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Taylor Ruck Swims Field-Leading 1:40.49 800FR Split, 2nd-Fastest of Her Career

2022 NCAA DIVISION I WOMEN’S SWIMMING AND DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS

Despite just consisting of two relays, the first night of the 2022 NCAA Division I Women’s Swimming & Diving Championships played host to a huge amount of fast swimming. Among the top performers of the night was Stanford’s Taylor Ruck, who swam on the Cardinal 800 free relay. Ruck swam the 2nd leg of the race, splitting a 1:40.49, which was the fastest split of anyone in the field tonight, and the fastest 200 free we’ve seen in the NCAA this season.

Ruck immediately became a star in the NCAA during her freshman season at Stanford, back in 2018-2019. She would go on to take 2nd in the 200 free and 200 back at the 2019 NCAA Championships, as well as 3rd in the 100 back. Following her freshman season, Ruck took a redshirt year to prepare for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, moving to Canada to train at the High Performance Centre in Toronto.

The world was then rocked by the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020, postponing the Olympics, and shutting nearly everything down for a period of time. After resuming training, Ruck experienced bouts of injury and illness, and was well off her personal bests as a result. She would go on to compete for Canada in Tokyo, racing on prelims of the 400 free and 400 medley relays, and making the semifinal of the 100 backstroke.

After returning to Stanford, Ruck was swimming well all season to be certain, but was still off the lofty standards she set in her freshman year. Given all that, there was uncertainty as to whether Ruck would ever return to her top form. Well, she appeared to answer that tonight, swimming her 2nd-fastest 200 free of her career of a rolling start, and her 3rd-fastest performance overall.

Ruck’s fastest 200 free split of her career came at the 2019 NCAAs, where she posted a blazing 1:39.83 on the 3rd leg. She would go on to take 2nd in the individual 200 free two days later, swimming her personal best of 1:40.37. Those are the only two instances of Ruck swimming faster than the 1:40.49 she split tonight.

Here is the split comparison between Ruck’s relay split tonight, her 2019 relay split, and her 2019 NCAAs individual performance.

Split 2022 NCAA Relay Split (Relay Start) 2019 NCAA Relay Split (Relay Start) 2019 NCAA Finals (Flat Start)
1st 50 22.69 22.07 23.06
2nd 50 25.31 25.30 25.19
3rd 50 25.82 25.98 25.79
4th 50 26.67 26.48 26.33
Final Time 1:40.49 1:39.83 1:40.37

Notably, in all 3 instances, the middle of her races have stayed essentially the same. Tonight, the difference was that she was a bit slower on the first and last 50s than she was in 2019.

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SMO
2 years ago

Super happy for Taylor! Great to see her back in form. I have always admired her courage for coming forward and sharing her struggles with eating disorder. No doubt that has inspired as many young women as her swimming! Lets also highlight that she made the final of the 200bk in Tokyo (and, of course, is a bronze medalist from the 800 FR relay 2016.) Wishing her great success for the remainder of the meet.

Awsi Dooger
2 years ago

I don’t know why Elizabeth Beisel was so unprepared. Ruck was clearly the star of that relay yet she was allowed to stand there like a dope in the post race interview, without a question posed to her. I thought for sure Beisel was going to rave about Ruck’s return to form and ask her about it. Why were they so brief with those interviews to begin with? Tonight of all nights offered plenty of time. I thought all 4 swimmers would field a question after both relays.

Meow
2 years ago

What’s the fastest 800 relay split?

SBSwammer
Reply to  Meow
2 years ago

It look like her 1:40 split was the fastest in the field.

USA
Reply to  Meow
2 years ago

Mallory Comerford (2018): 1:39.14

Yay
2 years ago

For all the hate Meehan gets in these comments he clearly is doing something right with Ruck. She’s really turned it around since the start of the school year. So happy for her.

MTK
2 years ago

As a Canadian (and of course a swim fan in general) it’s great to see Taylor back on form. Now we just need her to be at her best for an Olympic year, and she can challenge for an individual medal or two.

Njones
Reply to  MTK
2 years ago

👍🇨🇦👍
As well a return to anything close to her 2018 form (51.7 & 1:54 free splits) relaunches Canada into the 🥇 conversation in the Freestyle relays, especially now with Summer doing ‘Summer’ things…

mds
Reply to  Njones
2 years ago

1:54 flat start

Taa
2 years ago

Also Ruck looks to move up in her seedings. Big boost in the team race.

Swim Fan
2 years ago

Congrats to Taylor and Stanford women’s swimming!

Taa
2 years ago

Wheal and Goeders splits were fast also on the medley. I thought they should have swapped Nordmann in on this relay and took out Reagan.

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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