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Cincinnati Marlins Swimmer Breaks 10 & Under NAG Record in 50 Fly [VIDEO]

Cincinnati Marlins swimmer Carson Foster has broken a 16-year old National Age Group Record Tuesday night at a Time Trial on Tuesday night.

With his 50 fly swim of 30.26, he broke the 10 & under boys National Age Group Record that has withstood a slew of impressive attempts – including the great Michael Phelps, who holds the 100 mark for that age group.

The old record belonged to MJ El-Amin in 30.55, set back in 1996. El-Amin would go on to be an Olympic Trials qualifier and be one of the most prolific swimmers in the history of Florida A&M before the varsity program was cut.

The young Marlin is within a second-and-a-half of Phelps’ mark in the 100. He still has at least two big meets, the LSC and Zone Championships, to swim before aging up, so he could still have records to swim.

Foster also paired up with teammates Ian Brann, Aaron Sequeira, and Jacob McDonald to set an Ohio LSC Age Group Record in the 400 medley relay at 5:11.13. If you can imagine, that swim cut nearly 30 seconds off of the 5:40 that was set by the Greater Toledo Aquatic Club in 1984. A 27-year old record going down by roughly 40-meters is stunning.

This meet, though just a mid-week “time trial,” is an officially-sanctioned USA Swimming event; the Marlins hold one every long course and short course season in the famed Keating Natatorium at St. Xavier High School. The Marlins are one of the most storied club programs in the history of American swimming, having produced 23 Olympic medals, 15 World Records, and a stunning 60 National Champions.

Update: a video of the swim has been added above, and his technique looks pretty solid. A wide entry, stays pretty low to the water. A stroke any 10 & under coach would be happy with.

 

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DDias
12 years ago

It s amazing how evolution makes the sport crazy fast.Last week had a champs in Brazil and a guy made 24.71(50 free) and 53.49(100free) in 13-14years-old category.Cesar Cielo was a 25.2 swimmer at 14 and 53 mid in 100 free at 15..

aswimfan
Reply to  DDias
12 years ago

Yolane Kukla was 24.74 and 54.02 when she was 14!
(I think that must be fastest times ever for 14 yo girl)
and she has not been faster since.

She already had great muscle strength because she was a former gymnast.

bobo gigi
Reply to  aswimfan
12 years ago

You are an encyclopedia!

don
12 years ago

This from USA swimming:
The Age Group Development Committee supports the Time and Recognition Committee’s decision to eliminate the 10 & Under category in the National Recognition program. Every reward system is based on values and philosophy; in our recognition program, we want to measure, and we want to reward, those things we consider most important. We want to reinforce those behaviors we consider most beneficial to the swimmers involved. This means we want to encourage well-rounded swimming development across the four strokes, technical development, and aerobic base development among our youngest competitive swimmers. We believe that emphasizing existing USA Swimming and local programs for 10 & Unders best serves the long-term growth of these age group swimmers. … Read more »

WHOKNOWS
12 years ago

Carson has been swimming for six years – tremendous amount of improvement over last year’s times. His 50 free and 50 fly times are about .5 seconds difference… I am sure that his coach has a long term plan for his career!

RetiredOldLady
12 years ago

Look at those dimples! So stinking cute.

bobo gigi
12 years ago

Congrats to him.
Braden, any news of Michael Andrew? I know you follow his career.
And if you want fast times perhaps you must look at the PV long course age group championships of this week with the young Isabella Rongione. I follow her progression for many months. I don’t know if she will be tapered and if she’s still 12 but if yes she could break a few NAG records.

bobo gigi
Reply to  Braden Keith
12 years ago

Thank you for the answer.

WHOKNOWS
Reply to  Braden Keith
12 years ago

Michael went a 1:00.62 in the 100 m fly in June – just before the trials

VA Swim mom
Reply to  bobo gigi
12 years ago

Isabella broke the 11-12 800m NAG record in June and is close in the 400. She is a super strong swimmer and a great kid. She ages up in September. Chances are she will not taper until Super sectionals in Buffalo or J Nats. Plenty left to come.

There are several PV 11-12 & 13-14 girls from PV in the top 10 list. They probably won’t be tapered for seniors or Jo’s but will be ready to romp at super sectionals.

bobo gigi
Reply to  VA Swim mom
12 years ago

Thank you for the news. And yes I correct what I’ve said. She swims this week at the PV long course senior championships. It looks she’s a great freestyler and a very good all-around swimmer. Unlike men the american freestyle on the women’s side looks incredible in the next years with Katie Ledecky, Becca Mann and Isabella Rongione.

Dan Carl
12 years ago

Congratulations to Carson as well as Ian, Aaron and Jacob. Well done Marlins.

PsychoDad
Reply to  Dan Carl
12 years ago

I did not know they kept track of records for 10 & under. They should not! Our LSC does not.
This does not mean anything but he is most likely much bigger than the rest of kids. He has about 25% chance to be good when he is 14-18. 10 & under should be working on technique and competing on small scale, not trying to break records. Totally wrong.

Reply to  PsychoDad
12 years ago

Your LSC is doing a disservice if it truly doesn’t keep records for a category kept at the national level. He’s likely not “trying to break records,” but doing so as he’s having a great time competing at a high level. You have no idea about his technique – typically NAG record holders have great technique at any age. You need to dial it down a thousand.

PsychoDad
Reply to  Eddie Rowe
12 years ago

>He’s likely not “trying to break records…

It was a time trial, so, yes, he was trying to break the record.

Kids of average size and average yardage CANNOT swim that fast no matter how good their technique is.

Phil
Reply to  PsychoDad
12 years ago

Mujahid was the same size as his other competitors when he set that record (and his 11-12 records before they were broken). He had perfect technique, and was one-of-a-kind at the time.

Reply to  PsychoDad
12 years ago

Ohio keeps records the 10 & Under 400 relays because back in the 80’s the pool that was used for JO’s did not have blocks on both ends, so the 10 & Unders did 400 relays. The records are primarily that old because they have been uncontested for 20 years. All of those records were from 1984 until the last 2 years when they were all broken by 20 seconds or more because some more meets in the area started having those events.

Brennus
Reply to  PsychoDad
12 years ago

PysychoDad: He is of average size. You are jumping to too many conclusions about a young swimmer you know nothing about.

PsychoDad
Reply to  Braden Keith
12 years ago

Solid but not “perfect” as some suggested. He does not anchor his arms (it is all about strength for him). His reach is short and he makes up for that with a lot of strokes.

PsychoDad
Reply to  Braden Keith
12 years ago

Here are rules I would love to see in place for 10 & under:

1. Not allowed to swim Long Course.
2. Not allowed to practice in USA Swimming clubs from April 1 until September 1. Go swim in summer league.
3. Cannot practice more than 5 hours a week excluding dryland.
4. To qualify for End of SCY Season Championship and swim ANY event, each swimmer must meet qualifying times in 50 yard events in ALL strokes. Qualifying times are per age.
5. Kids 6 and younger cannot join an USA Swimming club. I see 4 year old swimming LC. What is the point of that?

In current system, all we do is using poor… Read more »

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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