2017 W. NCAA Picks: How Fast Can Stanford Go in the 800 Free Relay?

2017 WOMEN’S NCAA SWIMMING & DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS

800 FREESTYLE RELAY

  • NCAA record: Stanford (2017)- 6:49.42
  • American record: Stanford (2017)- 6:49.42
  • U.S. Open record: Stanford (2017)- 6:49.42
  • 2016 NCAA Champion: Georgia- 6:51.80

After breaking the NCAA and American Records at the Pac-12 Championships, the Stanford Cardinal squad is the overwhelming favorite to win the 800 free relay at the 2017 Women’s NCAA Championships. Katie Ledecky, Simone Manuel, and Lia Neal are likely to swim it, while the Cardinal has options, such as Ella Eastin and Katie Drabot, for the additional leg. Freshman Drabot has been as fast as 1:43.71 this season, but Eastin rolled to a 1:42.18 on the 2nd leg of this relay last season.

In team terms, it might make sense for Stanford to leave Manuel off this relay. The star sprinter can only swim four of the five relays, and this is the only relay race the Cardinal can pretty likely win without her. The choice for Stanford now comes down to using Manuel on this relay with a chance for a historic American record time or leaving Manuel off this relay with a shot for a historic sweep of all five relays.

No one is likely to come close to the Cardinal, but the race for 2nd between Cal and USC should be a good one. Cal will field Amy Bilquist and Katie McLaughlin, who have both turned in sub-1:43 splits for the Bears previously. Headlining USC’s relay are freshman Louise Hansson, who posted a 1:42.10 leadoff split at Pac-12s, and Kirsten Vose, who led off with a 1:43.08 at last season’s NCAAs.

Michigan will be in the mix with All-American freestylers G Ryan, Siobhan Haughey, and Rose Bi. Virginia also has an All-American in reigning distance champ Leah Smith, who has delivered multiple 1:42 splits on the leadoff leg. Teammate Kaitlyn Jones has come up with a 1:42-high split on the anchor leg.

After snapping Georgia’s winning streak in this event at the 2017 SEC Championships, the Aggies will look for a top 8 finish at NCAAs. Sarah Gibson and Claire Rasmus should be able to throw in a pair of 1:43s if they match their conference meet performances. In-state rival Texas sits one spot ahead of them at 6th seed. The Longhorns will rely heavily on Claire Adams and Joanna Evans, who put up a pair of rolling-start 1:44s on the relay at Big 12s.

A handful of teams including NC State, Georgia, Wisconsin, and Kentucky will be battling for top 8 points. Kentucky has the slight edge going into the meet, largely thanks to Asia Seidt splitting a 1:43.89 on the 2nd leg at SECs.

TOP 8 PREDICTIONS:

Place Team Season Best
1 Stanford 6:49.42
2 Cal 6:53.37
3 USC 6:54.24
4 Michigan 6:55.34
5 Texas 6:54.77
6 Virginia 6:56.21
7 Texas A&M 6:57.90
8 Kentucky 6:59.33

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Wahooswimfan
7 years ago

Comerford of Louisville – 1:40.21 split – fastest of the field (even beat Ledecky’s split) – looks like the 200 will be a 3 person race.

Wahooswimfan
7 years ago

Live stream working for anyone? Website says it was supposed to start at 5;30, but does not seem to be working.

Thunderbolt
Reply to  Wahooswimfan
7 years ago

Think central time zone

Thunderbolt
Reply to  Thunderbolt
7 years ago

Whoops my bad. Eastern time zone

E Gamble
7 years ago

There will have future chances to break this record. Simone would be a waste on this relay. They’re 4 seconds ahead of the closest team.

coach
Reply to  E Gamble
7 years ago

Funny how everyone seem to thinks theirs a hard decision to make for Greg. Simone Manuel gonna be in the relay tonite! We gonna make a dominant statement busting out a world record no one get close to for the next 10 yrs!!

Look the Card can afford to dq 3 relays still gonna win by a comfy margin. Thats what happen when you can sit back on a 150-250pt cushion over all other teams! The only team title race will be for runner up the next 3 or 4 seasons 😀

Coach Mike 1952
Reply to  coach
7 years ago

There are no FINA-recognized world records in SCY. FINA was founded in 1908. However, in 1927, Johnny Weissmuller was said to have set “world records” in SCY, which MAY have been allowable at that time. Does anyone out there who is more of a swim historian than I am have more info on this from the early days of last century? Thanks.

ALEXANDER POP-OFF
7 years ago

Ledecky’s anchor split may help us to gauge what will happen in the individual. 1:39:10 is TOUGH.

Ervin
7 years ago

Put Manuel on this relay!!!…They’re going to win this meet anyway. Might as well make this record untouchable for the foreseeable future

Bigly
7 years ago

Ledecky drops a 1:38 split.

Sccoach
7 years ago

6:45 if Manuel is on it. 6:47 if not

Sccoach
Reply to  Sccoach
7 years ago

Boom!!!!! What do I win??

trswimmer2
7 years ago

I doubt they use Simone here. She can only swim 4 relays and 3 individual. Makes sense to have her on both medleys and the other freestyle relays since they are much closer.

SwimGeek
Reply to  trswimmer2
7 years ago

Agreed. Would love to see her on it to see the absurd record they could post . . . but Stanford has no reason to use her here. She’s far more valuable on the other 4 relays. They obviously do not need her here. They can’t even say they are chasing a record with her — they’re likely to re-break the record without her! Alas, Stanford is trying to win a title — not post crazy times for us swim geeks.

About Lauren Neidigh

Lauren Neidigh

Lauren Neidigh is a former NCAA swimmer at the University of Arizona (2013-2015) and the University of Florida (2011-2013). While her college swimming career left a bit to be desired, her Snapchat chin selfies and hot takes on Twitter do not disappoint. She's also a high school graduate of The …

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