2014 Mesa Grand Prix Preview: Links, schedule and storylines to watch

2014 Mesa Grand Prix

Event Schedule

Thursday:

  • 100 free
  • 200 breast
  • 400 free
  • 100 fly
  • 400 free relay

Friday:

  • 400 IM
  • 200 free
  • 200 back
  • 50 free
  • 800 free relay

Saturday:

  • 200 fly
  • 100 breast
  • 100 back
  • 200 IM
  • 800 free (women only)
  • 1500 free (men only)
  • 400 medley relay

5 Storylines to Watch

1. That comeback you might have heard about:ย We won’t belabor the point. You’ve probably heard plenty already about the winningest Olympian of all time making his comeback from retirement in the desert this week.ย Michael Phelpsย will make his debut as a part of the new-and-improved NBAC professional squad ย in Mesa, focusing on sprints (50 free, 100 free, 100 fly). This week will be a chance for fans – and Phelps himself – to gauge exactly where he’s at after nearly two years away from competition.

2. How about those loaded backstrokes?ย Mesa will be a fast meet all around, but there might not be a stroke with as much intrigue as the men’s backstrokes. Take a look at this all-star lineup in the 100: Olympic gold medalistย Matt Grevers.ย World Champs silver medalistย David Plummer.ย Swimming iconย Ryan Lochte,ย on the comeback trail after his 2013 knee injury. Former Russian Olympianย Arkady Vyatchanin,ย who’s been a staple on the Grand Prix circuit this season. NCAA breakout starย Ryan Murphy,ย along with his training partnerย Jacob Pebley.ย Stanford proย Eugene Godsoe.ย Add in Olympic gold medalistย Tyler Claryย in the 200 (where Murphy might be at his most dangerous) and you’ve got a who’s-who of elite backstrokers who should make this race a showstopper. Even prelims will be exciting – just looking at numbers, there will be some big names missing out on the A final.

3. Theย otherย comeback story:ย Lost in the Michael Phelps hoopla is the fact that his former NBAC teammate and Olympic medalistย Katie Hoffย is making theย first big-stage swim of her comeback. Once one of America’s most promising young swimmers (an Olympian at 15 and a three-time medalist at 19), Hoff had a disappointing run in the years following the Beijing Olympicsย and took much of 2013 off to focus on her studies. But Hoff has been quietly back in the water, posting some impressive times in local Florida meets. The Hoff comeback is one of the more underrated stories in the swimming world right now: she’s still just 24 years old with outstanding versatility. She’ll swim the 100 free, 100 fly, 200 free, 100 breast and 200 IM in Mesa. Oh, and she’ll likely be sporting that engagement ring she got while throwing out the ceremonial first pitch at the Tampa Bay Rays game on Sunday as well.

4. Grand Prix points race heats up:ย The Grand Prix circuit is giving away $150,000 in total prize money over the course of its 6 stops, with the top three finishers in each event earning prize money. First place nets $500, second $300 and third $100 – but those amounts also correspond to Grand Prix points, with first earning 5 points, second 3 and third 1. The top point-earners at the end of the series win a 1-year lease of a BMW, a pretty cool prize for a sport where earnings are still sparse.

Right now the men’s standings are deadlocked, with NBAC teammatesย Conor Dwyerย andย Yannick Agnelย each holding at 27 points. Agnel isn’t eligible for the car prize (only U.S. swimmers can win the lease), but there’s certainly some friendly competition between the two for the Grand Prix title. Each will swim 6 events in Mesa. For the women,ย Megan Romanoย leads, butย Caitlin Leverenzย is just 2.5 points back. Second-placeย Katinka Hosszuย won’t be competing, as she’s in Brazil at the Maria Lenk Trophy this weekend.

5. Master’s World Records on high alert:ย This year’s Mesa Grand Prix is dual sanctioned by USA Swimming and U.S. Masters Swimming, meaning registered Masters members are eligible to set Masters World Records at the meet. Hunting those records will be such names asย Nathan Adrian, Anthony Ervinย andย Darian Townsend.ย All three are entered at the U.S. Master’s National Championships in early May, so should be Masters eligible for Mesa.

Just a few of the records that could be in jeopardy:

  • Adrian: 50 free age 25-29, 22.59
  • Ervin: 50 free age 30-34, 22.13
  • Townsend: 200 free age 30-34, 1:53.15*

*Note – Townsend is still 29 years old, but per FINA rules, a Masters swimmer’s age is officially determined by his/her age on December 31st of the year of competition. Townsend turns 30 in August, meaning he’s eligible to break 30-34 records at this time.

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liquid4TheGOAT
10 years ago

I think I did say it right, except technically speaking, the Daylight Savings Time is from March to November for agriculture to take advantage of the “warmer” months for growing, not November to March.

bobo gigi
10 years ago

I’ve just remarked you wrote the finals are at 5 PM Pacific Time.
I believe that Mesa was in Mountain Standard Time.
Hopefully I will understand something before the meet starts. :mrgreen:

bobo gigi
Reply to  bobo gigi
10 years ago

I believed.
Ok. If I recap, the meets starts at 5 PM PT.
Mesa is in MST but has the time of PT.
Why? I don’t know but it’s like that.

liquid4TheGOAT
Reply to  bobo gigi
10 years ago

Bobo, Mesa is in Arizona which is an outlier, because I believe they don’t have Daylight Savings Time from early November to early March like most of the other states. Therefore the effect is that AZ is ion the same time as the other MST states during those winter months for 4 months, and for the rest of the year they are on the same time as the PST states. I hope I’m saying that right!! It’s confusing.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
10 years ago

The biggest loaded field on backstroke i have ever seen in a Grand Prix !! and we all know Usa has been pretty dominant on backstroke events these past years … that will be exciting . Same for 100 free , both very exciting races and happy to see LC pools again .

liquid4Katie
10 years ago

Or am I misinterpreting the rules?

bobo gigi
Reply to  liquid4Katie
10 years ago

Are you the same Liquid every time? ๐Ÿ˜†

liquidpropstoBobo
Reply to  bobo gigi
10 years ago

lol yeah I was getting bored with liquidassets every time after so many years, so I’m mixing it up a bit these days. Especially after some funny wiseguy on here who disagreed with me on something posted a reply to me using “liquidass” awhile back. ๐Ÿ˜‰ I will only use that myself if I make a real liquidass of myself, hopefully I won’t have to use it much.

I know you haven’t show much interest in US Masters swimming, but since nobody else is biting, do you have any casual opinion on the issue I raised above re: combining USMS/USS sanctioned meets?

bobo gigi
Reply to  liquidpropstoBobo
10 years ago

Sorry but I don’t know anything about Masters swimming.

liquid4Katie
10 years ago

I think we’re all rooting for Katie Hoff! Everyone loves a good comeback and redemption story, especially from a sweetheart like Katie. We know she’s got more in the tank.

Dwyer vs. Agnel is fun too, for Grand Prix points, it helps that they’re both training together and with Phelps. They should let foreigners qualify for the car, too.

100 back will be sick!! Only 2 of those swimmers have to be approaching A game and each other to make it exciting, but it will likely be more than 2.

Is anyone else besides me bothered that the meet is dual USMS and USS sanctioned? I have been an outspoken champion in support of the elite swimmers… Read more ยป

Bill
10 years ago
Pvdh
10 years ago

At this point, adrian is the runaway favorite for the 100 free. He always kills everyone on the Grand Prix circuit.

floppy
10 years ago

Sadly, dana vollmer is not a storyline. Is she planning to come back? Just taking this year off? Unofficially retired?

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending โ€ฆ

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