Texas Two-Step: Townley Haas Crushes 1:30.46 200 Free

2016 MEN’S NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS

In one of the most eye-popping swims you may ever see, Texas freshman Townley Haas crushed the NCAA, American, and U.S. Open record in the 200 yard freestyle with a final time of 1:30.46.  Fresh off of teammate Joseph Schooling’s 100 butterfly record, Haas came out on a mission, clocking 20.90 in the first 50 and flipping at 43.61 at the 100, nearly a full second under the previous record pace from Simon Burnett of Arizona.  Haas slowed down a bit over the final 100 (closing in “only” a 46.85), but was enough below pace to crush Burnett’s standard.

A comparison of the splits:

Simon Burnett (2006, Atlanta): 21.28, 44.44 [23.16], 1:07.53 [23.09], 1:31.20 [23.67]
Townley Haas (2016, Atlanta): 20.90, 43.61 [22.71], 1:06.92 [23.31], 1:30.46 [23.54]

Impressively, that swim was actually under Haas’ record split from Wednesday night when he was completely fresh.  Doubly impressive: Haas is just a freshman, and has three more years to dip under the 1:30 barrier.

In This Story

14
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

14 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
bobo gigi
8 years ago

1.30.46 flat-start! 😯 😯 😯 😯

I can’t still believe it!

And he’s only a freshman!

Before the meet I’ve written it was time to break that antique record of Simon Burnett.
But I never expected it would be done this week.
Especially by such a margin!
He broke it by 0.74s!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
When we know that so many big names were unable to break it, that time is insane.
Sorry Ryan Murphy. Sorry Joseph Schooling. While all you records are amazing, I consider the performance of Mr Haas the most impressive performance of the meet so far and probably in the top 5 of the greatest SCY men’s swims ever.

Ok guys, I’m the first… Read more »

Coach Mike 1952
Reply to  bobo gigi
8 years ago

Townley’s 200 flat start was actually faster than his relay split. Amazing. The future of American swimming just became brighter.

Pedro
8 years ago

Dude this is nuts

CO swimmer
8 years ago

And I thought I was impressed by last year’s Ncaas ????

Aussiecrawl
8 years ago

Swimming SCY to LCM is totally different.
The critics will be watching closely.
Can Townley beat Sun, Agnel,Mcevoy in the 200 @ Rio ?? Hmmm it remains to be seen.
More likely as a team USA member for a relay birth. Im sure Townley might be ripe for a individual spot for the next worlds.

Ole 99
Reply to  Aussiecrawl
8 years ago

One thing to keep in mind here though is that Haas is doing this with no underwater swimming. Prior to this meet his lcm 200 was significantly more impressive than his his scy 200 time. He’s got to do the swimming, but his progression should translate in the big pool.

Grubby_1
8 years ago

Interesting comment and idea. Haas is swimming the 1650 tomorrow night to help secure a Texas victory. He would never do this for himself, rather swim for the team championship. Great things take time and he is coming along well beyond expectations.

Ole 99
8 years ago

If the USA swimming database is correct Haas has gone from 1:35.19 (12/14) to 1:30.46. Wonder what he could go right now in a LCM 200 free. He was 1:47.55 last summer. 1:43? 1:44? Dare I suggest a 1:42?

Steve-O Nolan
Reply to  Ole 99
8 years ago

Could definitely see a 1:44. A 1:43’s a bit unlikely and 1:42 would be insane.

DRESSEL IS GOD
Reply to  Steve-O Nolan
6 years ago

Maybe 1:43 low Tokyo, textile record. Maybe he could hit 1:42 something for a lifetime best-And with dressels start and turns—- 1:41 is a possibility.

Irish Ringer
8 years ago

Guy has just average turns too so room to take that even lower.

Swimmer Thieroff
Reply to  Irish Ringer
8 years ago

That could also bode well for his long course prospects… Perhaps another potential Olympic contender in the 200 in the making? (Or at least an 800 free relay member?)

pwb
8 years ago

This 200 has to be one of the best swims ever. When you think of all the studs who have swum this race at NCAAs in the decade since Burnett’s record and the nearly second Haas took off that time … Just a mind blow

About Morgan Priestley

Morgan Priestley

A Stanford University and Birmingham, Michigan native, Morgan Priestley started writing for SwimSwam in February 2013 on a whim, and is loving that his tendency to follow and over-analyze swim results can finally be put to good use. Morgan swam competitively for 15+ years, primarily excelling in the mid-distance freestyles. While …

Read More »