2017 Men’s NCAA Championships: Day 3 Finals Live Recap

2017 MEN’S NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS

Chase Kalisz and the Georgia Bulldogs hold three of the top four 400 IM seeds heading into tonight’s final, with Kalisz looking to challenge his own American record and reclaim the NCAA throne.

Kalisz won back-to-back titles in 2013 and 2014, but was upset in 2015 by Will Licon and took a redshirt year in 2016 as Josh Prenot won the title. He’s joined by teammates Jay Litherland and Gunnar Bentz in tonight’s final, along with 200 IM co-champ Mark Szaranek of Florida.

In the 100 fly, Texas stars Joseph Schooling and Jack Conger look to weather the challenge of Olympic sprint powers Caeleb Dressel and Ryan HeldThe 100 breast has Will Licon leading a tight field that includes defending champ Fabian Schwingenschlogl of Mizzou. In the 100 back, Ryan Murphy targets his own American record and an NCAA 4-peat in the event, while John Shebat and Connor Oslin target Murphy.

The 200 free could be one of the most entertaining events of the night. Townley Haas is the defending champ and American record-holder. But he’s got to overcome Wednesday’s 1:30-point swimmers Blake Pieroni and Dylan Carter of IU and USC, respectively, plus freshman 1:31s Cameron Craig of Arizona State and Dean Farris of Harvard.

The night will close down with the 200 medley relay, where Cal entered the meet as the favorites, but a red-hot Texas team has taken over the spotlight after prelims.

We’ve also got a shot to see some of the top splits in history in every stroke: Cal’s Murphy has the fastest 50 back ever in 20.20 from last year. Missouri’s Schwingenschlogl was three tenths off the best breast split in history (22.64) this morning. Texas’s Schooling holds the best-ever fly split (19.36) and Dressel this morning set the fastest free split in history at 17.71.

Keep refreshing this page for live, event-by-event recaps in real-time from tonight’s NCAA finals, and follow @SwimSwamLive on Twitter for even more updates.

400 IM – Finals

  • NCAA record: 3:34.50 Chase Kalisz (Georgia) 3-28-2014
  • American record: 3:34.50 Chase Kalisz (Georgia) 3-28-2014
  • U.S. Open record: 3:34.50 Chase Kalisz (Georgia) 3-28-2014
  • 2016 NCAA Champion: Josh Prenot (Cal) – 3:35.82

Top 3:

  1. Chase Kalisz, Georgia – 3:33.42 AR
  2. Andrew Seliskar, Cal – 3:36.18
  3. Mark Szaranek, Florida – 3:36.31

Georgia’s Chase Kalisz emphatically announced his return to the NCAA, jumping back to the top of the 400 IM with a new American, NCAA and U.S. Open record of 3:33.42. Kalisz was patient, letting Texas’s Jon Roberts push the pace through fly and back. But a massive breaststroke split of 58.61 put Kalisz way out front, and he rode the clean water home with a 51.13 anchor to become the fastest man all-time by 2.4 seconds.

Cal’s Andrew Seliskar played roughly the same game, staying with the pack on fly and back and dropping a 59.92 on breaststroke and a 50.86 on freestyle to nab second place and move all the way up to 4th all-time in the event at 3:36.18. Seliskar passes up legend Michael Phelps for that #4 spot.

Bronze went to Florida’s Mark Szaranekwho tied for the 200 IM win last night. Szaranek was 3:36.31 and sits five hundredths back of Phelps in 6th all-time.

Georgia’s Gunnar Bentz finished fourth in 3:36.60, 8th all-time. That was powered by a wicked 48.73 on the closing 100. Georgia’s other A finalist was Jay Litherlandwho blasted a second-best-in-heat 50.26 on the anchor leg, but was too far out of contention to jump back into the top of the heat. He finished 7th in 3:38.66.

In between was Stanford’s Abrahm DeVine (3:37.73), followed by Roberts, who fell off the pace on breaststroke but still finished 6th in 3:38.66.

Virginia Tech’s Robert Owen took 8th in 3:41.21.

South Carolina’s Tom Peribonio came through for a huge B final win in 3:40.24, holding off a late charge from 10th-place Joe Patching of Auburn (3:41.19).

100 BUTTERFLY – Finals

  • NCAA record: Joseph Schooling (Texas), 2016- 44.01
  • American record: Tom Shields (Cal), 2016- 43.84
  • U.S. Open record: Tom Shields (Cal), 2016- 43.84
  • 2016 NCAA Champion: Joseph Schooling (Texas)- 44.01

Top 3:

  1. Caeleb Dressel, Florida – 43.58 AR
  2. Joseph Schooling, Texas – 43.75
  3. Jack Conger, Texas – 44.35

Olympic champ and U.S. Open record-holder Joseph Schooling went out fast, but it was the sprint freestyler Caeleb Dressel who ran him down late to pull a big upset and take out the American, NCAA and U.S. Open records. Dressel went 43.58, becoming the second man ever under 44 seconds.

It’s a fitting win for Dressel, the sprinter who was widely criticized by fans for choosing what was seen as a distance school in Florida, to use a massive back half to win a second NCAA title for the week. Dressel closed in an absurd 22.88, using a huge final underwater kickout to pass up schooling and nail the touchout.

Dressel’s 43.58 takes down the 43.84 set by Olympian Tom Shields back in December. Also under that record was Schooling, who pushed the pace early in a gutsy race and held on for second in 43.75, his best by three tenths. That pair sits #1 and #2 all-time.

Texas’s Jack Conger took bronze in 44.35, improving his #5 spot all-time. Also under 45 seconds was NC State’s Ryan Heldwho was 4th with a 44.92.

Cal’s Zheng Quah took fifth in 45.06, but the Bears were dealt a blow when Matt Josa was DQ’d for the second time. Josa has swum two individual races and taken DQs in both. He was called for a non-simultaneous touch on a wall.

Indiana’s Vini Lanza went 45.52 for sixth and Mizzou took seventh with Andrew Sansoucie in 45.76.

Cal’s Justin Lynch won the B final in 45.41.

Texas continues to lead the team points battle by a wide margin, sitting 99.5 points ahead of Cal. Florida is lurking in third, just 8.5 back of Cal for second, with Josa’s DQ and Dressel’s upset pulling a big points swing.’

NC State is 30 back in fourth and Indiana 10 behind them in fifth.

200 YARD FREESTYLE – Finals

Top 3:

  1. Townley Haas, Texas – 1:30.65
  2. T-2: Blake Pieroni, Indiana – 1:31.16
  3. T-2: Dylan Carter, USC – 1:31.16

USC’s Dylan Carter pushed an early pace with half a body length lead over defending champ Townley Haas of Texas, but his big underwaters used up his legs early on. Haas swam a better tactical race, taking over the lead through the middle of the race and pushing in to a 1:30.65 win.

That’s the second-best performance of all-time despite a bit of a rough finish for the Longhorn sophomore. Carter held on to tie for second place with Indiana’s Blake PieroniBoth men were 1:31.16, tying for the 5th-fastest performance all-time. Carter and Pieroni were both a bit faster on Wednesday night, leading off their team’s relays in 1:30s.

Next came the two freshmen who had the nation’s top times out of the conference rounds. Harvard’s Dean Farris went 1:32.25 for fourth and Arizona State’s Cameron Craig 1:32.46 for fifth, proving they could hold up to the tough NCAA spotlight.

Florida’s junior world record-holder (in long course meters) Maxime Rooney was sixth in 1:32.79. Rooney is also a freshman, with the future of this event at the NCAA level suddenly looking very bright. NC State’s Soeren Dahl (1:32.98) and Wisconsin’s Brett Pinfold (1:33.57) rounded out the championship heat.

Coming out of Dressel’s massive 100 fly win, Jan Switkowski made it two heat wins in a row for Florida, taking the B final in 1:32.51. That won by seven tenths of a second.

In team points, Texas built its lead to more than 100 after the 200, with Florida overtaking Cal for second. The Gators are 11.5 ahead of the Golden Bears, with NC State 30 back of them.

100 BREASTSTROKE – Finals

  • NCAA: 50.04 3/28/2014 Kevin Cordes, Arizona
  • American: 50.04 3/28/2014 Kevin Cordes, Arizona
  • U. S. Open: 50.04 3/28/2014 Kevin Cordes, Arizona
  • Championship: 50.04 3/28/2014 Kevin Cordes, Arizona
  • 2016 NCAA Champion: Fabian Schwingenschlogl, Missouri

Top 3:

  1. Will Licon, Texas – 50.68
  2. Fabian Schwingenschlogl, Missouri – 50.77
  3. Carsten Vissering, USC – 51.40

Missouri’s Fabian Schwingenschlogl pushed a huge 23.46 over the first 50 yards to build a big lead, but star 200 breaststroker Will Licon showed his endurance with a 26.80 back-half to pick up the win. Licon was 50.68 to pass up two more swimmers and move to #2 all-time in the event.

Schwingenschlogl held on for second in 50.77, taking the #3 spot all-time for Mizzou.

USC sophomore Carsten Vissering topped the pack behind those lead dogs, going 51.40 for bronze. That was a touchout of .01 over Cal’s Connor Hoppe. A tenth back were Auburn’s Michael Duderstadt (51.55) and Virginia Tech’s Brandon Fiala, who still sits #9 all-time with his 51.30 from prelims. Fiala was 51.66 tonight for sixth.

Duke’s Peter Kropp (51.90) and South Carolina’s Nils Wich-Glasen (51.92) took seventh and eighth in a final where all 8 swimmers broke the 52-second barrier.

Further proving that the breaststroke currently has the best crop of hard-to-pronounce names, George Washington’s Andrea Bolognesi won the B final in 52.07. He was followed by Mauro Castillo Luna of Texas A&M (52.12) and Conner McHugh, who further lowered a legendary Minnesota school record to 52.30.

100 BACKSTROKE – Finals

Top 3:

  1. Ryan Murphy, Cal – 43.99
  2. John Shebat, Texas – 44.35
  3. Connor Oslin, Alabama – 44.56

Cal’s Ryan Murphy completed his first four-peat, winning his fourth-straight NCAA title in the event with a 43.99. Murphy hasn’t been quite as on fire as he was last year, but this time still stacks up as the third-fastest swim in history, and Murphy himself owns all three swims ever under 44 seconds.

Second went to Texas sophomore John Shebatwho has morphed this week into the NCAA’s next premier backstroker in the post-Murphy era. Shebat was 44.35, cutting almost three more tenths off his prelims swim and moving to #3 all-time. He passes up Olympic champ Matt Grevers tonight.

Alabama’s Connor Oslin took third in 44.56 – that finishes just outside of the top 10 swims all-time, and Oslin remains 5th in history. The Crimson Tide also took fourth in 44.91 with junior Luke Kaliszak.

USC’s Ralf Tribuntsov touched out Penn State’s Shane Ryan for fifth, 45.13 to 45.17. Ryan had to win a swim-off just to make the A final, and moved up to sixth place. He was a narrow 0.05 ahead of Louisville’s Grigory Tarasevich (45.22) for seventh. And NC State’s Andreas Vazaios went 45.49 for 8th place.

Georgia’s Taylor Dale came up with one of the most impressive B final swims of the night. Dale swam the 100 back in the morning, plus Georgia’s 200 medley relay, then lost  swim-off for 8th in the 100 back, making tonight’s B final his 4th swim of the day. But Dale came up with his best swim by far, blasting a 44.64 to crush the field by a body length and crack the top 10 all-time. Dale now sits 7th all-time, passing up – ironically enough – Penn State’s Ryan, who beat him in the swim-off just about four hours ago.

In the team points battle, Cal took advantage of Florida’s big backstroke and breaststroke weakness to rocket back to a 24.5-point lead for second. NC State is 51 behind Cal and Indiana 66.5 back. But IU has two divers in the A final, and should score in the ballpark of 30 points.

3-METER SPRINGBOARD – Finals

Top 3:

  1. Steele Johnson, Purdue – 502.20
  2. Briadam Herrera, Miami – 477.30
  3. Juan Hernandez, LSU – 464.35

Purdue’s Steele Johnson won his second-straight diving event this week, outscoring the field by 25 points and breaking the NCAA meet record with 502.20 points.

Miami’s Briadam Herrera took second with 477.30 and LSU freshman Juan Hernandez made a stellar debut with a 464.35-point, third-place finish.

200 MEDLEY RELAY – Finals

  • NCAA record: 1:22.27, Michigan, 2013
  • American record: 1:22.40, California, 2015
  • U.S. Open record: 1:22.27, Michigan, 2013
  • 2016 NCAA Champion: Alabama, 1:22.28

Top 3:

  1. Texas – 1:21.54 NCAAR
  2. Alabama – 1:21.89 NCAAR
  3. Cal – 1:22.28

It was a wild 200 medley relay. Defending champs Alabama were without their key piece from last year, anchor leg Kristian Gkolomeev, but apparently no one told the Crimson Tide they shouldn’t be contenders anymore. They went out fast on Connor Oslin‘s field-best 20.39 backstroke split and hung tough the entire way.

But Texas was too tough to hold off, with their killer middle splits. Will Licon had the field’s best breaststroke split at 22.91 and Joseph Schooling the best fly split at 19.45 to give the Longhorns the lead. Brett Ringgold‘s 18.34 anchor capped a new U.S. Open and NCAA record of 1:21.54. John Shebat was the leadoff man there, going 20.84.

Pavel Romanov (23.3 breast) and Luke Kaliszak (19.9 fly) kept the Alabama in the hunt, and Zane Waddell blasted an 18.26 anchor job to get Alabama under the record as well in 1:21.89.

Cal was 1:22.28, getting a 20.45 backstroke leg from Ryan MurphyBehind them, Mizzou was 1:22.48. Breaststroker Fabian Schwingenschlogl was the only other breaststroker under 23, going 22.93 for the Tigers.

Florida got a massive 17.93 anchor split from Caeleb Dresselbut it was only enough to rise to 5th in 1:23.08. NC State made similar late moves, with Ryan Held splitting 18.13 to seal 6th in 1:23.18.

Stanford was 1:23.74 and Louisville 1:24.06 to round out the A final.

 

Team Scores

Texas holds a nearly-insurmountable lead of 138.5 points heading into tomorrow. But the drama is for second, where Cal leads Florida by almost 30. NC State remains fourth, though Indiana’s tough divers helped close that gap to just 6.5 points.

From there, things are tight between Stanford, USC and Georgia for sixth. Stanford has great milers, but Georgia is tough in the 200s of each stroke. USC probably has the best sprinters of the bunch, which helps in the 100 free and 400 free relay, so that race should come down to the wire tomorrow. Mizzou isn’t totally out of that hunt, coming off of two high medley relay finishes.

It’s Louisville, Auburn and Alabama currently fighting for the last spot in the top 10.

Men - Team Rankings - Through Event 14                      
 
  1. Texas                           391.5   2. California                        253
  3. Florida                         224.5   4. NC State                          196
  5. Indiana                         189.5   6. Stanford                          160
  7. Southern Cali                   142.5   8. Univ of Georgia                   141
  9. Missouri                        135.5  10. Louisville                      102.5
 11. Auburn                          100.5  12. Alabama                            98
 13. Arizona State                      68  14. South Carolina                     60
 15. Purdue                             57  16. Texas A&M                          56
 17. Tennessee                          55  18. Michigan                           46
 19. Wisconsin                          33  19. Ohio St                            33
 21. University of Miami                31  22. Lsu                                28
 22. Virginia Tech                      28  24. Harvard                            21
 25. Arizona                          19.5  26. Minnesota                          18
 27. Penn St                            16  28. Notre Dame                         12
 28. Duke                               12  30. George Washington                   9
 31. Denver                              7  31. Florida State                       7
 33. UNC                                 6  34. Kentucky                            4
 34. Northwestern                        4  36. Cornell                             3
 37. Hawaii                              2  37. Penn                                2
 39. Pittsburgh                          1

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Steve W
7 years ago

Dressel was criticized for “choosing what was seen as a distance school in Florida”? Perhaps my understanding of “distance” is different, but I consider the 1650 free, 500 free, and 400 IM to be “distance” events. Perhaps coach Troy has not had many 50 free specialists in his career, but anybody with knowledge of his success knows that Troy has coached several of the world’s best swimmers in many, many events – especially in the 100-200 yard/meter events. I’ve known Troy since 1976 – when I swam for him for two years. Even back then he was proving to be versatile. I had teammates go to Jr. and Senior nationals in the 100 free, 100 back, and 200 free. Another… Read more »

bobo gigi
7 years ago

Quick thoughts.

1. Wow for Kalisz. His backstroke is improving and that’s the key for him to beat Hagino. 58.74 for Bentz in the last 100 and a huge 23.76 in the last 50 🙂 but it’s always the same story with him. If only his backstroke…. I didn’t believe Seliskar would finish second in such a good time, especially after an average 200 IM.

2. Double wow for Dressel. I never thought one second he would beat Schooling in the 100 fly and would even break the 44-second barrier. I’m stunned. He beats him in yards while he would be at least one second behind in long course. Not the same sport. Dressel is in the shape of his… Read more »

bobo gigi
Reply to  bobo gigi
7 years ago

I remove “average 200 IM” by Seliskar from my comment. Maybe not the place he expected but in terms of time it was not bad at all.
I read he passes MP in the all-time SCY list in that event. That’s funny. Ok MP didn’t care at all about short course and that was a good thing otherwise he wouldn’t have had the same career, but that’s still another proof of 2 different sports. In LCM Seliskar has a PB of 4.16.05. Having said that I’m pleased to see him back at his best after tough last 2 years.

Bay City Tex
7 years ago

Will be interesting to see if Horns,had to swim tomorrow to win the title for 3rd straight year.
The past,2 years, they would’ve tied one year,and won outright the other year. Taking out Horns and moving Cal up a spot. The only way you can’t,do this, is when a Cal swimmer is,17th, and would’ve been able to swim in consolation. I’m sure the Auburn teams were this dominant back in the day, but the margin of victory the last 3 yrs., including this yr., has been impressive!

tomato
Reply to  Bay City Tex
7 years ago

amen

Derek
7 years ago

Man Alabama got hosed by that phantom relay DQ. They would be easily ahead of Louisville and Auburn.

Peter Davis
Reply to  Derek
7 years ago

Their backstroker went significantly past 15m tonight on the 200mr, so i don’t think they are complaining

Derek
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

Are you joking? With the officials at this meet, they would have DQ’d him if he went past.

They haven’t been afraid to DQ people for anything.

Peter Davis
Reply to  Derek
7 years ago

Wrong. They missed blatant DQs on Will Licon and Fabian Schwingenschloegl. They missed the Bama past 15m by several feet. It is at about 2:13:00 of the espn3 replay. The video doesn’t lie Oslin is way, way past 15m

Derek
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

No I just screenshotted the exact moment on an HD video that I could go frame by frame on, not an ESPN broadcast from a back angle. His head broke the surface clearly before the marker.

Stop lying, they were in lane 1. The official is looking right at him as he broke last…if he went past, he would have been DQ’d.

Licon and Shwing… I have no idea as I have not seen a replay.

Peter Davis
Reply to  Derek
7 years ago

Post it. Because he broke out way past the 15m marker in the espn3 replay, regardless of angle.

Derek
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

Breakout https://imgur.com/gallery/Kxv4W

You can stop hating now.

Peter Davis
Reply to  Derek
7 years ago

You said HD and better angle. Who is “lying” now? Here it is up close, in HD. Not some still shot from your Zapruder film. http://imgur.com/c92qNbJ Notice his head has still not broken the surface and he is well past 15m already. Hold this L, Derek, you earned it

Caleb
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

that’s a fisheye lens so it’s wildly misleading to use it to pinpoint where he is relative to the side. Derek’s shot is clear and he’s up before the marker.

Peter Davis
Reply to  Caleb
7 years ago

It is not a fish eye lens. Here are the frames, stopped at 5.4, 5.5, 5.6, and 5.7 seconds. Oslin’s head doesn’t break the surface until 5.7 and by that point he is indisputably past 15m.

http://imgur.com/JGvYfrq,75jwA85,xNLNli6,ZkyNS4C

What you are not seeing from Derek’s incredibly low quality shot is that Oslin doesnt actually break the surface for about another meter, as can clearly be seen in the HD shots I am providing.

Derek
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

Dude. That is from like 6 feet behind him. That totally messes with the perspective.

It’s obvious you can’t be reasoned with though.

Derek
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

That is from behind. You clearly know nothing about perspective. An HD wide angle from the side shows him behind it easily. With the official right on top of it.

Also, the officials foot is the actual marker, the buoy is just a guide. Stop spreading fake news.

Derek
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

And also, the angle everyone is posting if from behind him. I don’t know if anyone has educated you on perspective, but from behind an object will appear to be further than it is.

Peter Davis
Reply to  Derek
7 years ago

Hmm how does perspective work?

http://m.imgur.com/Qvxyf6a

This is too easy. My advice to you is when you get in an argument be right, or at lead the be honest, especially with yourself

Derek
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

He’s already taken one stroke on that…and it’s still from behind him…

Peter Davis
Reply to  Derek
7 years ago

You are a real piece of work. At this point it is a fact that Oslin broke out well past 15m. I have gone above and beyond to provide you with evidence that erases any shadow of any doubt that that is the case. It has become abundantly clear that…
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ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

Well done Peter – i am with you here . The truth shall set u free guys ….not the contrary in case u didn’t know how it works .

Peter Davis
7 years ago

Biggest story of the night:

As can be seen from about 55:40-55:45 of the ESPN replay, Licon takes a dolphin kick rather than a breaststroke kick in his last stroke into the wall. Unfortunately, it seems he cheated his way to a title, and the video evidence is more clear than any I’ve ever seen.

Attila the Runt
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

Nah, that would be Dean Farris’ fourth place in the 200 free.

Peter Davis
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

ESPN added advertisement to their replay so it is now at 57:55-58:00, at least for now

Bigly
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

Damn. That means Schwingen got schlogled.

Peter Davis
Reply to  Bigly
7 years ago

Upon further review, Schwingenschloegl did the exact same thing. Insane. And no calls, because no Josa

Peter Davis
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

Texas fans downvoting this but if you watch the video it is undeniable. The question, now that everyone can see this, is will Licon give back his title? There is ZERO question that he actively cheated.

Attila the Runt
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

Yeah, but was he wiretapped?

Bigly
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

Simply payback for Katijima v. Hansen. It’s breastroke karma.

Peter Davis
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

Go watch the video. “the bizarre optical qualities which moving water and light can create” You sound like a flat earther. The stroke judges have failed and made a mockery of this meet. Licon and Schwingenschloegl both blatantly cheated.

Caleb
Reply to  Peter Davis
7 years ago

i think you misjudged your micrdose

Peter Davis
Reply to  Caleb
7 years ago

Why don’t you go watch the video. It is disgusting seeing the two top finishers in the 100 breast blatantly cheat and get away with it.

aquajosh
7 years ago

Not bad for Florida to get a 20.0 fly leg out of their 200/400 IM specialist! Look for him to have a good 200 fly tomorrow.

Caleb
Reply to  aquajosh
7 years ago

that will be some race… Switkowski swimming well… Seliskar with the big IM today. The Georgia boys having solid meets… the mystery man from Singapore!.. .Josa out for revenge!… and of course the usual suspects.

Attila the Runt
Reply to  Caleb
7 years ago

You can pencil Conger in as second and fill the rest of your bracket as you please.

Conger FTW
Reply to  Attila the Runt
7 years ago

:(((((((((( I just want conger to win once

Back2Back
7 years ago

Texas 391 team points…close of Day 3…

HookEm
7 years ago

Ringgold with a 18.34….with a .45 RT. Hoping for a big 100 tomorrow

Dylan
Reply to  HookEm
7 years ago

He has a great chance. Sub 19 50 free and his start is not great compared to some others guys breaking 19. His second 25 is better and his turn is phenomenal. Not dressel-esque but who is? Definitely going to be fast

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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