2017 SEC SWIMMING & DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS
- Tuesday, February 14 – Saturday, February 18
- Allan Jones Intercollegiate Aquatic Center, Knoxville, TN (Eastern Time Zone)
- Prelims 10AM / Finals 6PM
- Defending Champion: Florida men (4x), Texas A&M women (results)
- Championship Central
- Psych Sheet
- Day 2 Finals Heat Sheet
- Live results
- Live Video
For the second night in a row, Florida speedster Caeleb Dressel dropped jaws with a sub-18 relay split. Tonight, he swam second for the Gators, and blazed his way to a 17.86. That time ties former USC Trojan Vlad Morozov’s 200 free relay split from the 2013 NCAA championships. Once again, someone in the stands was able to capture the magic moment, and we have it here for you. Florida was swimming in lane five, and Dressel swam the second leg.
As originally reported by Lauren Nedeigh:
MEN’S 200 FREE RELAY
- Florida, 1:15.67
- Auburn, 1:16.03
- Alabama, 1:16.40
Florida’s Caeleb Dressel once again brought the Gators up from behind, but he was even faster than his 17.90 split last night. Dressel clocked a 17.86 on the 2nd leg, helping the Gators win the race in 1:15.67. Jan Switkowski also split sub-19 for the Gators, touching in 18.90 on the 3rd leg. Alabama and Auburn battled closely behind them, with Auburn’s Kyle Darmody (18.79) edging out the Crimson Tide’s Laurent Bams (19.08) on the anchor leg.
The 2nd fastest split of the field came from Missouri’s Michael Chadwick, who put up an 18.64 on the 2nd leg en route to their 1:17.45 for 4th place.
A number of people have been discussing his relay exchange being too slow…
It does seems as though he is being safe, which is actually a very good thing. Because he isn’t pushing the boundaries, 1. His relay split is valid and not a fluke and 2. He is really powerful with his start. If he was pushing the boundary, my guess is that he would end up leaving the block in a much less powerful manner.
There’s nothing wrong with having a safe exchange when you can do it in 17.86!
Welcome to the Twilight zone, where a 1:15.03 gets second to a 1:15.67. 😉
Some of these guys are spending way too much time underwater instead of breaking out on the surface and start turning their arms over.
Tell that to Ryan Hoffer. ?
Underwater kicking is by far the fastest way to move through the water… if you can do it effectively.
Dressel had a really slow RT so as always I’m blown away.
To everyone saying it’s expected of him, can I just say that potential =#= reality. We have seen this happen over and over again even on the big stage. His ability to make his potential and my expectations into a reality every time he swims is what blows me away. Thank you Dressel.
They are in lane 5.
Fixed, thanks.
Looked like a very slow exchange (RT) for Dressel
Am I the only one who is having issues with videos on swimswam not playing?
yes u are