Groome, Barbiea, Patterson Push Missouri to Strong Start at Home Invite

To be honest, this was supposed to be a rebuilding year for the Missouri Tigers women’s squad that was 14th at NCAA’s last year. After the graduation of Cassie Cunningham and Dominique Bouchard, the team’s two anchors, Missouri was lacking an identity.

They’ve found that identity mid-season, though, as the new generation of Missouri women have picked up the torch and run with it, and their sprinters looked really good on the first day of their home invitational.

Women’s 200 Free Relay

In the first final of the night, Missouri won the 200 free relay in 1:30.56, just beating out Arkansas’ 1:30.78. The Missouri winning team was Dani Barbiea (22.65), Anna Patterson (21.99), Emily Coudette (22.94), and Lexi Spivak (22.98). Patterson quietly had a very good freshman year, splitting 22-low multiple times,, but that sub-22 second split is a whole new level for her.

Utah took 3rd in 1:32.49, book-ended by a 22.9 from Traycie Swartz and a 22.65 from Giuliana Gigliotti.

Men’s 200 Free Relay

The men’s 200 free relay was equally as close, but this time it didn’t go the Tigers’ way. The men from West Virginia took the win in 1:19.50, as Ross Glegg ran down Missouri’s anchor Max Grodecki to make up a half-second deficit on the final leg with a 19.59 split.

Both relays were very good, but West Virginia had that 4th leg to finish things off. Missouri had three legs under 20 seconds, including a 19.7 leadoff from Logan Mosley and a 19.6 second leg from Sam Tierney, but they couldn’t get the 4th that they really needed.

Utah took 3rd agaqin in 1:20.46; Nick Soedel led them off in 19.69.

Women’s 500 Free

Arkansas’ Nicole Menzel won the women’s 500 free in 4:45.53. She and Utah’s Sami Zuch were about even after the first 100 yards, but after that first 100, Menzel controlled this race. She ended up winning by just under a second, as Zuch touched in 4:46.38.

Arkansas’ Rachel Stoehr took 3rd in 4:48.71, and Utah’s Amanda Barrett was 4th in 4:50.33.

Women’s 100 Fly

Dani Barbiea, after swimming an automatic qualifying time in prelims, wasn’t quite able to match that time, but she did swam a 51.6 in finals, giving her the two fastest times in the nation, and two swims under the NCAA Automatic Qualifying Standard.

West Virginia’s Julie Ogden took 2nd in 53.67, which is a lifetime best for her. Utah sophomore Petra Soininen, a Finnish National Champion, was 3rd in 53.77.

UC-Davis’ Hilvy Cheung finished 4th in 54.35.

Missouri’s Anna Patterson, who ended up being an exhibition swim, was the second-fastest swimmer with a 53.59, but her swim didn’t count for points.

Men’s 100 Fly

Missouri’s Logan Mosley won the men’s 100 fly with relative ease, posting a 47.15 that pushes him to 2nd in the nation. That topped West Virginia senior Bryce Bohman, who was a 48.29 for 2nd.

Utah’s Karson Applin took 3rd in 48.56, and his teammate Alex Fernandes placed 4th in 48.93.

Men’s 500 Free

Missouri’s Eegan Groome qualified for NCAA’s last season only as a part of their 800 free relay. This year, he shouldn’t have to sweat too hard about an individual invitation, after winning the men’s 500 free here in 4:17.78. With results rolling in around the country still, as of the finish of his race, Groome’s was the best swim in the country by over four seconds.

Utah’s Bence Kiraly wasn’t far behind in this final, taking 2nd (and jumping to 2nd in the country) with a 4:19.24.

Missouri took four of the top five finishing spots, with Andrew Phillips placing 3rd in 4:23.42, Martin Wallace placing 4th in 4:24.58, and Carter Griffin taking 5th in 4:24.68.

Women’s 200 IM

The FIU Panthers got in a big swing in the women’s 200 IM. There, veterans Johanna Gustafsdottir and Sonia Perez Arau went 1-2 in 1:58.27 and 1:58,65, respectively.  Not only are those NCAA “B” qualifying times, it is each swimmer’s lifetime best in the event (for Arau, by about three seconds). Gustafsdottir is a bit better on the front-half of her IM, while Arau is a bit better on the back-half of hers.

The splits indicate that both shoul dbe set up for very good swims later in the meet.

The Panthers’ streak was broken by Missouri freshman Katharine Ross, who was 3rd in 2:00.28, and another Tiger Abby Duncan, an Auburn transfer, in 2:00.66.

Men’s 200 IM

Missouri’s got a very good men’s breaststroke group, and those breaststrokers also happen to make for a very good IM group. Sam Tierney won the race in 1:45.24, with Igor Kozlowskij taking 2nd in 1:45.74.

They’re both breaststrokers, but Missouri butterflier Mack Darragh took 3rd in 1:46.71.

Women’s 50 Free

Patterson backed up her impressive relay split with a 22.51 to win the women’s individual 50 free. Utah’s Traycie Swartz, though, gave her a good run with a 22.57 just behind for 2nd.

Arkansas’ Nina Drolc took 3rd in 23.11, with Giuliana Gigliotti placing 4th in 23.13.

Barbiea, who was the top seed in prelims, scratched the final.

Men’s 50 Free

Utah’s Nick Soedel, who was .01 seconds shy last season of making the NCAA A-final, is already almost back to the same time that he was last year. He won the men’s 50 free running away, albeit against a field not thick with good sprinting men’s teams, in 19.51 – and reports are that he’s not shaved for the meet.

West Virginia’s Tim Squires was 2nd in 19.93, and Glegg, who had the great relay anchor earlier in the session, placed 3rd in 20.18.

Max Grodecki had a much better swim than he did finishing off the relay earlier, as he flat-started a 20.29 for 4th.

Women’s 400 Medley Relay

Nobody was even close to the Missouri 400 medley relay, as they put up a stunning 3:33.79 to win this relay. That group saw Emily Doucette lead off in 54.42, followed by a 59.38 from Katharine Ross, a 51.69 from Barbiea, and a 48.30 anchor from Patterson.

While the Tigers graduated all but the fly leg on this relay last year, they’re already almost two seconds better than their best time from last season. Doucette can’t match the All-American Bouchard on the backstroke leg, but she did swim a lifetime best in that leadoff, and if the rest of this relay continues to swim this well, the Tigers will be more-than-happy with a 54-low from her. Ross, Barbiea, and Patterson combined to be about four seconds better, combined, than their counterparts from last season.

UC-Davis took 2nd in the race in 3:38.47, led by a 59.9 from Liliana Alvarez, Utah was 3rd in 3:39.33, and Arkansas was just 4th in 3:39.35.

The Razorbacks don’t look quite as sharp this year as they did at the Phill Hansel Invite at Houston last November, though the 1:00.18 breaststroke split from Daniels was a good one.

Men’s 400 Medley Relay

The Missouri men not only won the 400 medley by four seconds, they actually put together the top two relays in this race.

The Tigers’ breaststrokers were very good, including a 52.45 from Tierney on the A-relay, but the backstroker is what really stood out on this relay: Logan Mosley led off the A in a split of 46.60. This Missouri team is a very well-rounded one. It hasn’t taken much to make them a better relay than last year; they’ve got the same swimmers as last year’s medley, they’ve just reordered them:

Last year’s medley: Tierney, Kozlowskij, Mosley, Grodecki
This year’s medley: Mosley, Tierney, Kozlovskij, Chadwick (Grodecki and Chadwick had identical 43.54 anchor splits on the B and A relays, respectively).

The next-best relay was West Virginia in 3:15.82, including a 46.99 leadoff from Bohmann, and Utah placed 4th in 3:16.10, with a 43.18 anchor from Soedel.

Diving – Men’s 1-meter

The biggest upset of the first night of the meet came in the men’s 1-meter, where Utah sophomore Jacob Crayne upset the defending SEC Male Diver of the Year David Bonuchi 344.80-336.25.

Utah’s Josiah Purss almost did the same, with a 330.40 for 3rd.

Diving – Women’s 1-Meter

The Southern Illinois Salukis didn’t have many A-final swims on the first night of this meet, but they do have an outstanding diving corps. Cheri Zhang won the women’s 3-meter handily with 389 points, while Esther Chen took 3rd in 302.50. Those two are both Chinese natives.

They sandwiched Missouri’s Lauren Reedy who had a score of 345.15. Missouri All-American Loren Figueroa didn’t dive at this meet.

Full, live meet results available he.

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About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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