Georgetown Breaks Five Pool Records In Sweep of Johns Hopkins

GEORGETOWN VS JOHNS HOPKINS

  • November 8, 2025
  • Washington, D.C.
  • SCY (25 yards)
  • Results

Courtesy: Georgetown Athletics

WASHINGTON – The Georgetown University men’s and women’s swimming & diving team broke five pool records en route to defeating Johns Hopkins at Barbara & Jerry Procton Pool on Saturday afternoon. The men’s team won 136-126 while the women’s team won 161-101.

MEN’S HIGHLIGHTS

  • In the 1000 free, Bruno Ribeiro took first place with a time of 9:36.90.
  • Owen Watkins finished in first in the 200 free (1:39.56) and the 100 free (44.96).
  • In the 100 backstroke, Isaac Holtham (49.67) finished in first place.
  • Nick Pezzella finished first in the 100 breaststroke (56.12) and the 200 breaststroke (2:04.37).
  • In the 50 free, Daren Chen captured first with a time of 20.94.
  • Holtham finished in first place in the 400 IM with a time of 4:02.35.
  • The 200 free relay team of Watkins. Chen, Grant Closson and Bailey De Luise captured first with a time of 1:39.47.

WOMEN’S HIGHLIGHTS

  • The 400 medley relay team of Heidi WuAngelica RealiMadeline Malone and Bella Dimaculangan placed first with a time of 3:46.83.
  • The Hoyas swept the 1000 free with Mary-Stuart Hawkins (10:16.97), Sophia Riberio (10:25.74) and Payton Smith (10:27.51) taking first, second and third place, respectively.
  • In the 200 free, Lila Connor finished in first place with a time of 1:52.19.
  • In the 200 fly, Reali earned first with a time of 2:02.83.
  • Malone took first in the 50 free with a time of 23.51.
  • Ines Lovato (51.48) and Connor (52.04) took first and second in the 100 free.
  • In the 200 breaststroke, Caroline Largen finished in first (2:23.38) followed by Hawkins in second (2:23.80).
  • Camille Weiss captured first in the 500 free with a time of 4:59.06.
  • Reali placed first in the 100 fly with a time of 54.96.
  • In the 400 IM, Wu came in first (4:27.65) while Dimaculangan finished in second (4:34.33).

Courtesy: Hopkins Sports

BALTIMORE, MD – Johns Hopkins broke a pair of pool records and won three events in a tough 168-94 loss to Georgetown Saturday at the Barbara & Jerry Procton Pool. Ken Lee broke the two pool records while the 200 Free Relay team also took down the pool record.

Hopkins opened the day with second and fourth-place finishes in the 400 Medley Relay. The team of Jaya VeerapaneniRenee Bak, Lee and Alex Watson finished in 3:47.88, an NCAA B qualifying time. Their swim would have also broken the pool record, save for the Hoyas team that won the race in 3:46.83. Stella ZhangAmy HuKate Petitt and Elizabeth Cohen took fourth in the race in 3:55.51.

Julia Tuinman led the Blue Jays in the 1000 Free with a fourth-place finish in 10:43.61. Watson then placed second in the 200 Free as she touched in 1:52.54. Melissa Er finished in fourth place with a time of 1:56.24. Lee then claimed the first of their two records on the day, winning the 100 Back in 55.81. Their time is also an NCAA B time. Veerapaneni clocked in at 56.65 for third place. Reese Rosenthal won the 100 Breast by nearly two seconds as she finished in 1:06.15. Hu followed in second place with a swim of 1:08.04.

Maddie Horner grabbed second place in the 200 Fly as she touched in 2:08.74. Lily Rossmann placed fourth with a time of 2:10.57. Kimberly Lan led JHU with a third-place finish in the 50 Free (24.00). Cohen placed third in 24.37, beating Bak to the wall by just two-hundredths of a second. Watson then finished in third place in the 100 Free in 52.23, while Cohen took fourth in 53.19.

Lee took down the pool record in the 200 Back with a swim of 2:00.24, winning by more than 2.6 seconds. Their swim is also an NCAA B qualifying time. Rachel Davis took third in the 200 Breast (2:24.92) and Tuinman took third in the 500 Free (5:08.87). Petitt then placed third in the 100 Fly with a time of 58.26 and Horner grabbed third in the 400 IM (4:37.64).

Hopkins ended the day with second and third-place finishes in the 200 Free Relay. Veerapaneni, Bak, Cohen and Lan combined for a swim of 1:35.41 to take second place. Their time would have broken the pool record, which was downed by the Hoyas in 1:34.60. The team of Anna Miler, Zhang, Claire Han and Lee placed third in 1:37.30.

The Blue Jays return to the pool in two weeks for Loyola’s H2ounds Invitational November 21-23.

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JVW
7 months ago

Gonna want to change your caption and subhead from “Hopkins men’s team won. . .” to “Hoyas men’s team won.”