SIU’s Alex Santiago Rips New Conference Record 45.30 100 Fly on Day 3 of Men’s MVC Champs

2025 Missouri Valley Conference Championships (MEN)

  • Dates: Wednesday, February 19–Saturday, February 22
  • Location: Corwin M. Nixon Aquatic Center, Oxford, OH
  • Defending Champions: N/A (inaugural event)
  • Live Results (Available on MeetMobile)
  • Live Video
  • Championship Central
  • Fan Guide
  • Teams: Ball State*, Evansville*, Miami (OH)*, Missouri State*, Southern Illinois*, UIC*, Valparaiso*
  • Results: Day 1 | Day 2 | Day 3
  • Recaps: Day 1 | Day 2

TEAM SCORES (THRU DAY 3)

  1. Miami (OH) – 569
  2. Southern Illinois – 452
  3. Missouri State – 401
  4. UIC – 325.5
  5. Ball State – 237.5
  6. Valparaiso –113
  7. Evansville – 79

Day 3 of the 2025 MVC Men’s Swimming and Diving Championships saw Miami (OH) expand their lead over the field.

One of the biggest swims of the night came on the first event. Southern Illinois’ Alex Santiago ripped a 45.30 to win the 100 fly. With the performance, Santiago set a new MVC meet and conference record, along with a new Miami pool record. The swim was massive for Santiago, as his career best coming into the day was 46.25 from the Purdue Invite in November.

Miami’s Henju Duvenhage pulled off an impressive double tonight. He started out by coming in 2nd in the 100 fly with a 45.94. Duvenhage then went on to win the 100 back in 46.31, setting  a new conference record in the process.

Duvenhage would then help the RedHawks to victory in the 200 free relay. Tegan Barrier (20.03), Duvenhage (19.67), Scott Spear (19.38), and Jack Herczeg (19.51) teamed up for a 1:18.59.

SIU clocked a 1:17.45 in the relay, but was disqualified for a false start. Santiago led the Saluki relay off in 19.30. Had the time stood, it would have marked a new conference record.

Southern Illinois’ Tiago Faleiros won the 100 breast in a very tight race. He swam a 53.34, touching out Missouri State’s Luigi Da Silva, who came in 2nd with a 53.39. Faleiros’ performance marks yet another conference record in the event. Da Silva was out faster tonight, splitting 24.66 on the opening 50 to Faleiros’ 24.75, but Faleiros came home faster.

Bryce Menchhofer (Miami) picked up a win in the 200 free, touching out Missouri State’s Reese Hodgins, who swam a 1:36.70. Menchhofer clipped his own conference record from the fall, which stood at 1:36.67.

Miami also earned the win in the 400 IM, where Allen Cotton swam a 3:47.06, marking a new conference record.

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James
7 hours ago

Evansville needs to stop DQing their relays, or they will finish behind Valpo in the team standings

Yapper
8 hours ago

Wow .22 what an early take off

YES
11 hours ago

They probably shouldn’t post the reaction times in official results that clearly shows no early take off while getting DQd for ETO 🙄 +.22 is not ETO. No GoPros at the ends to aid in confirmation this year it seems.

SwimMom
Reply to  YES
8 hours ago

It was a false start. Not early take off.
Dual confirmation needed so at least 2 sets of eyes saw.
Happens to the best

Dylan
Reply to  SwimMom
7 hours ago

What would the difference be between a false start and an early take off be on a relay start?

Zeph
Reply to  SwimMom
6 hours ago

That’s the same thing when on a relay dive

Water Daddy
13 hours ago

Absolutely embarrassing call from the officiating crew on that SIU 200 free relay!! They should be ashamed!! The swimmer they claim left “early” had a reaction time of 0.22 (tied for the slowest of their 3 exchanges) and the race video confirms this – He still had 2 feet on the blocks!!! Call the cops because the Dawgs just got ROBBED!!!

Liendo is crooks father
15 hours ago

Why was siu dqd when all the relay exchanges were >+.20

KCref
16 hours ago

ICYMI: Saluki men went a 1:17 200 free relay but were DQ’d for an early take-off. RJP showed +0.21 on the exchange and the live stream had clear evidence on the safety of the exchange. Weirdly enough 2 officials made a call on the first exchange. If you’re curious the live stream is on demand on chatterbox. These athletes work way too hard all year to get screwed by bad officiating. It’s disappointing knowing these teams join a new conference and don’t receive the qualify of fairness that a power 4 school would receive.

SwimMom
Reply to  KCref
7 hours ago

Wasn’t it the first swimmer? Early take off is different than a false start? It seems it was the lead off swimmer false start??

Admin
Reply to  SwimMom
6 hours ago

The official results say “Early take-off swimmer #2”. If it was a false start on the leadoff, then that is not correctly noted on the results, and nobody has communicated it to the team, so you know something that nobody else on earth knows.

Swimming Fan
Reply to  Braden Keith
1 hour ago

I’m no where close to being any sort of “expert”, but I think SwimMom may be correct that it was a False Start by the SIU Swimmer #1…and not an early take off by Swimmer #2 (despite what I see noted on the official results). I went back and reviewed the OnDemand Livestream available via Chatterbox Sports of the entire race and watched it about ten times. For what it’s worth, there were two officials standing in the middle of the pool watching very closely the top two seeds (SIU and Miami) throughout the entire race. For my own eyes, it did not seem like the SIU Swimmer #2 left early. However, I could argue that the SIU Swimmer #1… Read more »

Last edited 1 hour ago by Swimming Fan
Admin
Reply to  Swimming Fan
1 hour ago

But if that were the case, you don’t think that the officials would inform the team of that?

I’m pretty sure the rules require officials to tell the team why they were DQ’ed. If they didn’t, that might be actual grounds to overturn on appeal.

Also here’s the full video. I don’t see anything even remotely close to what you described on the start. In fact, he appeared to be last off the blocks relative to the guys around him. I see nothing but a clean start. If the call was on the leadoff leg…that might be an even worse call than leg #2. But again, the team was told it was leg #2, so no evidence that the call… Read more »

ComeOnMan
16 hours ago

Southern Illinois being disqualified on an exchange with a +.22 reaction time on the 4×50 relay. Destroying their own Missouri Valley record in the swim as well. SMH.