Carmel Boys Roll To 14th Straight IHSAA Sectional Title In Noblesville

IHSAA Boys Swimming & Diving Sectional –  Noblesville

The Carmel High School boys successfully won their 14th straight IHSAA Sectional title on Saturday in Noblesville, setting the team up to take a run at a seventh consecutive state title this weekend.

The Carmel girls won a 35th straight high school state title on Feb. 13.

Carmel finished with 543 points, easily outpacing runner-up Noblesville (353), with Westfield (285) and Tipton (237) taking third and fourth.

The winning team was dominant by going 1-2-3 in seven of the eight individual swimming events, while also sweeping the three relays decisively.

Seniors Griffin Hadley and Augustus Rothrock led the way winning two individual events apiece for Carmel, both contributing on one winning relay as well.

Hadley topped the 200 freestyle in a time of 1:37.93, leading sophomore teammate Kayden Lancaster (1:39.63), and followed up by claiming the 100 free in 45.35 over Carmel sophomores Sean Sullivan (46.67) and Andrew Robertson (46.87).

Hadley owns respective bests of 44.58 and 1:36.38 in the 100 and 200, both done in December 2020.

Rothrock won the 200 IM in 1:48.24, leading junior teammate Ryan Malicki (1:49.39), and then claimed the 100 butterfly in a time of 49.29, with fellow senior Kellen Reese (49.95) also snapping the 50-second barrier.

Rothrock’s best times stand at 1:47.65 and 49.05 in the 200 IM and 100 fly, respectively.

Also winning for Carmel individually was Kayden Lancaster in the 500 free (4:33.10), freshman Carter Lancaster in the 100 back (49.75), and Malicki in the 100 breast (55.04).

Carter Lancaster and Malicki swam the first two legs on the 200 medley relay (1:32.14), Malicki, Rothrock, Robertson and K.Lancaster made up the 200 free relay (1:24.24), and Hadley and Sullivan were joined by Ethan Johns and Gregg Enoch on the 400 free relay (3:08.47).

The lone non-Carmel winner in a swimming event was Tipton senior Ayden Stanley, who snagged the 50 free in a time of 21.12 over Carmel’s Christopher Holmes (21.29) and William Kok (21.53).

Porter Brovont of Eastern (Greentown) also won the 3-meter diving event with a score of 488.46.

TOP 3 TEAMS – SECTION 9

  1. Carmel, 543
  2. Noblesville, 353
  3. Westfield, 285

Other notable sectional winners included Fishers winning Hamilton Southeastern over HSE, Franklin claiming a ninth straight title at Franklin, Zionsville winning an 11th straight title at Lafayette Jeff, and Brownsburg winning their eighth straight at Pike.

The psych sheets for the IHSAA State Championships will be released on Tuesday following the conclusion of all the sectional meets.

18
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

18 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Old Swim Coach
3 years ago

Looking forward to some epic matchups at state this weekend! Thanks to IHSAA and the IUPUI Natatorium for coming up with a workable plan that still allows the teams to compete. If your season or your state meet cancelled, look at how Indiana was able to figure it out. It can be done!

Swimfish87
3 years ago

Sad to see Westfield Perform so horribly. The team that wants used to be top contenders. With multiple state champions. Two were last year not having one person qualify for state. Sad to see

Guerra
Reply to  Swimfish87
3 years ago

That’s a shame because they’ve always had talent up there and a lot of good families that supported the program. I know their facility situation wasn’t very good in the past compared to other local schools like Carmel, HSE, Fishers and Noblesville. I think they just finished building their new 50-meter pool and that should eventually be a game changer.

Swimfish87
Reply to  Guerra
3 years ago

Pool size has nothing to do with it. Years ago Westfield was producing state champions year after year not to mention being in the top 10 every. Now with this new coach they have had some of the worst showings in school history. Heck I don’t Even think last year they qualified one swimmer. The club thought hey let’s take a coach from Carmel they do good. Wrong!

IndySwimFit76
Reply to  Swimfish87
3 years ago

Westfield has had 5 state champions in their history with IHSAA (Ben Wachtel 2006-2008 most notable with multiples titles). Top finish as a team was 3rd in 2011, only other Top 10 finish as a team was 9th in 2012. Otherwise int he past 20 years or so, they have only been a Top 15 school at state a hand full of times. 2010-2014 was a good run for Westfield, but no dynasty. It’s tough to compete when Carmel is in your sectional and very close by for families to take their kids there. I would say that Westfield is doing their best to rebuild and grow espeically with the new 10 lane 50m pool available, and a community that… Read more »

Swimfish87
Reply to  IndySwimFit76
3 years ago

Sorry but the size of the pool dose not make for a good team. Take a look back at Carmel history in the pool they used to have but yet still manage to have state championship teams.

Guerra
Reply to  Swimfish87
3 years ago

I know. Look at North Central…they were a lot better in the old dump before moving into the new pool. Unfortunately, the coaching went way down (and is still bad) after Mark Hesse left and Bruce Patmos was ousted by the kooks there.

SupSwim56
Reply to  Swimfish87
3 years ago

Recipe for success = Stable pool situation (regardless of size), good consistent coaching, large local population to draw swimmers from, supportive community. Your most successful HS teams have a large age group program to feed the HS team as well. Carmel has had all of those for a very long time. Carmel has also had their 50m pool since 1998, accounting for many of the successful history you reference. While your statement is partially accurate, it’s not the whole picture and should be noted. Westfield does not have all the ingredients yet, but getting close.

Evan Lake
Reply to  SupSwim56
2 years ago

Don’t worry, we have the ingredients this year😈

Go Rocks!

Swimfish87
Reply to  IndySwimFit76
3 years ago

And just so we’re clear ben Wachtel was the best Westfield swimmer. I have no ifs, ands or buts about that statement. Truly a pure talent. The man was just a pure gifted athlete

Evan Lake
Reply to  Swimfish87
2 years ago

😂

Evan Lake
Reply to  IndySwimFit76
2 years ago

No need to wait 3-4 years! We’re back this year to prove everyone wrong. This ain’t no rebuild, this is the redeem team 😈

Go Rocks!

Guerra
Reply to  Swimfish87
3 years ago

Yeah idk. I know Darrick and he seems like a nice guy at meets. He has more of a club background than high school and he is from outside Indiana. The sooner people who come from outside Indiana understand that high school is “the master” the better off they’ll be. I hope things get better for the Shamrocks…

Evan Lake
Reply to  Guerra
2 years ago

Don’t worry bud, WE’RE BACK😈

Swimming with Hippos
Reply to  Swimfish87
3 years ago

Westfield might not have the state champions they use to have but look at some of the facts: 1) Carmel brings in kids from around the state. There are several swimmers who moved to Carmel just to swim there. 2). Unlike HSE and Fishers, Carmel Clay school district never split the school, mainly for sports 3) even though Westfield is not winning, Carmel has a culture that produces college swimmers who don’t want to come back to Carmel….the coaches ruin it for the kids. I like the head coach from Westfield. He at least cares about his swimmers, not just churning out recruits (with no Olmypians).

Swimming with Hippos
Reply to  Swimming with Hippos
3 years ago

You clearly drank the kool aid. My goodness, the Belichek of high school swimming. That’s a good one!

Evan Lake
Reply to  Guerra
2 years ago

The talent is still here 😂

Evan Lake
Reply to  Swimfish87
2 years ago

As a current Westfield swimmer myself, I’m glad me and my team were able to prove you wrong this year. Catch us laughing to the bank at state! #Rentfree

Go Rocks!

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

Read More »