.67 (8.75) 37.67 (18.75) 46.52 (8.85) 56.37 (18.70) 1:05.16 (8.79) 1:15.29 (18.92) 4 NC State 1:15.56 1:15.82 30 1) Held, Ryan JR 2) r:0.25 Schiellerup, Anreas SR 3) r:0.11 Ress, Justin SO 4) r:0.61 Johnson, Scott SR r:+0.62 8.88 18.63 (18.63) 27.41 (8.78) 37.55 (18.92) 46.13 (8.58) 56.25 (18.70) 1:05.48 (9.23) 1:15.82 (19.57) 5 Alabama 1:16.91 1:16.52 28 1) Waddell, Zane FR 2) r:0.27 Kaliszak, Luke JR 3) r:0.89 Howard, Robert SO 4) r:0.14 Bams, Laurent JR r:+0.71 9.37 19.24 (19.24) 28.14 (8.90) 38.32 (19.08) 47.40 (9.08) 57.50 (19.18) 1:06.39 (8.89) 1:16.52 (19.02) 6 Auburn 1:16.45 1:16.62 26 1) Apple, Zachary SO 2) r:0.27 Darmody, Kyle SR 3) r:0.20 Kalontarov, Ziv SO 4) r:0.17 Holoda, Peter JR r:+0.67 9.18 19.12 (19.12) 28.13 (9.01) 38.22 (19.10) 47.36 (9.14) 57.76 (19.54) 1:06.54 (8.78) 1:16.62 (18.86) 7 Missouri 1:16.78 1:16.78 23 1) Chadwick, Michael SR 2) r:0.40 Sansoucie, Andrew SR 3) r:0.16 Mankus, Luke SO 4) r:0.33 Coffman, Sam SO r:+0.65 9.16 19.00 (19.00) 28.01 (9.01) 38.09 (19.09) 46.94 (8.85) 57.14 (19.05) 1:06.30 (9.16) 1:16.78 (19.64) 7 Indiana 1:16.53 1:16.78 23 1) Khalafalla, Ali JR 2) r:0.26 Pieroni, Blake JR 3) r:0.21 Lorentz, Sam SR 4) r:0.17 Romany, Josh SO r:+0.61 9.38 19.34 (19.34) 28.33 (8.99) 38.35 (19.01) 47.30 (8.95) 57.37 (19.02) 1:06.43 (9.06) 1:16.78 (19.41)
500 Free
NCAA Record: 4:08.60, Peter Vanderkaay (2006)
American Record: 4:08.54, Peter Vanderkaay (2008)
US Open Record: 4:08.54, Peter Vanderkaay (2008)
It had stood for 11 years, but someone finally broke through to get Peter Vanderkaay’s NCAA and American Record in the 500 free. That someone was Texas senior Clark Smith, who had been knocking on the door in that race for the last two years. Smith regains his title he last won in 2015 with a 4:08.42, breaking Vanderkaay’s American Record from 2008 at 4:08.54. The swim also eclipses Vanderkaay’s NCAA record from 2006 that was a 4:08.60.
Texas got huge points in that race with sophomore Townley Haas grabbing second at 4:08.92, just out-touching Michigan freshman Felix Aubock at 4:08.95. Smith had lead the race the whole way, holding off a late charge from Haas and Aubock. Grant Shoults, Fynn Minuth, Akram Mahmoud, Marwan El Kamash and Anton Ipsen also swam in the A-final in the fastest 500 heat ever with 8th place finishing at 4:11.73.
Texas has now won three straight titles in the 500 free with Smith (2015) and Haas (2016) being the only winners of the event in school history. The Longhorns now have a 111-83 lead over NC State in 2nd. Florida (63) and Stanford (62) round out the top four.
Event 3 Men 500 Yard Freestyle ========================================================================= NCAA: N 4:08.60 3/23/2006 Peter Vanderkaay, Michigan Championship: C 4:08.60 3/23/2006 Peter Vanderkaay, Michigan American: A 4:08.54 2/9/2008 Peter Vanderkaay, Club Wolverine U. S. Open: O 4:08.54 2/9/2008 Peter Vanderkaay, Club Wolverine Pool: P 4:08.75 Tom Dolan, Michigan Name Year School Prelims Finals Points ========================================================================= === Championship Final === 1 Smith, Clark SR Texas 4:10.53 4:08.42A 20 r:+0.67 22.68 47.34 (24.66) 1:12.37 (25.03) 1:37.47 (25.10) 2:02.43 (24.96) 2:27.44 (25.01) 2:52.86 (25.42) 3:18.30 (25.44) 3:43.93 (25.63) 4:08.42 (24.49) 2 Haas, Townley SO Texas 4:11.33 4:08.92 17 r:+0.76 22.98 47.91 (24.93) 1:12.88 (24.97) 1:38.08 (25.20) 2:03.35 (25.27) 2:28.92 (25.57) 2:54.38 (25.46) 3:20.04 (25.66) 3:45.19 (25.15) 4:08.92 (23.73) 3 Auboeck, Felix FR Michigan 4:09.93 4:08.95 16 r:+0.79 23.11 47.99 (24.88) 1:13.12 (25.13) 1:38.35 (25.23) 2:03.66 (25.31) 2:28.97 (25.31) 2:54.41 (25.44) 3:19.98 (25.57) 3:45.06 (25.08) 4:08.95 (23.89) 4 Shoults, Grant FR Stanford 4:12.14 4:10.23 15 r:+0.62 22.96 48.39 (25.43) 1:14.04 (25.65) 1:39.56 (25.52) 2:05.05 (25.49) 2:29.97 (24.92) 2:55.12 (25.15) 3:20.57 (25.45) 3:45.79 (25.22) 4:10.23 (24.44) 5 Minuth, Fynn SO South Carolina 4:09.55 4:10.57 14 r:+0.67 22.91 47.88 (24.97) 1:13.13 (25.25) 1:38.45 (25.32) 2:03.92 (25.47) 2:29.33 (25.41) 2:54.83 (25.50) 3:20.35 (25.52) 3:45.50 (25.15) 4:10.57 (25.07) 6 Mahmoud, Akaram JR South Carolina 4:09.73 4:10.83 13 r:+0.72 23.19 48.21 (25.02) 1:13.65 (25.44) 1:39.25 (25.60) 2:04.81 (25.56) 2:30.24 (25.43) 2:55.64 (25.40) 3:21.20 (25.56) 3:46.52 (25.32) 4:10.83 (24.31) 7 El Kamash, Marwan SR Indiana 4:11.84 4:10.87 12 r:+0.68 22.87 48.11 (25.24) 1:13.38 (25.27) 1:38.61 (25.23) 2:04.41 (25.80) 2:30.24 (25.83) 2:55.84 (25.60) 3:21.21 (25.37) 3:46.33 (25.12) 4:10.87 (24.54) 8 Ipsen, Anton Oerskov JR NC State 4:12.18 4:11.73 11 r:+0.70 23.21 48.34 (25.13) 1:13.73 (25.39) 1:39.12 (25.39) 2:04.69 (25.57) 2:30.13 (25.44) 2:55.89 (25.76) 3:21.76 (25.87) 3:47.02 (25.26) 4:11.73 (24.71)
200 IM
NCAA Record: 1:39.38, David Nolan (2015)
American Record: 1:39.38, David Nolan (2015)
US Open Record: 1:39.38, David Nolan (2015)
At the women’s meet last week, Katie Ledecky and Mallory Comerford tied for the gold in the 200 freestyle in perhaps the craziest race of the meet. Just six days later, seven guys turned dead even at the 175 in the 200 IM. It looked like Cal’s Ryan Murphy would steal the show with a win on the outside, but it was Florida’s Mark Szaranek and Texas’ Will Licon who out-touched Murphy at the finish. The duo touched at 1:40.67 ahead of Murphy’s 1:40.73. Licon seemed out of the race at the 100 when he turned in 8th place, but he used his 27.96 breaststroke split, a second ahead of the next fastest Chase Kalisz (28.86), to surge to the front.
Gunnar Bentz, Chase Kalisz, Andrew Seliskar, Andreas Vazaios and Jon Roberts also swam in the A-final. Szaranek now moves up to 9th all-time in the 200 IM, while Murphy and Bentz are now right behind him at 10th and 12th respectively.
Texas (140.5) has extended its lead over now second place Florida (96.5). NC State is now in third (96) and Cal is in fourth (91).
Licon is now the first swimmer to repeat in the 200 IM since Ryan Lochte won in 2005 and 2006. Texas now has four 200 IM NCAA titles with Licon (2016), Austin Surhoff (2010) and Nate Dusing (2001). Florida now has eight 200 IM titles. Szaranek joins Marcin Cieslak (2014), Bradley Ally (2009), Ryan Lochte (2005, 2006), Greg Burgess (1994, 1993) and Martin Zubero (1991) as 200 IM champions.
Event 4 Men 200 Yard IM ========================================================================= NCAA: N 1:39.38 3/26/2015 David Nolan, Stanford Championship: C 1:39.38 3/26/2015 David Nolan, Stanford American: A 1:39.38 3/26/2015 David Nolan, Stanford U. S. Open: O 1:39.38 3/26/2015 David Nolan, Stanford Pool: P 1:40.50 3/23/2017 Will Licon, Texas Name Year School Prelims Finals Points ========================================================================= === Championship Final === 1 Licon, Will SR Texas 1:40.50 1:40.67 18.5 r:+0.68 22.09 48.34 (26.25) 1:16.30 (27.96) 1:40.67 (24.37) 1 Szaranek, Mark JR Florida 1:41.11 1:40.67 18.5 r:+0.63 22.16 47.13 (24.97) 1:16.42 (29.29) 1:40.67 (24.25) 3 Murphy, Ryan SR California 1:41.79 1:40.73 16 r:+0.61 21.78 46.22 (24.44) 1:15.93 (29.71) 1:40.73 (24.80) 4 Bentz, Gunnar JR Georgia 1:41.12 1:40.90 15 r:+0.70 22.04 47.81 (25.77) 1:16.74 (28.93) 1:40.90 (24.16) 5 Kalisz, Chase SR Georgia 1:41.20 1:41.19 14 r:+0.70 23.18 47.70 (24.52) 1:16.56 (28.86) 1:41.19 (24.63) 6 Seliskar, Andrew SO California 1:41.49 1:41.26 13 r:+0.61 21.82 46.93 (25.11) 1:16.18 (29.25) 1:41.26 (25.08) 7 Vazaios, Andreas JR NC State 1:40.77 1:41.53 12 r:+0.68 21.92 46.74 (24.82) 1:16.45 (29.71) 1:41.53 (25.08) 8 Roberts, Jonathan JR Texas 1:42.24 1:42.56 11 r:+0.70 22.42 47.81 (25.39) 1:18.23 (30.42) 1:42.56 (24.33)
50 Free
NCAA Record: 18.20, Caeleb Dressel (2016)
American Record: 18.20, Caeleb Dressel (2016)
US Open Record: 18.20, Caeleb Dressel (2016)
There was a lot of hype over how fast Florida junior Caeleb Dressel could go. He led off the 200 free relay earlier tonight with an 18.23, just off of his 18.20 from last year’s NCAA Championships. Dressel won the race tonight in the same exact time, 18.23. Dressel now owns the nine fastest 50 free times in history.
NC State junior Ryan Held swam a stellar race himself, with a second place effort at 18.60, good for the fourth fastest performer in history. Texas junior Joseph Schooling was third at 18.79. Zach Apple, Michael Chadwick, Pawel Sendyk, Dylan Carter and Paul Powers all swam in the A-final.
Dressel is now the first person to threepeat in the 50 free since Auburn’s Fred Bousquet won three straight from 2003-2005. Florida also has three total wins in the 50 free at the NCAA championships, all from Dressel. Texas (173.5) still has a big lead over Florida (116.5) and NC State (113). California is currently fourth at 109.
Event 5 Men 50 Yard Freestyle ========================================================================= NCAA: N 18.20 3/24/2016 Caeleb Dressel, Florida Championship: C 18.20 3/24/2016 Caeleb Dressel, Florida American: A 18.20 3/24/2016 Caeleb Dressel, Florida U. S. Open: O 18.20 3/24/2016 Caeleb Dressel, Florida Pool: P 18.23 3/23/2017 Caeleb Dressel, Florida Name Year School Prelims Finals Points ========================================================================= === Championship Final === 1 Dressel, Caeleb JR Florida 18.38 18.23P 20 r:+0.61 8.80 18.23 (9.43) 2 Held, Ryan JR NC State 18.93 18.60 17 r:+0.59 8.89 18.60 (9.71) 3 Schooling, Joseph JR Texas 18.77 18.79 16 r:+0.55 8.98 18.79 (9.81) 4 Chadwick, Michael SR Missouri 18.99 18.97 14.5 r:+0.66 9.24 18.97 (9.73) 4 Apple, Zachary SO Auburn 18.93 18.97 14.5 r:+0.63 9.18 18.97 (9.79) 6 Sendyk, Pawel FR California 18.96 19.05 13 r:+0.65 9.03 19.05 (10.02) 7 Carter, Dylan JR Southern Cali 19.04 19.08 12 r:+0.57 9.21 19.08 (9.87) 8 Powers, Paul JR Michigan 19.06 19.17 11 r:+0.61 9.14 19.17 (10.03)
1m Diving
Purdue’s Steele Johnson made his return to NCAA diving this year after winning silver at the Olympics last summer in the 10m synchro event. Johnson, a sophomore won the 1m title on Thursday night for the Purdue Boilermakers. Johnson finished at 446.90 points, ahead of Indiana’s Michael Hixon (437.70) and James Connor (437.30).
Tennessee’s Liam Stone, Miami, Florida’s Briadam Herrera, Purdue’s Joey Cifelli, Texas’ Mark Anderson and Ohio State’s Colin Zeng also competed in the A-final. This is now Purdue’s fourth 1m diving title. Johnson joins himself (2015) and David Boudia (2010, 2011) as champions in the event for the Boilermakers.
There was little change to the leaderboard as Texas grabbed 12 points to stay ahead of Florida, NC State and Cal.
Event 6 Men 1 mtr Diving ========================================================================= Championship: C 473.75 3/28/2013 Kristian Ipsen, Stanford Name Year School Prelims Finals Points ========================================================================= === Championship Final === 1 Johnson, Steele SO Purdue 406.00 446.90 20 2 Hixon, Michael JR Indiana 384.70 437.70 17 3 Connor, James SO Indiana 396.30 437.30 16 4 Stone, Liam JR Tennessee 382.55 427.35 15 5 Herrera, Briadam JR Miami 424.20 405.90 14 6 Cifelli, Joseph SO Purdue 380.35 397.90 13 7 Anderson, Mark SR Texas 363.55 395.20 12 8 Zeng, Zhipeng SO Ohio St 392.90 327.00 11
400 Medley Relay
NCAA Record: 3:00.68, Texas (2016)
American Record: 3:01.60, California (2015)
US Open Record: 3:00.68, Texas (2016)
A few years ago, a sub-3-minute 400 medley relay seemed impossible. Texas made that a reality on Thursday night at the 2017 NCAA Men’s Division I Swimming and Diving Championships, breaking the old record that they had at 3:00.68. The Longhorns had all four of their swimmers a year ago with John Shebat (44.58), Will Licon (49.75), Joseph Schooling (43.60) and Jack Conger (41.29) all returning tonight to swim the fastest 400 medley relay in history.
Lost in that race was an American Record by California in second place at 3:01.51. Ryan Murphy had the fastest backstroke split with a 44.32, but it wasn’t enough to hold off Texas the last three legs. The last two years, it had been the same story in that race, with Cal’s Murphy giving the Golden Bears a big lead off the backstroke, with Schooling and Conger running down Cal on the back half. Murphy only had a 0.26 lead over Texas’ Shebat as he proved to be the key leg on that relay for the Longhorns. Texas never relinquished the lead after that.
Murphy (44.32), Connor Hoppe (50.97), Matthew Josa (44.59) and Michael Jensen (41.63) swam on the new American Record relay that was held by Cal from 2015. Missouri was third in the race with a 3:01.91. Southern California, Indiana, Louisville, Stanford and Florida also swam in the A-Final.
The Longhorns won their third straight 400 medley relay title and their second relay of the meet. Texas has a big lead going into tomorrow with 225.5 points. California is in second with 143 points, just ahead of Florida (138.5) and NC State (123).
Texas now has 14 NCAA titles in the 400 medley relay, the most of any school. The 2017 team joins the teams from 2016, 2015, 2004, 2003, 2001, 2000, 1990, 1989, 1988, 1984, 1982, 1981 and 1980.
Event 7 Men 400 Yard Medley Relay ================================================================================== NCAA: N 2:59.22 3/23/2017 Texas J Shebat, W Licon, J Schooling, J Conger Championship: C 2:59.22 3/23/2017 Texas J Shebat, W Licon, J Schooling, J Conger American: A 3:01.51 3/23/2017 California, California-PC R Murphy, C Hoppe, M Josa, M Jensen U. S. Open: O 2:59.22 3/23/2017 Texas J Shebat, W Licon, J Schooling, J Conger Pool: P 2:59.22 3/23/2017 Texas J Shebat, W Licon, J Schooling, J Conger School Prelims Finals Points ================================================================================== === Championship Final === 1 Texas 3:03.45 2:59.22N 40 1) Shebat, John SO 2) r:0.31 Licon, Will SR 3) r:0.31 Schooling, Joseph JR 4) r:0.23 Conger, Jack SR r:+0.61 21.16 44.58 (44.58) 1:07.77 (23.19) 1:34.33 (49.75) 1:54.42 (20.09) 2:17.93 (43.60) 2:37.34 (19.41) 2:59.22 (41.29) 2 California 3:04.95 3:01.51A 34 1) Murphy, Ryan SR 2) r:0.04 Hoppe, Connor JR 3) r:0.10 Josa, Matthew JR 4) r:0.25 Jensen, Michael FR r:+0.54 21.11 44.32 (44.32) 1:07.66 (23.34) 1:35.29 (50.97) 1:55.45 (20.16) 2:19.88 (44.59) 2:39.39 (19.51) 3:01.51 (41.63) 3 Missouri 3:02.53 3:01.91 32 1) Hein, Daniel FR 2) r:0.15 Schwingenschloebian SR 3) r:0.23 Sansoucie, Andrew SR 4) r:0.17 Chadwick, Michael SR r:+0.50 21.79 45.99 (45.99) 1:09.09 (23.10) 1:36.21 (50.22) 1:56.59 (20.38) 2:21.19 (44.98) 2:40.33 (19.14) 3:01.91 (40.72) 4 Southern Cali 3:04.55 3:02.20 30 1) Tribuntsov, Ralf JR 2) r:0.11 Vissering, Carsten SO 3) r:0.32 Carter, Dylan JR 4) r:0.22 Condorelli, Santo JR r:+0.65 21.50 44.76 (44.76) 1:08.33 (23.57) 1:35.99 (51.23) 1:56.29 (20.30) 2:20.80 (44.81) 2:39.99 (19.19) 3:02.20 (41.40) 5 Louisville 3:04.05 3:03.96 28 1) Tarasevich, Grigory SR 2) r:0.04 Claverie, Carlos JR 3) r:0.11 Quallen, Josh SR 4) r:0.16 Carroll, Trevor SR r:+0.56 21.62 44.97 (44.97) 1:08.65 (23.68) 1:36.51 (51.54) 1:57.10 (20.59) 2:21.69 (45.18) 2:41.42 (19.73) 3:03.96 (42.27) 6 Indiana 3:03.84 3:03.98 26 1) Glover, Bob SR 2) r:0.16 Finnerty, Ian SO 3) r:0.02 Lanza, Vini SO 4) r:0.22 Pieroni, Blake JR r:+0.61 22.00 45.98 (45.98) 1:09.77 (23.79) 1:37.71 (51.73) 1:58.46 (20.75) 2:22.78 (45.07) 2:42.22 (19.44) 3:03.98 (41.20) 7 Stanford 3:04.90 3:04.46 24 1) Dudzinski, Ryan SO 2) r:0.12 Anderson, Matt SO 3) r:0.25 Liang, Andrew JR 4) r:0.22 Perry, Sam JR r:+0.62 22.44 46.46 (46.46) 1:10.21 (23.75) 1:38.10 (51.64) 1:58.56 (20.46) 2:23.19 (45.09) 2:42.52 (19.33) 3:04.46 (41.27) 8 Florida 3:04.20 3:04.90 22 1) Blyzinskyj, Jack SR 2) r:0.08 Bray, Chandler FR 3) r:0.12 Dressel, Caeleb JR 4) r:0.23 Switkowski, Jan JR r:+0.60 22.36 46.59 (46.59) 1:10.90 (24.31) 1:39.01 (52.42) 1:59.03 (20.02) 2:23.34 (44.33) 2:43.13 (19.79) 3:04.90 (41.56)