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2013 NCAA Men’s Picks: Last-minute Breaststroke Calls

Braden Keith
by Braden Keith 15

March 28th, 2013 News

We’re 2 minutes away from NCAA’s!!  Let’s drop some breaststroke picks really quick…

 

Wildcats Bearing Down

The heavy favorite in the breaststroke events is Kevin Cordes of Arizona, the top seed in both distances and defending NCAA champion in the 100.  Cordes made his case this fall at AT&T Nationals, where he broke a pair of American records, becoming the first swimmer to ever break 1:51 in the 200, and narrowly missing cracking the 51 in the 100.  He’ll be joined by teammate Carl Mickelson, who grabbed a pair of 4th place finishes a year ago.  With studs across all four legs (including two elite breaststrokers) of their medley relays, coach Eric Hansen will have the luxury of finishing safely in the top 8 in prelims.  That means rotating Mickelson and Cordes, and saving each of these guys from any extra swims.  Look for junior Kevin Steel, as well.  He sealed his qualification this fall, and he’s seeded 11th here in the 100.

 

Cody Miller

Cordes is widely considered the runaway favorite in both events, but Indiana’s Cody Miller might have something to say about that.  He smashed Big Ten records in both breaststrokes, and actually swam the fastest 200 breast ever in a NCAA-only competition (Cordes’ 1:50.73 was at Winter Nationals, but is recognized as an NCAA record).  Two factors going against Miller: he doesn’t have the best NCAA history (he added significant time each of his first two seasons at this meet), and he has a much heavier workload than most of the other breaststrokers in this field.  He’ll have at least five relay over the first two days relays (Cordes, Mickelson, Hoyt, and Prenot will not), alone with two 200 IM’s (Hoyt and Mickelson will each have one at most, and Cordes doesn’t even have a third event).  That could be a factor as we head into Friday night and Saturday.

A Pair of Bears (actually, make that three)

Cal has been dominant in the breaststroke disciplines over the last few seasons (including a 1-2-4 finish in the 100 in 2011), and even though they are a little thinner than years past, the Bears will be represented in both A-Finals.  Trevor Hoyt has taken the reigns for Cal, finishing 6th in the 100 and 2nd in the 200 last year.  We like him equal or better those performances this year.

Hoyt be joined by freshman Josh Prenot in the 200, who looks to be one of the highest-scoring freshman at this meet.  In addition, Christian Higgins is buried in the psych sheet, but look for him to make some big moves.  He finished 13th in the 100 a year ago.

 

The Other Guys

  • Michigan’s duo of Richard Funk and Bruno Ortiz are seeded to A-Final (Ortiz in the 100, Funk in both events)… Critical points for Michigan.  Ortiz has more pure speed than Funk (that looks weird just typing it), but Funk was runner-up to Miller at Big Ten’s over both distances, swimming lifetime bests and earning himself a pair of 3rd seeds in the process.
  • Look for Ivy League champion Chuck Katis to make a splash.  He’s been lights-out all season, and should be a double A-Finalist.
  • Sprint freestyle extraordinaire Vlad Morozov will be demonstrating his versatility on the middle day in the 100 breast.  He was runner-up to Cordes at PAC-12’s.

100 breast picks:

  1. Kevin Cordes, Arizona – 51.10
  2. Cody Miller, Indiana – 51.50
  3. Carl Mickelson, Arizona – 52.19
  4. Vladimir Morozov, USC – 52.06
  5. Trevor Hoyt, Cal – 52.65
  6. Chuck Katis, Harvard – 52.49
  7. Bruno Ortiz, Michigan – 52.42
  8. Kevin Steel, Arizona – 52.66

 

 200 picks:

  1. Kevin Cordes, Arizona – 1:50.73
  2. Trevor Hoyt, Cal – 1:53.76
  3. Cody Miller, Indiana – 1:51.03
  4. Carl Mickelson, Arizona – 1:55.09
  5. Josh Prenot, Cal – 1:53.63
  6. Chuck Katis, Harvard – 1:54.08
  7. Christian Higgins, Cal – 1:55.14
  8. Richard Funk, Michigan – 1:53.32

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11 years ago

Don’t count Byron Sanborn of Princeton out he is young, but he is fast, and he is very capable!

liquidassets
11 years ago

Katis scratched the IM today and Harvard scratched their MR; is Katis sick??

liquidassets
11 years ago

With Cordes’s 49.5 on the relay, I’d say that AR is gone tomorrow, and probably Drugonjic’s suit record 50.8 as well.

Donald P. Spellman
11 years ago

I would not count out Matt Elliot (FLA), the 2013 SEC Champion, going top 8 in the 200 BR. He finaled at last summer’s Olympic Trials in the 200 BR and has been swimming well this SCY season.

Jj
11 years ago

Freshman Josh Prenot (who I believe is older than Kevin Cordes) will win the 200.

Martin
Reply to  Jj
11 years ago

Prenot is older than Cordes by about 20 days, that is odd. Maybe he is just a late bloomer, a swimmer named Ashlee Linn who swims for Florida is a freshman this year despite being 20. She swam for the SYS sharks (a dominant YMCA team) when she was still 19, maybe Prenot did the same? Regardless, I don’t think anyone can beat Cordes. He is still developing as a big league swimmer and with his stroke rate and power? Unbeatable.

Harrison Thai
Reply to  Martin
11 years ago

i believe that prenot took a year off to train for olympic trials if im not mistaken

lv2srf95
Reply to  Jj
11 years ago

And the 400 IM

Richard Henderson
11 years ago

I think Hoyt may be suffering from some illness. His breast split in the IM was 30.5, not good, and his free was a second and one half slower than the next slowest. I hope he can recover. He is crucial for Cal.

Reply to  Richard Henderson
11 years ago

Still split 52.2 in the medley. He’ll be just fine; the guy always gets up when it really counts.

FREEBEE
11 years ago

since Dax Hill split 51.8 this morning he perhaps should of opted for 100BR–could have squeaked into top 8?? of course he’s not but it would have been cool to see him in it

Martin
11 years ago

No Funk in the 100?

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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