2015 WOMEN’S NCAA DI CHAMPIONSHIPS
- Thursday, March 19 – Saturday, March 21
- Greensboro Aquatic Center – Greensboro, NC
- Prelims 11AM/Finals 7PM (Eastern Time)
- Defending Champion: Georgia (2x) – results
- NCAA Championship Central
- Live stream: All prelims & Thursday finals (Other sessions will be on ESPN3)
- Live results
The first day of the meet features the 500 freestyle, 200 IM, 50 freestyle, and 1 meter diving individually, as well as the 200 freestyle relay and 400 medley relay.
A three way race is setting up between Leah Smith, Brittany Maclean, and the new NCAA record holder, Cierra Runge, in the 500 freestyle. It will be a very fast final, and it should take a new NCAA record to win tonight.
The 200 IM will be a duel between Cal teammates Missy Franklin and Liz Pelton. Both swimmers are seeded several seconds ahead of the third place qualifier with 1:52’s. They are also within striking distance of Caitlin Leverenz’s American/US Open record of 1:51.77.
Stanford’s Simone Manuel is the favorite to win the 50 freestyle at her first NCAA Championship meet. The 50 will be very tight with 12 swimmers seeded under 22 seconds.
Based on the psych sheet scoring, California is expected to have the lead after the first day of the meet with 163 points. UVA is expected to be second at 121, and Georgia is expected to be sitting in third with 116.
200 Freestyle Relay – Prelims
- NCAA Record – 1:26.20, Arizona – 2009
- Championship Record – 1:26.20, Arizona – 2009
- American Record – 1:26.20, Arizona – 2009
- US Open Record – 1:26.20, Arizona – 2009
- 2014 Champion: Stanford, 1:26.23
Ivy Martin lead Wisconsin to the top seed in the 200 freestyle relay with her lead-off split of 21.62. The Badgers posted the fastest time of the country this year with their time of 1:26.86. Georgia finished just behind them as the only other team under 1:27. They finished with a time of 1:26.94. Stanford qualified third at 1:27.24 and California qualified fourth at 1:27.60.
Joining them in the A final will be Auburn, Texas A&M, NC State, and Louisville. It took a time of 1:28.05 t0 make the A final and a 1:28.79 to make the B final.
The fastest splits of the morning came from Louisville’s Kelsi Worrell. She went second for the Cardinals and split 21.04. Chantal Van Langdham also had a fast split for Georgia with a 21.23. Wisconsin’s Martin had the fastest lead off split at 21.62.
500 Freestyle – Prelims
NCAA – 4:31.90 – Cierra Runge, California – 2015- Championship – 4:32.53 – Brittany MacLean, Georgia – 2014
- American – 4:26.58, Katie Ledecky – 2014
- US Open – 4:26.58, Katie Ledecky – 2014
- 2014 Champion: Brittany Maclean, UGA – 4:32.53
Virginia’s Leah Smith broke the NCAA Record with her time of 4:30.37 in the second to last heat of the prelim to earn the top seed going into tonight’s final. Her approach to this race is much different that it was last year. Smith had a bad prelim swim last year, putting herself in the B final. She ended up finishing 9th but had she been in the A final, she would have finished third.
Smith may be the top seed, but the Georgia Bulldogs are the ones that put themselves on top in this event with four swimmers in the A final. Amber McDermott qualified second at 4:35.17, Brittany MacLean is fifth at 4:37.01, Hali Flickinger is sixth at 4:37.13, and Rachel Zilinskas snuck in to claim the final spot in the A Final with her time of 4:38.32.
California’s Cierra Runge cruised through her prelim swim to qualify third at 4:35.28. Texas A&M’s Sarah Henry finished with the fourth fastest time of 4:36.13 with a two second drop. Florida also put one swimmer into the final with a 4:37.17 from Jessica Thielmann that was good for seventh.
It took a time of 4:38.32 to make the A final and a 4:40.38 to make the B final.
200 IM – Prelims
- NCAA – 1:51.77 – Caitlin Leverenz, California – 2012
- Championship – 1:51.77 – Caitlin Leverenz, California – 2012
- American – 1:51.77 – Caitlin Leverenz – 2012
- US Open – 1:51.77 – Caitlin Leverenz – 2012
- 2014 Champion: Maya DiRado, Stanford – 1:52.50
California responded to Georgia’s big 500 freestyle by sweeping the prelims of the 200 IM. Missy Franklin claimed the top seed with a new pool record time of 1:53.62, Liz Pelton qualified second at 1:54.08, and Celina Li qualified third at 1:54.84.
Madisyn Cox posted the fourth fastest time of the morning for Texas at 1:54.88. Notre Dame’s Emma Reaney powered through the back half with an impressive 32.74 breaststroke split to qualify fifth at 1:55.20.
Courtney Bartholomew qualified sixth for Virgnia at 1:55.29 and Tanja Kylliainen was seventh for Louisville at 1:55.68.
Ashley Vance from Ohio State and Annie Zhu from Georgia tied for 8th in the 200 IM at 1:56.16. A swim off is required to determine who will swim up and who will swim down.
**UPDATE: Annie Zhu won the swim-off with her time of 1:56.71. She will be the final swimmer in the A final. Ohio State’s Ashley Vance finished second with her time of 1:57.01. She will be in lane 4 for the B final of the 200 IM tonight.
It took a 1:56.16 to make the A final and a 1:56.98 to make the B final.
50 Freestyle – Prelims
- NCAA – 21.27 – Lara Jackson, Arizona – 2009
- Championship – 21.27 – Lara Jackson, Arizona – 2009
- American – 21.27 – Lara Jackson – 2009
- US Open – 21.27 – Lara Jackson – 2009
- 2014 Champion: Olivia Smoliga, UGA – 21.59
Wisconsin’s Ivy Martin broke her own pool record from the prelims of the 200 freestyle relay with her time of 21.57 for the second fastest time of the prelim. In the final heat, however, Stanford’s Simone Manuel broke Martin’s pool record with her time of 21.54.
Farida Osman qualified third for California with her time of 21.63, and Louisville’s Kelsi Worrell posted a time of 21.70 for fourth.
Georgia is making a statement this morning! Chantal Van Landeghem lead Madeline Locus and Olivia Smoliga to a 5-6-7 finish to put all three swimmers into tonight’s A final. All three swimmers finished between 21.78 and 21.96.
NC State’s Riki Bonnema earned the final spot in the A final with her time of 21.97. Penn State’s Carolyn Fittin was .01 away from an A final swim with her ninth place time of 21.98.
It took a 21.97 to make the A final and a 22.14 to make the B final. There was also a three way tie for the second alternate position between Stanford’s Lia Neal, Cal’s Kaylin Bing, and Florida’s Natalie Hinds at 22.14.
400 Medley Relay – Prelims
Records:
- NCAA – 3:28.10 – California – 2012
- Championship – 3:28.10 – California – 2012
- American – 3:28.31 – Arizona – 2009
- US Open – 3:28.10 – California – 2012
- 2014 Champion: Stanford – 3:27.51
Virginia looked strong through their morning swim to earn the top seed in the 400 medley relay with their time of 3:28.27. They were under NCAA/American/US Open pace for a majority of the race. Courtney Bartholomew lead off with the fastest backstroke time of the morning at 50.88. Laura Simon also had the fastest split of the day with a 57.33 in the 100 breaststroke.
Louisville had the second fastest time of the session at 3:28.90. We are looking to confirm if Kelsi Worrell’s 100 fly split was the fastest in history, but if it isn’t the fastest, it is one of the fastest. She took it out in 22.68 to finish with a time of 49.56.
Stanford qualified third with their time of 3:29.28. Their line up was much different at the Pac-12 Championships, where they were more than a second faster. Simone Manuel also cruised the anchor leg with her time of 47.72. She split 45.8 at her mid-season championship meet.
Georgia qualified fourth with their time of 3:29.98 and California was fifth at 3:30.63. Missy Franklin had the fastest freestyle split with her time of 46.61 on the anchor leg.
Tennessee is seeded just behind California in seventh at 3:31.12.
The final A final spot went to Missouri with their time of 3:31.20.
Not that I’ve ever seen a 2nd alternate swim finals at anything like an NCAA meet, but just curious are they having a swim-off for the 50 3 way tie for 18th? Or do they just draw straws or something? I guess a swim off would not be that big a deal since it’s only a 50. Hinds and Neal will have more chances, but I’d love to see Bing finally get under 22 by the end of the meet, she was 22.0+ leading off the relay, and may have another shot on the relay tonight as well.
liquid4TheBears – if by some freak accident it happens, Hinds gets the spot – the other two swimmers scratched the swim-off.
Thanks for the info. I guess that makes sense; she would likely have the best chance of moving up for more points, and better for Bing to save a potential sub-22 for the relay where a few tenths could be a considerably bigger point spread than in the individual 50. But as you said it was take a couple of freak incidents for Hinds to swim anyway, eh.
Same would be true for Neal, but I just realized that not only was Hinds a bit off on her individual 50, neither of the Gator relays made A or B finals! That’s a shame; pretty shocking for a team who won the whole meet just a few years ago. Judging from Michalak’s 2IM and relay splits; she may be sick, the 2IM is usually her best event, I think.
holy moly is manuel gonna be chasin down them medley relays. a 46.0 would have put them at 27. ahead of others. will be crazy to see if she gets put in a place by the other 3 to chase them down.
Any of you NCAA officials know why UNC was not DQ’s in 200 free relay? Results show a -.06 on first exchange. There was a DQ in 200 free relay, SMU, a -.01 on third exchange. Was there a rule change this year that brings humans into the formula if the reaction is between +.09 and -.09?
I believe the rule is that if it’s between -.09 and .09 you go to the relay exchange pads. If it’s more than -.09, than the theory is the officials should be able to see a jump, and make the DQ call.
So, if she was -.06, you would go to the pads. I heard the announcer say they were going to video review. I’m guessing it was to make sure there wasn’t a pad malfunction–aka, if something crazy happened with the pads–some coaches will argue that.
Well if that announcement was made, there must of been video evidence that -.06 was wrong, but I guess the -.01 for SMU was OK. Can anyone else in North Carolina add to this explanation of UNC not getting DQ’d?
I heard the announcement, but I am not sure what heat it was for–so it may not have been for UNC.
Also, some coaches will ask for a video review hoping that they can get the DQ reversed.
Hope she just backed off on the second 50 as opposed to knotting up. Although the time was quick she may have tired herself out due to the blazing fast first 50.
Georgia is showing everyone why they swim the meet in the pool and not on paper!
Georgia is showing they didn’t rest fully for SECs. A lot of people say they didn’t rest for their conference meets, but it’s easy to see how rested you were by how you swim faster at NCAAs.
Go Dawgs……just sayin! Great start for the defending champs!
UVA and Cal clearly holding back – I imagine UVA will have Williamson and Thomas on Fly/Free at finals, and Cal will have Bootsma/Osman on back and Fly – I wonder if Busch told Bartholomew to hold back in prelims.
Worrell/Louisville clearly NOT holding back!
Laura Simon from UVA had the fastest BR split — 57.33