Cal women beat Oregon State despite distance double from Sammy Harrison

The Cal Golden Bear women won their first official dual meet of the season, topping Pac-12 foe Oregon State with their stars winning some unique events. The final score was 156-97 in favor of Cal.

We didn’t need another reminder that Missy Franklin is tough as nails, but we got one anyway when the sophomore swam back-to-back races early in the meet. Franklin, now appearing fully healthy after back spasms limited her this summer, was the runaway winner in the 200 free, going 1:48.24. That’s the event in which Franklin broke the American record last year.

She came back to take second in the next event, the 100 back, by just a tenth. Franklin was 55.78, but the win went to Hawaiian freshman Jasmine Mau, who went 55.67 to take the event.

Oregon State fought hard, though they were overmatched by last year’s #3 team in the nation. Beaver junior Sammy Harrison was the only double winner of the meet, hitting Cal’s soft spot and sweeping the 1000 and 500 free. Harrison was 9:50.25 to beat Cal freshman Sierra Runge (9:53.91) in the 1000, then 4:51.25 to win the 500 free.

But other than that, it was all Cal in this one. Usual backstrokers Rachel Bootsma and Elizabeth Pelton went 1-2 in the 200 fly with times of 2:01.14 and 2:03.53. That left the 200 back open for senior Melanie Klaren to go 1:58.54 and keep up the Bears’ tradition of excellence in the stroke.

Marina Garcia, in her second season out of Spain, won the 100 breast in 1:03.05, just ahead of freshman Maija Roses. Roses jumped atop the 200 breast, though, going 2:20.39. Freshman Noemie Thomas continued to impress in the butterfly, going 54.05 to win the 100-yard event. Thomas, a Canadian, was about a half-second off her season-best, which sits 6th in the NCAA.

Kaylin Bing (23.21) and Farida Osman (51.23) manned their usual sprint free events, helping the Bears sweep. Celina Li was the other Cal winner, going 4:19.67 in the 400 IM.

As has become tradition lately, Cal heavily split its relays. Bing was the top performer in the free relay, putting up the team’s only 22-second leg with a 22.97 on the end of the winning 200 free relay. In the medley, Missy Franklin‘s 25.7 backstroke split was probably most notable, though her team wound up 3rd overall. Osman split 23.58 on the butterfly to propel her team to the win.

Full results here.

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longseeker
9 years ago

Well, I may be the only one out those commenting so far who actually WENT to the meet in Berkeley. When you see Runge, a top distance swimmer (actually 200 to 1650 free) swim an event in the backstroke, you know that Teri and staff were letting a lot of people swim different events or distances. Different coaching philosophy than USC and other schools getting better times this early in the season.

As someone stated here, this was a dual meet not an “invite” and Cal was mainly swimming against themselves albeit Harrison swam well in the distances for Oregon State.

USC and Stanford look like early favorites for the PAC12 conference, but Cal will be there come February… Read more »

whoknows
9 years ago

Dual meets are not the destination. Dual meets are a part of the journey.
Swimmers are not robots. You don’t put in a quarter and get the results you (as a pundit) want.

Pac12 Fan
9 years ago

Swimnerd – I’m a huge Stanford fan, but please, just stop! You’re making the rest of Nerd Nation look bad. No matter what the results, you are overly critical of Cal. Let It all work itself out….

SwimminIsGood
Reply to  Pac12 Fan
9 years ago

Thank you for posting that, Pac12Fan…much appreciated! I’m a huge Cal fan, but I will always support the amazing swimmers and coaching staff at Stanford. Meehan is a top-notch guy who has earned his solid reputation. The swimmers have faith in him, rightfully so. Stanford is going to be the team to beat for many years, I’d say, and probably starting with this year. Georgia and Cal are also in the mix for this year, without question, though Stanford might have an early season spotlight on them. Stanford is loaded with incredible talent, and will only get better next year.

The sport of swimming should be the focus, with the desire for all teams to challenge one another in… Read more »

SWIMNERD
9 years ago

Slooow times even for this early in the season. Yawn. Cal’s deficiencies in the distance & breast continue to be a liability.

Wait til tomorrow for some eye popping swims when Oregon will get crushed by the Card.
Simone, Hu & co are gonna provide some entertaining fireworks then I can guarantee you!

Hswimmer
Reply to  SWIMNERD
9 years ago

Those are actually very good early in the season, you don’t know how hard they are training. I would love to see you go out there and do that since you are such a swim “nerd”…

SWIMNERD
Reply to  Hswimmer
9 years ago

Let’s compare a Pac 12 team that’s closer to Cal’s level: USC.

USC split their team and took a small contingent to the SMU Invite where they only managed to place 4th.
Yet their top times were MUCH faster than Cal’s across the board.

500 fr: Chenault (4:42.44), Breed (4:55.15) Cal = 13 sec slower!!
200 br: Tosky (2:11.08), Roses (2:20.39) Cal = 9+ sec slower!!
400 im: Tosky (4:12.34), Li (4:19.67) Cal = 7+ sec slower!!
200 fly: Tosky (1:55.59), Bootsma (2:01.14) Cal = 5+ sec slower!!
200 bk: Stewart (1:54.59), Klaren (1:58.54) Cal = 4 sec slower!
100 bk: Weiss (52.95), Mau (55.67) Cal = 3 sec slower!
200 fr:… Read more »

Underdog
Reply to  SWIMNERD
9 years ago

Are you aware that at the OSU vs Stanford dual meet last year, the Stanford team didn’t have anyone within 10s in the 1000 compared to Harrison, and the 500 wasn’t even close. Stanford is not strong in distance either. When the reigning PAC-12 champion posts one of the fastest 1000 times of the season so far, it’s obviously a good meet, especially when the win was only by 3 seconds. Your “swimnerds” have something else coming.

calswimfan
Reply to  SWIMNERD
9 years ago

1. you’re comparing USC’s invite times with Cal’s dual meet times
2. even if these times were comparable, it’s too early in the season for the times to mean anything. one reason being that swimmers swim off events early in the season. and teams also mix up on relays to even them out.

Facts often don’t speak for themselves. You need to put them in the right context and know how to use them.

With that said, great times from USC women. I’m not taking anything away from them but the purpose of the dual meets right now isn’t to go as fast as you can. One thing I’ll agree with you is that Cal women have… Read more »

calswimfan
Reply to  SWIMNERD
9 years ago

LOL i love you swimnerd.

OBear73
Reply to  calswimfan
9 years ago

yes…but it is getting tiring!

aswimfan
Reply to  SWIMNERD
9 years ago

I’m marveled at swimnerd’s consistent and devoted attack of CAL and Teri.

😀

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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