Cal splits 400 free relays, still gets A cut on final day of UNLV Invite

The Cal women and Stanford men both won every event but one on day 3 of the UNLV Invitational, sealing wins for each team. Cal put the exclamation point on the day by splitting its best swimmers up between 3 different 400 free relays and still making an NCAA “A” cut.

Day 2 recap here.

Full results available here.

 

Women’s Meet

Sammy Harrison of Oregon State won the mile to kick off the meet, going 16:19.81, just a few seconds off her time from Pac-12s last year. She beat Cal’s Catherine Breed (16:38.13) and ASU’s Anna Olasz (16:50.29).

From then on, though, it was all Cal on the women’s side, especially with UCLA and UCSB leaving the meet after prelims and not swimming the finals session. Update: A press release on the UCLA website revealed that the Bruins left early due to poor air quality at the facility.

Missy Franklin won the 200 back, going 1:53.73, about a second off the A cut. She was followed by three more Golden Bears, Sophia Batchelor (1:54.61), Hoi Shun Au (1:57.35) and Melanie Klaren (1:57.84).

Franklin came off that win to swim the 100 free, where she was out-touched by teammate Liz Pelton 48.71 to 48.83. Cal’s Rachael Acker was 49.43 for third, and UNLV’s Jessica Heim, usually a distance swimmer, went a lifetime-best 50.04 for fourth place.

Marina Garcia Urzainqui went 2:10.98 to win the 200 breaststroke after winning the 100 last night. Cal’s Celina Li took second in 2:13.72, a lifetime best for her. ASU’s Tory Houston, who was 2nd in the 100, took third here, going 2:14.72.

Li swam back-to-back events, going from second in the breast to winning the 200 fly. Her time of 1:57.55 was just enough to hold off teammate Sophia Batchelor, who took second in 1:57.68. The race could have gotten even more interesting, but two of the top three seeds didn’t swim finals – Noelle Tarazona of UCLA was the fastest swimmer in prelims, going 1:57.21, but her Bruins left early and did not compete at finals. Her teammate Anna Senko was the third seed after going 2:00.18 in the morning. ASU’s Tristin Baxter finished third at finals, sneaking under two minutes at 1:59.79.

Cal split up its top swimmers among 3 different 400 free relays to create some races at the end of the night. Missy Franklin anchored the A relay, Liz Pelton the B and Rachael Acker the C, splitting up the top 3 finishers in the open 100 free tonight. Franklin’s relay emerged victorious thanks to her 47.67 split as well as 48s from Caroline Piehl and Cindy Tran. Those three plus Alicia Grima went 3:16.42, an NCAA “A” cut. Pelton was 48.7, and her relay got a solid leadoff leg from Celina Li, who went 50.14. Their relay finished second overall in 3:17.92, just a second off A cuts. Acker was 49.1 and her relay teammate Rachel Bootsma went 49.0. That tidal wave of names and numbers might make your head spin – it really underscores the tremendous relay options Cal coach Teri McKeever has at her disposal this season.

The Golden Bears dominated the team scores at this meet, finishing over 800 points ahead of second-place Arizona State. Most of California’s studs will rest for winter nationals in a couple of weeks, so the fast swimming appears to be only beginning for Berkeley.

Final Team Scores

1. University of California          1278

2. Arizona State University       429.5

3. UCLA                                              394

4. UNLV                                             388.5

5. Oregon State Beavers              282

6. UC – Santa Barbara                    241

7. Brigham Young University  200

8. Northern Arizona University 155

9. Colorado State University        85

 

 

Men’s Meet

Stanford went 1-2-3-4 in the 1650 for the men, with Danny Thompson going 15:08.21 to win. 500 free and 400 IM winner Drew Cosgarea took second, going 15:23.37 to nip teammate Justin Buck (15:23.73). Bryan Offutt was fourth in 15:28.98.

Dave Nolan won the 200 backstroke, going 1:42.40, a good three and a half seconds faster than he was at this time last year. Cosgarea took second in his second consecutive event, going 1:43.21, while Stanford’s Will Gunderson was third in 1:45.57.

Adam Kalms of Wyoming took home the 100 free win, the only individual event on the day that Stanford didn’t claim. Kalms was 43.82, a season-best, a day after winning the 200 free. UNLV took the next two spots, with Sam Lameynardie going 44.22 and 50 free winner Dillon Virva going 44.23. Stanford’s Tom Stephens was just behind in 44.25.

Three men went sub-2:00 in the 200 breaststroke, including two from Stanford. Max Williamson won the event, going 1:58.97, while fellow Cardinal swimmer Mason Shaw was 1:59.65. The top seed, UNLV’s Brandon Meier, took third, going 1:59.98.

The closest race of the night for the men was the 200 fly, where Stanford’s Tom Kremer barely beat out UNLV’s Balint Batka for the win. Kremer was 1:45.40 and Batka was 1:45.67. ASU’s Alex Coci took third, going 1:46.42.

Stanford did not enter any 400 free relays, leaving UNLV to sweep the top 2 spots. The team of Gui Passos, Tom Paco-Pedroni, Dillon Virva and Sam Lameynardie won in 2:55.06, getting a solid 43.12 split from Virva. UNLV’s B team went 2:56.88 for second place. Wyoming finished third thanks to the fastest leadoff split in the pool in Adam Kalms’ 44.09.

Final Team Scores

1. Stanford                                  1262

2. UNLV                                        748

3. Wyoming                                 370

4. Arizona State University  356

5. UC – Santa Barbara               261

6. Brigham Young                     259

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FROMTHEBLEACHERS
11 years ago

The air quality at this meet was horrible. Swimmers were coughing, coughing with stomach pain, having trouble breathing, struggling to climb out of the pool. Many could not perform to thier capabilites – but are wired to compete – so they tried.
At least three swimmers went to the hospital Friday night.
Swimmers were spending time away from the pool when not swimming – outside before and after races, looking for clean air.
Saturday was marked by many no-shows – check the prelim results for DQs; eight DQs in eight heats of one race.
A couple teams left because any gains in achieving in competition were negligible compared to the health affects on the swimmers from… Read more »

gosharks
11 years ago

If you compare these results to the Arena Invite last year, Cal is swimming faster right now for what we assume is the same level of rest. They are in good shape. Many impressive doubles/triples from Franklin, Li, and Bachelor.

Matthew
11 years ago

BoBo she’s fine. Better than fine because she’s finally training w people who can beat her which only makes people faster.

She’s racing 10x more now than she ever did Starz. And off events for the first time. Law of averages says she’s not gonna win or get close to best times when you swim 12 races in 3 days when you’re really tired.

Freak out in February. Not November.

bobo gigi
Reply to  Matthew
11 years ago

I wasn’t so worried.
But thank you for comforting me. 😉
I think we’ll see fast times in 2 weeks.

Ready4WorldChamps
Reply to  bobo gigi
11 years ago

Bobo…

This detailed analysis that BearDevil posted on the CAL boards may help to shed some light and perhaps ease a few of your doubts 😉

“Winter Nationals have qualifying standards so Teri may have rested anyone who hadn’t yet met the standards. With a short week for Thanksgiving her team was going to get some rest any way so she’ll likely mini-taper some but not all of the team before Nationals.

Nationals are an open event allowing non-US citizens to compete so Marina’s and Batchelor’s drops are very encouraging. If internationals couldn’t swim at Nationals they would have been rested for this meet. Those two along with Osman have adjusted pretty quickly to short course. All will be… Read more »

bobo gigi
11 years ago

1.53.73 for Missy in the 200 back? 😕
I’m not convinced at all by her time.
She swam that kind of times when she was 14.
And was always around 1.50 in-season in the past 2 or 3 years.
Can her new training program explain that? Simply less rest than at Colorado Stars?
And another question of a non-specialist, more mental this time. Under Todd Schmitz she used to win almost all her races. Now in college, coach McKeever, as you say on swimswam, challenges Missy by putting her in many off-events like the 200 breast ot the 1000 free. And she often loses. Can it break a little her confidence? Because since the start… Read more »

duckduckgoose
Reply to  bobo gigi
11 years ago

Todd coached Missy since she was 7 years old, so she knew her inside/out. While McKeever’s coached Franlikn internationally a few times, those were for specific meets over a short period of time. Teri’s only been her formal coach for a few months and is still trying to figure out where Missy’s physical and mental breaking points are.

Missy already knows how to win in long course at the highest levels. She’s still never ground out an entire short course season against strong competition. She’s also being challenged in the weight room and classroom more than she’s ever been. All doing that away from home for the first time and training at sea level. It’s much easier to be the… Read more »

longseekeer
11 years ago

WHY DID THE UCLA TEAM LEAVE EARLY? TO GET HOME FOR THE UCLA FOOTBALL GAME?

MY CAL TEAM WAY WAS TOO STRONG FOR THIS PARTICULAR MEET, BUT UCLA HAD THE CHANCE TO FURTHER IMPROVE BY FACING TOP COMPETITION.

IT WILL BE INTERESTING TO SEE IF THE CAL WOMEN AND MEN WILL GET SOME “A” TIMES IN THE UPCOMING NATIONAL MEETS.

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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