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Michigan men, OSU women win in intense, live-tweeted Big Ten battle in Columbus

The storied Michigan-Ohio State rivalry landed full-force in the McCorkle Aquatics Pavilion in Columbus today, as the Wolverines and Buckeyes traded blows in a pair of back-and-forth dual meets. When the dust settled, the rivals salvaged a split, with the Michigan men and Ohio State women each coming out on top.

The meet had no shortage of drama, and giving us an insider’s view of the competition was the Michigan Swimming and Diving Twitter account, which the Michigan coaches used to live-tweet the event. We’ve embedded a few of the more notable tweets in the recaps.

Probably the most interesting tidbit from the live-tweeting was what appeared to be a spur-the-moment decision by coach Mike Bottom to suit up several of his butterflyers in response to Ohio State suiting up for a few events in the middle of the meet.

Men’s Meet

Ohio State put together a huge 200 medley relay to whip the crowd into a frenzy in the first race. Gavin Trebilcock split 22.2 leading off, taking advantage of Michigan’s biggest weakness to stake OSU to a nearly-full-second lead. Keanu Stevenson outsplit Michigan star Richard Funk on breaststroke and Tim Phillips went 20.85 on fly to extend the lead. Bruno Ortiz fought hard with a 19.4 anchor leg for Michigan, but it wasn’t enough as the Buckeye’s triumphed 1:27.50 to 1:28.03.

That led to this Mike Bottom quote to his team, which was recorded for all of posterity on Twitter:

Michigan Olympian Connor Jaeger battled back in the 1000 free, going 9:04.27 to smash the pool record by 19 seconds and eat into the OSU lead. Alex Miller was second for the Buckeyes in 9:11.51, also under the old pool record.

The Wolverines went 1-2 in the 200 free led by Michael Wynalda‘s 1:35.34 to regain the lead, but Ohio State fired back by pressing its backstroke advantage to the limit. The Buckeyes went 1-2-3-4 in the 100 back with four swimmers going 48s. Matt McHugh led the field with a 48.21 – Michigan’s top swimmer, Pete Brumm, was just 49.40.

Richard Funk stayed red-hot in the 100 breaststroke for Michigan, though, going 54.61 to beat Ohio State’s DJ MacDonald by .3. OSU did however take the 2-3-4 slots to keep the score close.

But Michigan pressed back in the 200 fly, answering Ohio State’s 100 back sweep with a 1-2-3-4 of their own. Dylan Bosch was 1:45.44 for a big win.

Stephen Ettienne won his first of two diving events with a score of 330.83 before his teammate Josh Fleagle went 44.30 to beat out a host of Wolverines for the 100 free win. Fleagle nipped Justin Glanda, Michael Wynalda and Bruno Ortiz, each of whom was 44 in the race.

Ohio State continued its hot streak with stud backstroker Connor McDonald’s 1:45.25 win in the 200 back over Michigan’s Ryutaro Kamiya. Kamiya was 1:45.65 and OSU’s Michael Gallagher was just a tenth behind in third. Feeling the momentum, Buckeye Andrew Braun went 1:58.77 to touch out Funk for the 200 breast win to keep Ohio State rolling.

But Jaeger returned to end the Ohio State run, touching out Alex Miller 4:24.42 to 4:24.92 in the 500 free. Michigan also took third and fourth in that race.

This was where the live-tweeting got interesting. Michigan’s tweets suggested Ohio State had suited up a few swimmers over the past several events, and Mike Bottom appeared to make a mid-meet decision to suit up a few athletes of his own, based on these Wolverine tweets:

 

It then appears that several of Michigan’s 100 butterflyers suited up and went 1-2 over the top of OSU star Tim Phillips. Dylan Bosch went 46.63 and John Wojciechowski was 46.89 to Phillips’ 47.72.

(Reporter’s note: Suiting up is one of the most overly-discussed issues in regular-season swimming, and we’ve seen plenty of strong opinions on it this past weekend. For what it’s worth: the final score is the final score, no matter what each team elected to wear. These tweets are only included because they appear to give an interesting inside look at one coach’s rationale for regular-season suiting.)

Stephen Ettienne won his second diving event with a 377.25 on 1-meter to tie the meet up going into the final two events of the night. Michigan came out of the diving break firing on all cylinders, though, as Kyle Whitaker and Dylan Bosch 1-2’d the 200 IM in 1:46.71 and 1:46.96 respectively.

But then Ohio State took the 400 free relay by four tenths – the team of Josh Fleagle, Michael Disalle, Steffen Hillmer and Tim Phillips went 2:55.78 to Michigan’s 2:56.18. Both Disalle and Phillips were 43.6 for the Buckeyes. Wynalda was 43.5 anchoring for Michigan, but wasn’t able to run Phillips down.

The meet didn’t end entirely without controversy: results showed a false start on Wynalda for the Michigan relay, and a fairly significant one at -0.11. But the false start was uncalled, and it appears the results merely reflect a touchpad malfunction, which seems the most plausible scenario – it’s pretty unlikely a false start of more than a tenth would go unnoticed by officials.

That left things in a 151-147 Michigan victory, heating things up in a rivalry that will all but certainly continue at the Big Ten Championships in Michigan in just about a month.

Men’s results.

Women’s Meet

The women’s dual was a two-day competition; Michigan held a narrow 4-point lead after Friday night’s racing.

Michigan ran away with the 200 medley relay to open women’s competition Saturday, getting a big 25.01 leadoff split from Ali DeLoof to go 1:41.37 to OSU’s 1:42.83.

DeLoof was entered in the very next event, the 100 free. She got some help from the unique meet format – since the women had completed half their events last night, the lineup tonight slated two men’s events between each women’s race. Even so, DeLoof only had the men’s medley relay and the men’s 1000 before jumping up again for the 100 free, where she finished second to Ohio State’s Michelle Williams, 49.89 to 50.30.

Claudia Lau won the 200 back with a 1:59.20, just about three tenths ahead of OSU’s Zulal Zeren.

But Ohio State went 2-3-4 in that event and fired back with a win in the 200 breaststroke behind Taylor Vargo‘s 2:15.21 touchout of Angie Chokran. That was a big momentum swing for the home team, and Kelly Ann Baird continued the hot streak with a 4:49.23 win in the 500 free, a 1-2 for the Buckeyes. Aliena Schmidtke (55.16) and Michelle Williams (55.40) combined to top Michigan’s Zoe Mattingly (55.47) in the 100 fly to jump out to a lead with two individual contests to go.

But Michigan wasn’t finished quite yet. Courtney Beidler went 4:14.55 to win the 400 IM, followed by teammate Marni Oldershaw, Carey Chen won 1-meter diving (292.43) and suddenly the score was tied heading into the final relay.

Ultimately, though, the home team won out as Ohio State rolled to a 400 free relay victory 3:20.80 to 3:22.72, and the Buckeye B team took third to power Ohio State to a 181-172 victory over their Big Ten rivals.

Women’s results (both days).

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G
10 years ago

MB tweeting during a meet? What a diva.

newswim
Reply to  G
10 years ago

IMHO, and I have no connection to either school this is no diva act.” We should applaud him for trying to use social media to broaden interest in the sport.

fjasfma
10 years ago

what a bunch of clowns

YouGotLezakd
Reply to  fjasfma
10 years ago

Could you please explain?

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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