OSU Invite Night One: Courtney Bartholomew Leads Off Relay In 50.8 100 Backstroke To Lead The Nation

The men and women squads from Florida, Virginia, Kentucky, plus the women from Purdue made their way to Ohio State University to compete over the next three nights at their Invitational.

Fast times were already put up tonight, with the 200 freestyle relay, 500 freestyle, 200 IM, 50 freestyle and 400 medley relay being contested tonight.

200yd Freestyle Relay

Women

The Gators put up an NCAA A standard in their 200 freestyle relay, with a winning time of 1:29.49. Sinead Russell lead off with 22.55, Natalie Hinds followed in a 21.87, Ellese Zalewski was 22.18, and Kaitlin Frehling anchored it home in 22.89.

Their time also tied the meet record set by Minnesota in 2008.

Virginia was second in 1:30.80, just off the B standard. And Ohio State was third at 1:31.40. Most of the women on those two teams averaged 22-mids.

Ellen Thomas lead off for UVa in 22.90. Carly Mercer was 22.70 for Purdue’s lead off.

Men

Not to be out done by the women, the Florida men had the win in 1:19.08. The team of Marcin Cieslak, 20.21, Bradley deBorde, 19.13, Corey Main, 19.56, and Matthew Curby, 20.18.

Ohio State was right behind them, in 1:19.68. Josh Fleagle had a great lead off in 19.96, the only sub 20 lead off of the night. His teammates Michael Disalle and Vlad Komarov followed him up in sub 19 splits at 19.65 and 19.92.

Virginia was third in 1:19.69.

500yd Freestyle

Women

Freshman Leah Smith from Virginia punched her ticket to Minnesota in March with a 4:36.19. She lead wire-to-wire, out aggressively at 1:48 at the 200 mark. Her final time was a new University of Virginia school record.

Her teammate Carolina Kenney was second in 4:42.34. And Hanne Borgersen made it sweep for UVa in 4:42.51. Those top three times were under last years invited time to NCAAs.

Senior Alex Norris from Ohio State swam a lifetime best to finish fourth in 4:43.16.

Florida went 5-6-7, with Lindsey McKnight in fifth at 4:43.25 – she posted 4:42.97 this morning.

Men

Another freshman will be making their way to NCAAs. Florida’s Mitch D’Arrigo had w inning time of 4:15.04, which was also another meet record that belonged to current OSU senior Alex Miller.

In a 1-2-3 effort by the Gators, junior Dan Wallace was second in 4:16.20, and Sebastien Rousseau was third in 4:17.97 – the two were also under the meet record.

Jan Daniec was fourth, giving under the 4:20 mark, at 4:19.44. Former meet record holder Miller was fifth at 4:21.24.

200yd IM

Women

Two years out of the Olympics can be a year that top international swimmer can focus into the NCAA season, and Elizabeth Beisel looks poised for a strong final year with the Gators. She came in tonight and dominated finishing in a A time of 1:54.59 (meet record).

Her breaststroke split was solid at 33.69. While Beisel has struggled a bit in this short IM race, this may be her year for this event in addition to repeating in the 400 IM.

Virginia’s Ellen Williamson was second in 1:56.13, which was also another UVa school record. Her teammates Kaitlyn Jones, Shaun Casey, and Courtney Bartholomew were 3-4-5, 1:56.58, 1:57.41, and 1:57.45 respectively.

The last swimmer in the A field under 2:00 was Florida’s Hilda Luthersdottir in 1:58.38. From the B final, Russell was 1:57.68 – a big improvement from her 2:01.97 in prelims.

Men

Another Florida Gator finished in an A standard, with Marcin Cieslak winning in yet another meet record of 1:42.69. He was just .06 away from Ryan Lochte’s pool record set at short course Nationals in 2010.

Eduardo Solaeche-Gomez was second for the Gators in 1:43.90.

Virginia was third with Parker Camp at 1:45.70. He set a new school record with his time in prelims of 1:44.50. His teammate Luke Papendick from the B final swam faster than him tonight, but finished 11th, in 1:45.66.

Ohio State finished fourth and fifth with Steven Zimmerman at 1:45.84 and Tamas Gercsak at 1:46.04. Both were lifetime bests for those Buckeyes.

50yd Freestyle

Women

Natalie Hinds had quite a freshman career. After splitting sub 21 on the relay, she came back here in the individual 50 to finish in 22.27. She tied with her senior teammate Ellese Zalewski.

Mercer from Purdue tied her lead off time from earlier in the meet for third, 22.70.Fellow Big Ten competitor Michelle Williams from Ohio State was fourth at 22.82 – just .01 off her prelims time of 22.81.

Williams teammate Aliena Schmidtke was sixth, also under 23 at 22.99.

Ellen Thomas was 22.97 for the Cavaliers. Her teammate Emily Llyod from Virginia was 22.95 this morning, but finished 23.11 tonight for 7th.

Men

Senior Bradley deBorde broke his own meet record from last year with a winning time of 19.48.

Ohio State has a gem in the works with freshman Josh Fleagle. He swam under the 20 second mark, at 19.93 – exactly the same time he hit in prelims, for second place. 19.93 was a personal best for Fleagle, and also the third time her swam sub 20 for the day.

Eric Bruck from Kentucky was 19.92 in prelims, but finished in 20.00 tonight for third.

400yd Medley Relay

Women

Two teams registered the A standard to wrap up the meet for the night on the women’s side. Florida had the top time of 3:30.27 (meet record) with a quartet of Sinead Russell– 51.96, Hilda Luthersdottir– 59.49, Ellese Zalewski– 51.29, and Natalie Hinds– 47.53.

The real headliner of the night came from Virginia’s Courtney Bartholomew. She led off her relay in 50.80 – yes, you read that right. That is obviously the top time in the country, and that is before she has swum it in the individual 100 backstroke race. That is crazy fast.

Virginia was second in 3:32.07 with Bartholomew, Laura Simon– 1:00.33, Ellen Williamson– 51.87, and Emily Lloyd– 49.07 (note that the live results had the A and B relay orders switched for the two teams). If UVa can keep improve their breaststroke and get a sub 49 split on the end, this relay could be dangerous by March. This relay was a new team record for UVa.

Ohio State suffered an unfortunate DQ in this race. Their overall time would have been around the 3:38 mark.

Kentucky’s relay finished fourth, with a notable split from their butterfly swimmer Tina Bechtel. She split 51.79 tonight on the relay. Mercer from Purdue anchored home in 48.52 on her team’s relay, which was the second fastest freestyle split of the night.

Men

Florida clinched one more A standard of the night in the medley relay. Corey Main, 47.37, Eduardo Solaeche-Gomez, 53.08, Marcin Cieslak, 45.95, and Bradley deBorde, 42.85, teamed up to finish in 3:09.25 – new meet record.

UVa was second in 3:11.09. Yannick Kaeser split 52.63 on their breaststroke leg.

Ohio State A relay was third, C relay fourth, and B relay in 6th – all at 3:11.85. There is probably no other team in the nation that can produce three relays at 311 (that’s under the B standard).

On the C relay for the Buckeyes, Connor McDonald had the fastest 100 backstroke lead off of the night at 47.06, a lifetime best. And on the A relay, Josh Fleagle anchored in 42.88, previewing us to another great sprint race between himself and deBorde.

In This Story

11
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

11 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Wahoo Strong
11 years ago

Looks as if both of our women’s A and B relays have been DQ’d for swimming in the wrong lanes…that stinks.

Wahoo Strong
11 years ago

Why are the Ohio results now showing the DQ of the Bartholomew 400 Med relay? What is going on? Are the names still wrong, and did one of our relays get dq’d for real?

Josh
11 years ago

That was a school record in the women’s 400 MR for Florida by over a second (3:30.2), and they have room to grow there. Russell was about half a second off her best flat-start time, and Hinds has been 46.8 on the end of a relay before. Without any other improvements, that would put them at a 3:28 high-3:29 flat. If they can improve by even a couple of tenths, they’ll challenge for the win at NCAAs.

Beisel tied her school record in the 200 IM, which bodes really well for the 400 IM final tonight.

Cieslak was about 3 seconds faster in the 200 IM than he’s ever been in season. That’s scary. Watch for his 200 fly tomorrow.… Read more »

Dolph Lunguard
11 years ago

Impressive by UVA staff. UNC has also been impressive. With the three big losses on the men’s side for UVA, UNC is men’s favorite, but if UVA can use that open scholarship money to find a sprint free/flyer at semester that could change quickly.

John Sampson
11 years ago

Agree that the UVA staff seems to have gotten things right with these girls. Fantastic swims all around

11 years ago

Bartholomew… SMASH. Holy cow. Another player in the 100 backstroke this year. For my money, the deepest and most insane event in women’s NCAAS swimming.

Also… While it’s only one session from a mid season meet, it was a heck of a session for the new staff at UVA.

bobo gigi
11 years ago

No surprise about Courtney Bartholomew.
She’s a six-time US junior short course champion on backstroke. 100 back/200 back double in 2009, 2010 and 2011!
She’s so far in her career “only” a short course swimmer. But a monster short course swimmer. And well better in the 100.

Wahoo Strong
11 years ago

Something must have gotten mixed-up in the entries, because if you go to these UVa results:

http://www.virginiasports.com/sports/c-swim/spec-rel/112213aac.html

you will see which group of ladies actually got credited with the results. Excellent results from both relays though. This is a really exciting meet so far!

About Amanda Smith

Amanda Smith is a former swimmer at both Indiana and USC, where she earned a total of nine All-American honors at the NCAA Championships. Smith, a middle-distance specialist as a swimmer, was also 3-time USC School Record holder, a 2012 NCAA Woman of the Year nominee, and an Olympic Trials …

Read More »