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Alabama Commit Emilio Perez Downs 2003 100 Fly Wisconsin HS State Record

2021 WIAA Boys Division 1 State Meet

Team Scores (Top 10)

  1. Sun Prairie – 232.5 Points
  2. Greenfield Co-op – 211 Points
  3. Arrowhead – 192 Points
  4. Waukesha North Co-op – 139 Points
  5. Brookfield Central/East – 135 Points
  6. Hudson – 132 Points
  7. Verona Area/Mount Horeb – 112 Points
  8. Sheboygan North – 108 Points
  9. Muskego – 105 Points
  10. Middleton – 92 Points

The Wisconsin Boys Division 1 High School State Championships ran earlier this week at Waukesha South High School. The Division 1 meet is for the state’s larger high schools, compared to Division 2 for the smaller schools which went down 2 days later on February 8th.

The Sun Prairie boys came back from last year’s 3rd place finish to claim the victory, scoring 232.5 points to Greenfield’s 211 for second and Arrowhead’s 192 for third.

Emilio Perez came out on top in both the 50 freestyle and 100 butterfly. Along with the wins, the Greenfield senior downed the Wisconsin high school state records in both of the events.

In the 50, Perez’s winning swim of 19.81 made him the first high school swimmer from the state to go sub-20 in the event. He took the record from Ben Wiegand who set the previous record at last year’s meet with a 20.16. Now the former record holder, Wiegand was actually also in the 50 freestyle final, swimming a 19.92 for a best time. Sheboygan North junior William Hayon came in at third, hitting a 20.19.

Both Perez and Wiegand are seniors this year and will make the move to the NCAA next season. Perez originally committed to swim at Arizona State but has since changed his commitment to the University of Alabama according to his Instagram bio. Wiegand on the other hand will stay in his home state and is set to swim at the University of Wisconsin.

Perez’s second state record came in the form of a 47.27 100 butterfly, downing Kyle Bubolz‘s long-standing mark of 47.71 from February of 2003. Bubolz was an accomplished high school swimmer before beginning his successful collegiate career at Northwestern. Bubolz earned a number of accolades at as a Wildcat, including 19 All-American honours, 12 Big Ten Championships, and a national titles. Bubolz, Mike Alexandrov, Bruno Barbic, and Matt Grevers were a part of the somewhat legendary 400 medley relay at the 2007 NCAA Championships. The team broke the NCAA record en route to victory in the event and earned Bubolz, Alexandrov, and Barbic a spot in the NW Athletics Hall of Fame in 2014 (Grevers had already been inducted).

Perez’s swim knocked a decent amount of time off his PB of 48.78 from last year. 50 freestyle bronze medalist William Hayon came in behind Perez with a 47.56 and Oscar Best rounded out the top 3 with a 49.89.

While Hayon didn’t pick up any individual wins and didn’t race the 100 freestyle, he threw down the fastest split in the field on the 400 medley relay. Anchoring for Sheboygan North, Hayon hit a 42.76 split which was the only swimmer to crack 41 with the next fastest being JP Anhalt’s anchor split of 44.01 for Sun Praire.

Another double winner at the meet was Perez’s teammate Jackson Lustig who won the 200 IM and the 500 freestyle. In the former, Lustig clocked a 1:50.63 which was nearly 3 seconds ahead of second-place finisher Devin Testin (1:53.25) and third-place finisher Lance Johnson (1:53.29). That swim for Lustig was the fastest he’s even been, improving upon his previous best of 1:53.82 from November 2020.

In the 500 free Lustig swam a 4:30.22 for the win, also notching a new best time, taking a second off his 4:31.71 from last month. Andrew Hanson (4:37.14) and Alex Foti (4:40.90) joined Lustig on the podium in second and third, respectively.

Despite Perez and Lustig’s double wins, Greenfield was not able to hold off Sun Prarie for the win. Ben Wiegand was actually the only individual winner from Sun Prairie at the meet, taking the victory in the 100 freestyle with a 44.08.

Sun Prairie did however win the 200 freestyle relay as Ethan Braatz (21.11), Avery Lodahl (21.11), JP Anhalt (21.11), and Ben Wiegand (19.36) swam a 1:22.69 to down Middleton’s state record of 1:23.12 from 2019.

Other winners at the meet included Nick Chirafisi in the 200 free (1:39.83), Michael Long in the 100 back (49.89), and Owen Miller in the 100 breast (55.97).

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skiski
3 years ago

He’s a Bama commit now.

JCO
3 years ago

His Instagram has “Alabama Swim and Dive ‘25”

Phil McDade
3 years ago

Shout out to Waukesha North — Bubolz’ alma mater — and head coach Kyle Bedalov for the program’s first-ever state-title relay win in the 200 medley courtesy of Andrew Herman, Tyler Hartmann, Drew Millette and Cory Michalek. The relay registered the 3rd-fastest time in Div. 1 state history. The team also finished a program-best 4th in the team title chase.

It should also be noted that Bedalov — in his role as state swim coaches association (WISCA) president — and longtime Waukesha South/Catholic Memorial head coach Blaine Carlson (the state meet was moved to the Waukesha South pool after longtime host county Dane County issued a Covid-19-related ban on swim meets) — were instrumental in advocating for, and helping to… Read more »

Anonymous
Reply to  Phil McDade
3 years ago

Greenfield would of got the state record in the 200 Medley Relay if they had Leo Gandaria on instead of freshman Liem Funk. Just saying the freshamn 22.7 would of been replaced with Senior Leo’s 20.6

skiski
Reply to  Anonymous
3 years ago

That record will stay for a while. Kind of hard to beat a relay with a 21.00 fly split.

skiski
Reply to  Anonymous
3 years ago

And anyway why even deal with hypothetical times? Madison West could have been 1:29 in 2019 if they had Jekel on the back and Bensch on the fly.

Poopsie
3 years ago

Will Hayon was 42.7 anchoring the 400 free relay which is uh, pretty quick for a junior

PFA
Reply to  Poopsie
3 years ago

Very impressive right around where Adam Chaney was his jr year but that doesn’t really mean anything to compare the two.

swimmer
Reply to  Poopsie
3 years ago

Also a 19.5 relay split too

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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