2016 MEN’S NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS
- Wednesday, March 23 – Saturday, March 26
- McAuley Aquatic Center – Atlanta, GA
- Prelims 10AM/Finals 6PM (Eastern Time)
- Defending Champion: Texas (results)
- Championship Central
- Live stream: Wednesday/Thursday prelins & finals, Friday/Saturday prelims / Friday/Saturday finals on ESPN3
- Live Results From Commit Swimming – Live Results from Hy-Tek
Already downing his own records in the 50-yard freestyle, Caeleb Dressel came back on Saturday night to swam the fastest 100-yard free in history with a final time of 40.46. Courtesy of Ben Schmitz and the Florida swimming & diving Twitter account, the race can be seen below.
The podium held the same order as the 50-yard freestyle from Thursday, with NC State’s Simonas Bilis clocking in at 41.18, and Alabama’s Kristian Gkolomeev in 41.52.
Originally reported by Jared Anderson:
100 FREE – FINALS
NCAA Record: 40.76, Vlad Morozov, 2013American Record: 41.07, Caeleb Dressel, 2016U.S. Open Record: 40.76, Vlad Morozov, 2013Pool Record: 41.59, Simonas Bilis, NC State (prelims)- 2015 Champion: 41.56, Kristian Gkolomeev, Alabama
Top 3:
- Caeleb Dressel, Florida – 40.46
- Simonas Bilis, NC State – 41.18
- Kristian Gkolomeev, Alabama – 41.52
Though he was the star of day 1, Florida’s Caeleb Dressel had been a bit overshadowed in yesterday’s all-around record haul. But the Gator sophomore smashed his way back into the limelight in the 100 free, going 40.46 to break his own American record and officially take over the NCAA record and title of fastest all-time in the event from Vlad Morozov.
Dressel’s time takes three tenths out of Morozov’s 2013 record and makes him just the third man ever under 41 in the event. Dressel was out in an insane 19.2 to his feet on a flip turn at the 50-mark.
NC State’s Simonas Bilis also had a huge swim, moving into the top 5 all-time with a 41.18. Currently, the top 5 includes Dressel, Morozov, Cesar Cielo, Nathan Adrian and Bilis.
Alabama’s Kristian Gkolomeev had a slow start to the meet, but has been progressively heating up. He finished his individual slate of events with a 51.52 for bronze – that’s his lifetime-best, and actually faster than what he went in winning this event a year ago.
NC State put two into the top 4, with Ryan Held going 41.77 for fourth. Also under 42: Brett Ringgold of Texas (41.80) and Missouri’s Michael Chadwick (41.98).
The top 4 teams remain stable, though NC State made up a little ground on Florida for 3rd. Gkolomeev powered Alabama up to 5th, jumping over Georgia (2.5 points back) and Tennessee (17 back).
They say ” Cannot swim fast without breath control ” Must breath every 3 , 5 , 15 …
This swim is an example of great technique and oxygen utilization, that does not impede the stroke
Florida was the right choice
He was out like a flash but held on well. Let’s see what he can do in the big pool in the summer.
So so fast. I think he can go 47-mid in this event LC. Maybe even challenge for the gold in Rio if he can get to 47.50 or faster (provided he makes the team).
He is one new key for that 400 free relay to shine for Gold .
the amount he swims over the water rather than under has me very excited for LCM