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Smith And Messerschmidt Open Up UGA Invitational With Hot Times

Virginia’s Leah Smith and Cal’s Tyler Messerschmidt open the three-day UGA Fall Invitational at the Gabrielsen Natatorium in Athens, GA with impressive times during Friday morning’s prelims. Competition resumes Friday evening with finals and relays at 5:30 p.m. EST.

Smith achieved an NCAA ‘A’ cut with a personal best 4:32.61 result in the women’s 500-yard free, while the 6’7” Messerschmidt dropped 0.57 seconds off his season best to record a 19.47 in the men’s 50-yard free and gain an NCAA ‘B’ cut. Messerschmidt, whose best time is 19.16, was the first of six men to qualify under 20 seconds for Friday night’s final.

Live Results

In the pool, Georgia hosts SEC rival Auburn University (Auburn), Pennsylvania State University (Penn State), University of Virginia (Virginia), University California Berkeley (Cal) and Florida State. Prelim competition starts at 9:30 on all three days. Finals go at 5:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday and at 3 p.m. on Sunday.

The Bulldog divers host Auburn, Penn State, Virginia, Harvard University, Virginia Tech and University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). Diving competition starts at 11:30 a.m. on Friday, 5:15 p.m. Saturday and 11:30 a.m. on Sunday.

Smith Bests Her Own School Record In 500-Yard Free

University of Virginia’s sophomore Leah Smith is the top qualifier for tonights 500-yard free final with a very fast 4:32.61, which is a 13 second drop from her season best time and erases her own school record (4:33.65) by 1.04 seconds.

Cal’s Cierra Runge was the second top qualifier at nearly five seconds back (4:37.06), while host Georgia senior Amber McDermott, who finished third at last year’s NCAA Championships in this event, qualified third (4:39.34). She was followed by teammates Brittany MacLean (4:40.68) and Hali Flickinger (4:41.45). The top 23 finishers all dropped time from their seed entries.

The top three qualifiers in the men’s 500-yard free were all Bulldogs, as freshman Kevin Litherland (4:17.75) dropped ten seconds from his seed time to post a NCAA ‘B’ cut. Teammates Jay Litherland (4:19.24) and junior Matias Koski (4:19.92) were the second and third top qualifiers, also with NCAA ‘B’ cuts. The top 11 qualifiers achieved NCAA ‘B’ cuts and qualified with season-best times.

Friday night’s A Final will feature five Bulldogs, three of which are bothers, as freshman Mick Litherland (4:21.94 ) and Alec Cohen (4:22.33) qualified sixth and seventh.

200-Yard IM Battles Are Brewing

Watch the middle four lanes of the women’s A Final Friday night, as only 0.70 seconds separated the top four qualifiers in the 200-yard IM prelims. Courtney Bartholomew (1:55.23) and Kaitlyn Jones (1:55.61) qualified one and two for Virginia, while Cal’s Missy Franklin (1:55.92) qualified third and Virginia’s Ellen Williamson (1:55.93), who is the third of four Virginia swimmers to qualify for the A Final, qualifies fourth. The top 21 qualifiers all achieved NCAA ‘B’ cuts.

For the men’s 200-yard IM, it’s an all Georgia and Cal A-Final, as each team has four swimmers competing Friday night. The Bulldogs have the top three qualifiers Chase Kalisz (1:43.56), Tynan Stewart (1:43.75) and Gunnar Bentz (1:43.85). Jay Litherland (1:46.31), who made a quick turn-around after qualifying second in the 500-yard free, qualified seventh to be the fourth Georgia man in the A Final.

Cal qualified four men in the A-Final with the fourth, fifth, sixth and eighth qualifiers. Will Hamilton (1:44.21), who dropped four seconds from his seed time, was the top qualifier for Cal. The top twenty-men qualified with NCAA ‘B’ cuts.

Messerschmidt Goes 19.47 in Prelims

The top eight qualifiers in the women’s 50-yard free were all under 22.50 and within 0.47 seconds of each other. Host Georgia’s Chantal Van Landeghem led the way with season best time by 0.68 seconds to qualify first with a 22.03. A tenth of a second back was Cal’s Farida Osman (22.13) and Virginia’s Ellen Thomas (22.14), who qualified fourth earlier in the 200-yard IM A Final, put up the third fasted qualifying time, 0.01 behind Osman.

Six men go under 20 seconds in the 50-yard free prelims. It was Cal’s Tyler Messerschmidt blazing a path under 20 seconds with a hot 19.47, as Bulldogs Michael Trice (19.72) and Nicolas Fink (19.88), and Auburn’s Arthur Mendes (19.89), Kyle Darmody (19.95) and Seth Stubblefield (19.96) followed. Cal’s Lai Yeung Chung (20.15) and Penn State’s Nate Savoy (20.17) were just north of 20 seconds, which means we could see an all-sub-20-second A Final Friday night.

Competition this evening starts 5:30 p.m. EST.

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bobo gigi
9 years ago

Leah Smith 4.32.70 in final. Hard to swim faster in final after huge prelims. Still a great swim. Great consistency.
Cierra Runge second in 4.34.81. Another new PB for her.

HighTek
Reply to  bobo gigi
9 years ago

I would have guessed that it would only be a few tenths faster if any, or a little slower. UVA has a very long tradition of swimming lights out in the morning and very rarely making big drops at night except for the few exceptions of super studs, which I guess Leah is but still… I personally like that mindset because why would you want to waste an opportunity?

bobo gigi
9 years ago

Nice time drop for Gunnar Bentz in the 200 IM prelims. His PB was 1.45.17.
200 IM in yards is hard for him. He’s so much more built for long course. And that’s a good thing. Cool to see him take power and speed.
Can’t wait to see his 400 IM against Chase Kalisz.

Very weird IM splits for Missy Franklin and Liz Pelton. Slow backstroke and decent breaststroke. It’s not common. We’ll see in final.

New PB for Leah Smith in the 500 free prelims. Did she gave everything in the morning or can she still accelerate tonight?
I’m also curious to see Cierra Runge’s performance after leaving NBAC and after a so great summer. Her… Read more »

OldSpice
9 years ago

Nevermind, I see the list now. 4th fastest American and 5th fastest ever.

Joel Lin
9 years ago

She should flirt with 4:29 tonite and easily dispose of the NCAA record. Definitely one of the rapidly improving names in the world for 200m & 400m. Timing is perfect to be a player in Rio not just in relays but to get to podium individually.

SoCal Guy
Reply to  Joel Lin
9 years ago

its too bad, shes up against the greatest female swimmer of all time.

Joel Lin
Reply to  SoCal Guy
9 years ago

Not in the 4×200 free relay!

OldSpice
Reply to  SoCal Guy
9 years ago

And, 2nd is just as good as first when it comes to Olympic Trials… Although, after that 2nd isn’t quite as good.

On a similar note, doesn’t that swim make her the 3rd or 4th fastest performer of all time? That swim was easily the best and most impressive swim in this young NCAA season. UVA women were on fire this morning!

Joel Lin
Reply to  OldSpice
9 years ago

I believe it makes her 3rd all time behind Ledecky and Knutson who did swim 4:31.

bobo gigi
Reply to  Joel Lin
9 years ago

1. Katie Ledecky 4.28.71
2. Katie Hoff 4.30.47
3. Dagny Knutson 4.32.18
4. Leah Smith 4.32.61
5. Missy Franklin 4.32.66
6. Allison Schmitt 4.32.71
6. Kate Ziegler 4.32.71
8. Sarah Henry 4.33.07
9. Caroline Burckle 4.33.60
10. Amber McDermott 4.33.97

OldSpice
Reply to  Joel Lin
9 years ago

If that’s true, then she would be the 4th fastest ever, but 3rd fastest American ever. MacLean still has the NCAA record. It should go Ledeckey, Knutson, MacLean then Smith… but where does Evans fall into the mix?

bobo gigi
Reply to  Joel Lin
9 years ago

I talked only about the Americans.
Yes, Brittany MacLean swam 4.32.53 and is 4th fastest ever.
And Janet Evans is 11th among Americans and 12th fastest ever in 4.34.39.
So Leah Smith is 5th fastest ever.

SipSip
9 years ago

Leah Smith’s time was also the 2nd fastest ever in the NCAA and less than a tenth of a second off of the NCAA record, I believe.

law Dawg
9 years ago

Gunnar is still 18, so he could conceivably give Nolan’s 200 I.M record a run, depending on how much he saved for finals. Should be a great race regardless. Look for Kalisz, Bentz, Stewart, and Hamilton to all break 1:43.

gooby
Reply to  law Dawg
9 years ago

I’m predicting at least one 1:41 from the group. Lots of exciting fast swimming this weekend!

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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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