2016 NCSA Spring Junior National Champs: Day 4 Finals Live Recap

2016 NCSA SPRING JUNIOR NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS

  • March 15th-19th, 2016
  • Short Course Yards Prelims/Long Course Meters Finals
  • Prelims 8:30 AM Eastern Time/Finals 6:00PM Eastern Time (Except Tuesday, where they’re 4:00PM)
  • Orlando YMCA // Orlando, Florida
  • Live Stream
  • Psych Sheets
  • Championship Central
  • Live Results via MeetMobile: “2016 NCSA Spring Championship”

**Tonight’s finals will be contested in long course after this morning’s SCY prelims session**

Tonight Metro Atlanta’s Harvard commit Dean Farris will be a name to watch, with first seeds in both the boys’ 100 back and the boys’ 100 free and a fourth seed in the 100 fly. However, with Reece Whitley in the field leading off the 200 breast, it’s always good to keep an eye on that National Age Group record, a 2:11.30 set by the Penn Charter swimmer himself. Whitley came within a second of his yards NAG this morning. Camden Murphy is the top seed in the boys’ 100 fly, after being the only swimmer to make it in under 47 in SCY this morning, with 46.96.

On the girls’ side, youngest female ever under 59 in the 100y breast Margaret Aroesty will take on Virginia commit Madeleine Vonderhaar in the long course 200 breast. The duo came in within .02 seconds of each other this morning. Lucie Nordmann and Paige Madden have a top seed apiece, each boasting a big lead over the competition this morning in the 100 back and 500 free (which will be the 400 tonight). Meanwhile, Duke commit Kylie Jordan will lead the field in the 100 fly.

Girls’ 100 Meter Back

  1. Lucie Nordmann, Magnolia: 1:01.18
  2. Autumn Haebig, Ozaukee: 1:01.71
  3. Alexandra Sumner, Suburban Seahawks: 1:03.16

Fifteen-year-old Lucie Nordmann of Magnolia scored a big win in the girls’ 100 back, swimming the event in 1:01.18. That time is faster than Nordmann’s best by nearly two seconds. With tonight’s swim, Nordmann moves from 72nd on the All-Time Top 100 List for 15-16 (1:02.88) to 11th.

Second seed Autumn Haebig held with her place going into the event, finishing second in 1:01.71. The duo were the only two swimmers under 1:02 or 1:03.

Third place went to Alexandra Sumner of the Suburban Seahawks, another fifteen-year-old, in 1:03.16. Nation’s Capital’s Carrie Boone was close behind with 1:03.19.

Erin Earley and Eireni Moshos hit one right after another in 1:03.80 and 1:03.81, followed by Hannah Lindsey in 1:04.02 and Caroline Famous in 1:04.52.

Boys’ 100 Meter Back

  1. Dean Farris, Metro Atlanta: 56.43
  2. Tyler Sesvold, St. Charles: 56.92
  3. Dylan Curtis, Dayton: 57.01

Dean Farris scored his first of the weekend, after taking second in the 200 back, tonight in the 100. He finished nearly a second ahead of the field with 56.43.

St. Charles’s Tyler Sesvold made a huge jump after just edging his way into the ‘A’ final with eighth place this morning, swimming 56.92 for the silver medal. Dylan Curtis followed close behind in 57.01.

Frederick Schubert grabbed fourth in 57.29, George Wozencraft took fifth in 57.83, Ethan Young finished sixth in 58.00, Sam Cuthbert took seventh in 58.35, and eighth went to Luke Sobolewski in 59.41.

Jase Ashkin of Rockville Montgomery swam a quick 57.33 to win the ‘B’ final

Girls’ 400 Meter Free

  1. Paige Madden, City of Mobile: 4:12.46
  2. Joy Field, Magnolia: 4:16.49
  3. Morgan Tankersly, Greater Tampa: 4:16.52

Paige Madden of the City of Mobile Swim Association scored a big win in the girls’ 400 meter free, swimming the event in 4:12.46. She came in four seconds ahead of the field (and the Field), as Magnolia’s Joy Field made a huge move from her eighth-place seed to win the silver medal in 4:16.52.

Greater Tampa’s Morgan Tankersly finished third in 4:16.52, followed by Stanford commit and 200 champion Katie Drabot of Ozaukee in 4:16.53.

Isabella Rongione and Megan Byrnes of Nation’s Capital finished 5th and 7th with 4:18.29 and 4:19.90, and Lindsay Stone of Pack came in between them with 4:18.92 for sixth.

Genevieve Pfeifer rounded out the ‘A’ final with 4:21.48.

Boys’ 100 Meter Free

  1. Dean Farris, Metro Atlanta: 50.59
  2. Daniel Krueger, McFarland Spartans: 51.12
  3. Justin Rich, Poseidon: 51.30

Dean Farris scored his second event title of the weekend in the 100 free with a 50.59, almost half a second up from second-place Daniel Krueger of the McFarland Spartans, who finished in 51.12. Krueger, a 16-year-old, currently holds the #2 spot in the all-time rankings for his age group with a 50.01 from 2015.

Justin Rich of Poseidon moved up from his seventh seed to take the bronze in 51.30. David Madej took fourth in 51.40, followed by James Murphy in 51.53, Thomas Cope in 51.79, Samuel Pomajevich in 51.80, and Aaron Schultz in 52.06.

Girls’ 200 Meter Breast

  1. Margaret Aroesty, Long Island: 2:30.35
  2. Kate Douglass, Westchester: 2:30.40
  3. Halle Morris, North Bay: 2:33.39

The girls’ 200 breast was a battle between 16-year-old Margaret Aroesty of Long Island and 14-year-old Kate Douglass of Westchester. Aroesty swam a stellar first half, splitting 1:12.16 to Douglass’s 1:13.94. Douglass picked it up in the second half, going 1:16.46 to Aroesty’s 1:18.19, but it wasn’t quite enough. Aroesty took the win by .05 seconds, swimming 2:30.25 to Douglass’s 2:30.40.

Tonight’s swim marked personal best time for both girls. Aroesty dropped .25 seconds, moving from 20th in the All-Time Top 100 list for 15-16 year-olds to tie for 17th with Sarah Henry. Douglass dropped .60 seconds, but held her 10th-place spot.

Third place went to Halle Morris of North Bay, three seconds back in 2:33.39. Madeleine Vonderhaar, who came in as the second seed, came up fourth in 2:33.46.

Halladay Kinsey (2:34.78), Alexis Yager (2:35.21), Kristina Murphy (2:36.66), and Jaclyn Hill (2:40.90) rounded out the ‘A’ final.

Boys’ 200 Meter Breast

  1. Reece Whitley, Penn Charter: 2:14.97
  2. Jacob Montague, Grosse Pointe: 2:15.10
  3. Daniel Chang, Barracuda: 2:17.93

Penn Charter’s Sports Illustrated ‘Sportskid of the Year’ Reece Whitley battled it out with Michigan commit Jacob Montague for the 200 breast title. Similar to the girls’ race, Whitley went out fast, clocking a 1:04.25 split to Montague’s 1:06.03, but then Whitley slowed it down on the way to the finish with 1:10.72 to Montague’s 1:09.07. However, Montague’s closing speed wasn’t quite enough to catch Whitley, and the 16-year-old took the event in 2:14.97 to Montague’s 2:15.10.

Both swimmers missed their best times by more than a little. Whitley’s National Age Group record sits at 2:11.30, while Montague ties for the 17th spot in the All-Time Top 100 for 17-18 with 2:14.37.

Daniel Chang of Barracuda finished third in 2:17.93, followed by Brennan Pastorek in 2:18.83, Montague’s future Wolverine teammate Charlie Swanson in 2:19.25, 16-year-old NCAP swimmer Spencer Rowe in 2:19.84, Dayton’s Thomas Cope in 2:20.35, and NCAP’s Timothy Wu in 2:27.32.

Girls’ 100 Meter Fly

  1. Kylie Jordan, NCAP: 1:00.60
  2. Jasmine Hellmer, NCAP: 1:00.76
  3. Taylor Pike, Razorback: 1:00.80

The girls’ 100 fly was an incredibly tight race between Nation’s Capital duo Jasmine Hellmer and Kylie Jordan and Razorback Taylor Pike. At the 50, Hellmer had the lead with a 28.42 split. Jordan hit second with 28.63, and Pike was close behind with 28.71. But, Jordan kicked it in the second 50 and won the event in 1:00.60, followed by her 16-year-old teammate Hellmer in 1:00.76. Pike, another 16-year-old, was third in 1:00.80.

16-year-old Molly Sheffield took fourth in 1:01.54, followed by Cailey Grunhard in 1:01.71. Elizabeth Menzmer, a 15-year-old, took the sixth slot with 1:02.12, followed closely by Skylar Fore in 1:02.14. 15-year-old Amalie Fackenthal finished eighth in 1:03.90.

Boys’ 100 Meter Fly

  1. Camden Murphy, Kingfish: 53.95
  2. Nicolas Albiero, Cardinal: 54.38
  3. Samuel Pomajevich, NCAP: 54.87

Camden Murphy just missed his 9th-ranked 15-16 best time in the 100 fly, a 53.79, swimming 53.95 to win tonight’s event. Nicolas Albiero moved way up in the 15-16 rankings with his second-place 54.38, going from 42nd (54.88) to 22nd. Samuel Pomajevich nabbed third in 54.87.

Miles Smachlo took fourth in 55.24. Frederick Schubert, Aaron Schultz, and Dean Farris were packed in close for fifth, sixth, and seventh, with 55.55, 55.67, and 55.70. Cody Bybee grabbed eighth in 55.92.

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DRswimmer
8 years ago

Let’s go Reece, break that NAG!!

PVSFree
8 years ago

Looks like Andrew scratched at least the 100 back, I haven’t seen him, he may have scratched all his events from this morning

Irish Ringer
Reply to  PVSFree
8 years ago

Judging by his times this morning he’s either not feeling well or the 100s are now too far of a distance for him as well.

PVSFree
Reply to  Irish Ringer
8 years ago

I know a couple people that haven’t been feeling well this week down here. I watched his 100 back this morning and he missed a turn, that could explain his 100 back, I’m not sure about the other two 100’s though. His 100 breast earlier this week was fine

Irish Ringer
Reply to  PVSFree
8 years ago

Hard to say. The announcers from last night said it was also his 3rd week of racing so maybe he’s tired from that and the travel.

DRswimmer
8 years ago

Anyone having problems with the sound??

hswimmer
Reply to  DRswimmer
8 years ago

Yes, no sound here.

About Hannah Hecht

Hannah Hecht

Hannah Hecht grew up in Kansas and spent most of her childhood trying to convince coaches to let her swim backstroke in freestyle sets. She took her passion to Morningside College in Sioux City, Iowa and swam at NAIA Nationals all four years. After graduating in 2015, she moved to …

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