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2013 Juniors, Night 1: Seliskar, Bentz Crush Meet Records

National Junior Teamers Andrew Seliskar and Gunnar Bentz each downed a meet record to open the first night of the 2013 Junior National Championships in Irvine, CA.

Women’s 200 Fly

After posting one of the top times ever for a 15-year-old girl, and placing third at World Championship Trials in the 200 fly to secure a spot on the Junior World Championship team, it’s hard to imagine how Katie McLaughlin could top that as a 16-year-old.  The Mission Viejo teenager didn’t wait long (she turned 16 about a month ago), dropping nearly a full second from her previous best (2:10.37) to handily win the girls 200 fly, touching in 2:09.68.  McLaughlin finished more than a second ahead of the field, and now sits third all time amongst 15-16 girls.  Meet record holder Jasmine Tosky (2:09.28 from 2010) and the legendary Mary T. Meagher (2:05.96) are in front of McLaughlin.

18-year-old Olivia Barker was second in 2:10.75, a lifetime best for her by nearly a full second.  Olympic Trials semifinalist Courtney Weaver of the Flint ‘Y’ Falcons was third in 2:10.95.

Men’s 200 Fly

Andrew Seliskar topped one of the fastest fields in age group history, touching in 1:56.54, breaking Kyle Whitaker’s super-suit-aided record of 1:56.95 from 2009.  The top four finishers currently rank 2nd (Seliskar), 3rd (Justin Wright), 5th (Corey Okubo), and 6th (Justin Lynch) all time on the men’s 15-16 age group list.  Lynch, better known for his speed (he’s the National Age Group record holder in the 100 fly), was out like a shot, touching in 55.95 at the 100, with the other three hanging between 0.75-1 second back.  Seliskar held steady over the final two lengths, coming home in 59.92 for the win.

Lynch hung on for second in 1:57.80.  Wright closed well, but fell short to touch third in 1:58.21.  Okubo was just behind in 1:58.28.

Women’s 200 Breast

17-year-old Maija Roses of SwimMAC Carolina went out hard and hung on over the final 50 meters for the win, touching 2:31.77, the fastest amongst girls her age this year.  Incoming Texas Longhorn Madisyn Cox cut a whopping 5+ seconds off her seed to finish second, touching in 2:32.09.  15-year-old Katherine Drabot was third in 2:32.58.  Top seed Bethany Leap of the Sarasota Sharks was fifth, finishing about a year and a half off her seed time.

Men’s 200 Breast

The second meet record of the night went down in the men’s 200 breast, courtesy of Gunnar Bentz and Andrew Schuehler.  Bentz ran away with this one, cutting three full seconds off his previous best, finishing in 2:12.88.  That knocked a second and a half off the previous meet record set by Christian Higgins back in 2010 (2:14.35).  Bentz continues to set himself apart as arguably the top mid-distance/IM recruit of 2014, clocking the #3 time in history for 18 and under boys (and he is still just 17).

Schuehler, a future Penn State Nittany Lion who competes for the Jersey Wahoos, also swam out of his mind, dropping three seconds to eclipse the previous meet record to register a final time of 2:14.03.  Nicolas Hatanaka was third for the Loveland Swim Club in 2:15.82.

Women’s 800 Free

Teenage workhorse Becca Mann bounced back from a seventh place preliminary swim in the women’s 200 fly (she scratched finals there) to win the 800 freestyle in 8:36.72.  Though it was well off her best time from last summer (8:27.37), this swam was better than her performance at World Championship Trials, where she finished in 8:41.93.  The primary focus for Mann the last few months has been on her 5K and 10K open water efforts, where she represented Team USA in Barcelona.

Danielle Valley of the Sarasota ‘Y’ Sharks finished second in 8:38.03, and 13-year-old Isabel Rongione of The Fish was third in 8:39.09.

Men’s 1500 Free

Jonathan Roberts of the North Texas Nadadores put the field away early, cruising to a 6+ second victory in the final event of the evening.  Blitzing the fast heat early on, Roberts took out his mile in 4:00, before settling into a rhythm of 31.0-31.3 per 50, touching in a time of 15:24.82.  Nick Norman of the Mission Viejo Nadadores finished a distance second in 15:31.41, and Kevin Litherland of Dynamo was third in 15:35.07.

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C Martin
11 years ago

It’s too late here on the East Coast. Shucks!

C Martin
11 years ago

Fast swims by both (both under the MR). Green took it out really fast (58.92), but Katz got him the last 10 meters. Excited for the relays.

SWIMSWIMSWIM
11 years ago

Interesting, didn’t notice until now, but Connor Green scratched the 400 IM A Final to rest for the 200 backstroke tonight. If Ryan Murphy is going to WYC (not sure if anyone knows the answer), then Green and Katz are fighting for the second slot. Right now, Katz is ahead with a 1:58.95 (WCT) and Green went 1:59.01 last week.

C Martin
Reply to  SWIMSWIMSWIM
11 years ago

I say Green pulls it out IF he takes it out faster than he did in prelims. Katz was ahead by a full second at the 100, but Green closed that to less than half a second by the end. We’ll see. I say it’s Green with the win.

C Martin
11 years ago

New meet record for Kylie Stewart in 2:09.04! Breaks Missy Franklin’s mark of 2:09.16! Well done!

C Martin
11 years ago

Dressel’s first 25-30 meters were RIDICULOUSLY FAST! Then he dropped off and Condorelli caught up. Wasn’t the times I exepected but still, great race for Bolles!

Hulk Swim
11 years ago

This is the one downfall of having the meet outside… It looks chilly there, as the sun goes down…

C Martin
Reply to  Hulk Swim
11 years ago

True. I swam at Boys and Girls Club Nats in April in St. Petersburg and even though it was in the high 80’s during the day, at night you would need a sweatshirt and pants (also to keep away the mosquitos, too).

Hulk Swim
11 years ago

Paul Powers is a BIG BOY… Wow. This is gonna be fun.

C Martin
11 years ago

It’s Dressel time!

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, …

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