Big Ten Finalist Ruslan Gaziev To Return To Ohio State Roster For 2020-2021

1:34.8/42.5/19.3 freestyler Ruslan Gaziev will return to the active roster for the Ohio State Buckeyes this season after an Olympic gap year.

The school confirmed this week that Gaziev will return to Columbus to take classes and compete for the Buckeyes in the coming NCAA season. Gaziev was an impact swimmer for Ohio State as a freshman in 2019, qualifying for NCAAs and splitting 18.9 on the team’s 200 free relay. He was a three-event Big Ten finalist that year, swimming the 50, 100 and 200 frees.

Gaziev should have three years of collegiate eligibility remaining. He’s one of Canada’s top sprinters and should still be in the mix for an Olympic bid, with the Tokyo Olympics now postponed until the summer of 2021.

GAZIEV’S TOP TIMES

  • 50y free: 19.34
  • 100y free: 42.51
  • 200y free: 1:34.83
  • 50m free: 22.46
  • 100m free: 49.56
  • 200m free: 1:49.33

His return comes at a great time for the Buckeyes, who just graduated star sprinters Andrew Loy and Matthew Abeysinghe. Ohio State still has do-everything star Paul DeLakis, and also brings in our #7-ranked recruiting class nationally, headed by West Virginia transfer Hunter Armstrong

Armstrong (career-bests of 19.7/42.7/1:35.8 in free) and Gaziev should both be sophomores this year, eligibility-wise, and will help cover for Loy’s and Abeysinghe’s absences on the freestyle relays.

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Geno
3 years ago

Nice to see some of these redshirt athletes commit to returning to NCAA competition. I always chuckle at how fixated articles on one athlete/situation shift to an entirely different subject matter (i.e. Cameron Craig) in the comment section. Sounds like Cameron is seeking the help he may need, and I am glad he is committed to continuing in the sport albeit the professional ranks or in college elsewhere (although I think Braden is correct in that programs will not want to take him in given his struggles at both ASU and OSU). That being said, if Gaziev is fully committed to a return, he has the potential to make a big impact on a team with both proven and unproven… Read more »

makaveli
3 years ago

Yes, Ruslan can sprint, but he’s far from being just a “sprinter”. Long course 200 freestyle is his event… You’ll see.

Frankie 5 Angels
3 years ago

Gonna be a big year for Ohio State Sprint, they’ll need it as their distance is non existent

Swimmer
Reply to  Frankie 5 Angels
3 years ago

Ya ever heard of Charlie Clark

OH10
3 years ago

Great news!!!!! Ohio State has to be chomping at the bit to get their team back on campus to train (Gaziev, Andreis, Armstrong, Delakis, Fleagle, McDermott, Pohlmann all 19’s…let the competition begin and the cream rise to the top)… B1G speed = B1G relay points = B1G title…Go Bucks!!!!

JCO
3 years ago

Is Cameron Craig coming back to the Buckeyes in the fall? If so, OSU could be in a position to compete for the B1G title with Michigan losing so many points

Admin
Reply to  JCO
3 years ago

Cameron told us a few weeks back that he would not be returning to the Ohio State swim team, but that he is still planning to swim. He didn’t say if that was in college or not.

His 2nd DUI charge has not been adjudicated yet, it’s been put on hold because of corona.

Buddy
Reply to  Braden Keith
3 years ago

Maybe it’s time to stop bringing up the DUI’s and just let him move on. Leaving your comment at
“Cameron told us a few weeks back that he would not be returning to the Ohio State swim team, but that he is still planning to swim. He didn’t say if that was in college or not.” Would suffice. Continuing to remind people isn’t helping anything. Just leave the kid alone.

PVSFree
Reply to  Buddy
3 years ago

They’re just reporters reporting the news my friend. That’s what they do.

Buddy
Reply to  PVSFree
3 years ago

Understandable for sure! But, it’s also important to think of how their comments might be affecting Craig. Just pointing out that it might be nice to show some respect and provide less publicity. He’s had 3 articles about it already, I’d be quite bothered to see a fourth.

SCAR
Reply to  Buddy
3 years ago

What happens when he has a third charge and injures someone, would they NOT report it??

Dill Borenkott
Reply to  Buddy
3 years ago

Getting two DUIs in a very short period of time isn’t exactly something we should pretend didn’t happen. Recklessly putting lives in danger by driving on the freeway with a BAC of more than double the legal limit should mean you lose your right to have your feelings protected in a public forum.

Choicesmade
Reply to  Buddy
3 years ago

He is going to have to live with these choices he made moving forward. These are going to follow him for some time. No passes after a second DUI. He did it, it happened. He’s lucky he did not hurt anyone!

non-apologist
Reply to  Buddy
3 years ago

Glad to hear that the primary concern of Cameron and his buddies are “the impact that his DUIs will have on Cameron Craig.”

Meanwhile, he hasn’t made any statement of remorse about how it impacts others. His teammates, who were counting on him, who he let down; the other motorists that he shared the road with; the coaches who took a chance in bringing him to Ohio State and now have to deal with this fallout.

Every day in the United States almost 30 people die in drunk-driving accidents. Let’s pour one out for them. Literally. Pour your damn drink out and don’t get behind the wheel.

TIA.

poacher
Reply to  non-apologist
3 years ago

I get it…all of it…but this article isn’t about Cameron Craig, DUI, or empathy vs no empathy. It’s about Ruslan and his return to an even more powerful Buckeye sprint group. O…H

Admin
Reply to  Buddy
3 years ago

Hi Buddy,

I can appreciate what you’re feeling for Cameron and his future.

That being said, the DUI adjudication is relevant as it’s unlikely that another NCAA program will bring him on until the 2nd case is settled.

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

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