2022 PAC 12 WOMEN’S SWIMMING & DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS
- Wednesday, February 23-Saturday, February 26, 2022
- Weyerhaeuser King County Aquatic Center, Federal Way, Washington
- Defending champions: Cal (1x)
- Start Times: 10:30am prelims / 6:00 pm finals (PT)
- Event Schedule
- 2021 Scoring Breakdown
- How to Watch
- Championship Central
- Psych Sheets
- Live Results
- Thursday Finals Heat Sheets
WOMEN’S 200 IM
- NCAA Record: 1:50.67 – Ella Eastin, Stanford (2018)
- Pac-12 Record: 1:50.67 – Ella Eastin, Stanford (2018)
- Pac-12 Championships Record: 1:52.26 – Katinka Hosszu, USC (2012)
- NCAA A Cut: 1:53.66
- NCAA B Cut: 1:59.94
Top 3:
- Torri Huske (Stanford) – 1:52.42
- Izzy Ivey (Cal) – 1:53.54
- Brooke Forde (Stanford) – 1:54.23
Stanford freshman Torri Huske won her first individual Pac-12 title tonight in Federal Way, taking the 200 IM in a decisive victory over Cal’s Izzy Ivey. Huske, a Tokyo 2020 U.S. Olympian, chipped 0.40 seconds off her personal best with the swim, and remains the #3 swimmer in the NCAA this season with the performance. She stands behind only UVA’s Kate Douglass (1:52.21) and Alex Walsh (1:52.38) this season. Coincidentally, Douglass and Walsh were the duo that represented the U.S. in the LCM 200 IM in Tokyo this past summer, where Walsh won Silver and Douglass Bronze.
Huske is now also the 4th-fastest freshman of all-time in the 200 IM, behind only Douglass, Walsh, and former Stanford Cardinal Ella Eastin. Douglass is the fastest freshman all-time in the event, having swum a 1:51.36 during her first year with Virginia. Last year, Walsh swam a 1:51.53 as a freshman, and Ella Eastin clocked a 1:51.65 as freshman back in 2016.
Huske, whose best stroke is butterfly, takes the race out as fast as anyone we’ve seen. The difference between her and the 3 girls she’s behind on the all-time freshman performers list is that all 3 are faster on breaststroke, and a little faster on freestyle in their IMs. If Huske is going to challenge Walsh for the NCAA title next month, she’s going to do it through improving the back half of her race.
Can we agree to not refer to college women as “girls” in the text of an article, at least?
They refer to themselves as girls in interviews
If they want to refer to themselves and their peers as “girls,” that’s fine and completely not the same thing. In comments, the women are referred to as “girls” way more often than the men are referred to as “boys,” and it’s not just in this site.
Thanks for saying that.
Take a pill
Why is this your takeaway from this article?
My other takeaway is that Torri Huske is awesome, but I did already know that.
Video??