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Beisel to Swim 200 Fly, No 200 IM at 2014 NCAA Championships

In a huge curve ball, Florida All-American Elizabeth Beisel has entered the 400 IM, the 200 back, and the 200 fly for the 2014 NCAA Championships, forgoing a day one event in favor of two on the meet’s final day.

This was revealed late Monday night when USA Swimming posted the official pre-selection lists.

NCAA DI Women – Preselections Entry List

While these lists don’t show the cut-off lines for the NCAA Championships, they do show which three events different swimmers have selected as their three attempted entries for NCAA’s; for swimmers like Beisel, this makes for their three actual entries with invites secure by Automatic Qualifying times.

Beisel has toyed with quite a few different events this season, and ranks 9th in the 200 fly (1:54.60) despite not racing it at the SEC Championships. Unlike prior years, she probably won’t have any final day relay commitments though, so swimming these two races, which fall as event 16 and 19 and so have a little separation, shouldn’t be unimaginably grueling for her.

Beisel’s first day in previous years has been a bit shaky; as a freshman, she was 8th in the 500 free, as a sophomore she DQ’ed the 200 IM, and last season she was 5th in the 200 IM. The Gators are banking on her being able to outplace that in the 200 fly even at the end of a Saturday double-swim session.

Other notable entries:

  • Cal’s Missy Franklin will swim three freestyle events and no backstroke: the 500 free on day one, the 200 free on day two, and the 100 free on day three. She’s an Olympic Champion and World Record holder in the backstroke races, but Cal is loaded there and will overall net more points with her in the freestyles.
  • Cal’s Liz Pelton will swim the 200 IM, the 200 free, and the 200 back as her three events. That’s not a huge surprise as it’s what she swam at Pac-12’s, but many still thought she should be in the 100 back on the meet’s second day.
  • Cal’s Rachel Bootsma will swim the 100 fly, 100 back, and 200 fly, which is the same lineup as last season.
  • Tennessee’s Lindsay Gendron will swim the 200 free, the 100 free, and the 200 fly; that means she’s also skipping a day one event, where she was 8th last year in the 500 free, in favor of a last-day double of the 100 free and 200 fly. She didn’t even qualify for NCAA’s in the 200 fly until Tennessee’s last chance meet this past weekend.
  • Texas A&M’s Breeja Larson, who has been a 100/200 breaststroker almost exclusively in her career, is entered in the 50 free and seeded 34th in 22.34. She’s been very good in the 50 this season.

There were no big surprises that we noticed from the defending NCAA Champions at Georgia.

Much more analysis to come, including drawing the expected cut lines on Wednesday.

 

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Josh
10 years ago

Teresa Crippen did this schedule every year with much success. I wonder if they’re resting her on day one to give her the best shot at the NCAA record in the 400 IM.

SwimminIsGood
10 years ago

Perhaps not super significant at this point in time, but Celina Li is listed in 200 Br and not 200 Fly…interesting…

usswimFan
Reply to  SwimminIsGood
10 years ago

I assume based on her breaststroke relay split, she and Teri thought that was the better option…and more potential to move up. I think she would have been ranked 48th in both events, pending if she qualifies to swim 200 BR.

klorn8d
10 years ago

also noticed Kelsi worrell is swimming 200 fly instead of 100 free

SWIMSWIMSWIM
10 years ago

Looks like the 100 back bubble benefited the most this year due to scratches. Nine of the top 50 scratched, moving quite a few people into the meet in this event. The 200 IM and 200 Free each had 6 scratches from the top 50. The 200 breast provided the least bit of help with only one scratch.

Ben
Reply to  SWIMSWIMSWIM
10 years ago

that makes sense though… anyone who is good at butterfly is probably also good at backstroke and freestyle and for that matter IM… but 200 breast is probably the most specialty event… in that there is the least correlation between being good at breaststroke and being good at the other strokes. The best IMers are almost always flyers or backstrokers.. (thinking phelps/lochte)

Peterdavis
Reply to  Ben
10 years ago

Anecdotally, like in the extreme cases of Phelps and Lochte, yes. Traditionally, no. Breaststrokers have the innate advantage of being fastest at the leg that takes the longest. So, if Breastroke takes 10% longer than backstroke, and a swimmer is 10% faster than competition, whereas their competition has the same advantage in backstroke, all else being equal, the breastroker will have a slight advantage = 1% of the total time of the faster backstroke leg. Capiche? Same reason back half swimmers are often the best – they are moving the fastest, relative to their competitors, during the phase of the race that takes the longest.

10 years ago

Interesting…

Pick em Challenge?

G
10 years ago

The “See the lists here” link gives me a pop-up window of a random photo of 3 people.

G
Reply to  G
10 years ago

it’s fixed now, thanks

Chris
10 years ago

Minor edit, it looks like the the link should go to http://www.usaswimming.org/_Rainbow/Documents/3951f824-82cf-4811-bf14-9413464ca870/NCAA%20DI%20Women%20-%20Preselections%20Entry%20List.pdf. It currently goes to a picture of Jack Wagner.

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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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