Ethan Ekk Goes 8:44 in 1000 Free, 1:33 in the 200 Free an Hour Apart at Florida Senior Champs

2025 Florida Swimming Spring Senior Champs

The scoreboard was turned off for the entirety of Ethan Ekk‘s heat of the 1000 yard free on Thursday night in Orlando at the Florida Swimming Spring Senior Championships meet. When he finished, there was nary a reaction from swimmer or crowd.

But then he asked the timer for his time, a true-grass roots swimming experience, and a murmur began to wave across the deck.

8:44.69.

Ekk is now the third-fastest 17-18 in the history of the 1000 yard free, and he’s only 17 years old.

Splits by 100 Splits by 200 Splits by 500
100 49.06
200 52.32 1:41.38
300 52.74
400 53.29 1:46.03
500 53.24 4:20.65
600 52.92 1:46.16
700 52.82
800 53.47 1:46.29
900 53.48
1000 51.35 1:44.83 4:24.04

The only 17-18s ever faster than him are Luke Hobson, who swam 8:43.66 as a freshman at Texas, and Luke Ellis, who swam 8:44.62 at Sectionals in December with the Sandpipers of Nevada.

Ekk is a Canadian-American who last year, along with his siblings Owen and Bella, decided to Pursue Canadian international teams. He was the first to break through, racing for Canada at the Junior Pan Pac Championships in August. He continues to train in Florida with ATAC in Tallahassee.

A Stanford commit, his previous best time was 8:56.73 from this meet last year, meaning a full 12 second improvement.

About an hour after that swim, he split 1:33.64 in the 200 free while leading off ATAC’s 5th place 800 free relay. That knocked about three-tenths off his previous best time from Winter Juniors in December. His brother Owen, 16, anchored that relay in 1:37.15, with Marcus Szabo (1:44.68) and Liam Walsh (1:45.81) swimming the middle two legs.

Their relay finished in 6:41.28, five-and-a-half seconds back of the winning Bolles School quartet of Andrew KravchenkoCharles ZuhowskiNicholas Kwan, and Sascha Macht. They didn’t have anything as fast as Ethan Ekk‘s 1:33, but they were a more balanced relay, anchored by Macht in 1:37.08.

Other fast splits in that relay included Olympic Trials qualifier Ryan Erisman of Laker Swim splitting 1:36.56 on a roll and 27-year-old Grant Sanders of the Fast Falcons swimming 1:36.69 on a leadoff leg.

In the girls’ meet, 15-year-old Brinkleigh Hansen from Saint Petersburg Aquatics, a member of the US Junior National Team, won in 9:53.00. She took control of this race very early, opening up a three-and-a-half second lead on the field in the first 200 yards, and then was steady for the remainder of the swim to win by almost five ahead of Claire Custer of the Sarasota Sharks (9:47.65).

Another Saint Petersburg 15-year-old Isabella Riva was 3rd in 9:49.62, and in total the team had three of the top five finishers.

Planet Swim won the girls’ 800 free relay in 7:14.82, with the team of Penelope ZarczynskiCharlotte DriesseLily Doyle, and Olivia Moore combining for a 7:14.82.

Laker Swim finished 2nd with another 15-year-old phenom Rylee Erisman splitting 1:43.55 on the anchor leg to almost pull them back from a nearly-five second deficit. SPA was 3rd in 7:15.73, with the 1000 free winner Brinkleigh Hansen leading off in 1:47.85 and her older sister Karrington Hansen anchoring in 1:47.38.

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1YearLoan
3 hours ago

Really wish he wasn’t going to Stanford

Cassandra
Reply to  1YearLoan
58 minutes ago

tbf the stanford men have actually been showing signs of life this year, particularly w their mid distance / distance group

Riccardo
Reply to  1YearLoan
6 minutes ago

Adults commenting stuff like this will never not be lame.

NCSwimFan
4 hours ago

ATAC is so good at developing distance products. Always see them first in the pool for warm-ups and lighting up distance sessions. What a swim. Congrats Ethan & ATAC!

Swimmer Ace
Reply to  NCSwimFan
3 hours ago

Once the ekks go, ATAC is done. Similar to Cavalier Aquatics, you won’t hear from them again

ScovaNotiaSwimmer
4 hours ago

Odds on him making the Canadian Worlds team this year?

800 Fr? 4×2?

Brizzy
Reply to  ScovaNotiaSwimmer
4 hours ago

World,s or world juniors with his brother.Can he do both? Is it legal to do both?

ScovaNotiaSwimmer
Reply to  Brizzy
1 hour ago

I think you can’t do both?

Swumswims
Reply to  ScovaNotiaSwimmer
4 hours ago

And permanently give up a shot at the US Sr team?

1650
Reply to  Swumswims
3 hours ago

Unfortunately for Ethan (and fortunately for US fans), the young talent of 200 freestylers is incredibly promising (Williamson, Heilman, Mijatovic, to name a few), and there’s also a lot of very strong swimmers that are still young enough that they’ll be around in LA and maybe even 2032 (Guiliano, Hobson, Alexy could also be really good if he focused on it, hell even Kieran Smith could be throwing down 1:44 splits by LA). He’s got a very good shot at making Canadian national teams in a few events in the future, and the men’s side of Canada swimming is also on the rise at the moment, with Liendo, Kharun, Knox, etc. It’s impossible to say which he feels more allegiance… Read more »

Brizzy
Reply to  1650
2 hours ago

Another consideration.Swimmers on less competitive teams than the USA can many times qualify for multiple events including relays.A little tougher on stacked USA teams.

captain bubbles
Reply to  Braden Keith
27 minutes ago

Isn’t it 3 years to change sporting nationality? Which basically means no international meets for 3 years. Pretty hard to be an elite swimmer de facto banned from international competition.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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