2025 Men’s NCAA Division I Championships: Day 1 Finals Live Recap

2025 Men’s NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships

Welcome to the first night of the 2025 Men’s Division I NCAA Championships! We’re looking forward to bringing you live coverage of all the action out in Federal Way. As always, our first session will be short, sweet, and to the point. Just a pair of relays: the 200 medley and 800 free, will make up this session.

While there are only two events tonight, we should be in for a thrilling couple of races, as it’s on the board that the NCAA records go down in both. Tennessee leads the entries in the 200 medley relay after having gone a 1:20.22 at the SEC Championships last month. That time put them just 0.07 seconds off the NCAA record of 1:20.15, which Florida set at last year’s NCAAs. Speaking of the Gators, they come in as the 2nd seed, holding a season best of 1:20.66. Texas is the only other team to have gone under 1:21 this season, entering as the 3rd seed with a 1:20.75.

Florida comes in as the top seed in the 800 free relay, having won the SEC title in 6:02.50. With that performance, they were just 0.24 seconds off the NCAA record of 6:02.26, which Cal set last year. Cal has only been 6:06.66, but actually returns the same team that set the record last year, even though they may opt to use some different swimmers this year. Texas is the #2 seed in the 800 free, having gone 6:03.24 at SECs, while Georgia is the 3rd seed at 6:05.43. The Texas squad holds the American Record in the event.

Men’s 200 Medley Relay

  • NCAA Record: 1:20.15 — Florida (Chaney, Smith, Liendo, McDuff) (2024)
  • Championship Record: 1:20.15 — Florida (Chaney, Smith, Liendo, McDuff) (2024)
  • American Record: 1:20.98 — NC State (Hayes, Hoover, Miller, McCarty) (2024)
  • U.S. Open Record: 1:20.15 — Florida (Chaney, Smith, Liendo, McDuff) (2024)
  • 2024 Champion: Florida (Chaney, Smith, Liendo, McDuff) — 1:20.15

Top 8:

  1. Texas (Modglin, Germonprez, Kos, Guiliano) – 1:20.28
  2. Tennessee (Taylor, Houseman, Caribe, Crooks) – 1:20.50
  3. California (Seeliger, Okadome, Rose, Alexy) – 1:20.76
  4. Arizona State (Vergnes, Dobrzanski, Kharun, Kulow) – 1:20.87
  5. Indiana (Barr, Benzing, Brooks, King) – 1:20.92 (American Record)
  6. NC State (McCarty, Hoover, Miller, Fox) – 1:21.16
  7. Florida State (Herbet, Baravelli, Arkhangelskiy, Bork) – 1:21.60
  8. Georgia (Urlando, Pitshugin, Van Renen, Bidois) – 1:22.01

Well… this meet didn’t get off to the ideal start for a handful of teams. First and foremost, Florida was disqualified for a false start on the fly-to-free exchange. The Gators had set the NCAA record in the event with a time of 1:20.05. On that Florida team, Jonny Marshall (20.59), Julian Smith (22.14), Josh Liendo (19.08), and Scotty Buff (18.24) combined for a 1:20.05, coming in 0.1 under the record. Buff’s reaction time was -0.06, just outside the permitted -0.04 margin.

Virginia Tech was disqualified in heat 2, as was Michigan. The Hokies would have finished 11th, while the Wolverines would have been 12th. Virginia Tech had a 15m infraction on the lead-off, while Michigan’s swimmer #2 false started.

That left the winner of the 200 medley relay…Texas! In their bid to reclaim the NCAA title, the Longhorns are off to the start they needed. Will Modglin led off in 20.32, Nate Germonprez split 22.83 on breaststroke, Hubert Kos was 19.33 on fly, and Chris Guiliano anchored in a speedy 17.80, putting Texas into the finish in 1:20.28. That swim put the Longhorns just 0.13 seconds off the NCAA record.

Tennessee wound up 2nd with a 1:20.50, fueled by a 17.67 anchor from Jordan Crooks, who is one of the most highly anticipated swimmers of this meet. The Vols also benefited from a huge 19.05 fly split out of Gui Caribe. Lamar Taylor was 20.74 on back and Kevin Houseman split 23.04 on breast.

Cal knocked nearly a second off their seed time, taking 3rd in 1:20.76. Bjorn Seeliger was excellent leading off, clocking a 20.57, while Yamato Okadome split a very quick 22.77 on breast. Dare Rose gave the Golden Bears a 19.39 on fly, and Jack Alexy anchored in 18.03.

The back half of Arizona State’s relay was really something. Ilya Kharun went an 18.78 on the fly leg, which is the fastest split in history, then Jonny Kulow anchored in 17.78, marking a 36.56 on the 2nd 100 of the race, which is the fastest back half in history as well.

Though they only finished 5th, Indiana made history as well, taking down the American Record. Luke Barr (20.65), Brian Benzing (22.65), Finn Brooks (19.49), and Matt King (18.13) combined for a 1:20.92, clipping the previous AR by 0.04 seconds.

The meet kicked off with a bang in heat 1, where Georgia ripped a new season best by more than a second, winning in 1:22.01. That time would have come into the meet seeded 8th, and the Bulldogs ended up 8th, 9 places ahead of their 17th seed. Luca Urlando led the Georgia team off in 20.52, then Kristian Pitshugin clocked a 23.06 on breast, Ruard Van Renen was 19.48 on fly, and Tane Bidois anchored in 18.95.

Scoring Update:

  1. Texas – 40
  2. Tennessee – 34
  3. California – 32
  4. Arizona State – 30
  5. Indiana – 28
  6. NC State – 26
  7. Florida State – 24
  8. Georgia – 22
  9. Stanford – 18
  10. Louisville – 14

Men’s 800 Freestyle Relay

  • NCAA Record: 6:02.26 — Cal (Jett, Lasco, Alexy, Hanson) (2024)
  • Championship Record: 6:02.26 — Cal (Jett, Lasco, Alexy, Hanson) (2024)
  • American Record: 6:03.24 — Texas (Hobson, Maurer, Guiliano, Carrozza) (2025)
  • U.S. Open Record: 6:02.26 — Cal (Jett, Lasco, Alexy, Hanson) (2024)
  • 2024 Champion: Cal (Jett, Lasco, Alexy, Hanson) — 6:02.26

Top 8:

  1. California (Alexy, Jett, Lasco, Henveaux) – 5:59.75 (NCAA Record)
  2. Texas (Hobson, Guiliano, Maurer, Carrozza) – 6:00.08 (American Record)
  3. Georgia (Koski, Urlando, Magahey, Branzell) – 6:06.02
  4. Alabama (Hawke, Alves, Hagar, Dragoja) – 6:06.59
  5. Stanford (Minakov, McFadden, Polonsky, Dupont) – 6:06.69
  6. Indiana (McDonald, Miroslaw, Van Westering, Frankel) – 6:06.76
  7. NC State (Winkler, Diehl, Miller, Hoover) – 6:06.95
  8. Florida (Painter, Smith, Mitchell, Lindholm) – 6:06.96

History was made tonight in Federal Way, as the Cal Golden Bears shattered the NCAA Record in the 800 free relay by well over 2 seconds, becoming the first team in history to break 6:00 in the event. It was a hard fought battle, seeing Cal and Texas immediately break away from the rest of the field, and going head-to-head in adjacent lanes.

Texas’ Luke Hobson got the Longhorns out to the early lead, swimming a 1:28.90, which was the 2nd-fastest swim ever in the event. Hobson was within a tenth of his own NCAA record in the 200 free with that swim. While his split was phenomenal, Cal lead-off Jack Alexy did his part, getting the Golden Bears out to a 1:30.02. Gabriel Jett was able to erase Texas’ lead on the 2nd leg of the race, splitting 1:29.16, while Texas’ Chris Guiliano was 1:30.13. Jett handed off to Destin Lasco, who put on a master class in underwaters, delivering a 1:29.10 split, moving Cal into the lead by 0.66 seconds at the final exchange. Rex Maurer was 1:29.91 on the 3rd leg for the Longhorns.

With the lead, Lucas Henveaux dove in for Cal, but his start was errant. In his interview, Henveaux said he slipped off the start and his streamline broke when he entered the water, while the video made it look like he may have actually even scraped the bottom of the pool off his start. Either way, Henveaux’s poor start was enough for Texas’ Coby Carrozza to take the lead on the first 25. Henveaux would battle back, pulling into the lead on the 3rd 50, and holding it through the finish. In the end, Cal broke the NCAA record, while Texas’ time of 6:00.08 shattered the American Record by over 3 seconds.

Indiana was phenomenal in the 3rd heat of this race. Coming in with a season best of 6:11.39, the Hoosiers dropped the hammer, going a 6:06.76. It was a team effort, seeing Owen McDonald pop a new career best of 1:31.14 leading off, which is his first time under 1:32 from a flat start. Rafael Miroslaw then clocked a 1:31.30 on the 2nd leg, Kai Van Westering was 1:32.79 on the 3rd leg, and Tomer Frankel anchored in 1:31.53. With that performance, the Hoosiers wound up 6th overall.

The 3rd heat was all Big Ten, as Ohio State came in 2nd with a 6:10.58, while Michigan was 6:11.10 for 3rd, and USC came in 4th in the heat with a 6:11.17. Overall, the Buckeyes were 10th, while the Wolverines came in11th, and the Trojans 12th.

Team Standings (Thru Thursday)

  1. Texas – 74
  2. California – 72
  3. Georgia/Indiana – 54 (Tie)
  4. NC State – 50
  5. Arizona State – 48
  6. Stanford – 46
  7. Tennessee – 34
  8. Alabama – 30
  9. Florida State – 24
  10. Florida – 22
  11. Louisville – 18
  12. Ohio State – 16
  13. Auburn – 14
  14. Michigan – 12
  15. North Carolina/USC – 10 (Tie)
  16. VirginiaTexas A&M – 8 (Tie)
  17. Georgia Tech/Virginia Tech – 6 (Tie)
  18. Army – 4

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Ohio Swimmer
2 days ago

Nooooo just like the basketball my predictions are wrong

15m steps ahead
2 days ago

It’s day 1 and SEC combined already -22😭😭, lmaooo

Last edited 2 days ago by 15m steps ahead
15m steps ahead
Reply to  15m steps ahead
2 days ago

ACC +38
Big ten +6
Big 12 -26
Patriot league +4

snailSpace
Reply to  15m steps ahead
2 days ago

Wasn’t that mostly Florida though?

ArtVanDeLegh10
Reply to  15m steps ahead
2 days ago

UF was DQed, that may be why

Last edited 2 days ago by ArtVanDeLegh10
mds
3 days ago

And to think Cal did this relay performance without an Olympic relay Gold-medalist, who I understand was on the original entry list for the Bears at the ACC meet(?).

Brooks Curry had swum in three previous NCAA meets making the “A” final in 8 of the 9 sprint events (“B” in the 9th) in which he competed, including 2 wins. All three of the 200 frees he swam in the NCAA meet were in the “A” finals noted.

In 2024 he made the US Olympic team as a 200 freestyler(relay), after training the year with Cal.

15m steps ahead
Reply to  mds
2 days ago

Stop it. He never swim for Cal this year

Isaac
Reply to  15m steps ahead
1 day ago

Yeah but that is someone Durden would recruit lol.

KSW
3 days ago

Best first night ever ?

mds
Reply to  KSW
3 days ago

Well, I’m not sure Coach Nesty would agree…..

mds
3 days ago

Hobson better watch out for Alexy in the 200.

Last year, Alexy was rolling start 1:30.50 and then was 2nd in individual 200 at 1:29.75.

This year, Alexy lead off at 1:30.02. What will the flat start 200 bring?

Of course, the same type of consideration for Hobson might again bring an NCAA record individual swim. Last year Luke’s relay swim was 1:29.13 before he won the individual race in 1:28.81.

Expecting a great race!!

BR32
Reply to  mds
2 days ago

After swimming the 200 medley and anchoring 18.03 too

snailSpace
Reply to  mds
2 days ago

I feel confident in my 3rd/2nd place picks for him in the 100/200.

applesandoranges
Reply to  mds
2 days ago

Last year’s times don’t mean a thing.

mvnjuan
Reply to  mds
2 days ago

Absolutey no correlation

Isaac
Reply to  mvnjuan
1 day ago

We will see, he went fast in prelims

Brunofan
3 days ago

Not to beat a dead horse — it’s obvious he didn’t push off the bottom — but any swimmer implicitly knows that pushing off the bottom in the middle of a race would never help, and instead kill all your momentum. It’s silly to even suggest

Boxall's Railing
Reply to  Brunofan
3 days ago

This…unless it’s in the Paris Olympic pool – shallow enough where it might actually work 😂

Back2Back
Reply to  Brunofan
2 days ago

I don’t hear anyone implying it was a ‘strategy’ to push off the bottom, just like failing to touch a wall on a flip turn shortens a race…

At issue, was it clear he touched the bottom, which I hear should be (Might be, definitely is?) grounds for a DQ? Others:

Touching, hitting, pulling on a lane line?

Swinging from the backstroke flags….

Back2Back
Reply to  Brunofan
2 days ago

Ok, not a ‘strategy’. Infraction? DQ’able?
Others: missing a wall, pulling on lane line? Swinging on backstroke flags?

Bobthebuilderrocks
3 days ago

Maurer was 1:29.9 with a .39 RT. Works out to where flat start, it would be about a second PB from his 1:31.5 at the Invite Meet, same meet he went 4:04 at. Leon’s record is going down tomorrow. Holy smokes

Swimfan27
Reply to  Bobthebuilderrocks
3 days ago

Don’t know if he’ll take it down given Leon’s insane first 250, but I bet he’ll be close, which is still insane. I thought that record would last a generation.

Bobthebuilderrocks
Reply to  Swimfan27
3 days ago

Leon’s insane front half VS Rex’s insane back half.

snailSpace
Reply to  Bobthebuilderrocks
2 days ago

Maurer seems to be in great form. I’m a bit worried about Germonprez. And hey, Texas is overperforming seed so far.

Bobthebuilderrocks
Reply to  snailSpace
2 days ago

.24 from SEC’s. I’m really hoping it was first race jitter type of stuff and not that he’s out of form, but I’m not super confident.

Maurer is going to go something filthy in the 500 tomorrow.

Did you see Hubert’s 19.3!? SHEESH. Feels like we got robbed of a 100 fly from him.

snailSpace
Reply to  Bobthebuilderrocks
2 days ago

Did you see Hubert’s 19.3!? SHEESH. Feels like we got robbed of a 100 fly from him.

Oh yeah!! He had a weak start too (with a decent start it would have been 19.1). It was only 5th fastest in the field but it kept them in the game, and it’s even better considering his sprint UW speed isn’t the best. Really looking forward to his 200 free relay split (he could be as fast as 18.3, which I never would have imagined) and his 100 fly in the 400 medley relay.

Bobthebuilderrocks
Reply to  snailSpace
2 days ago

Texas could have an actual 200 free relay with only 1 actual sprintet (Giuliano )that would be funny. I’m curous to see his 4 medley fly split, could help keep Texas in 2nd behind Florida

mvnjuan
Reply to  Bobthebuilderrocks
2 days ago

It wont.

Floptropicans
3 days ago

Top 6-10 scoring
#6 ASU 245 : 0
Day 1 : (56) 48 : -8
Day 2 : (58)
Day 3 : (55.5)
Day 4 : (75.5)

#7 NC State 197.5 : 0
Day 1 : (44) 50 : +6
Day 2 : (49)
Day 3 : (36)
Day 4 : (68.5)

#8 Georgia 165 : 0
Day 1 : (32) 54 : +22
Day 2 : (34)
Day 3 : (60)
Day 4 : (39)

#9 Stanford 192 : 149 : 43
Day 1 : (36) 46 : +10
Day 2 : (9)
Day 3 : (54)
Day 4 : (50)

#10… Read more »

Last edited 3 days ago by Floptropicans