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The Best December Swimming Weekend…Ever (a Review and Historical Reference)

The weekend of Thursday December 1st, 2011 through Sunday, December 4th was one of the fastest December swimming weekends that we’ve ever seen in the United States. There was so much strong swimming, that it is easy to get bogged down in the mire of how deep the performances when, so let’s take a recap of all that went down, as well as crunch a few numbers for historical perspective. (Swim geeks, make sure you read all the way to the end).

Click the links to read the full stories.

Freshman Phenoms

National Age Group Records

A total of 6 National Age Group records went down this past weekend. In addition to Cordes’ two, mentioned above:

Hosszu, Trojans Tear up Texas

Arizona Awesome in Austin Too (with a nod to Michigan)

Leverenz Rocks Winter Nationals 200 IM

Coughlin Throws-Back to Yards at Georgia Invite
Swede Swims Textile Best in Netherlands
  • At the 2011 Dutch Open, Sweden’s Sarah Sjostrom shocked everyone (including herself) to cut a second off of her lifetime best in the 100 free with a 53.05. That’s the fastest time in the world this year, a Swedish Record, and a new worldwide textile best.
Very Worthy Hall of Fame Inductions
  • Along with all of the swimming at the Texas Hall of Fame Invitational, Eddie Reese and Josh Davis were both inducted into the state of Texas Swimming and Diving Hall of Fame for their exploits with the Longhorns. Can’t think of any two who deserve the honor more.

NCAA “A” Cuts Year-Over-Year

Starting broadly, to this point in the NCAA season, we’ve seen 59 NCAA automatic qualifying times (22 men and 37 women). Through the fall semester in 2010, there were only 36 such cuts (10 men and 26 women), which means an overall 63% cuts before the break.

And it’s not just the top swimmers – NCAA “B” cuts are way up as well.

The question is – why the uptick? I’ve got a few different theories. My first is that this year’s NCAA field is simply stronger than last years. If you look across events, the majority of them were dominated by underclassmen last year, and it’s those cream-of-the-crop swimmers who are responsible for these A-cuts. There are a few exceptions (women’s 100 fly, men’s 200 free), but those events seem to fit the theory, as they have 0 and 1 of the 59 A-cuts, respectively. Many events (men’s backstrokes, for example) didn’t have any seniors in the A-Final at NCAA’s last year.

There may also be an Olympic year effect in play. Swimmers have extra motivation to swim fast in an Olympic year (even though most college swimmers aren’t going to make the Olympic team, especially on the men’s side). For those who are earning A-cuts, the increase is almost enough to wonder if coaches have changed their strategies a bit this season – give a little extra rest now, less rest for NCAA’s, and prepare for Trials or the Olympics. You’d be hard-pressed to get any of them to admit to it, though.

Some of it is specific cases. With Arizona, for example, this meet was a good opportunity for Eric Hansen to set a tone for the rest of the season. With Frank Busch, it was easy for the swimmers to put full trust in him, but any time there’s a new coach, there’s some wariness from kids who committed to the “other guy”. A little extra taper in the fall will go a long way towards earning himself the full confidence of his team.

But ultimately, it wasn’t just so many people that cracked a certain standard. It was how incredibly far those top times were better than last year’s. Off the top of my head, there were 5 times swum in Austin that would have won NCAA’s last year (3 from Hosszu, 1 from Chitwood, 1 from Thompson). There were a ton of school records broken across the country – both at the legendary, huge programs some upstarts, and everywhere inbetween. Several unofficial “winter invite records,” “freshman records,”

What’s Up Next

Though FINA has already handed-out their World Swimmer of the Year honors (to Missy Franklin and Ryan Lochte), there’s still more to come in this action-packed December. Watch out for next weekend’s European Championships in Poland and the Duel in the Pool the weekend after back in Atlanta.

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anonymous
12 years ago

How about indian rivers Brad Tandy 19.70 at Gator Holiday Classic and Caleb Weirs 43.70.

emilyr
12 years ago

ur right bobo… Missys not a pure sprint specialist (right now :-), the backs r her pet races n shes also so good in the 200 distance w/that fantastic finishing speed of hers. n she doesnt even have a 50m pool to train in in her preparations for the olympics!

Missys starts, turns & underwaters (at this point) would also put her at some disadvantage against the top aces in the 100 fr, even if she can make up for some of that w/her amazin skills above water…like what she did to Britta, Daniela, Jeanette & Fran in Berlin, that was fun to watch hehe… cause there wont be much room for error in London, not when ur competing against… Read more »

bobo gigi
12 years ago

I hope, emilyr, Missy Franklin will be focus only on her best events at the next olympic games, 100m and 200m backstroke, and the 3 relays. And I repeat here again and again, the 100m free asks specific training and you must be as fresh as possible in the final against pure specialists. And USA don’t have these great specialists. Your best women in this race are Missy Franklin and Natalie Coughlin. And they don’t train all days for this race, they have other strokes and other distances to work. But I agree with you, Missy has an enormous potential in this race and she’s today the only american girl able to win the 100 free. Perhaps after 2012 she… Read more »

aswimfan
12 years ago

Yes, Magnussen will swim in Queensland meet this weekend, and I think Thorpe is swimming in Italy also, long course, so it will be the first time we really get a glimpse how far he’s been into his training. I predict a 50-51 for Thorpe.

John26
12 years ago

correct me if im wrong but dont Magnussen and Thorpe swim again in the upcoming weekend?

emilyr
12 years ago

wasnt that soo amazin what Sarah S did in Eindhoven, w/o a taper either?! between Missy’s & Sarah’s incredible potential, and if you throw in what we caught a glimpse of in Femke’s sprint ability @ Worlds, London’s going to be v, v. exciting in the 100 fr after a slower than expected finals in Shanghai!!

cant wait also to find out what Natalie can do in the shorter IM after her performances from the Georgia Invite… we may get to see that as soon as the Duel in the Pool, perhaps even in the sprint br as well haha. at least according to what Natalie revealed here:
http://www.usaswimming.org/ViewNewsArticle.aspx?TabId=2216&itemid=3997&mid=11941

DDias
12 years ago

I am looking forward to see what times Sjostrom will do full tapered next week.Oh, days 14-18 will be Brazilian Open, an Olympic trial in Rio de Janeiro.

bobo gigi
12 years ago

Braden you must keep the rythm.

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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