2015 Men’s Pac-12 Championships: USC tears up day 4 prelims

PAC 12 MEN

200 Back

Stanford’s David Nolan leads a tough 200 backstroke field as he chases his second win of this week’s meet. Nolan won the 200 IM on day 1 and was right in the hunt in the 100 back last night. His 1:40.57 took top billing in the 200 back Saturday morning, but it’s looking more and more like a solid group of guys could go under 1:40 in tonight’s final.

Stanford freshman Patrick Conaton impressed in this race in a time trial earlier this week, and he followed it up with a big point-scoring swim of 1:40.87 to give Stanford the first and second seeds.

Cal took the next two spots, with junior Jacob Pebley (1:40.93) and defending Pac-12 and NCAA champ Ryan Murphy (1:41.07).

A very Cardinal- and Bear-heavy A final also features Stanford senior Drew Cosgarea (1:41.69) and Cal senior Jesse Rickman (1:42.12).

Also into the A final: Arizona’s Thane Maudslien (1:42.18) and Arizona State’s Perry Barkley (1:42.50).

100 Free

After becoming the first Pac-12 man to three-peat in the 200 and 500 frees last night, USC’s Cristian Quintero is back in search of his third individual win of the 2015 postseason. Quintero went 42.61 to top the 100 free prelims, and after his 41.6 split on the 400 medley relay last night, he looks capable of even more in the final.

The field behind him, though, is incredibly bunched up. In fact, there was a three-way tie out of prelims for the second seed, with USC’s Santo Condorelli and Ralf Tribuntsov both equalling Utah’s Nick Soedel at 42.66, just .05 back of Quintero.

Behind them was another tie, this time for 5th between Cal’s Seth Stubblefield and Sam Perry of Stanford at 42.79. USC sophomore captain Reed Malone was one of only two men not in a tie in the top 9 of this event, going 42.97 for 7th.

Behind him was yet another deadlock, this one requiring a swim-off between Stanford’s Tom Stephens and Cal’s Tyler Messerschmidt for the last championship heat spot. Both men were 43.16.

That should add tremendous drama to the end of the prelims session, as the only thing more exciting that swim-offs are swim-offs between two rival teams still fighting for the conference title. In terms of point values, the winner of the swim-off will be guaranteed 11 points with a shot at earning more, while the loser can only earn a maximum of 9, and that’s if he can hold his position in tonight’s B final.

Swim-off results: Messerschmidt took the swim-off win with a 43.03 and will nab lane 8 for the championship heat. Stephens went 43.18, just off the pace, and will lead the B final.

200 Breast

Finally some breakthrough swimming from Steven Stumph! The former national high school record-holder in the 100 breast struggled as a freshman at USC, not hitting lifetime-bests in either breaststroke race. But after swimming to a personal-best in the 100 breast yesterday, Stumph became the top qualifier in the 200 breast with a 1:53.01 that blows out his previous PR by almost three seconds.

Stumph was great going out, turning in 53.99 at the 100-wall with no other swimmer cracking 55. He leads a field that includes huge names like Josh Prenot of Cal (2nd in 1:54.25) and American record-holder Kevin Cordes of Arizona (4th in 1:55.49).

The Trojans got four into the championship final, perhaps giving them the ammunition they need to make a run at Stanford for the team title. Also in the top 8 for Southern Cal: Morten Klarskov (3rd in 1:54.65), Andrew Malone (5th in 1:55.65) and Ridge Altman (7th in 1:55.84).

Arizona State’s french junior Thibaut Capitaine went 1:55.69 for sixth, and Cal’s Chuck Katis earned the final A heat lane with a 1:55.89 for 8th.

200 Fly

USC’s huge day continued with the Trojans third top finisher. Sophomore Michael Domagala led the 200 fly in 1:42.75. That’s a drop of 2.3 seconds on a day where coach Dave Salo‘s crew has been shedding seconds in droves.

Domagala has two Stanford Cardinal and two Cal Golden Bears nipping at his heels in the 1:43s. Stanford’s Gray Umbach is second in 1:43.31, and Tom Kremer sits fourth in 1:43.75.

Meanwhile for Cal, Long Gutierrez is third in 1:43.50 with Adam Hinshaw going 1:53.92 for fifth.

Arizona also put a pair in the the final, with freshman Justin Wright leading the way in 1:44.19 and fellow rookie Rasmus Skjaerpe going 1:44.70. The final championship heat spot went to Arizona State’s Patrick Park at 1:44.77.

 

The day will continue with platform diving prelims, plus the early heats of the 1650 free, before all those events and the 400 free relay compete in tonight’s finals.

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Pac-12 Swim
9 years ago

Does anyone have results of early mile heats?

Joel
9 years ago

Why aren’t the 200 Fly results (prelims) posted?

someone gets it
9 years ago

@calswimfan right on, thank you for that

SamH
9 years ago

I feel like Stanford has changed up their strategy this year, same with USC. Last few years, they have partially rested Nolan and then tried to push it further at NCAAs which is also a tougher schedule to swim. And since Nolan has not been able to push further but simply maintain, which is an accomplishment in its own right, they will take advantage of this ability.

With USC, I think Quintero and Malone are the only ones who will get further along in time drops at NCAAs. But USC has swam extremely well and will no doubt place top 10 at NCAAs and who knows from there.

Cal is swimming well but you can’t help but doubt just… Read more »

iLikePsych
Reply to  SamH
9 years ago

There’s also 50.00 in the 100 breast. And Cordes has won swimmer of the meet the past two years off impressiveness rather than point value of his swims.

calswimfan
9 years ago

I just compared Cal swimmers’ times from last year and this year and almost everyone is either better or where they should be. SC and Stanford decided to step up this year and beat Cal in the conference championship. Pac-12 swimmers don’t get the luxury to rest for their conference meet, train again, and then full rest for NCAA’s because the conference meet is so close to the NCAA’s. But then again, some schools might be able to pull it off. It’s just not Durden’s strategy.

I don’t think people are purposely downplaying the significance of the conference meet. The fact is that the NCAA meet is the bigger meet. And the importance of the conference meet is relative… Read more »

Josh
9 years ago

I scored out the meet based on prelims and 1650 seeding. This could very well come down to the 400 Free relay between USC and Stanford. Pretty awesome. Just too bad there is no live feed. Would love to be able to watch this tonight.

Joe
Reply to  Josh
9 years ago

Note that Nolan can’t swim the 400 free relay tonight. Unless USC DQs, there’s no chance Stanford can get them in that relay.

Flyin'
Reply to  Joe
9 years ago

Welp, it’s over then lol

saeta
9 years ago

has there been an analysis recently that predicts what the cutoff times (general ballpark) will be for ncaas?

Joe
9 years ago

Messerschmidt won the 100 free swimoff in a 43.0, and Burton won the 200 breast going away in 1:56.

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 …

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