D2 Power Tampa Upsets Florida Split-Squad in Friday Double Dual

Tampa vs. Rollins College vs. Florida

  • October 25th, 2024
  • Tampa, Florida
  • Short Course Yards (25 yards), Double Dual, No Diving
  • Meet Results
  • Team Scores:
    • Men: D1 Tampa 191 – D1 Florida 71
    • Men: D2 Tampa 205 – D2 Rollins College 57
    • Men: D1 Florida 162 – D2 Rollins College 100
    • Women: D2 Tampa 130 – D1 Florida 126
    • Women: D1 Florida 160 – D2 Rollins 94
    • Women: D2 Tampa 215 D2 Rollins 47

An upset for the ages: NCAA Division II power University of Tampa, including the 2024 national champion men’s team, swept their tri meet against the University of Florida and Rollins College on Friday.

The scoreline doesn’t tell the full story – the Gators sent a team made up primarily of swimmers who didn’t attend their blockbuster meet against Virginia last week (though there were a few exceptions, like Gracie Weyant).

But still, with a group of high-profile recruits for the deep Gators, the win is a watershed one for Tampa, with both the Gators men and women eyeing top 5 finishes at this season’s Division I NCAA Championship meet.

This meet was a last-minute addition to the Gator schedule after hurricanes disrupted their early season. It was also the season-opener for the Tampa men thanks to a busy hurricane season in Florida.

Tampa and Rollins swimmers both wore racing suits, while Florida did not – a point that was explicitly brought up in the Florida press release, which is an unusual acknowledgement in a school’s official communications.

Men’s Recap

The Tampa men set the tone early with a 1-2 finish in the opening 200 medley relay. That included a winning 1:27.80 that tiptoed them past national rivals UIndy (1:27.84) for the top time in Division II this season and the #25 time across all collegiate divisions.

That was followed by a 9:03.78 in the 1000 free from sophomore Jacob Hamlin – the top time in D2 by six seconds.

Hamlin finished 3rd in the 1000 free (8:58.32), 6th in the 1650 free (15:16.22), and 8th in the 500 free (4:25.43) at last year’s NCAA Division II Championship meet, and is already way ahead of pace – his best time in the 1000 a dual meet last season was 9:20.24, and that wasn’t until January.

The 1000 free is an NCAA Championship event in D2.

Hamlin finished 2nd in the 500 free later in the meet in 4:28.32, also way ahead of schedule, behind only his teammate Rafael Nicolas Ponce de Leon, who won in 4:26.77. Ponce de Leon won the 200 as well in 1:37.13. The former Tennessee Volunteer has a best time in the 500 free that is four seconds better than what won the D2 NCAA title last season.

Another 1-2 finish in the 1000 for the Spartans (Diego Dulieu, 9:11.18) meant the rout was on. The Tampa men won 11 events in total in the meet. That included a 1:19.77 in the 200 free relay to wrap the meet up, almost four seconds ahead of the runners-up from Florida.

Ponce de Leon led off that closing relay in a split of 20.75, and he was followed by Gabriel Rzezwicki (19.66), Tibor Tistan (19.53), and Caleb Brandon (19.83). Those three took the top three spots in the individual 50 free as well, including Tistan winning in 19.70. He is the first D2 swimmer under 20 seconds this season and is tied for 16th across all divisions.

Rollins College didn’t have the depth of Tampa to take out the Florida split-squad, but they did pick up the other two wins on the day. William Slowey won the 100 breaststroke in 55.03, which is within a second of his lifetime best of 54.07 from last year’s mid-season meet. He is historically very good throughout the year, though this is a dual meet best for him. Being fast multiple times didn’t really cost him at season’s-end last year – he was almost as good again at NCAAs to finish 20th in 54.14.

Rollins’ other win came from Evan McInerny in the 200 fly, which he won in 1:48.45. He used a big final 50 split of 28.25 to take a second off the runner-up Kenan Dean from Tampa (1:48.87).

Those two Rollins wins came back-to-back in the middle of the meet.

The Gators’ lone win in the men’s meet came from senior Raphael Rached Windmuller in the 200 breaststroke. He swam 2:01.41, another last-50 difference-maker ahead of Tampa’s Jared Mindek (2:01.70).

Florida also got a good performance from Caleb Maldari in the backstroke races. He finished 2nd in the 100 (50.29) and the 200 (1:48.16). Maldari was on last year’s US team for the World Junior Championships and finished 7th at the 2024 US Olympic Trials in the 200 back in long course.

Other Highlights:

  • Tampa’s Parker Knollman won the 200 back in 1:46.71. He was 3rd at last year’s NCAA D2 Championship meet and the two swimmers ahead of him are both gone (Santi Zabala of Tampa graduated, Ben Sampson of Colorado Mesa transferred to Texas).
  • Tibor Tistan added a win in the 100 free in 44.52 to his win in the 50 free, taking back-to-back races.

Women’s Recap

The women’s meet was much more competitive, with the battle between Florida and Tampa coming down to the final race.

In essence, whoever won the final relay was going to win the meet.

Florida got out to an early lead, and Gracie Weyant (23.34) gave them the fastest split of the meet, but ultimately Tampa just had ‘one more’ sprinter on that final relay. A 23.50 second leg from Tilde Morin put them into the lead, and they held on to win by over a second in 1:35.49.

A 1:33.80 in that relay from Tampa’s first meet leads D2 by more than a second.

Morin also picked up an individual win in the 50 free, touching in 24.12 as part of a 1-2-3 Spartan finish.

The split-squad for Florida put up a good fight throughout the meet, including freshman Gracie Weyant, who was part of the squad that traveled to Virginia last week.

She grabbed wins in the 200 free (1:50.54) and 500 free (4:53.30). That swim in the 500 is within four-tenths of her lifetime best done at the 18 & Under Winter Championships in 2020. She hasn’t raced much of the event in the last three years, but racing the 400 SCM free against Virginia and now the 500 here might indicate a shift of focus in Gainesville.

The Florida women picked up eight wins in 14 events, the lion’s share in the meet.

Besides Weyant, Anna Moore and Addison Reese were both multi-event winners for the Gators. Moore won the 100 breast (1:03.43) to lead a 1-2-3 Florida finish and the 200 breast (2:16.69) by 2.6 seconds. Reese, a freshman who like Weyant was ranked “Best of the Rest” among the top recruits in the class of 2024 by SwimSwam, won the 100 free in 51.39, the 100 fly in 54.81, and the 200 fly in 1:59.74.

For Tampa, the lone double winner individually was a freshman as well. Newcomer Carlie Tyler from the renowned Sacred Heart Academy program in Louisville that produced swimmers like Olympian Brooke Forde picked up a pair late in the meet. First she won the 200 back in 1:59.00, leading a 1-2-3 finish, and then she won the 200 IM in 2:03.78 in the last individual event of the meet. Those swims helped spur a late-meet rally, culminating in the victory-clinching 200 free relay.

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wolfensf
16 hours ago

It was a scrimmage calm yourselves. So with roster limits what is the creative way to get around that? A JV team?

ElvisVB
18 hours ago

A win is a win. If the Lakers chose to leave LeBron at home on the couch and then play in flip flops, they don’t get to say it’s not a real win for the other team due to their stupid decisions. Congrats to Tampa and Rollins.

Andrew
Reply to  ElvisVB
10 hours ago

Except lebron is a washed ring chasing narcissist who is a glorified role player in 2024

Swimjim
19 hours ago

With the upcoming SEC roster caps, the Florida men at this meet will ALL be off the team next year, and none will make the Gator’s SEC team this year. Many will be in the portal by year’s end, and some may end up swimming for Tampa or Rollins! Maybe this was Nesty’s way of giving them an audition with other coach’s as he knows he over-recruited and there is no place on his roster for them.

Swimjim
Reply to  Braden Keith
15 hours ago

Well, I certainly hope I’m wrong, but the Olympic Trials finalist didn’t make Florida’s SEC team or NCAAs this past year (maybe OTs and LCM aren’t so relevant to NCAA swimming?). Being on the “C team” for this meet doesn’t necessarily bode well for making the SEC team this year, or the final 22 next year (especially if UF brings in another full class of men for 2025).

I agree the roster caps may bring some additional parity across the board.

Aquajosh
19 hours ago

I don’t see what was accomplished by Florida adding this meet to their schedule. They sent their C team unsuited after morning practice to swim a suited Tampa team that was last year’s Div 2 National Champions. I get that dual meets don’t matter to UF, but now you’ve ruined your all-time and yearly win/loss percentages, your dual meet record, and have recorded losses to Tampa, and ROLLINS. You could have sent them to a USS meet and gotten the times but none of the rest of that. Even the social media team didn’t want it on their Insta.

Second, did anyone notice that Rafael Ponce de Leon (Tennessee’s school record holder in the 500 free) is now at Tampa?… Read more »

swimapologist
Reply to  Aquajosh
19 hours ago

Florida sent an Olympic Trials finalist. Is he really on their “C” team?

He didn’t even win his races. Oops.

Get it together Josh
Reply to  Aquajosh
19 hours ago

Tampa finished the season in the top 25 across the board last year so don’t sit here posting like these guys swam against some high school team. Such a sensitive response to an article that gives the Spartans some props for once. They are largely ignored by SwimSwam and honestly don’t deserve your disrespectful post.

swimapologist
Reply to  Get it together Josh
17 hours ago

Damn, SwimSwam writes a nice article about your team, and the first thing you do is run in and whine about lack of coverage of your team?

Reminds me of the saga last year where the D3 teams erupted in full-blown rage because SwimSwam made a D2 meet the Meet to Watch on Instagram.

Get it together Josh
Reply to  swimapologist
12 hours ago

I would hardly consider that whining. It’s a simple statement of the facts. I don’t even think SwimSwam would deny that there hasn’t been a lot of coverage of Tampa outside of last year’s championship meet. If that is your takeaway from what I said then you missed the point entirely. Which is that it is downright gross to flood a comment section with post about how you send your scoring team rejects to swim against Tampa like they aren’t worthy of your time and that’s why you lost the meet. Tampa has had duals against Minnesota and FSU over the years and they are gracious and good sports about the competition and aren’t arrogant about being there. Given they… Read more »

Get it together Josh
Reply to  swimapologist
11 hours ago

Was it whining? It was a statement of facts. Hardly compares to a saga or full blown rage. The saga is this comment section and unnecessary explanations of the details surrounding this meet. Apparently a headline referring to a split squad wasn’t enough and it requires redundant explanations.

Aquajosh
Reply to  Get it together Josh
16 hours ago

I think you missed my point. Florida underestimated Tampa (and for that matter Rollins) and messed up their dual meet record for it. Tampa is a great team (and as I said, last year’s Div 2 National Champions), but let’s not be delusional and think that UF wouldn’t have won that meet handily if they had brought their NCAA qualifiers. Hell, the team they sent probably could have won it if they suited up. In any other sport at UF, fans would be questioning the decision to give away a win, inseason or not.

Get it together Josh
Reply to  Aquajosh
12 hours ago

No I didn’t miss your point. It’s the fact that you felt the need to point it out in the comment section to diminish their win is what I have an issue with. Anyone who cares enough about this story or to come to this comment section understands that UF didn’t bring a full squad and we all understand what a training meet is. But making comments like “even the social media team didn’t want it on their insta” is just rude and unnecessary. You could have made your point without the extra disses…but you didn’t.

Qqq
Reply to  Aquajosh
18 hours ago

With next years roster limits maybe they’re giving some kids a glimpse of their future teams…

OldChestertonliveson!
21 hours ago

Will Tampa win another d2 NCAA ? Probably. Is this win impressive? No.

Tampa will often set up their meet schedule strategically to make for outcomes like this to help in recruiting. They tried this with having Minnesota come to their pool but that didn’t work too well. Many teams do this however. It’s all for social media and recruiting. However hats off to that team!

Tampa Lover
Reply to  OldChestertonliveson!
20 hours ago

Yea so this meet was NOT on Tampa’s schedule. Florida asked to join Tampa vs. Rollins due to their first 2 meets being cancelled. Not for social media or recruiting, I think they are fine on both ends as far as that goes.

This Guy
Reply to  OldChestertonliveson!
19 hours ago

I bet you are zero fun at parties

Wrong.
Reply to  OldChestertonliveson!
11 hours ago

Absolutely false.Tampa and Minnesota scheduled a dual the last two years at the end of winter training. It had everything to do with throwing a training meet in at the end of the trip and zero to do with Tampa’s recruiting strategy. Tampa doesn’t have recruiting woes. If Kiner needed to do that he would be smart enough to not swim against a full Minnesota squad at the end of a tough training cycle.

1650butterfly
1 day ago

Great job Tampa! You too Rollins! Very impressed

Old Swim Coach
1 day ago

Good headline but it’s not a real upset unless they beat the “A” team.

tampa lover
Reply to  Old Swim Coach
1 day ago

not our fault Florida chose not to bring their A team

This Guy
Reply to  Old Swim Coach
1 day ago

Look at this rocket scientist over here!

Queens
Reply to  This Guy
1 day ago

🤯

Lifeguard
Reply to  Old Swim Coach
23 hours ago

A win is a win! Yay Tampa!

Hmm
1 day ago

No.3 Florida (1-1, 0-1 in the Sunshine State Conference)

Don’t see that very often.

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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