Alec Enyeart Decommits from Minnesota; Announces Verbal to Texas

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Alec Enyeart from Park Hill South High School and Tsunami Swim Team of KC in Kansas City, Missouri has announced his verbal commitment to the University of Texas for 2022-23. Originally, he had made a verbal commitment to the University of Minnesota.

“I’m excited to announce my commitment to the university of Texas! Although this is a change from my original plans, I’m confident that the university of Texas will be the best place for me to develop as an athlete and student. Hook Em!!🤘”

Enyeart specializes in mid-distance and distance freestyle and IM. He had a breakout summer, dropping huge amounts of time and winding up with Olympic Trials Wave II cuts in the 800/1500 free. At Speedo Summer Championships-West, he notched PBs in the 200 free (1:53.71), 400 free (3:56.87), 800 free (8:04.39), 1500 free (15:22.66), and 400 IM (4:27.92). He was, notably, runner-up in both the 800 free and 1500 free, sixth in the 400 IM, and seventh in the 400 free. A week later, he competed at NCSA Summer Championships and won the 400/800/1500 free, improving his PBs in the 400/800.

Since his verbal to Minnesota, he improved his LCM times from:

  • 1500 free: from 16:13.53 to 15:22.66
  • 800 free: from 8:29.31 to 8:02.16
  • 400 free: from 4:10.69 to 3:54.82
  • 400 IM: from 4:38.66 to 4:27.92
  • 200 IM: 2:12.53 to 2:10.21
  • 200 fly: 2:10.90 to 2:08.05

Enyeart is the reigning Missouri High School Class 2 state champion in the 500 free and came within 1.01 of the Class 2 state record last November when he won the title in 4:28.71. He also placed 2nd in the 200 free (1:40.55), anchored the 4th-place 200 free relay (21.23), and swam the third leg (46.84) on the runner-up 400 free relay. He picked up new PBs in both the 200/500 free at the meet, swimming 2 and 7.1 seconds faster than he’d been in those same events at the 2019 MSHSAA Boys State Championships. Enyeart won the 500 free and 1650 free at the 2020 18&U Winter Championships-Lee’s Summit. He also finaled in the 100 free (16th), 200 free (6th), 200 fly (5th), and 200 IM (9th) and notched PBs in the 100/1650 free, 200 fly, and 200 IM.

SCY times:

  • 1650 free – 15:30.62
  • 500 free – 4:28.71
  • 1000 free – 9:23.98
  • 200 free – 1:40.55
  • 200 fly – 1:51.77
  • 400 IM – 4:01.55

The Longhorns also expect Alec Filipovic, Alexander Turney, Charlie Crosby, Holden Smith, Manning Haskal, Ryan Branon, and Spencer Aurnou-Rhees in the fall of 2022.

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B1Guy!
2 years ago

Has anyone else noticed how long the kids pinky is!!! Dude must be scoopin buckets of water

Ollie
2 years ago

Good move.

Old Swimmer
2 years ago

The rich get richer! Poor Minnesota

Snarky
2 years ago

Four years of not going to NCAAS.

Horninco
Reply to  Snarky
2 years ago

Username checks out

Hswimmer
2 years ago

Big drops Eddie likey

samulih
Reply to  Hswimmer
2 years ago

altho i think Eddie will not be there for long, 1-2 years…. man he looked old on those Brett videos, got all the mental faculties but the body seems to be getting old

swimgeek
2 years ago

A pet peeve — we need a more uniform way of identifying quickly what class year a swimmer is from. Sometimes it’s “class of 2022” (HS). Sometimes it’s “class of 2026” (college) – doing subtraction is hard:). Sometimes it’s “he’s committed to TX for 2022-23”. That’s 3 different ways of saying the same class year! This time of year, there are lots of class of 2023 juniors committing. Also lots of class of 2022 seniors committing. Can we just their HS grad year as a consistent way of identify their class year?

Thomas
Reply to  swimgeek
2 years ago

22-23 also makes me think they’ll transfer out after that one year… even though that’s absolutely not true

Guy
2 years ago

I’d rather swim at Texas than Minnesota too

Ghost
Reply to  Guy
2 years ago

I would too probably. Not sure I would like being left at home from NCAAs if I qualified and they couldn’t take me! How would you like that? I realize that doesn’t mean he will be left home, but who knows especially after they had 26 qualifiers last year! At that point, Minnesota tundra might be ok!

TexasLonghornAlum
Reply to  Ghost
2 years ago

By the time he arrives a lot of the 26 qualifiers will be gone. Texas’ biggest class of qualifiers will be Seniors this year.

Horninco
Reply to  Ghost
2 years ago

Iron sharpens iron

samulih
Reply to  Guy
2 years ago

college is much more than swimming pool in the end.

swimgeek
2 years ago

When your 1500 is faster than your 1650, you know there’s gonna be some massive time drops this winter.

About Anne Lepesant

Anne Lepesant

Anne Lepesant is the mother of four daughters, all of whom swam in college. With an undergraduate degree from Princeton (where she was an all-Ivy tennis player) and an MBA from INSEAD, she worked for many years in the financial industry, both in France and the U.S. Anne is currently …

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