Cal Last Chance Meet
- February 27- March 1, 2026
- Spieker Aquatics Complex, Berkeley, CA
- SCY (25 yards)
- “Cal Last Chance Meet” on Meet Mobile
In-state foes Cal and Stanford met for one last championship-qualifying meet for the 2025-2026 season, with the Golden Bears hosting a Last Chance meet in Berkeley. Among the performances at the Spieker Aquatics Complex, Cal’s Humberto Najera took over a full second off of his 200 backstroke career best to become the #4 performer in the NCAA this season in 1:38.02.
Najera, coming off of an ACC Championships where he finished 6th in the 200 back (1:40.62), fired out of the gates in 47.82, nearly a second better than his ACCs performance (where he took it out in 48.67). The final two 50s were each more than eight-tenths better than what he did at ACCs (25.01/25.19 to 25.94/26.01). Overall, this time beats his 2025 NCAA Championships prelims performance of 1:39.30; he went on to finish 13th overall (1:39.54). This season, Najera only logged one sub-1:40 time, with this one nearly cracking the 1:38 barrier. He only sits behind Florida’s Jonny Marshall (1:36.38), Texas’ Hubert Kos (1:36.80), and Alabama’s Tommy Hagar (1:38.02) this season.
Cal’s Mia West stood out with a massive 20.63 split on the Golden Bear women’s 200 free relay. West came in as the 2nd leg of the relay, following Mary-Ambre Moluh‘s 21.76 opening split. Her 20.63 ties Claire Curzan for the 15th-fastest relay split in history. West is coming off of an ACC championships where she won the 200 fly in 1:51.52, a time that ranks 5th in the NCAA this season. Her fastest 50 free came in December at the Minnesota Invitational, in 22.14, making this split a second and a half faster than her fastest flat-start 50 free.
The rest of that relay was made up of Teagan O’Dell (21.52) and Sydney Griscavage (21.76), as the Cal quartet combined in 1:25.67, marking the 5th fastest 200 free relay in the country this season and the 5th team under 1:26 this season.
Both Kathryn Hazle and Alexa McDevitt each moved up in the NCAA rankings in the women’s 400 IM for Cal. Hazle swam her first best time in this event in three years, previously holding a best time of 4:07.44 from November of 2022, dipping under 4:07 for the first time in 4:06.54. over a second and a half from her season best of 4:08.27 from last week’s ACC Championships. Hazle now moves up to the 25th fastest time in the NCAA this season.
McDevitt finished just behind Hazle in 4;07.29, continuing her rapid growth in the event since joining the program in the fall, having entered with a pre-Cal best of 4:12.57 from February of 2024. Her time here tops the 4:08.21 season best from the Minnesota Invite in December and makes her the 31st-fastest performer this season.
Stanford also had a nice 1-2 punch of their own; both Alana Berlin and Levenia Sim each climbed the women’s 100 back national rankings and into the top 30. Berlin swam the fastest time of her freshman season in 51.40, marking just her 3rd time under 52 in her college career. She has been as fast as 51.33, which would rank 28th, but her current time still sits 29th.
Sim is directly behind Berlin in 30th, 0.06 seconds slower, in 51.46. That time is more than three tenths faster than her fastest this season, which came at ACCs last week in 51.78, yet still does not match her near five-year best time of 51.03 from the NCSA Junior National Championships in March of 2021.
Cal’s Zachary Tan turned in his first-ever sub-52-second time in 51. Moving him into a precarious tie for 33rd in the NCAA this season. Last season, the cutline sat at 29th, with that time being 51.58. There is a strong possibility of some movement ahead of him, which may just do enough to sneak him in to the NCAA Championships.

Do we have video? I just want to see if the 17m underwater marker is in the right spot.
END LAST CHANCE MEETS.
And TT’s for qualifying purposes. 100%
I get the sentiment, but I don’t think Humberto is really known as an exceptionally strong underwater swimmer anyway.
Yeah it was more a joke about last chance meets than the swimmer.
Anyone know the deal with Nans’ 200 free?
Meet mobile was showing a 1:31.5 on Friday afternoon, but it now looks like it was over 2 mins (swam to get a 100 split).
Did meet mobile just hallucinate and get my hopes up for nothing?
He swam to get the 100 split.
Thanks. So meet mobile did indeed hallucinate with that 1:31.5 and get my hopes up. Bummer.
Tough sophomore year for him after a promising freshman year. Looking forward to a junior year bounce back!
Wow. The vaunted Durden taper is unfurling again. They own March PBs.
Anyone
But
Texas
Cal second at NCs. Book it
IU will choke and doesn’t have 350 diving points
ASU only sprinters
FL is just Liendo and Marshal
not even worth mentioning NCS lmaoo
UF may have a few other decent swimmers.
Jaouadi
Hafnaoui
Buff
De Groot
I am liking Andrew 2.0
Also Season Best for Cal in Men’s 200 medley relay, now ranked in the top 8, so they will be in the final heat. Putting Battaglini on fly and Wrede on free makes the difference compared with ACC.
Nice! Got the splits for those two?
Looks like they swam the relay twice.
Start of session: 1:22.29 (Petty- 20.49, Okadome- 23.40, Battaglini- 19.73, Wrede- 18.67)
End of session: 1:21.63 (Petty- 20.65, Gissendaner- 22.81, Battaglini- 19.84, Wrede- 18.33)
Thankfully they listened to me
Relays are prelim/final now, so won’t they be circle seeded?
Anyone know if Durden’s already cut some people?
lol, Cal is taking this “wait until the end of the season to swim fast” thing to another level.
I’ve been maniacally tracking conference results and it was looking like Bert was going to miss NCAAs after scoring in two events last year.
Then he drops the 4th fastest time in the country in a friggin last chance meet. SMH.
Heckuva a swim though!
I heard he was sick at conference
Ahh, that makes more sense. But also kind of highlights the riskiness of waiting until end of season to swim fast.