The 2014 Women’s NCAA Championships are on to their final session on Friday night in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and Georgia will enter with a 72-point lead over the second-ranked Stanford Cardinal. With the mile still to be factored in, we expect that lead to grow on the final night of this meet, and ultimately it would take a collapse of all-time, all-sports, historical levels for anybody to catch the Bulldogs after the work they did in prelims.
The night will start with the 1650 free, a race that will be without the NCAA Record holder Stephanie Peacock. Next up, Virginia’s Courtney Bartholomew will try and stave off the likes of Liz Pelton, Elizabeth Beisel, and Sinead Russell in the 200 back. Next up, Missy Franklin will be looking for her second-straight win, and a reclaiming of her 17-18 National Age Group Record, but to do so she’ll have to overcome Arizona’s Margo Geer: the third-fastest swimmer in the history of that event.
The 200 breast will see A&M’s Breeja Larson try to win her first career 200 breaststroke NCAA title (hard to believe), and right after that Larson will watch her teammate Cammile Adams trying to defend her title in the 200 fly.
The session will close with the purest race in college swimming: the women’s 400 free relay. There, the Arizona women had a great swim in the morning, but someone’s going to have to come close to a record to win in finals.
All the links you need, including live stream and live results, to follow the meet are here.
Day 3 up/downs and scoring projections can be seen here.
Day 3’s prelims recap is available here.
Women’s 1650 Free – Timed Final
Georgia’s next great freestyler, Brittany MacLean, broke the NCAA Championship and overall NCAA Record in the women’s 1650 freestyle with a 15:27.84 in the fastest heat of the women’s 1650 free on Saturday evening.
She was out in a 4:41, followed that with a 4:22, and followed that with a 4:21 by 500 yard frees. She still closed with her now well-known speed, with a 26.61 split on the last 50 yards. (Read more about the record here).
That’s four wins in the last six years in this event for the Bulldogs.
Her teammate Amber McDermott took 2nd in 15:40.27, which by most standards is a great swim as well. She was one of five swimmers in this race that were faster than Haley Anderson’s winning time last year.
Virginia freshman Leah Smith put up a 15:42.04 for 2nd, followed by Texas A&M’s Sarah Henry in a new A&M School Record, by three seconds, of 15:42.44.
Indiana’s Lindsay Vrooman rounded out that lead pack in 15:44.45 for 5th.
The top swimmer out of the early heats of the women’s 1650 free was Arizona freshman Tjasa Oder, who was a 15:56.88 for 6th place
Minnesota’s Kiera Janzen was 7th in 15:57.38 – another time out of the early heats. Janzen went out very hard in this race, hitting at 4:47 in the 500, and though she had a nice kick at the end, she trailed off a bit through the last third of the race.
Florida State’s Madison Jacobi (16:01.09) and Towson’s Kaitlin Burke (16:04.30) are also assured of at least 11th and 12th place points, respectively.
200 Backstroke – FINALS
It was Indiana’s Brooklynn Snodgrass early push that sealed her the win in the 200 backstroke tonight, marking two-straight wins for Canadian swimmers. She had the lead at the 100 mark, and her third 50 is what gave her enough cushion over Cal’s Liz Pelton and Virginia’s Courtney Bartholomew.
Snodgrass’s winning time was 1:50.52 — just over the efforts of Pelton, 1:50.55, and Bartholomew, 1:50.84. Indiana won this event in 2010, when Kate Fesenko beat out Florida’s three-time champion at the time, Gemma Spofforth, and four years later they’ve found themselves back on top of the podium.
Pelton was the defending champion and was almost three seconds slower here than she was to swim the fastest time ever last year.
Florida’s duo Sinead Russel and Elizabeth Beisel were 4th and 5th, respectively, in the heat at 1:51.65 and 1:52.21. Beisel still has another race later this session, in the B final of the 200 butterfly.
Rounding out the A final was Melanie Klaren of Cal in 1:52.44, Sam Corea of Denver in 1:53.68, and Jillian Vitarius of Auburn in 1:54.78.
Vitarius’ teammate Aubrey Peacock won the B Final in 1:52.37 – that would have put her 6th in the A-Final.
100 Freestyle – FINALS
After failing to defend her NCAA title in the 50 on the first night of this meet, Margo Geer of Arizona captured the 100 freestyle title tonight in 47.10. She sent an early message this morning when she posted a 47.00 to move to 3rd on the all-time . Geer had the lead at the 50 in a split of 22.52 and never looked back as she won her second title in the event this year.
London Olympians Lia Neal and Missy Franklin were second and third. Neal had just a .01 lead on Franklin at the turn, but she was able to hold on and extend it as she finished at 47.17 and 47.26.
Natalie Hinds, who finished third in this event last season, was fourth, 47.40. Hinds finally got into the A final in this event, after having some troubles getting into that top eight all weekend.
Kasey Carlson of USC finished off her individual NCAA career with a 6th place, 47.86. Stanford’s Maddy Schaefer put herself into the mix with a 22.98 opening split, which was third best overall, but finished seventh in 47.98.
Lindsay Gendron of Tennnessee was eighth at 48.06 — and she still has the finals of the 200 butterfly at the end of the session.
Women’s 200 Breaststroke – FINALS
Notre Dame’s Emma Reaney, who has visibly the most efficient stroke in the water, took the women’s 200 breaststroke title, her first NCAA title, in 2:04..06, and in the process broke her own NCAA, U.S. Open, and Championship Records in the event.
In the process, she beat Breeja Larson of Texas A&M, who was a 2:05.88 for 2nd to tie with Stanford’s Katie Olsen. Larson, who is one of the greatest breaststrokers in NCAA history, will now graduate without a title in this 200 (though she’s won three-straight in the 100).
Georgia’s Melanie Margalis took 4th in 2:06.40, followed by the second Aggie swimmer, sophomoer Ashley McGregor, in 2:06.53.
Minnesota’s Kierra Smith was the Gophers’ second First-Team All-American of the day, placing 6th in 2:06.76, with Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s Emily McClellan (2:06.98) and Georgia’s Annie Zhu (2:07.98) rounding out the A-Final.
Utah freshman Stina Colleou won the B-Final in 2:08.35.
Women’s 200 Fly – FINALS
Texas A&M’s Cammile Adams almost got “Cammile Adams’ed” on this women’s 200 fly, but her lead going into the final 50 of the women’s 200 fly wound up being enough for her to win her second-straight title in the 200 fly, and end her NCAA career on top of a podium.
As for the reverse treatment, Adams was at a 1:23.08 going into the final turn, while her Worlds teammate Maya DiRado was in 6th and over a second back.
Adams usually has the fastest closing 50 in any given race yards where she’s not racing Katinka Hosszu, but her 150 split at NCAA’s was more ambitious than she’s been. She turned three-tenths better than her swim at SEC’s, where she was actually a few hundredths faster overall.
Though Adams’ closing split of 29.17 was still very, very good, Stanford’s DiRado was a bit faster in 28.82, but as we said, Adams’ lead was insurmountable by that point.
Tennessee’s Lindsay Gendron, in her second individual final of the night, placed 3rd in 1:53.05, followed by Louisville’s Kelsi Worrell, who closed much better than prelims en route to a 1:53.63.
Kentucky’s Tina Bechtel finished off her breakout season with a 5th-place finish in 1:53.65 – a lifetime best for her.
Georgia’s Hali Flickinger was 6th in 1:54.76, with A&M’s Caroline McElhany (1:55.52) and UNC’s Meredith Hoover (1:55.85) rounding out the A-Final.
Georgia’s Lauren Harrington was a 1:54.65 to top the B-Final.
Women’s Platform Diving
USC junior Haley Ishimatsu won her second-straight NCAA Championship on the platform with a score of 365.15, topping Emma Ivory-Ganja by about 16 points. Ivory-Ganja has made a big immediate impact on Texas after transferring from UCLA last year, and Texas’ diving squad will continue to be a force in the future.
Georgia’s Laura Ryan finished third on the platform, after winning the 1m and 3m titles earlier in the weekend. Ryan’s performances would earn her Diver of the Year.
Women’s 400 Freestyle Relay – FINALS
The championships were capped up with another thrilling race. Arizona lead with her big gun, Margo Geer, tonight versus her being in the second spot in the morning session. Geer hit the pool hot, and swam to a 46.86 lead off swim – much better than her individual swim earlier, and just .2 off the NCAA and U.S. Open Record from Arianna Vanderpool-Wallace, and just .02 off the American Record from Natalie Coughlin in 2011.
Maddy Schaefer led off for the Cardinal in 47.91, and Felicia Lee brought the Cardinal back into the game with her 47.92 split against Alana Pazevic’s 48.20.
Things got even more interesting after the third leg, as Cal was behind nearly two seconds from Arizona and a second from Stanford, Missy Franklin dove in to split 47.08, and bring the Bears back into the mix heading into the final 100 yards. Between Stanford, Arizona and Cal, just .8 seperated the three into the final push.
Farida Osman split 47.55 for Cal, which wasn’t enough to keep them in the race, as they finished third in 3:11.37.
But Lia Neal and Grace Finnegan went head-to-head, and Neal literally fit the expression perfectly of “putting your head down and get your hand on the wall”. Neal looked like she didn’t breathe for almost a half of a lap, which surged the Cardinal ahead of the Wildcats, as her 47.14 was good enough to beat Finnegan’s 47.93, to win the event.
Their final time was 3:10.83 to Arizona’s 3:10.99. This was the fourth of five total relay wins for Stanford this weekend.
Georgia was fourth with 3:12.09,Florida in fifth, 3:12.44, as Natalie Hinds split a notable 47.14 on their third leg. Rounding out the heat was USC in sixth, 3:13.01, Tennessee in seventh, 3:14.10, and Wisconsin in eighth in 3:14.90.
The top 10 teams:
1. Georgia – 528
2. Stanford – 402.5
3. Cal – 386
4. A&M – 336
5. USC – 252
6. Florida – 239
7. Tennessee – 223
8. Arizona – 156
9. Texas – 144
10. Minnesota – 136.5
A full breakdown and analysis of scoring can be found here.
If I were a Stanford program insider I would leave well alone with the women’s program. They look terrific into the future.
I would just push for a new men’s coach and put an end to the Skip Kenney era for once and all. Combining the men and women is a risk, and not one worth taking. Stanford can afford to fund two coaching staffs.
Bottom line is Stanford has it all over most everyone. It is basically a school you’d turn down any Ivy to attend, it is a scholarship school, the climate is great and it has the finest aquatic center in the world. The athletic department can write blank checks to every varsity program so it can… Read more »
Marina Garcia, a swimmer who swam 2:22.88 to finish FOURTH at last year’s WORLD AQUATIC CHAMPIONSHIPS, only swam 2:11.55 at the 200 breast prelims.
This is almost at the absurd level, and it begs a lot of questions.
To show how bad her SCY swims are, the regression would be akin to Missy Franklin never cleared 1:45-1:46 in the 200 free in her freshman year after smashing 1:54.81 in Barcelona.
Was there an international swimmer in the Division I school who made worse transition to NCAA/SCY swimming? Because as far I know, majority of international student swimmers who studied and trained at US college system normally either equaled or improved their (converted) times even when they come from countries with… Read more »
Coach and swimmer of the meet?
The Stanford Cardinal were on fire! Awesome meet, congratulations to the coaching staff and swimmers! Cal seemed a little flat and had the unfortunate relay DQ, but they will learn from this and next year they will be tough to beat, as usual.
Geer so close to the AR on her leadoff!! 46.86 to Coughlin’s 46.84. Congrats to the Bulldawgs for a fantastic meet and to Stanford for exceeding all expectations and dominating the relays to take 2nd. Tough meet for the Bears take 3rd but they will regroup live on to swim another day.
If I were a Stanford alum/fan, I might push for Meehan to run both the women’s and men’s programs at Stanford.
Agreed. Revisit this thought a week from now since I don’t expect it to go especially well next week for the Stanford men’s team. Stanford 2014 had comparable talent to USC and less talent than Cal and look at the results. Props to the Dawgs, but Meehan’s done an unbelievable job in two seasons on the farm.
Cal’s diver slipped to 5th so it will take a miracle for them to pass Stanford now.
I guess the Bears could theoretically catch Stanford if Rowell holds 4th or higher, Cal wins the relay while Stanford gets 3rd or worse. A tall order. Go Bears!!
So far it looks like McLean for Swimmer of the meet with 3 NCAA records, two wins and a 4th, vs DiRado with 2 wins and a 2nd but no records.
Do really records count? DiRado has one and may get another shortly. I think they’ll give McLean Swimmer of the Meet and give DiRado that big award they gave Schmitty last year. Well, we know Stanford’s taking the relay tonight– Schaefer can flat start 47, Lee can roll start 47 and the way DiRado is swimming, she can hit 47 too. Neal anchored 46 at Pac-12s. The American record is a goner– they might get that NCAA record. Georgia clearly gets the title but their sprinters didn’t swim as well (esp on relays) as I expected.
I meant relay records.
Seeing some of relay exchange(in Georgia side), i think many of them made a SAFE start, just to never get a DQ.Their coach is playing(a well done) chess battle.
I also have GA at about 3:10.6 but are they all American citizens to get AR?
Not sure if they count relays vs individual, but if it were me, I’d include relays which would give DiRado a leg up.
I agree that Stanford should get the AR, I conservatively have them at 3:10.5 and the record is 3:10.6
Too many nervous-safe starts(a friend calls FART START) for any AR.Except for an 0.08 and other 0.1, most were in 0.2-0.3 range.
Does diving count? I’m thinking laura ryan 1st 1st 3rd.