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The Complete Database of Sub-19s At 2017 Men’s DI NCAAs

2017 MEN’S NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS

It’s been a banner year for sprinters – as of Thursday evening, 30 different men have broken 19 seconds, accounting for 51 different sub-19 swims at the men’s Division I NCAA Championships alone.

Update: 17 more swimmers cracked 19 in prelims of the 200 medley relay Friday morning. That included 8 new faces, bringing the total numbers to 38 men and 68 swims with tonight’s final yet to come.

You can check out that entire crowd of 18-second men here, organized in a spreadsheet. You can view by event, name, team and type of start (relay or flat), complete with some totaled numbers at the top.

Certainly that number is expected to grow after today’s 200 medley relay, which should feature another slew of 18-second (or faster) anchor legs. We’ll continue to update this spreadsheet when we get a chance, though this year’s crop of NCAA and American records plus top-10 historic swims has kept us plenty busy. Stay tuned to this page and SwimSwam.com for more coverage of this year’s incredible sub-19 club.

From last night’s “5 Big Things” story:

2. THE 18 CLUB EXPANDING RAPIDLY

Today’s meet featured a clown car full of swimmers hitting 18-second 50 freestyles, whether from flat starts or relay starts. Once a hallowed barrier, the 19.0 bar fell 25 times in prelims – 19 in the 200 free relay and 6 in the individual 50 free. Then at night, the 200 free relay featured 20 splits of 18.99 or better, plus 6 more individual swims.

Of course, many of those swims were done by the same swimmer, like Florida’s Caeleb Dresselwho cracked 19.0 four times by himself today: 17.99 on the relay in prelims, 18.38 individually in prelims, 18.23 leading off the relay in finals and 18.23 again in his individual final.

By our count, 30 different men broke 19 at some point today, together accounting for 51 different sub-19 swims.

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The real march madness
7 years ago

The 18.98 from Sam Perry was actually from Andrew Liang. Perry’s been an 18.7 at least 🙂

Dan
7 years ago

50yd Free, 1 Sr in A-Final, 1 Sr in B-Final.
Take that and the Freshmen like Hoffer, and it might take 18+ for A-Final and 19.0+ for B-Final next year

jim
7 years ago

With a relay exchange of .00, Dressel could possibly go 17.54. How crazy is that. You could be in the lead by 1.0 seconds of this medley relay, and have an anchor of 18.55 and lose.

This reminds me of the one relay from the Women’s 2016 400 medley relay, where I forget who, Virginia or Tennessee were ahead by 2 seconds going into freestyle leg, and had a 47.7 split, and lost (Simone Manuel split like 45.5). Amazing how much faster swimming is getting.

“At some point there will be a plateau of human ability, but it is not this day!” – Eddie ‘Aragorn’ Reece

Bill Bell
7 years ago

Ringgold’s flat start pr is 18.96 to win consols (19.11p)
If he went 18.93 must have been leading off relay (finals results not posted) but your list has him leading off in 19.96. And 18.96 it is per results on swiminfo.com. And Tate Jackson led off for Texas in 200 FR prelims so…close but no cigar.
For the record: I have 129 performances by 115 performers 19.96 or faster, And Dressel now has all Top 10 50 free performances. Only swimmer of either sex in D1 to hold this record.

drewbrewsbeer
7 years ago

It’ll be cool to see Schooling make it on the list in the fly.

Why no love for the Bayou??
7 years ago

Also, completely missed was Thibodeaux (Teddy) Boudreaux Delacroix Chambleaux III. Back in the early days of swamp swimming, he was the LeBron Phelps married to a Giselle Munn of his day and his talent was as unknown (for the time) as Polio in a President. Based on local folklore from crawdad carvings in magnolia trees, ol’ Teddy BDC3, was a legend. He was clocked at a time in an approximate time of 5.5 chickens, which at the time converted to about 17.28 seconds, and this was a time period when most guys were taking double digit chickens to finish their race. For context: one chicken is the amount of time it takes for one gator to eat one chicken, and… Read more »

completelyconquered
Reply to  Why no love for the Bayou??
7 years ago

This needs to read in Ed Orgeron’s voice.

Jhony bravo
7 years ago

Where is Hoffer??

Dan
Reply to  Jhony bravo
7 years ago

Is he still in HS? Swam Winter Jr Nat in Dec 2016. Don’t think there are to many college 18&U swimming Winter Jr Nat as they normally have a winter invite around that same time.

Cmon
Reply to  Jhony bravo
7 years ago

Cal will have 18.7, 18.9, 19.1, 19.1 flat start times heading into next year with hoffer, sendwyk, Jensen, lynch. 1 freshman 2 sophomores

Person
Reply to  Jhony bravo
7 years ago

Hoffer is in his senior year of high school, sure he’ll join that list next year.

Dan
7 years ago

How many have gone under 19 this year and in total? Does anyone know.
Had a friend who went 18.9 on a relay 14 years ago at a small conference meet (not one of the big conference meets, ACC, SEC, PAC10, BIG10 or BIG12), unfortunately the relay was disqualified and that time is probably lost. I know that time would not count but 18.9 relay split 14 years ago was pretty good

Same here
Reply to  Dan
7 years ago

My grandpa went a 18.43 as the anchor of a small retirement home teams 200 Medley Relay. She was old and dove in after the back leg, so she kind of false started by about 3 minutes, but that might explain why her time wont show up in the record books, even though she did technically finish 18.43 seconds after the fly leg finished….They got DQ’d as well.

Of note: Mel Stewart was the flyer in that relay

Dan
Reply to  Same here
7 years ago

It was on an FAU relay at their conference meet, Pavel Babaev, the results might still be online.
His (sprint) coach is now the current FSU head coach, Neal Studd.

jim
Reply to  Dan
7 years ago

I know in early 2000’s, one of my teammates split like 18.7. So, if you go back that far, yeah, there are many more.

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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