2018 Women’s Pac-12 Championships: Day 2 Finals Live Recap

2018 WOMEN’S PAC-12 SWIMMING & DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS

Tonight in Federal Way, Washington, swimmers are set to compete in the first individual event finals at the 2018 Pac-12 Women’s Championships. Swimmers are slated to compete individually in the 500 free, 200 IM, and 50 free. The men’s 3-meter diving finals will take place after the 50 free, followed by the women’s 200 free relay. The reigning NCAA champions are featured in each of tonight’s individual races: Stanford’s Katie Ledecky (500 free), Cal’s Kathleen Baker (200 IM), and Stanford’s Simone Manuel (50 free).

WOMEN’S 500 FREE:

  1. GOLD: Katie Ledecky, Stanford, 4:26.09
  2. SILVER: Ella Eastin, Stanford, 4:34.04
  3. BRONZE: Lauren Pitzer, Stanford, 4:36.61

Stanford’s Katie Ledecky dominated the field, putting up her 3rd fastest performance ever in the process. Teammate Ella Eastin, who opted for this event instead of the 200 IM today, has dropped 10 seconds from her lifetime best throughout today’s sessions. Tonight marked her first swim below 4:40, and she blew that barrier away in 4:34.04. That makes Eastin the 2nd fastest woman in the country this year behind only Ledecky. Cardinal freshman Lauren Pitzer completed the Stanford podium sweep, knocking 4 seconds off her best time with her first sub-4:40 swim.

Arizona’s Kirsten Jacobsen knocked another 2 and a half seconds from her best to finish 4th in 4:37.47. With that, she’s now taken about 5 seconds off her best time today. Stanford’s Megan Byrnes was the only other swimmer to break 4:40 in the A final, rounding out the top 5 in 4:39.05.

Notably, Stanford’s Leah Stevens won the B final in 4:37.44, taking over a second and a half off her lifetime best.

WOMEN’S 200 IM:

  • Pac-12 Meet Record: 1:52.26, Katinka Hosszu (USC), 2012
  1. GOLD: Kathleen Baker, Cal, 1:52.70
  2. SILVER: Sarah Darcel, Cal, 1:54.50
  3. BRONZE: Brooke Forde, Stanford, 1:54.98

Cal’s Kathleen Baker broke away from the field early, flipping in 51.57 after a quick 27.22 back split. Baker finished nearly 2 seconds ahead of the field with her 2nd fastest performance ever, touching 4 hundredths ahead of her time from last season’s Pac-12s. Freshmen Sarah Darcel (Cal) and Brooke Forde (Stanford) battled for the silver. Darcel was about 2 seconds ahead through the back, but Forde cut into that lead significantly on the breast leg. Forde continued to close the gap down the final stretch, but ran out of room as Darcel hit the wall for silver to Forde’s bronze.

Stanford’s Ally Howe ran down teammate Katie Drabot with a 27.25 free split, touching a nail ahead in 1:55.12 to Drabot’s 1:55.15. Cal’s Keaton Blovad, who was 2nd through the halfway mark at 52.20, held off Stanford’s Kim Williams, 1:55.72 to 1:55.74, for 6th place. Blovad and Williams each broke 1:56 for the first time.

WOMEN’S 50 FREE:

  1. GOLD: Simone Manuel, Stanford, 21.20
  2. SILVER: Abbey Weitzeil, Cal, 21.41
  3. BRONZE: Amy Bilquist, Cal, 21.74

Stanford’s Simone Manuel took down her own Pac-12 Meet Record, putting up her 2nd fastest swim ever to win it in 21.20. Cal’s Abbey Weitzeil was just a hundredth shy of her time from 2017 Pac-12s as she took the silver. Teammate Amy Bilquist shaved 2 tenths off her lifetime best to give the Bears 2 on the podium. Stanford’s Janet Hu dipped under 22 as well, touching in 21.98 to clip USC freshman Marta Ciesla (22.04). Ciesla knocked a couple of tenths off her time.

WOMEN’S 200 FREE RELAY:

  1. GOLD: Cal, 1:25.87
  2. SILVER: Stanford, 1:26.81
  3. BRONZE: USC, 1:28.43

Cal took down the American Record tonight, clearing the former mark by 4 hundredths. Maddie Murphy lead them off in 21.96, handing off to Amy Bilquist, who put up a 21.24 on the 2nd leg. Katie McLaughlin took on the 3rd leg in 21.67, while Abbey Weitzeil brought them home in 21.00. The Cardinal came in 2nd with Simone Manuel (21.22) and Ally Howe (21.55) putting up their fastest splits on the 2nd and 4th legs respectively. The Trojans wound up 3rd with a 21.75 leadoff from Louise Hansson and a 21.96 2nd leg from Marta Ciesla.

Though Arizona initially touched 3rd, they were disqualified, giving ASU the edge in the points standings after they were separated by just half a point heading into the relays.

TEAM SCORES THROUGH DAY 2:

  1. Stanford University             611.5   2. University of California- Berk  510.5
  3. Arizona State University          354   4. University of Arizona           302.5
  5. University of California - LA   288.5   6. University of Southern Calif      270
  7. Utah, University of               155   8. Washington State University       142
  9. Oregon State University            87

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Schoolboyz
6 years ago

Hahahaha what in world is this comment

Schoolboyz
6 years ago

I’m a little stunned with USC. Winning it all only 2 years ago.
Is ASU swimming through this meet?

Hint of Lime
Reply to  Schoolboyz
6 years ago

Also curious to USC sitting in sixth currently. Feel like they land good recruits, too.

Taa
Reply to  Hint of Lime
6 years ago

Just not many of them

Ervin
Reply to  Hint of Lime
6 years ago

They always land good recruits and do nothing with them.

CraigH
Reply to  Ervin
6 years ago

A couple years ago they landed two of the top recruits in the nation in Stanzi Mosely and Becca Mann. Those two alone should have been worth upwards of 100 points alone here based off of their projections coming out of high school.

Drama King
Reply to  Hint of Lime
6 years ago

Dont have the enough depth.

Sean Sullivan
6 years ago

Anyone know why Ella Eastin was in the 500 and not the 200 IM? Are they going to stick with that for NCs or did they just want to try it here like Katie’s 400 IM last year?

Swimmer
Reply to  Sean Sullivan
6 years ago

The only problem with swimming on a team with someone like Ledecky is other really fast swims can seem ordinary. Eastin’s 500 was a great swim (as are most of her races to be honest), but I almost forget how good she is next to Ledecky.

Adsf
Reply to  Swimmer
6 years ago

I think Eastin swam this fast because of Ledecky too. She basically tried to catch up with Ledecky and got her PR. Vice versa, I suppose Ledecky got her 400IM going because if having Easton as her training partner as well.

Sean Sullivan
6 years ago

We don’t have the relay reaction times included, but Simone really needs to work on that relay start. It always confuses me when someone with that much collegiate experience isn’t getting at least a .5 second advantage from a flying start.

Z K
Reply to  Sean Sullivan
6 years ago

Simone just isn’t that great of a relay swimmer most of the time

Zanna
Reply to  Z K
6 years ago

Yeah terrible.

Sean Sullivan
Reply to  Zanna
6 years ago

Responses like this make it seem like elite swimmers are completely above reproach. You can recognize that Simone is simultaneously the best 100 freestyler in the world while also acknowledging that her relay splits haven’t been as consistently phenomenal as her individual swims at various conference, national, and world championships. She’s still had a few great splits (Lauren pointed out that she has the fastest relay split ever for a 50) but she’s no Nathan Adrian when it comes to relays.

Zanna
Reply to  Sean Sullivan
6 years ago

Spot the sarcasm

ALEXANDER POP-OFF
Reply to  Sean Sullivan
6 years ago

What is wrong with you people? Hello?! Simone has the fastest 50 and 100 yd free relay splits of ALL TIME! She is best on anchor.

Swimfan18
Reply to  Sean Sullivan
6 years ago

Simone is a swimmer who swims better as the meet goes on… the last day of meets she is on fire

Frequent flyer
Reply to  Swimfan18
6 years ago

Many swimmers work the opposite way. But the last day it is always so much fun to watch her!

Yozhik
Reply to  Sean Sullivan
6 years ago

Simone Manuel has variety of reaction times some of which were close to DQ.
But it is true that some of her relay performances are surprising. For instance her 53.3 in Rio when she was able of 52.7 might cost Americans a gold medal. Her relay time last year in NCAA wasn’t even close to her spectacular record at 100.
And at the same time she holds three LCM relay world records where she showed very impressive times.

Swimfan
Reply to  Yozhik
6 years ago

What were her relay splits in Budapest??? It’s interesting how the Simone haters love to highlight any and everything they think Simone does wrong, yet won’t acknowledge when she does well!
But, haters WILL hate!

paloozas
Reply to  Swimfan
6 years ago

w400 free – 52.17, tied w/ Bronte Campbell for fastest split, only Sjostrom’s 51.7 was faster

w400med – 52.23, fastest free split of the field

mixed400med – 52.17, fastest free split for the women

mixed400free – 52.18, fastest split from out of the women

not only is manuel incredibly fast, she’s also incredibly consistent. not more than 0.06 separate all her splits.

AvidSwimFan
Reply to  Sean Sullivan
6 years ago

No one ever mentions how Kathleen Baker and Lily King’s splits on the medley relays were subpar to their personal performances at Rio and Budapest, and that both times the fly and free legs were what won Team USA ?? the gold at the the Olympics and Worlds. But every time there’s even a micro second difference with Simone’s time everyone is ready to chime in. Simone’s personal 200 free at NCAAs was subpar compared to her split in the 800 free but no one talks about that. We accept that many times Dressel’s flying split is usually slower than his flat start, there’s no knocking on him though. Simone tends to get faster as the meet progresses. So can… Read more »

Z K
Reply to  AvidSwimFan
6 years ago

In Budapest, kathleen went 58.54 in the 400 medley relay, while she went 58.58 in the individual event. Yes Simone is fast but she goes slower than her best times on relays (most of the times when a relay start is supposed to make you faster than your best time) no hate on Simone though she is still very fast

swammer
6 years ago

What is the fastest women’s 50 free relay split? 21.00 for Weitzel is flying!!

Bearly Breathing
Reply to  swammer
6 years ago

I’m fairly certain there’s been a sub-21 relay split. For some reason the time 20.96 stands out. The name escapes me though.

Ana
Reply to  Lauren Neidigh
6 years ago

Weitzeil has been faster than 21 before so it still stands as is.

Taa
Reply to  Lauren Neidigh
6 years ago

Erica Brown from SECs 20.81 I think

TJAY
Reply to  Lauren Neidigh
6 years ago

Erika Brown’s 20.81 and Liz Li’s 20.84 are the only ones from last weekend that are absent from the list; which means Weitzel’s 21.00 is out!

Observer
Reply to  swammer
6 years ago

I would hardly call 21.00 flying when her best flat start is 21.1 from 2 years ago.

Z K
Reply to  Observer
6 years ago

Well better than Simone’s split of 21.22

Joe
6 years ago

Where the Teri McKeever haters at???

Sccoach
Reply to  Joe
6 years ago

They are busy questioning Haas and Schooling in the Big 12 comment section

ALEXANDER POP-OFF
6 years ago

What’s the 200 fr relay American Record? CAL could challenge.

ALEXANDER POP-OFF
Reply to  Lauren Neidigh
6 years ago

So said, so done!

Bearly Breathing
6 years ago

Nice little duel for 3rd going on: Ariz – 302.5, ASU – 302

CraigH
Reply to  Bearly Breathing
6 years ago

Remember the guy in the preview article who got indignant when they suggested that Arizona could be close to USC for third place?

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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