CCS Final Recap: Bellarmine Prep Gets 30th Straight Boys Title

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The 2013 meet was a blowout: Bellarmine Prep beat second-place Palo Alto High School by 148 points. In 2012 it was 171.5 points; in 2011, 163.5. But rather than relegate themselves to also-ran status the Paly boys kept picking themselves up and giving it another try, like David going to battle against Goliath. And this year, for once, they were within reach of the prize; it would all come down to the last relay.

To set the stage, Paly had -for the first time in umpteen years- outscored Bellarmine in prelims. The lead moved back and forth between the two until the diving, where Paly scored a bundle and jumped out to a 27-point lead. Bellarmine came roaring back, though, and by the end of the 200 free relay they were up (on paper) by 29.5. By nabbing four of the top eight slots in back Paly moved ahead, and even losing ground to Bellarmine in the breast and 400 free relay they still could come out on top.

Fast-forward to finals.

Paly got off to a nice start by winning the 200 medley relay in CCS record-breaking fashion: their 1:31.28 lowered Saratoga’s CCS mark of 1:31.84 from 2009 by .56. William LeeScott PowellAndrew Liang, and Winston Wang contributed to the effort. Saint Francis (1:32.04) took second with Benjamin HoCurtis OgrenGautham Bommannan, and Sean Elmurib. Los Gatos touched out St Ignatius and Bellarmine for third.

From the very first individual event Bellarmine began to outperform their prelims placements. Junior Aidan Burns won the 200 free in 1:37.15 and the Bells got an extra bump from junior Cooper Burrill who moved up a couple of spots from prelims and finished second, a half-second in front of Leigh senior Michael Hannigan.

The 200 IM proved to be an exciting race as Saint Francis senior and future Stanford Cardinal Ogren once again broke the National Independent School record. He had held it since last year’s CCS championship when he swam a 1:45.01. This time he lowered it to 1:44.90. Second and third went to Bellarmine’s Michale Messner (1:48.85) and Santa Cruz’s Gabe Bolender (1:50.68).

Paly’s Andrew Liang won the 50 free in 20.41, a tad off his prelims time. The Stanford-bound senior touched .58 ahead of Albert Gwo of Los Altos; Stefan Kranenburg of St Ignatius was third. The 50 free was one of Bellarmine’s most successful events; they picked up six points over prelims with two swimmers in the “B” final: Thomas Reed and Nico Fasan.

Junior Colin Zeng of The King’s Academy was the top diver, scoring 631.90 points. Paly sophomore Reed Merrit placed second with 474.85, while Drew Jung of Carlmont (451.35) took third.

Andrew Liang of Paly was back after diving with another victory, this time in the 100 fly. His 47.44 didn’t lower his own recently-established CCS record (47.09, set in prelims) but was good enough to win by two seconds. Three sophomores finished nearly together for second through fourth places: Chistopher Staka of Aptos (49.46), Daichi Matsuda of Gunn (49.69), and Matthew Thomas of Valley Christian (49.75). In the meantime, Bellarmine added 3 points in better-than-prelims swims from a couple more of its consolation finalists.

At this point it was 165-139 in favor of Paly, but Bellarmine had its two strongest events coming up: 100 free and 500 free. Once again they exceeded expectations and scored points above and beyond what one might have expected from prelims. Saint Francis sophomore Ho won the 100 with 45.22 ahead of Gwo from Los Altos (45.37) and Leigh’s Hannigan (45.57). The Bells managed fourth, sixth, and fifteenth places. In the 500 it was a repeat performance for Bellarmine’s Burns and Messner, once again finishing 1-2 with 4:23.36 and 4:27.59, respectively. Freshman Jarod Hatch of Sobrato took third, less than a second in front of Paly freshman Alex Liang.

Bellarmine had the momentum now, and they capitalized on it with a victory in the 200 free relay. St Ignatius had set the CCS record in prelims with 1:23.53 but Bellarmine got the 40 points in finals. Burrill (21.50), Reed (21.26), Messner (21.02), and Burns (20.13) combined for 1:23.91, while St Ignatius (Clark SunPeter LewczykSheldon Boboff, and Kranenburg) settled for second with 1:24.35. Paly (Ryan DroverAndrew Cho, Alex Liang, and Wang) clocked in at 1:26.77.

Paly’s big event, the 100 back, was up next. At the conclusion of the event the Vikings were actually up by 1 point, but they had lost ground from prelims. Ho of Saint Francis won the 100 back with a 49.56; Lee of Palo Alto finished second with 50.00, .64 ahead of Gunderson senior Corey Gutierrez.

Saint Francis’ Ogren followed up his National Independent School record in the 200 IM with another CCS record in the 100 breast. His winning time of 53.81 was 9/100 better than what he’d gone in 2013, the last time he had set it. Second place went to Joe Kmak of Junipero Serra (55.99), while Jonathan Panchak of Los Gatos got third.

With Bellarmine leading 282-276 going into the 400 free relay it was still possible for Paly to tie, at the very least, and win outright at best. But that depended on Bellarmine not living up to expectations, something which hadn’t happened all day. The Bells ended up winning the relay and with it the meet, extending their streak to 30 years at the top.

Burrill (46.44), Timothy Kou (46.26), Messner (45.87), and Burns (43.79) combined for a winning time of 3:02.36. Palo Alto (Alex Liang, 46.94; Lee, 46.03; Cho, 47.68; and Andrew Liang, 43.47) finished in 3:04.12. Saint Francis rounded out the podium with 3:05.83: Ogren (45.64), David Ren (48.09), Elmurib (47.06), and Ho (45.04).

 

Team

Final

vs psych

vs prelim

Bellarmine

322

98

22

Palo Alto

310

-21

-3.5

St Ignatius

216

-10

-9

Saint Francis

192

-11

-3

Monta Vista

153

-23

0.5

Los Gatos

112

-3

1

Leigh

96

14

4

Serra

91

91

-1

Sacred Heart

89

63

4

Gunn

88

-71

-10

 

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bobo gigi
9 years ago

FULL MEET VIDEO REPLAY HERE!
http://www.nfhsnetwork.com/events/95451

Justin Pollard
9 years ago

10 years ago when, I was a senior at Bellarmine, we won our 20th straight CCS title. At the time, Cooper Burrill was a 10 and under at my club – Almaden Swim and Racquet Club. Now he’s helped the Bellamine squad win it’s 30th straight! Congratulations and Go Bells!

Lisa Farr
9 years ago

Thanks for the great coverage of high school swimming championships. Congrats to Coach Larry Rogers and the Bellarmine swim team.

floppy
9 years ago

Too many California high school meets to keep up with. Where are results from whatever conference/district/section/region/division includes Corey Okubo?

Admin
Reply to  floppy
9 years ago

floppy – look for CIF SS D1

About Anne Lepesant

Anne Lepesant

Anne Lepesant is the mother of four daughters, all of whom swam in college. With an undergraduate degree from Princeton (where she was an all-Ivy tennis player) and an MBA from INSEAD, she worked for many years in the financial industry, both in France and the U.S. Anne is currently …

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