2019 W. NCAAs Day 1: Who Looks Like They Hit Their Taper?

2019 WOMEN’S DIVISION I NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS

Night one of the 2019 Women’s Division I NCAA Championships is over and done with, which means we can do what sports fans often do best: overreact to a very small sample size. So, based on exactly one swim, let’s see who looks like they hit their taper.

Who’s Looking Good?

A few swimmers stood out Wednesday night in that they outperformed their 2018 relay 800 free splits by a wide margin, or met high expectations.

Leading the way in the “outperforming” category is Wisconsin’s Beata Nelson, who shaved 1.19 seconds off her 2018 NCAA split to go 1:41.39 – her best flat start time is 1:45.48, swum leading off a relay in 2017. Cal’s Amy Bilquist went 1:42.63 in 2018, and went 1:41.93 Wednesday night, though she was 1:41.59 at Pac-12s. USC’s Louise Hansson, who was a question mark to be on this relay, led off in 1:41.95 after going 1:42.71 in that spot last season and 1:42.56 at Pac-12s last month.

Three of Stanford’s four swimmers also seem to be in good shape, taper-wise. Ella Eastin improved on her 2018 NCAA time by a tenth (1:41.13 vs 1:41.03), and over half a second off her Pac-12 split. And while Brooke Forde technically did not go faster than her season-best split (1:41.70), she did accidentally finish to the foot and do an extra 50, and was still under her NCAA time from last year (1:42.94 vs 1:42.37) – it still bodes well. Finally, freshman Taylor Ruck lived up to enormous expectations. We said that she could fill the void left by Katie Ledecky on this relay, and she sure did, throwing down a 1:39.83 split in her first-ever NCAA appearance.

Similarly, Louisville’s Mallory Comerford went the fastest relay split in history last season (1:39.14), and basically matched it tonight (1:39.19), and Siobhan Haughey gained a few tenths on her 2018 time, but was still a very solid 1:40.98 tonight. They’re also off to a good start.

Who’s Looking Questionable?

Let me repeat myself: we are likely attributing way too much to tonight by generalizing a single performance to an entire meet’s outlook. Nonetheless, here are a few swimmers who underperformed either based on last year’s swim or expectations we’ve built over this season.

Tennessee’s Erika Brown, whose meteoric rise to sprint stardom came to a head with a 1:40.68 anchor split at SECs last month, split 1:43.37 Wednesday night en route to her team’s 18th-place finish. Do we throw in the towel on her meet? Of course not. But it could indicate she peaked too early.

Stanford’s leadoff swimmer, Katie Drabot, added a second onto her 2018 NCAA split (1:42.99 vs. 1:43.99). However, she was 1:44.64 at Pac-12s last month, so she did improve markedly from that.

Texas’ relay returned three swimmers from last season, and all three of them went slower. Last season at NCAAs, Quinn Carrozza led off in 1:43.72 and was 1:44.78 Wednesday night. Claire Adams was 1:41.71 last year and went 1:43.83, and Evie Pfeifer was 1:43.73 after going 1:43.18 last year.

Seed time vs. Actual Time

Below, we’ve done the math on how 800 free relay teams performed based on their seed time. The teams are sorted by how much they over- or under-performed based on entry time (a negative difference means the team went faster than its seed time).

Team Seed time Actual time Difference
Stanford 6:51.69 6:47.22 -4.47
Ohio State 7:02.93 6:59.62 -3.31
Arizona 7:02.63 6:59.47 -3.16
Wisconsin 7:00.39 6:57.54 -2.85
Texas 6:58.52 6:55.80 -2.72
Louisville 6:58.69 6:56.07 -2.62
USC 6:54.56 6:52.13 -2.43
Arizona State 7:00.88 6:58.78 -2.1
Cal 6:50.63 6:50.12 -0.51
Florida 7:01.32 7:00.97 -0.35
Michigan 6:54.58 6:54.35 -0.23
Minnesota 7:00.10 7:00.34 0.24
Georgia 6:58.01 6:58.52 0.51
Notre Dame 7:02.36 7:03.97 1.61
Kentucky 6:56.23 6:58.05 1.82
Virginia 6:55.22 6:57.77 2.55
Auburn 6:57.00 6:59.67 2.67
Texas A&M 6:54.47 6:57.75 3.28
Tennessee 6:55.15 7:01.91 6.76

In This Story

17
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

17 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
2 Cents
5 years ago

No one going to mention NC State and their 0 points on day 1?

Reply to  2 Cents
5 years ago

What I mentioned in the other story: they weren’t seeded to score any points there, and scratching the relay allows Kylee Alons to swim the other four relays. I think it’s probably a good call for them in terms of team points.

2 Cents
Reply to  Jared Anderson
5 years ago

Fair enough. I just got to this article first.

It is a good call for them if they were fully rested for ACCs (which I believe they were) as their same time would have not scored. But if they weren’t fully rested at ACCs, then it was a bad call as they could have scored. Again, I think they were fully rested before and thus did make a good call. It will still be hard for them to beat Louisville and Virginia at the meet though. The 200 FR will be a wash with UVAs 800, but they will be behind Louisville after tonight for sure.

Edit: I missed the 2 girls they have in the final of the… Read more »

Swimmer
5 years ago

I can’t see all the splits on the live results. Is anyone else having the same problem?

DRAMA KING
5 years ago

One good thing about Texas performance (eventhough added time) is that they didn’t peak early. They could still drop times in coming days.

Benedict Arnold Schwarzenegger
Reply to  DRAMA KING
5 years ago

Yeah, definitely bad to peak on the day of the meet. You’d never be able to keep up the fast swimming. Better to peak on day 3 so you’re only terrible and over rested on day 4, rather than being fast Wednesday and terrible every other day. I’d be worried if I were Stanford

Tweettweet
5 years ago

‘Hit their taper’ is the worst three words in our swimming world.

Forgot to add that I hope the swimmers you list as ‘questionable’ don’t read your comments. Nice contribution to any stress/anxiety.

SVIRD
Reply to  Tweettweet
5 years ago

Hey this is the big leagues. Swimswam is just objectively analyzing the top performers along with some light comments. Pretty mild honestly lol.

Benedict Arnold Schwarzenegger
Reply to  Tweettweet
5 years ago

Agreed. SwimSwam should only write compliments about everyone. If you don’t have something nice to say, then stop presenting facts.

Wut
Reply to  Benedict Arnold Schwarzenegger
5 years ago

[deleted]

Bruh
Reply to  Tweettweet
5 years ago

As much as I hate negative press about athletes, this happens in far worse forms in sports like basketball and football through sites like Bleacher Report and what not. If swimming hopes to take that leap into being a more respected sport, athletes have to live with negative ‘press’ like this. It’s the nature of the sport. People will always over read into things.
Also I’m fairly certain the athletes you put in the ‘questionable’ category have far better things to do then check SwimSwam. Good luck to them all

Blackflag82
Reply to  Tweettweet
5 years ago

Pretty sure the only swimmers checking swim swam this week are those who are not at the meet…

Swamfan
Reply to  Tweettweet
5 years ago

this is the division 1 NCAA championships. Some of the best swimmers in the world compete here. Critiques & analysis comes with the territory of being an elite athlete. Swimmers can stay off of swim swam.

However, I do agree that “hit their taper” is one of the worst phrases in swimming. It’s passive and the terms “hit/ miss” imply that optimally timing your rest is a hit or miss and somewhat up to chance- absolving responsibility. It’s up to athletes and their coaches to swim fast when it counts.

googoodoll
5 years ago

Interesting article. Thank you for the synopsis…PLEASE keep them coming on all relays and if time/energy permits individual events? Or at least top 16 seeded individuals.

phelps swims 200 breast rio
5 years ago

“In which we totally overreact to swims from night one.” I love this…

CrinkleCut
5 years ago

Looks to me like all four Texas swimmers swam slower this year than last, assuming that paragraph is written correctly.

About Torrey Hart

Torrey Hart

Torrey is from Oakland, CA, and majored in media studies and American studies at Claremont McKenna College, where she swam distance freestyle for the Claremont-Mudd-Scripps team. Outside of SwimSwam, she has bylines at Sports Illustrated, Yahoo Sports, SB Nation, and The Student Life newspaper.

Read More »