You are working on Staging2

Division II David Lambert Just .01 Behind Joseph Schooling in 50 Free

2017 TEXAS INVITATIONAL

The individual events at the 2017 Texas Hall of Fame Swimming Invitational began on Thursday morning, and USA Swimming National Team members dominated the racing.

Clark Smith, a Texas post-grad, had the top morning swim in the 500 free at 4:14.40. His undergraduate training partner Townley Haas sits 2nd in 4:15.65 and Liam Egan of Stanford is 3rd in 4:15.95. Smith and Haas finished 1-2 at last year’s NCAA Championship meet at this event. Grant Shoults of Stanford, who was 4th at NCAAs last year, also made the A final with a morning 4:16.66.

In the next event, the men’s 200 IM, Abrahm DeVine qualified 1st in the men’s 200 IM with a 1:43.08. He drove out hard, and was half-a-second better than the field on the front-half. Texas’ Sam Stewart, the best breaststroker in the field, qualified 3rd in 1;45.09, with Arizona’s Nick Thorne in between at 1:44.34. Other notables include Arizona State freshman Grant House, better known as a freestyler, qualifying 7th in 1:46.09.

Then in the men’s 50 free prelims, Joseph Schooling qualified 1st in 19.33. This was Schooling’s 3rd event at NCAAs last year and he finished 3rd. The big attention-grabber, though, was Oklahoma Baptist swimmer David Lambert qualifying 2nd in 19.34.  That’s an NCAA “A” cut time, the fastest time nationally in D2 this season by half-a-second. The only swimmer faster than that in the history of Division II swimming is Lindenwood’s Serghei Golban, who split 19.18 on a relay leadoff at the 2016 NCAA Championship meet.

The women’s events started with another National Team member Leah Smith qualifying 1st in the 500 free. She swam 4:38.30, which cleared the field by almost two seconds. Joanna Evans and Evie Pfeifer from Texas were the top collegians in matching 4:40.0s.

Texas-ex Madisyn Cox led the way in the women’s 200 IM in 1;54.61. Wisconsin’s Beata Nelson, the team’s new star after Cierra Runge decided to transfer, qualified 2nd (and as top collegian) in 1:55.16.

Texas took the top 2 spots in the women’s 50 free- Rebecca Millard in 22.32 and Claire Adams in 22.42 – which are both season bests. Millard was the 10th-fastest NCAA-wide in the 50 free last season.

In This Story

22
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

22 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Joe
6 years ago

Are those splits right for Texas? Katz with a 45 back and Shebat with a 46?

ems
Reply to  Joe
6 years ago

Texas B relay beat their A relay to win the 400medley!

Buona
Reply to  ems
6 years ago

Texas A team was disqualified. Ringgold took off early.

ems
Reply to  Buona
6 years ago

Yes I know, but they would have beat the A team regardless.

Buona
Reply to  ems
6 years ago

Yes surprising.. Schooling splits 53.37 for fly? Strange

Reply to  Buona
6 years ago

The 53.37 was Temple’s breast split. Schooling split a 45.50 on fly, then they were DQed for an early takeoff on the free leg.

Buona
Reply to  Lauren Neidigh
6 years ago

Oops. See the psych sheet wrongly. Thanks for clarifying.

enchantedrock
Reply to  Buona
6 years ago

he split 45.5

enchantedrock
Reply to  Joe
6 years ago

They are correct. Amazing swim for the freshman. I know the Cal recruiting class is being hyped, and rightfully so, but Katz, Pomajevich, Larsen, and Neri (his stroke is amazing) are really special. Eddie knows how to pick em.

ATXswimfan
Reply to  Joe
6 years ago

Don’t look now, but this is shaping up as the Katz, Pomajevich, and Neri show. Katz went faster than Shebat’s freshman best in the 100bk and looks like a relay option if Shebat’s 100bk is off in March. Pomajevich’s 200 free split bodes well for a big 200 fly. And Neri goes from 4:23 to 4:16 in the 500. A big personal best from Larson in the 200 leading off the relay last night as well.

Oh, and Casey Melzer dipped into the mid-52s on his medley relay breaststroke leg…not exactly Licon, but good enough to keep Texas in contention if the other 3 legs perform near their bests.

crooked donald
6 years ago

Pretty bad for a “legend” when a DII guys intimidates you so much you get 5th in your own invite after winning the prelims.

ems
6 years ago

Don’t know what happened to Schooling, dropped to 5th with 19.50, but Lambert just dropped a 19.17

Buona
Reply to  ems
6 years ago

Maybe conserving energy for relays and other events? He splits 18.99 in 200 freestyle relay.

Swimnerd
6 years ago

Sam freas alive and well at OBU

Murica
6 years ago

Looks like Leah Smith followed Augie after all. She’s listed as un-az

Chester A. Dudzinski Esq.
Reply to  Murica
6 years ago

I believe Cory Chitwood coached her at UVA, was her coach at the Olympics and remains her coach but I Could be wrong.

Distance Swimmer
6 years ago

How is Lambert still eligible? He was swimming for St. Andrews from 2013-15. Still a beastly time, OK Baptist shredded the NAIA not too long ago, not much surprise from that program.

FLSwimmer
Reply to  Distance Swimmer
6 years ago

He took a year off collegiate swimming to train for Olympic Trials with Donald Gibb, head coach at NTC Aquatics.

Distance Swimmer
Reply to  FLSwimmer
6 years ago

still puzzled by that, NTC is such a weak team

HTTR
Reply to  Distance Swimmer
6 years ago

Why puzzled?
Don Gibb was an SEC 50 Freestyle champ and NCAA All-American and a fine sprinting coach.

Sprinterator
Reply to  Distance Swimmer
6 years ago

Is Freas still head coach there? (If so, that’ll be why he’s going so quick)

HTTR
Reply to  Distance Swimmer
6 years ago

Lambert did swim for St Andrews during the 2013-14 and 2014-15 seasons.
However, he was not active in collegiate swimming the last two seasons.
Consequently, he legitimately has this one last year of eligibility remaining.

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, …

Read More »