2023 NCAA WOMEN’S SWIMMING AND DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS
- March 15-18, 2023
- Allan Jones Aquatic Center–Knoxville, Tennessee
- SCY (25 yards)
- Meet Central
- Psych Sheets
- Live Results
- Live Stream
- SwimSwam Preview Index
- Pick ’em Contest
- Day 1 Finals Live Recap
- Day 2 Prelims Live Recap|Day 2 Finals Recap
- Day 3 Prelims Live Recap
What. A. Race.
The women’s 100 fly event at the 2023 NCAA Championships lived up to every single bit of hype it got, and it concluded in Virginia’s Kate Douglass getting her hand on the wall first in a time of 48.46. She took down her old NCAA, US Open, and American record time of 48.84 by 0.36 seconds, though the race was far from a blowout for the Virginia senior.
Douglass was challenged by Maggie MacNeil from start to finish, as MacNeil was out really fast at the first 25. Douglass then out-touched MacNeil by 0.08 seconds at the 50 mark with a 22.48 opening split compared to MacNeil’s 22.56, but in the closing few yards of the race it seemed like MacNeil was going to take back her lead and win the race. She outsplit Douglass 25.95 to 25.98 on the back half, but Douglass did just enough to beat out MacNeil by a slim margin of 0.05 seconds at the end.
MacNeil’s time of 48.51 was also well under Douglass’s previous NCAA record. She dropped 0.38 seconds from her previous best time of 48.89 from the 2021 NCAA Championships, a mark that had been the NCAA record prior to this season.
In addition, third-place finisher Torri Huske also broke the 49-second barrier, taking a few tenths off her best time of 49.17 to clock a 48.96. She joins Douglass and MacNeil as the only women in history who have been 48-point in the 100 fly.
Douglass, MacNeil, and Huske’s swims from tonight are the first, second, and fifth-fastest in history respectively.
All-Time Top Performances, Women’s 100 Fly
- Kate Douglass, Virginia — 48.46 (2023)
- Maggie MacNeil, LSU – 48.51 (2023)
- Kate Douglass, Virginia — 48.84 (2023)
- Maggie MacNeil, Michigan – 48.89 (2021)
- Torri Huske, Stanford — 48.96 (2023)
As you can see from the splits, Douglass matched her back half from ACCs where she set her previous record, and improved entirely on her front half tonight.
Comparative Splits:
Kate Douglass, 2023 NCAA Championships | Maggie MacNeil, 2023 NCAA Championships | Torri Huske, 2023 NCAA Championships | Kate Douglass, 2023 ACC Championships (previous NCAA record) | |
50y | 22.48 | 22.56 | 22.75 | 22.86 |
100y | 25.98 | 25.95 | 26.21 | 25.98 |
Total | 48.46 | 48.51 | 48.96 | 48.84 |
Race Video:
Props to Douglas and the ladies of Virginia
⭐️🔥⭐️🔥⭐️🔥⭐️🔥⭐️🔥⭐️🔥⭐️🔥
Thanks for posting the videos 🙂
Rowdy’s Revenge: Kate beat Maggie by .06 on the reaction time, and by .05 in the race. The reaction time made all the difference.
In drag racing that is called a hole shot win. Its all about racing. Love it
Exact same back half time for Douglass between this one and ACCs last month. Huske also swam this very similarly to Douglass last year, with a couple hundredths slower on the second 50 but about a tenth faster on the first.
Maggie’s back halves are also similar, with a 25.95 here and 25.90 at SEC. The improvement vs her old NCAA record mostly came from the back half, where she was about 3/10 faster there and 1/10 faster on the front half between 2023 NCAAs and 2021 NCAAs.
Her time at 2023 SECs vs 2021 NCAAs was about 0.4 slower on the front half and 0.3 faster on the back half so it looks like she figured out… Read more »
Well, for what it’s worth I got the final places and “at the touch” right in my pre-race prediction between KD and MM… But they beat the times I guessed out of the water.
I LOVE VERTICAL VIDEOS!!!!
Amazing race. Kate is just unbeatable.